Topic: Crime and Punishment
Karadzic Trial Exposes Discrimination by UN War Crimes Tribunal

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Radovan Karadzic is being denied the same pre-trial preparation time that
the Tribunal has afforded to high-profile non-Serbian defendants.

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by Andy Wilcoxson
(libertarian)
Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Trial of former Bosnian-Serb president Radovan Karadzic by the UN war
crimes Tribunal in The Hague is a disgrace. It will go down in history with
the Stalinist show trials of the Soviet Union and the British Star Chamber.

On September 3rd Karadzic asked the Tribunal to delay the commencement of
his trial for ten months so he could prepare his defense. If his request had
been granted, his trial would have started on July 3rd 2010.

The Tribunal denied his request and ordered that the trial commence on
October 26, 2009, just one week after the Prosecution filed a "marked-up"
version of the indictment.

Radovan Karadzic entered the Tribunal's custody on July 30, 2008. The
October 26th start date only gave him one year and three months to prepare
his defense ahead of the trial -- which is substantially less preparation
time than the Tribunal has given several high-profile non-Serb defendants.

Kosovo-Albanian KLA commander, and former Kosovo Prime Minister, Ramush
Haradinaj had two years to prepare his defense before his trial started. He
entered the Tribunal's custody on March 9, 2005 and his trial began on March
5, 2007.

Ante Gotovina, a high-ranking General in the Croatian military, had two
years and three months get ready. He entered the Tribunal's custody on
December 10, 2005 and his trial commenced on March 11, 2008.

The chief of staff of the Bosnian-Muslim military, Rasim Delic, had two
years and four months of pretrial preparation time. He entered the
Tribunal's custody on February 28, 2005 and his trial began on July 9, 2007.

There is no explanation, other than anti-Serb discrimination by the
Tribunal, why Karadzic shouldn't be entitled to as much pre-trial
preparation time as Delic, Haradinaj, and Gotovina, but he didn't even ask
for that much time. He was more than reasonable in his request, and the
Tribunal was totally unreasonable in its refusal to grant it.

If Karadzic's request for additional time had been granted, he would have
had three weeks less preparation time than Haradinaj, three months less than
Gotovina, and four months less than Delic. Karadzic could have justifiably
asked for even more time since he is facing far more numerous and more
serious charges than the Tribunal ever leveled against Delic, Haradinaj, and
Gotovina. None of them were accused of genocide.

At least Karadzic fared better than former Serbian president Slobodan
Milosevic who only got seven and a half months to prepare a defense before
his trial started, but that's just further proof that the Tribunal
discriminates against Serbs and extends preferential treatment to non-Serbs.
Milosevic entered the Tribunal's custody on June 29, 2001 and his trial
began on February 12, 2002.

The Tribunal's intransigent refusal to allow Karadzic adequate preparation
time has forced him to resort to nonviolent civil disobedience. Karadzic is
refusing to participate in the trial proceedings until his defense is ready.

Rather than acquiescing to Karadzic's reasonable request for preparation
time, and affording him the same preparation time given to high profile
non-Serbian defendants like Delic, Haradinaj, and Gotovina, the Tribunal
announced that it will further degrade Karadzic's rights by imposing a
defense lawyer on him against his will.

In its November 5th ruling the Tribunal stated that Karadzic had
"substantially and persistently obstructed the proper and expeditious
conduct of his trial by refusing to attend the proceedings until such time
as he considers himself to be ready despite this Chamber's decision, upheld
by the Appeals Chamber, that he has had sufficient time to prepare."

Article 21 of the Tribunal's Statute gives an Accused person the minimum
guarantee of "adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his
defense". Unfortunately, it's the Tribunal that gets to decide what
constitutes "adequate". The Tribunal's assertion that Karadzic has had
adequate preparation time is based solely their assertion that he has.
Obviously the Tribunal feels that high profile non-Serbian defendants like
Delic, Haradinaj, and Gotovina are entitled to more "adequate" preparation
time than high profile Serbian defendants like Karadzic and Milosevic.

In response to Karazic's so-called "obstruction" the Trial Chamber announced
that it was ordering the registrar of the Tribunal to "appoint a counsel
[chosen by the Tribunal] to prepare to represent the interests of the
Accused".

The Tribunal adjourned the trial until March 1, 2010 to give the imposed
lawyer time to read the "many thousands of pages of documents" they have to
acquaint themselves with in order to, as the Tribunal put it, "properly
cross-examine the witnesses brought by the prosecution". For this voluminous
task the Tribunal's ruling said, "The Chamber considers that an appropriate
preparation period is three and a half months."

Even with a delayed start date of March 1, 2010, Karadzic still has
substantially less preparation time than Delic, Haradinaj, or Gotovina
received. He'll have three months less than Haradinaj, nine months less than
Gotovina, and ten months less than Delic.

If Karadzic refuses to accept the anti-Serbian discrimination that the
Tribunal is manifestly subjecting him to, and if he persists in his refusal
to attend the trial proceedings until he has had preparation time on par
with what has been afforded to high-profile non-Serbian defendants, the
Tribunal incorporated the following threat into its ruling: "Should the
Accused continue to absent himself from the resumed trial proceedings in
March, or should he engage in any other conduct that [in the Tribunal's
opinion] obstructs the proper and expeditious conduct of the trial, he will
forfeit his right to self-representation, no longer be entitled to
assistance from his assigned defense team, and the appointed counsel will
take over as an assigned counsel to represent him."

Karadzic is asking the Tribunal's Appeals Chamber to overturn the
appointment of counsel in his case. If they refuse, his appointed lawyer
should understand that he isn't practicing law on extraterritorial ground in
The Hague. He must practice under the authority of the Dutch Bar Association
where no effort will be spared to have him disbarred if he attempts to
represent Radovan Karadzic against his will.

The lawyer should also understand that everything he does will be subjected
to immense scrutiny. Hundreds of articles will be written about his
performance during the trial. Given that he only has three and a half months
to prepare, it is very likely that he will be ill prepared for task before
him. Every mistake that he makes, or is perceived to have made, will be
written about extensively and published for the world to see. If Karadzic is
ultimately convicted, the public exposure of mistakes made by his so-called
"defense attorney" will be highly damaging to the reputation and financial
viability of that lawyer's legal practice.

The lawyer should also understand that nobody is going to cooperate with
him. When the Tribunal attempted to impose a lawyer on Slobodan Milosevic
against his will, the defense witnesses boycotted the trial. They refused to
testify and the trial ground to a halt. There is no reason to think the
Karadzic trial won't meet the same fate. Any imposed lawyer will have a very
difficult task, and he will be criticized severely if he fails to get
witnesses to testify for the defense.

Only a defense lawyer who has been bribed by the Tribunal would agree to
represent Karadzic against his will. The consequences of trying to represent
such a high-profile defendant against their will would be worse than any
honest lawyer could bear.

The Hague Tribunal is a corrupt kangaroo court; it is manifestly unjust
because it discriminates against the people it puts on trial on the basis of
their ethnicity. Radovan Karadzic is obviously being denied the preparation
time he needs because he is a Serb, while Delic, Haradinaj, and Gotovina all
got the time they needed because they're not Serbs. No effort should be
spared in the cause of having The Hague Tribunal shut down, and in having
its indictments and verdicts thrown-out.

©2009 Andy Wilcoxson, all rights reserved. You must have written permission
from the author in order to republish this work.
Published: Thursday, November 12, 2009

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