BosNet NEWS: Update On War Crimes
Subject: BosNet NEWS: Update On War Crimes
CONTENTS
[01] New Mass Grave Found In Northwest Bosnia Cave
[02] New Indictments Expected From War Crimes Tribunal
[01] New Mass Grave Found In Northwest Bosnia Cave
21 March, 1996
LUSCI PALANKA, Bosnia-Herzegovina
A suspected mass grave has been found in a deep cave in
northwestern Bosnia near one of the worst Serb death camps. Investigators
say it could contain the remains of up to 120 Muslims and Croats. In an
apparent attempt to conceal the grave, someone threw the bodies of animals
and rubbish on top of the human remains and set off an explosion at the
cave, a Bosnian war crimes researcher says. The Bosnian government war
crimes committee, which found the site near the village of Lusci Palanka,
claimed the animal remains were a ploy by the Serbs to mask the cave's
true horrors.
The committee gave APTV a videotape showing the inside of a deep
cave containing piles of bones. One of the researchers was shown holding
what he said was part of a human spine. Another Bosnian war crimes
researcher, Refik Hodzic, spoke to APTV last weekend from the site. "The
problem is that the site of the cave has been ruined by a big
detonation... by whoever tried to cover the traces of this crime," he
said. "On top of it they have thrown bodies of animals and rubbish, so it
would be very hard to find the remains of the bodies under all that
stuff," Hodzic said. He estimates there are up to 120 bodies in the cave.
Cave is Near Omarska Detention Camp The cave is near Omarska, one
of the most notorious Serb-run camps. The detention camp was closed in
late 1992 following international outrage over pictures of emaciated
inmates. 11,500 people are missing from Omarska. Survivors of the camp
claim prisoners were brutally killed on a daily basis. Bosnian authorities
believe that two busloads of men who dissapeared from the Omarska camp on
the eve of its closure could be buried in Lusci Palanka.
Jadranka Cigelj, a Bosnian Croat lawyer who survived Omarska and
now lives in Zagreb, Croatia, gathers evidence to help war crimes
investigators. She said large trucks would drive away bodies daily "in a
direction unknown to us at the time .... those who died during the day of
their injuries, and at night those who were killed. On average there were
20 to 30 bodies every day," she said.
Cigelj accused two Bosnian Serbs of being directly responsible for
the deaths: Mirko Babic, who was in charge of the Omarska mine at the time
and Zeljko Mejakic, commander of security at the camp. Both are among the
53 people indicted by an international war crimes tribunal based in The
Hague. "They often sent us to clean... the blood. The walls, the
furniture, the floors-everything was sprayed with blood," Cigelj recalled.
Survivor told of Burial Site Bosnian authorities said they had
known for some time of the existence of the suspected grave site near
Lusci Palanka from a man who claimed to have survived a shooting there.
But the site was only recently discovered. Bosnian officials hope that
exhumation of the grave site and others in the area could start next month
as the ground thaws. Exhumation of suspected mass grave sites is
considered crucial to determining what happened to the 27,000 people
reported missing in Bosnia's war.
The head of the Bosnian war crimes committee, Bekir
Gavrankapetanovic, said excavations have to be coordinated with the war
crimes tribunal. Tribunal spokesman Christian Chartier said it is
interested in participating in exhumations "if graves are related to
ongoing investigations or indictments."
[02] New Indictments Expected From War Crimes Tribunal
21 March, 1996
THE HAGUE, Netherlands
The U.N. war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia said on
Thursday it would make important announcements on Friday, a phrase it
usually employs to signal new indictments. Earlier this week the tribunal
said it expected to issue indictments soon against two men arrested in
Munich and Vienna on suspicion of war crimes against Serbs in Bosnia in
1992.
Action on Krsmanovic is Due Soon
Prosecutors must also decide by April 3 whether to indict or
release Bosnian Serb Colonel Aleksa Krsmanovic who is being held as a war
crimes suspect at the tribunal's detention centre. Krsmanovic and General
Djordje Djukic were captured on January 30 by Bosnian government forces
who later handed them over to the tribunal. Djukic was charged on March 1
with crimes relating to the 43-month Serb siege of Sarajevo in which more
than 10,000 people are believed to have died.
The tribunal-set up by the U.N. Security Council in May 1993-is
the first international body for the prosecution of war crimes since the
Nuremberg trials held after World War Two. It has no police force of its
own and relies on the former Yugoslav republics, other states or the
international peace implementation force (IFOR) in Bosnia to make arrests.
So far it has indicted 53 suspects-46 Serbs and seven Croats-including
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and his military commander General
Ratko Mladic. The tribunal currently holds just two indicted suspects at
its detention centre, Djukic and Bosnian Serb Dusan Tadic who is accused
of atrocities at the Omarska prison camp in Bosnia.
Vukovar Atrocities Highlighted
The U.N. war crimes tribunal heard that the massacre of 261 Croats
at Vukovar in eastern Croatia in 1991 marked the start of "ethnic
cleansing" in the Former Yugoslavia. Prosecutor Grant Niemann, speaking
at hearings in the case of three senior officers of the Yugoslav People's
Army (JNA) charged with the Vukovar killings, said the massacre had served
as a chilling blueprint for systematic mass murder. "It was the very
beginning of what became known as ethnic cleansing, planting the seeds of
genocide in the former Yugoslavia,'' he told the tribunal.
|