Milosevic's Son, in Hiding, Attacks New Rulers BELGRADE (Reuters) - The son of ousted Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic (news - web sites) has accused the country's new rulers of seeking to ``exterminate'' the former first family, a weekly newspaper reported on Tuesday. Marko Milosevic, who fled the country on a false passport after the mass uprising last year which put reformers in power, also denied allegations of involvement in lucrative and shady cigarette and oil dealings during his father's turbulent rule. ``I never took any part in such dealings and the competent authorities know this too,'' Marko told the weekly Svedok in what it billed as his first interview since he left Yugoslavia. Marko, widely disliked in Serbia and once described by the United States as one of the richest and most violent members of the Serbian mafia, said his father now faced a U.N. war crimes trial because of his long defense of the Serbs. The weekly said Marko, a 27-year-old former racing car driver, was abroad but did not say where. It also did not say how it interviewed him. He has earlier been reported to be in either Russia or one of the former Soviet republics. ``I left because I feared for my family's safety and decided not to return when it became clear that the law and instruments of power were being used to exterminate my family,'' he said. The younger of two children, Marko became rich years ago -- according to his critics, thanks to questionable business dealings and with the help of underworld figures and the police. He owned a disco, an amusement park, a bakery, a cosmetics shop and a local radio station -- sparking widespread allegations he used his father's position to enrich himself. But Marko told Svedok: ``I didn't earn a single dinar by taking it away from someone...society could only benefit from my obvious investments.'' He said he wanted to see his father, arrested on April 1 for alleged abuse of power and shipped to the U.N. court in The Hague (news - web sites) last month, ``alive, well and free'' as soon as possible. ``He is in The Hague because his defense of the Serbian people was too spirited and lasted far too long for the liking of the governments of some European countries and the United States,'' Marko said. The U.N. war crimes tribunal indicted Milosevic and four top aides during NATO (news - web sites)'s 1999 bombing campaign against Yugoslavia, accusing forces under their command of responsibility for atrocities committed against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. Asked what he thought about the country's new reformist authorities, Marko said: ``I think the puppet Yugoslav government has verified the old Serb saying that 'if the conquerors' hands are blood-stained to the elbows, the hands of those serving them must be blood-stained to the shoulders'.'' Email this Serbian News Network - SNN [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.antic.org/