Peace is the Way

July 30, 2008

More on Serbian War Crime Prosecution

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 6:16 pm

Here is another AP article concerning Karadzic , one of the masterminds of the genocide against non-Seriban populations in the Balkan Wars of the 1990’s.

UN tribunal in The Hague takes custody of Karadzic

Wednesday, July 30, 2008 10:17 AM EDT
The Associated Press
By MIKE CORDER Associated Press Writer

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The U.N. war-crimes tribunal at The Hague finally took custody of Radovan Karadzic on Wednesday — 13 years after the former Bosnian Serb leader went on the run — putting him in a jail where he was free to mingle with dozens of former allies and enemies.

Serbia handed over Karadzic overnight, flying him in a government jet from Belgrade to the Netherlands to await trial on charges of waging genocide against non-Serbs during the 1990s Balkan wars. His new home is a special wing of a Dutch prison reserved for people accused of war crimes in the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

“The arrest of Radovan Karadzic is immensely important for the victims who had to wait far too long for this day,” tribunal prosecutor Serge Brammertz told reporters at a news conference at the court. “(It also showed) that there is no alternative to the arrest of war criminals and that there can be no safe haven for fugitives.”

Karadzic’s arrival in The Hague marked the end of a 13-year effort by the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal to get hold of its most wanted war criminal. He is accused of responsibility for the deaths of tens of thousands of people and the suffering of hundreds of thousands of Bosnian Muslims and Croats.

Legal experts consider Karadzic the most important figure in the war crimes committed in Bosnia, exceeding the role played by the late Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, whose own trial ended inconclusively when he died in 2006 in the same U.N. jail.

During the 1992-1995 Bosnian war, Karadzic was known as the urbane, intellectual face of a monstrous regime blamed for the worst atrocities in Europe since World War II. According to his indictment, he and other senior Bosnian Serb leaders unleashed ethnic cleansing campaigns to drive Muslims and Croats out of land he considered part of a “Greater Serbia.” The terror reached its climax at Srebrenica.

Prosecutors allege Karadzic masterminded atrocities including the 1995 massacre of 8,000 Muslim men and boys in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica, the deadly siege of Sarajevo, and the detention of tens of thousands in 20 concentration camps where many were tortured, starved and sexually abused.

Serbian authorities say they arrested Karadzic on July 21 in the capital Belgrade, where he had been living under a false identity and practicing alternative medicine.

In Belgrade, Karadzic’s lawyer Sveta Vujacic said his client will postpone entering a formal plea for 30 days, the maximum allowed under court rules. Karadzic’s extradition stalled while a Belgrade court waited for an appeal, but Vujacic said he never filed one.

On Tuesday night hours before Karadzic left Belgrade, about 15,000 Serb extremists rallied in a main square in the Serb capital demanding a halt to the extradition. Several hundred hooligans separated from the group and hurled stones and burning flares at riot police.

Later, police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators, trying to push them from the square. Belgrade’s emergency clinic said it treated 51 policemen and 23 civilians injured in clashes. The city’s military clinic reported treating three policemen and three civilians.

On Wednesday, the extremist Serbian Radical Party accused pro-Western president Boris Tadic of “provoking and organizing” the violence. Party leader Tomislav Nikolic says Tadic wants to “wipe out” the Radicals and “take Serbia into a war.”

In The Hague, the war crimes tribunal said Karadzic will be summoned before a judge Thursday and asked to enter a plea on each of 11 counts, including genocide, extermination and persecution.

“It will take some months before the prosecution and the defense are ready to start this trial,” said Brammertz, the Belgian prosecutor.

Tribunal spokeswoman Nerma Jelacic said the court will ensure Karadzic’s “well being and right to a fair trial as much as possible and in accordance with the highest international standards.”

Karadzic is being held in the same high-security prison that once housed his former mentor Milosevic and where other former allies and enemies are also in custody. The war-crimes tribunal jail is in a separate wing of a prison in Scheveningen, a coastal suburb of The Hague.

The center, which has 84 cells, currently has 37 other detainees, all of them alleged Yugoslav war criminals. Each cell, measuring 17 by 10 feet, has a shower, toilet, sink and desk.

Cell doors are left open most of the day, except for a brief midday period to allow for a change of the guards. Prisoners may have computers, but are not allowed Internet access. They also receive Dutch, German, Belgian and French television channels, as well as satellite reception in their own language.

Courses in arts, languages or sciences are available. They share a gym, outdoor courtyard, library and a recreation room for darts, table tennis and board games. They have access to a doctor, nurse and psychiatrist and to a hospital in the adjoining Dutch prison.

The tribunal declined to give details about Karadzic’s transfer, citing security in future cases. But it confirmed his arrival shortly after a helicopter landed behind the high wall of the jail while another helicopter hovered overhead.

