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Snuffysmith
Karadzic Fingered At Last

By Daniel Simpson

23/07/08 -- - ICH -- -I never met Radovan Karadzic, though like many in the Balkans, I did once pretend to try and find him.

His trademark bouffant vanished long before I first set foot in Bosnia, a decade too late to see Serbs douse Sarajevo with anti-aircraft cannon, if not the "armed trees" of Dr Karadzic's warped poetic prophecy.

A psychiatrist, his delusions started early. Born in a Montenegrin stable, as World War II spawned Socialist Yugoslavia, his role model wasn't just his father Vuk, a Serbian militiaman who fought both the Nazis and the Partisan resistance. In time, he grew to see himself as heir to a far more celebrated Vuk Karadzic: the poet, folklorist and father of Serbian orthography.

By the outbreak of war in 1992, this linguist namesake's spirit had long since possessed Dr Karadzic, who was lured into politics in the 1960s by an infamous nationalist writer. Visitors to his mountain redoubt were regaled with folk tales of Serbian suffering, as well as claims that Bosnia's Muslims were slaughtering themselves, or fleeing their homes in gratitude to join ethnic kin elsewhere. Some were even treated to his singing. From a lopsided gawp, the Bosnian Serb leader would wail about his people's historical woes, mawkish epics backed by a single-stringed lyre called a gusle, the traditional grating accompaniment to Balkan laments.

The peasants these anthems eulogised were all that remained when I arrived. And they weren't about to betray their hero to prying outsiders, even for a $5 million bounty. For years, Dr Karadzic had roamed the wilds of Serb-run eastern Bosnia, unhindered by thousands of NATO soldiers who'd been sent to police the peace. He'd disguised himself as a priest, some said, shorn of his grey shock and sporting a beard. Others reported "sightings" worthy of Elvis: in cafés, at funerals, and even poetry readings. But if they'd phoned them in to NATO, the response had never been swift enough to threaten capture. Rewards seemed no match for the smuggled loot that bought Europe's most notorious fugitive freedom to do as he pleased.

Or did it? While there's little doubt Dr Karadzic stole a fortune, having been convicted of fraud and embezzlement before the war, he wasn't just an outlaw holed up with mercenaries, defying wary pursuers to take casualties. The weather-beaten folk he went to ground amongst had been reared on tales of centuries of relentless oppression. Even if they loathed the man they loved his cause: the avenging of bygone misfortunes, by wanton aggression if needs be.

"They can look for him as much as they want, but they'll never find him," a gap-toothed woman told me a few years ago, in one of the shacks that comprised a place called Celebici, where Dr Karadzic was said to have stayed. "He was a good man. People will protect him."

He also had friends in higher places than these remote mountain hamlets, whether in Serbia or further afield. According to his wife Ljiljana, who still runs the Bosnian Serb Red Cross, when he went to ground in 1997 it was because "he had an agreement with Richard Holbrooke." Bill Clinton's Balkan envoy denies this was part of the deal he struck to end the war, but she claims Mr Holbrooke promised "the U.S. would leave him alone if he withdrew from the post of president of the Bosnian Serb Republic," despite his indictment for genocide.

Serbian officials said the same. Others pointed fingers at pro-Serb France, whose legionnaires patrolled the wilds where Dr Karadzic hid, before he slipped across the border and moved to Belgrade, only to be arrested now that Serbia's bid to join the European Union seems viable.

Occasionally there'd been shoot-outs, and rumours of attempted raids, but NATO mostly targeted Mrs Karadzic and her son, whom it dubbed the renegade leader's "support network". When the French said in 2004 they were preparing to pounce, Serbia asked them to transfer Dr Karadzic to The Hague, recalled the spokeswoman for the tribunal's former prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte. However, she wrote in her memoirs, this aroused "the great displeasure of the Americans, who intervened to suspend the operation." Once again this was promptly denied, along with several similar allegations, variously levelled at Washington, Paris and Moscow.

Whatever the truth of them, NATO troops were effectively told not to look for Dr Karadzic, or other suspects, but to arrest them only if encountered "in the course of their normal duties". Since there's only one dirt road into the south-eastern border mountains, and it passes through a Serb town synonymous with war crimes, all of which the police chief denies happened, this seemed somewhat improbable.

The NATO commander at the time, an American general called John Sylvester, conceded as much when I met him. "When we go in there, obviously we are recognised as 'them,' 'they,' 'somebody else,'" he said. "That makes it difficult to go in on his turf and find him." Still, he insisted, "we've been looking real hard now for about three years". That was 2002.

"Of course," Ms Del Ponte said last year, "Karadzic could have been easily arrested until 1998, but no one wanted to." The reason was simple, she said: "The fear of renewed unrest, which could have put our own soldiers in harm's way."

