From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Trial of Milosevic Could Unnerve Leaders in the U.S.
and Elsewhere 
1520 GMT, 010626



Summary

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia now awaits
Slobodan Milosevic for alleged war crimes in Kosovo. But in the two years
since the Kosovo conflict, it appears that the former president did not
commit the genocide he was accused of by NATO, including the deaths of some
10,000 people. Ironically, the charges he faces would make it easy for
international courts to try a variety of foreign leaders and military
officers, including Americans.

Analysis

Former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic will likely be extradited to
face charges at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia 
(ICTY). 
Milosevic is charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes for his
role 
in the 1999 Kosovo conflict. An indictment for Milosevic's role in the
Bosnian war, from 1992 to 1995, has not yet been released, according to an
ICTY spokeswoman.

The Kosovo indictment includes persecution and seven instances of murder,
totaling 340 victims. These murders are classified both as alleged war
crimes 
- violations of the codes and practices of war - and as crimes against
humanity, defined as severe crimes conducted against innocents, often
outside 
the context of war. Milosevic also stands accused of crimes against humanity
for the forcible deportation of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo.

But noticeably absent are charges of genocide. This is striking because
Milosevic's government was blamed for as many as 10,000 killings of ethnic
Albanians during the opening weeks of the 1999 war for Kosovo. It now
appears 
that these mass killings have not been borne out by two years of excavations
and investigations.

As a result, the prosecution in The Hague appears to have settled on lesser
charges that will more easily result in a guilty verdict. But this
development may set a new precedent, making it easier for international
courts to bring charges against other democratically elected heads of state
as well as military officers. This precedent poses a risk both to American
political leaders and U.S. military officers who command missions overseas
that kill local civilians.

The Yugoslav cabinet agreed at a meeting in Belgrade June 23 that it was
prepared to extradite war crimes suspects to a United Nations tribunal,
opening the door to sending Milosevic to trial. A cabinet decree handed
authority for all extraditions to Yugoslavia's republics, Serbia and
Montenegro. In Serbia, where Milosevic has been imprisoned for corruption,
Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic said he expected Milosevic's extradition
within 
three weeks, after he exhausts appeals.

But the charges Milosevic must answer to in The Hague are significantly
different from the charges of genocide leveled by London and Washington just
two years ago. During the initial weeks of the war, NATO governments claimed
that the numbers of ethnic Albanian dead and missing ranged in the tens of
thousands. Eventually, the accepted number of Albanian dead settled around
10,000. And the ICTY stated that it would leave itself the option of adding
genocide charges.

But the tribunal has not added these charges because Kosovo has not yet
yielded the killing fields the West expected two years ago. The ICTY has
exhumed about 4,000 bodies to date, according to a spokeswoman. However,
many 
of these bodies have not been definitively identified, either as
non-combatant ethnic Albanians or otherwise. They may be casualties of
battle, collateral damage or ethnic infighting. More Albanian bodies have
recently been discovered in Serbia.

The international search for Kosovo's killing fields has yielded a
significant share of critics - among the very people who have gone to Kosovo
to uncover the truth. A Spanish team returned from Kosovo in 1999; its
leader 
told the El Pais newspaper that the limited individual gravesites were the
result of fighting between ethnic Albanian guerrillas and Yugoslav forces,
in 
stark contrast to the piles of corpses at genocide sites in Rwanda.

As a result, the ICTY appears to have shifted strategy. In April 2000, the
tribunal announced an ambitious schedule to uncover 300 suspected burial
sites. In August, London-based Guardian newspaper reported that ICTY
spokesman Paul Risley said that the number of victims was far less than
10,000 and closer to 2,000 to 3,000 - only slightly more than the number
uncovered in the summer of 1999, immediately after the war. In the summer or
2000, the tribunal found only 680 bodies, The Guardian reported.

Late in 2000, the ICTY changed its tactic: It shifted from conducting a mass
search for the killing fields to putting together a case, based on available
evidence that would convict Milosevic. As a result, the charges are
certainly 
somber but of lesser magnitude.

In the Hague, for example, Rwandans have recently stood trial for genocide.
A 
number of Serbs are under indictment for genocide in Bosnia. In contrast,
Milosevic would stand trial for war crimes - violations of the Geneva
Conventions that are comparatively common in conflict - as well as certain
crimes against humanity, but not genocide.

But the tribunal is helping to set an important and ironic precedent. By
dropping the genocide charge, the court has set a relatively undemanding
hurdle for trying heads of state or military leaders. And the ICTY's most
serious charges - crimes against humanity - are not iron-clad in the sense
that the crimes are not on the scale of, say, Nazi Germany or Imperial
Japan.

As a result, the threshold for crimes against humanity - and their ferocity
- 
have been signficantly lowered. If an unpopular but democratically elected
former leader like Milosevic can be indicted, extradited and tried for these
crimes, so can many other political leaders in a variety of governments
around the world. 

Every leader who has sent troops into conflict is liable for civilian deaths
or excessive force. The potential list ranges from influential figures like
Russian President Vladimir Putin, for Chechnya, to lesser-known leaders like
Mozambique's Joaquim Chissano, who presided over his own country's civil war
and remains in power.

On this front, Americans may have some of the greatest legal exposure.
Former 
President Clinton ordered U.S. operations in Kosovo, Somalia, Afghanistan
and 
Sudan - all of which resulted in civilian deaths. U.S. military officers may
face additional legal exposure abroad, as would officers in the Canadian,
British and Nordic militaries who contribute forces to peacekeeping
operations.

The one significant trouble international courts will have in enforcing this
precedent is the lack of an executive arm with which to reach out and grab
suspects. No court in the world has the ability to coerce China, Russia or
the United States to hand over a current or former leader. They enjoy much
more political power than does a country like Chile, unable to gain the
release of former President Augusto Pinochet.

But the indictment process is likely to become more institutionalized. A
permanent international war crimes tribunal, sponsored by the United
Nations, 
is likely to begin operations within a few years. The United States has
attempted to hinder the creation of this tribunal, but half the necessary
signatories have ratified the treaty.
Related Analysis:
Yugoslavia: Right Back Where
We Started
Just two years after NATO won its conflict against Yugoslavia, the new
government in Belgrade is preparing to extradite former President Slobodan
Milosevic. But a new, old logic now flows from the Balkans. The charges
against Milosevic, regarding Kosovo, do not appear to amount to the rhetoric
leveled at him during the war. And the need to reward the Kostunica
government for its help is strong. Expect NATO to reward Belgrade -- quite
possibly with Kosovo.

Analysis

Two events in the Balkans last week drew attention back to the troubled
region. The first was the apparent decision by the Kostunica government to
extradite former president Slobodan Milosevic for war crimes charges. The
second was an attempt by Europe to broker a cease-fire in Macedonia. Both,
in 
different ways, are cautionary tales against thinking that closure in the
Balkans is possible.
Click here to continue.
Yugoslav Legislation May Send Milosevic to The Hague
The government of Yugoslavia has approved draft legislation that, if passed
by Parliament, would allow Yugoslav citizens to be extradited for trial in
The Hague. The legislation is almost sure to become law, and people in
Yugoslavia expect a quid pro quo. While Belgrade will always have the option
of not actually enforcing the extradition law, odds are that former
President 
Slobodan Milosevic will soon stand before the war crimes tribunal.

Analysis 
The Yugoslav government on June 14 approved draft legislation paving the way
for extradition of accused war criminals, such as former President Slobodan
Milosevic. The legislation authorizes the government to cooperate with the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The
Hague.


_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to