Karadzic’s top commander, Ratko Mladic, also accused of genocide, remains at large.

Brammertz praised Serbia’s new pro-Western government, saying it deserved “full credit” for the arrest. He said he hopes the new cooperation will shortly lead to Mladic’s arrest and that the two men could be tried together.

“It is clear that if Gen. Mladic is arrested in the near future that this will be a serious option,” he said.

Bosnia’s international administrator lifted the travel ban against Karadzic’s family after Serbia handed him over to the war crimes tribunal. The family had been banned the family from leaving Bosnia because of suspicions they helped Karadzic elude capture.

July 29, 2008

War Crime/Genocide Charges and Convictions

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 6:29 pm

Here is an article regarding the convictions of individuals charged with warm crimes.  Read through and understand how justice is an important part of efforts towards ending genocide and crimes against humanity.

7 Bosnian Serbs guilty of genocide in Srebrenica

Tuesday, July 29, 2008 1:42 PM EDT
The Associated Press
By AIDA CERKEZ-ROBINSON Associated Press Writer

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — The Bosnian war crimes court convicted seven Bosnian Serbs of genocide Tuesday in the 1995 massacre of Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica and handed down prison sentences ranging from 38 to 42 years. Four others were acquitted.

Issuing their first sentence related to Europe’s worst massacre since World War II, judges at the war crimes court sent three of the former policemen to jail for 42 years, another three away for 40 years and one for 38 years.

The verdict comes as Serbia prepares to extradite former Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic — also indicted for genocide in Srebrenica — to the separate U.N. war crimes tribunal in Netherlands. Karadzic was arrested last week in Belgrade after hiding for over a decade.

The seven men were found guilty of killing more than 1,000 captured Bosnian Muslim men and boys after Bosnian Serb forces overran the eastern town of Srebrenica — a U.N.-protected enclave for civilians during the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

The seven hunted down Muslims who tried to escape the Serb roundup. Many victims surrendered after being told they would be safe but instead about 1,000 were brought to a warehouse and killed inside by automatic rifles and hand grenades.

The Bosnian court said their crimes were part of a widespread, systematic attack against Bosnian Muslims in Srebrenica, carried out by Serb forces “with a joint plan to annihilate” the group.

In all, about 8,000 Bosnian men and boys were slaughtered at Srebrenica, a massacre the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, has ruled was genocide.

Widows and mothers of the victims were in the courtroom when the verdict was read.

“Nothing can ease my pain,” said Munira Subasic, a woman from Srebrenica who lost her son in the massacre. Her son’s body has never been found, although over 3,200 other victims have been found in nearby mass graves, identified through DNA analysis and reburied.

Subasic said, despite the sentences issued Tuesday, the Bosnian Serb forces did succeed in establishing a Bosnian Serb ministate “on the blood of our children.” Srebrenica is now part of the Bosnian Serb ministate, Republika Srpska, created during the war.

Bakira Hasecic, the head of the Women Victims of War association, said she was sorry that Bosnia had no death penalty “so that their mothers, daughters and wives can experience the pain the mothers of their victims are experiencing.”

Milenko Trifunovic, Brano Dzinic and Aleksandar Radovanovic received the 42-year sentences, while Milos Stupar, Slobodan Jakovljevic and Branislav Medan each got 40 years and Petar Mitrovic received 38 years.

The judges acquitted Velibor Maksimovic, Dragisa Zivanovic, Milovan Matic and Miladin Stevanovic, concluding the prosecutor failed to prove beyond doubt that they took part in the war crimes.

The court concluded that Trifunovic and Radovanovic were in front of the warehouse shooting at prisoners, while Dzinic threw hand grenades at them. Jakovljevic, Medan and Mitrovic guarded the rear of the warehouse to prevent the detainees from escaping.

Mitrovic also fired his automatic rifle at the detainees. Stupar was their commander and knew what his subordinates were doing.

The panel of judges concluded that all of them perpetrated these acts with genocidal intent.

The Serb troops were led by genocide fugitive Gen. Ratko Mladic. Along with Mladic, Karadzic is accused of masterminding the Srebrenica genocide and faces 11 war crimes charges in The Hague

July 26, 2008

Sudan genocide charges ‘dangerous’-Al Jazeer Response

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 2:37 pm

The following news article from ALJAZEER.NET shows some of the complications involved in bringing charges of genocide and crimes against humanity against a sovereign head of state.  I present this piece of journalism to show how the influence of internatioal bodies is questionable .  I present this  to show how the terminology involved in the charges ca often lead to more of the same political and socail unrest that is part of the situation being defined by the charges themselves.

David

From Sunday 7-20-08

The chairman of an emergency Arab League meeting has said that a decision by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to charge Sudan’s president with genocide and war crimes sets a dangerous precedent.