A year earlier, Britain's Ambassador to Bosnia had sought permission to talk to Dr Karadzic, believing he could persuade him to surrender before he vanished. "I would have been the first senior international Serbian speaker he would have met," said the envoy, Charles Crawford, who has since retired from diplomatic service. The British foreign secretary, Robin Cook, liked the idea, Crawford said, but "allowed himself to be bamboozled" by mandarins, who urged him to ask his counterpart in Washington. Mr Cook duly "consulted Madeleine Albright, who said no."

Another American denial. What lies behind it, like all the others, remains unclear. Perhaps once Dr Karadzic goes on trial, we'll finally get to hear about what's been keeping him.



Daniel Simpson was a reporter for the New York Times in the Balkans during 2002 and 2003
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20340.htm
graham4anything
shows that anyone who commits crimes against humanity, war crimes, better fear that eventually they shall be caught

may the last 28 years people in America who did or enabled them, fear every single day for the rest of their time...

you will be caught. might take a while... but justice will be done and you will be brought to
trial.
Snuffysmith
Mladic Heads Most-wanted List - Adam LeBor, The Times

The arrest of Radovan Karadzic is the strongest signal yet that the net is steadily closing in on his military commander, the former General Ratko Mladic. Mr Mladic, 65, is now the UN war crimes tribunal's most wanted fugitive. He is charged, alongside Dr Karadzic, with war crimes and genocide including the siege of Sarajevo, “ethnic cleansing” in Bosnia and the massacre of up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys after the fall of Srebrenica, in eastern Bosnia, in July 1995. Squat, bull-necked and radiating belligerence and a messianic belief in the righteousness of his actions, Mr Mladic preferred a muddy trench on the front lines to hobnobbing with diplomats. He and Dr Karadzic loathed each other but were locked in a dark embrace. He viewed Dr Karadzic as a profiteer, growing fat on the Serbs' suffering. Dr Karadzic claimed that Mr Mladic had lost his mind on the front lines.
Net Closes in on Karadzic's General - The Australian

Belgrade has pledged to quickly apprehend Serbian war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic as Serb nationalists clashed with riot police over the capture of former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic. Karadzic's lawyer, Sveta Vujacic, said last night his client would defend himself before the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague, where he will answer 11 charges, including genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. That has set up the prospect of Karadzic using the courtroom in The Hague as a soapbox to preach his Serb nationalism and to seek to rewrite the history of the Balkan wars in the same way his one-time ally Slobodan Milosevic did during his ill-fated trial. The charges relate to his leadership of the Serbian campaign of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia in the 1992-95 war, which left 100,000 dead and two million mainly Bosnian Muslims uprooted.
Why Now and Who's Next? - Sonja Pace, Voice of America

The lawyer for former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic say he will conduct his own defense before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague, where he faces charges of genocide and war crimes committed in Bosnia in the 1990s. Karadzic was arrested near Belgrade on Monday and could be extradited to The Hague within days, but the fact that he's been on the run for nearly 13 years and working and living in Belgrade in disguise raises questions over who knew, why he was arrested now and whether his one time military commander, Ratko Mladic, might soon face the same fate. The Serbian government has said it is preparing to extradite Karadzic to The Hague. He faces charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for his part in the Bosnian war of the 1990s. He and his one-time military commander, Ratko Mladic are specifically linked to the Srebrenica massacre of 1995 in which 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed and to the nearly four-year-long siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo, in which it is estimated that more than 10,000 people were killed. Mladic remains at large and James Lyon says there must be continued pressure for his arrest.
Karadzic will Defend Himself - Harry de Quetteville, Daily Telegraph

The lawyer for Radovan Karadzic said the former Bosnian Serb leader would defend himself against charges of genocide at the International Criminal Tribunal. Mr Karadzic's lawyer also promised to delay his extradition to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) as long as possible, but it seems certain he will arrive in The Hague within a week. "Karadzic will have a legal team in Serbia that will help him with his defence but he will defend himself," the lawyer said. Once in The Hague, he will enter a legal process that in all likelihood will occupy the rest of his days.
Former Serb Leader to Represent Himself - Simons and Bilefsky, New York Times

A lawyer for Radovan Karadzic said on Wednesday that his client, newly shorn of the bushy white hair and beard that disguised him for years, would defend himself in any war crimes trial if he was handed over to the United Nations tribunal here. “He is convinced that with the help of God he will win,” the lawyer, Svetozar Vujacic, said in Belgrade, the Serbian capital. Mr. Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb leader, was arrested on Monday after nearly 13 years as a fugitive.
Daily Telegraph update on the capture of Radovan Karadzic. Karadzic and War’s Lessons - Roger Cohen, New York Times opinion

