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SUSICA CAMP CHIEF NAMES MASS GRAVE
SITE
By Emir Suljagic in The Hague
Bosnian Serb prison commandant tells mother where her murdered
sons lie buried.
November 7, 2003 (IWPR'S TRIBUNAL UPDATE
No. 332) A former Bosnian Serb prison camp warden this week told
a mother how her two sons were killed, and where they were buried.
Dragan Nikolic, 47, who was known by the nickname Yankee, was commandant
of the infamous Susica camp near Vlasenica in eastern Bosnia from
about June, when it was established to imprison local Muslims and
other non-Serbs, to the end of September 1992, according to the
indictment against him.
Nikolic pleaded guilty on September 4 this year to four counts of
crimes against humanity. The first person ever to be indicted by
the Hague tribunal, he admitted guilt to some of the most gruesome
crimes of the Bosnian war.
In one of the most dramatic moments of tribunal history, Nikolic
was confronted at his November 3 sentencing hearing with a woman
who
asked him to reveal the whereabouts of her two sons.
The witness, Habiba Hadzic, 60, spent three months in the Susica
camp. When she left the camp in July 1992, her two sons Enes and
Bernes Hadzic remained behind. She never saw them again.
"They are not alive," she told the court.
"Yankee knows that, and I would beg him to tell me what mass
grave they are in, so I can give them a proper funeral."
The presiding judge, Wolfgang Schomburg adjourned the proceedings
and advised Nikolic's defence to ask him whether he would answer
the question.
After a short break, he came back and told Hadzic and the court
what had happened to her sons. "As far as her sons are concerned,
they were taken on September 30, 1992 to Debelo Brdo, and there
they were liquidated," he said, his eyes lowered.
The camp was being closed down, and the Hadzic brothers were among
a final group of about 40 prisoners who had survived months of torture
at Susica.
"Most of them did not have any identity papers. As far as I
can remember, one of her sons wore a denim jacket," Nikolic
told the court.
He told Habiba Hadzic that the 40 prisoners were buried where they
were killed, on the slopes of Debelo Brdo, a hill near his home
town of Vlasenica.
The court also saw two other Susica victims testify, both under
pseudonyms, about living conditions inside the camp.
A woman, referred to in court only as SU-032, told of how she was
repeatedly raped by camp guards while she was held at the camp with
her eight-year-old son.
The first time this happened, she said it was Nikolic who picked
her out and took her to a guard's hut, where she was raped by one
of the camp guards. This happened the next day and the day after
again.
Su-032's son found out later what had happened. She told the court
that he had sustained psychological damage and now suffers from
depression. "He often talks about suicide," she said.
When the women were released from the camp, SU-032's sister was
taken off the bus at a Serb checkpoint and she never saw her again.
A witness for the defence, psychologist Nancy Grosslfinger told
the court that judging by her conversations with Nikolic, he now
feels remorse for what he did. "He told me he could not explain
why he had done it," she said.
According to Grosslfinger, Nikolic told her that he started feeling
shame for what he had done at the time the camp was closed in late
September 1992, and that he felt relieved by admitting his guilt.
The psychologist said that when she asked Nikolic what he could
do now, he told her that "it would be too little and too late".
As a result of his guilty plea, prosecution and defence asked the
court to sentence Nikolic to 15 years in prison.
In his closing arguments, lead prosecutor Upawansa Yapa told the
judges that Nikolic had behaved brutally towards his victims. Some
of them were forced to wash his feet, others were beaten and refused
food.
The court also called as its witness Dr Ulrich Seiber, a law expert
from the Max Plank Institute, who has researched legal practice
in former Yugoslavia. Dr Seiber said that someone who committed
similar crimes in the former Yugoslav republics could expect courts
there to hand
down a sentence of between 33 and 36 and a half years in prison,
depending on whether he pleaded guilty.
Addressing the court, Nikolic expressed his remorse once again.
"I only know how I feel about what I have done," he said.
"I feel ashamed, because in the Susica camp there was myself
on one side, armed and uniformed. On the other there were women
my mother's age, children, and friends I grew up with."
Apologising to his victims, Nikolic said he hoped that his victims
would understand that his remorse was sincere, "We should never
forget the victims. I had many friends among them. I hope I will
be given the opportunity to contribute to lessening their suffering."
Emir Suljagic is an IWPR reporter in The Hague.
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