Mahmoud Ali Youssef, the foreign minister of Djibouti, said at the opening of the one-day meeting in Cairo on Saturday that the 10 charges brought against Omar al-Bashir at the Netherlands-based court will have dangerous repercussions for the entire region.

“The indictment is a dangerous precedent in dealing with heads of state. It will have dangerous repercussions, not only on Sudan but on the whole region,” Youssef said.

He chaired the meeting convened by the 22-member Arab League to discuss the charges.

In his opening statement, Youssef criticised what he branded “the double standards” of the international community, saying that “the world watches Palestinian suffering without moving” to end it.

Extermination charges

Al-Bashir was charged on July 14 that he waged a campaign of extermination against three Darfur tribes that claimed up to 300,000 lives and drove 2.5 million people from their homes.

A three-judge panel from the ICC is expected to take two to three months to decide whether to issue an arrest warrant.

The charges against al-Bashir came a year after the court indicted Ahmed Harun, Sudan’s humanitarian affairs minister, who was formerly in charge of security in Darfur, and suspected militia leader Ali Kushayb on crimes against humanity.Arab foreign ministers were expected to discuss a proposal calling on al-Bashir to hand over two Darfur war-crimes suspects to the court in an effort to fend off the longtime leader’s own prosecution.

Al-Samani al-Wasiyla, Sudan’s minister of foreign affairs, after a brief meeting with his Egyptian counterpart Ahmed Abul-Gheit, said that “the Arab position is completely united” in condemning al-Bashir’s indictment.

Just before the Arab League meeting convened, Yemen’s lower house of parliament condemned the charges against al-Bashir as legally groundless.

A resolution passed by the 301-seat Yemeni Assembly of Representatives dismissed them as a “complete falsehood and an infringement on Sudan’s internal affairs”.

It said that the charges were “part of a plot targeting Arab and Muslim nations”.

July 22, 2008

Charges of Genocide Interfering with Peace

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 10:08 pm

There is an ongoing struggle with the International Courts charging the President Al-Bashir with Genocide and Crimes against Humanity.  Some are suggesting that to indict al-Bashir at this time would do much to undermine the peace talks that are underway.  If the world community indicts and arrests al-Bashir for criminal intent and activities, will his government withdraw from the peace process and committ furthter crimes against the peoples of Darfur?  Definition of genocide and crimes against humanity, timing of accusations. charges, and indictments, and when to intervene all are driven by the element of timing.  When is enough–enough?  Will and when will geocide ever end, if politics and definition allow acts to go un-reported and are softend unde the veil of denial and expediency?

David

July 17, 2008

New Classes

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 1:02 pm

Two classes of interest will be featured on this blog in the Fall term.  One is PSY 299 Special Studies: The Psychology of Genocide.  The text will be Will Genocide Ever End?  The other class is a Sociology Class on Death and Dying.  It will be an inquiry into American attitudes about death and dying and ultimately living.  Different faith’s perspective on death and dying will be discussed.

I am looking forward to being involved in these classes.

Remember:  There is no way to peace.  Peace is the way!

Genocide in Sundan Darfur

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 12:55 pm

It seems as if the government and possibly people of Sudan are resisting the implications of genocide charges having been brought against their president, Omar al-Bashir. It will be interesting to see how and when he is arrested and how the international community will respond. This is an opportunity to live part of history. If the situation in Darfur has not been criminally genocide and crimes against humanity, let the truth be known.  Now is the time to bring light to all the facts of this terrible situation.

david

July 15, 2008

Sudan

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 6:57 pm

The International Criminal Court has filed genocide charges against Sudan’s president,  Omar al-Bashir.

So far, the government of the United States has been ambivalent about these charges and its support of the ICC’s action against al–Bashir.

As has been pointed out in the course work for the Psychology of Genocide, hesitation and denial have long fed into the intensity of genocide and its propagation.

Time will tell if the United States has the moral courage and fortitude to speak out against these crimes against humanity as it has against such crimes in countries like Iraq.

What will we do as a nation after hundreds of thousands have died at the hands of this regieme?

There is no way to Peace.  Peace is the way!

David

July 2, 2008

Iran next?

Filed under: Uncategorized — peaceclass @ 12:24 pm

There is much speculation that the current administration is planning an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities: either directly or through Israel’s action attacking and bombing the facility and responding in a way that supports such acts of aggression.

America is involved in a two-front war in Iraq and in Afghanistan at this time.  War/Combat/Military Action, or any other invented euphemism against a well-armed and supplied Iranian military would be folly at any time–let alone at this time.  Peace requires new thinking and not the same logic that has proven less than successful in current mid-east/anti-terror.  Is America safer?  Will the old-state/new state thought process of defeated empires and nation-states lead to pre-genocidal conditions?  Food for thought.  History has a way of repeating itself.

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