After covering a war, a friend said, buy yourself a house. I did. I came to this French village where church bells chime the rhythm of the days, married here, raised children and parked Bosnia somewhere in a corner of my mind. I had to forget. I had to write a book, so the horror would never be forgotten, in order to forget just enough to go on. There is always a measure of guilt in survival when so many have died. There are faces, in death and bereavement, that can never be eclipsed. It’s peaceful here. I’d been out watching crows in the stubble when I returned to discover Radovan Karadzic had been arrested in Belgrade, 13 years after the end of the war, to face charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.
Just a Moral Hypocrite - Rosa Brooks, Los Angeles Times opinion

He looks like a cross between Santa Claus and a New Age guru, and he calls himself an alternative healer. But Radovan Karadzic, who was arrested in Serbia on Monday, stands accused of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity. To those who know his history, Karadzic, former president of the "Republika Srpska" and one of the chief architects of the brutal Bosnian war, is the man who brought the concentration camp back to Europe and ordered Europe's worst massacre since World War II (in 1995, Bosnian-Serb forces slaughtered more than 7,000 unarmed Bosnian Muslim men and boys near Srebrenica). With Karadzic's approval, torture and starvation became routine methods of prisoner control, organized mass rape became a spectator sport and snipers were authorized to fire on children during the siege of Sarajevo. Karadzic's arrest was long overdue. He was indicted by the UN's International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia at The Hague 13 years ago, and since then, he had hidden in plain sight, protected by tolerant Serbian officials. At some point, Karadzic even stopped bothering with his once-heavy security detail: He simply replaced his trademark bouffant hairdo with a jolly white beard, took up acupuncture and holistic medicine and opened a practice as a New Age healer.
War Crimes and Punishment - Chandler Rosenberger, National Review opinion

So where was Radovan Karadzic all this time? Karadzic was arrested on a bus Monday afternoon in Belgrade, where, behind the cunning disguise of a long white beard, he had been practicing alternative medicine - an apparent career change from his previous occupations as sports psychologist and, later, as murderous president of the Bosnian Serb Republic. Karadzic had never been too hard to find. In 1996 the BBC’s Robin Lustig drove to the gates of his home in suburban Belgrade and requested an interview. There were florid tales of how Karadzic, like some hero of an epic poem, had donned the cassock of an Orthodox monk and had scurried from monastery to monastery. But the truth turned out to be more mundane. We now know that Karadzic was a brutal thug who had lived rather openly in a country that had grown weary of suffering for his crimes.
Marching Toward Freedom - Stephen Schwartz, Weekly Standard opinion
An interesting pair of events took place on Monday, July 22: President George W. Bush welcomed Kosovo's Albanian leaders, President Fatmir Sejdiu and Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, to the White House. Bush was all smiles, declaring, "I'm a strong supporter of Kosovo's independence. I'm against any partition of Kosovo. I believe strongly that the United Nations mission must be transferred to the EU as quickly as possible." Then late that night, Serbia announced the arrest of its number-two indicted war criminal, the Bosnian Serb poet and government psychiatrist Radovan Karadzic, with the declared intention of turning him over for trial at the UN Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia in The Hague. The Serbian action is one indication that Bush was right on the money: The stronger the US support for a Kosovo whole and free, the harder it is for Serbia to press its continuing claim to this former Serbian province.
Snuffysmith
Case Offers Court Chance to Repair Image - Sullivan and Finn, Washington Post

The arrest of Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb leader accused of genocide and crimes against humanity, offers a major test -- and, some say, a shot at redemption -- for the huge and costly international court that will try him. Its last big-name defendant, former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, at times seemed to be in control of his own trial, turning normally somber proceedings into a freewheeling forum in order to air his many political grievances. It was a public relations disaster for the UN-affiliated International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, which spends more than $300 million a year. Created by a 1993 UN resolution, the tribunal has indicted 161 people in connection with the Balkans wars of the 1990s, the worst violence in Europe since World War II. The court has a $310 million annual budget and more than 1,100 employees from 82 countries. Critics have accused it of being too expensive and ineffective, bringing too few people to justice in view of its vast resources; Milosevic gave it a reputation for unruliness and indecision that lingers today.
Snuffysmith
Arresting Developments
Richard Byrne
July 23, 2008 | web only
The capture of Radovan Karadzic, a primary architect of the vicious war in Bosnia, could transform the Balkans. But the U.S. and Europe must beware of overplaying a good hand.

From the archives: Richard L. Bosco on the challenges of rebuilding a country where memories of genocide still linger.

Karadzic attending a conference while living undercover as a doctor of alternative medicine. (AP Photo/Kikinda Television)

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