Srebrenica Massacre: UN Court Rejects Mladic Genocide Appeal
Former
Bosnian Serb commander Ratko Mladic has lost his appeal against a 2017
conviction for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The UN court
upheld the life sentence for his role in the killing of around 8,000 Bosnian
Muslim (Bosniak) men and boys in Srebrenica in 1995.
The
massacre, in an enclave supposed to be under UN protection, was the worst
atrocity in Europe since World War Two.
It is not
yet clear where Mladic will serve the rest of his sentence.
The
five-person appeals panel found Mladic had failed to provide evidence to
invalidate the previous convictions against him, although the presiding judge
dissented on almost all counts.
However, the
Appeals Chamber also dismissed the appeal brought by the prosecution, which had
sought a second conviction against Mladic over crimes committed against Bosnian
Muslims and Bosnian Croats in some other areas during the war.
The verdict
was delayed by technical difficulties, which continued throughout the session.
Mladic had
denounced the tribunal during his appeal hearing in August, calling it a child
of Western powers. His lawyers had argued he was far away from Srebrenica when
the massacre happened.
Mladic,
known as the "Butcher of Bosnia", was one of the last suspects to
face trial at the UN's International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia. He was arrested in 2011 after 16 years on the run.
In 2017 he
was found guilty of genocide over Srebrenica, but acquitted of genocide over
his army's 1992 campaign, in which Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats were expelled
from their homes or detained in appalling conditions.
In 2016, the
same court convicted former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic of
planning the Srebrenica massacre, among other crimes.
His initial
40-year sentence for genocide and war crimes was later increased to life in
prison in 2019 - the remainder of which he will serve in the UK.
Survivor
Semso Osmanovic, who lost 23 family members in the massacre, told the BBC's Guy
De Launey that the verdict meant he finally felt able to return to his home
town.
"I was
living the whole of my life for this moment - to see justice being done by the
international court. And hoping to bring my children and my wife to
Srebrenica," he said. "That's the place I was born."
Sehida
Abdurahmanovic, whose husband was killed in Srebrenica, watched the verdict at
a memorial centre in Potocari.
"Mothers
who barely hear, who can not see, those sick and can hardly walk, came to see
this. As it was yesterday, everything is still fresh," she told BBC News
Serbian.
"It is
of utmost importance that he got this life sentence and that genocide in
Srebrenica was confirmed."
In Sarajevo,
one Bosnian newspaper led its online coverage of the verdict with the headline:
"Look at the butcher's tears when he realises that he will die behind
bars."
But the
reaction among Mladic's supporters was very different.
The former
general's son, Darko Mladic, said his father "did not have a chance for a
fair trial" and described the proceedings as "a travelling
circus".
The current
president of the Bosnian Serb enclave, Zeljka Cvijanovic, said the tribunal had
"once again confirmed its role as anti-Serb court, which establishes
responsibility for war crimes not by evidence, but by the ethnicity of the
indicted".
He has blood
on his hands," Munira Subasic told me when I visited her home, a short
walk away from the killing fields of Srebrenica.
Ratko Mladic
was the enforcer of a political plot, engineered at the top, to make sections
of Bosnia's Muslim population disappear.
The ethnic
cleansing began with persecution - propaganda turned neighbours against one
another - and for many thousands it ended when Ratko Mladic's men overran the
UN base at Potocari, a designated safe zone.
It was here
that Munira's 17-year old son Nermin was torn from her arms, as he tried to
reassure her everything would be fine. Twenty-two members of her family perished
in the genocide.
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