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Jury Still Out on Tribunal's
Success
Now There's Record of What Happened in Former Yugoslavia
by Don Melvin
November 13, 2005 - (Cox News Service) Everything in this courtroom
in the Hague, Netherlands — the rules, the decorum, the judges
in scarlet robes — seems a world away from the battlefield
blood, murder and mayhem around which these proceedings revolve.
But observers say the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia has accomplished a great deal. It has forged a new area
of international law, threatening consequences for those who would
commit crimes with impunity on the battlefield. Military commanders
have something to think about even in the heat of war. "It's
almost an assumption now that there will be a justice mechanism
after conflict," said Edgar Chen, of the Washington-based non-profit
Coalition for International Justice.
Through the testimony of 4,000 witnesses, the tribunal has created
an incontrovertible historical record of what happened in the former
Yugoslavia — no small accomplishment in a land where competing
historical myths have so often caused blood to be shed. But the
tribunal has not been an unalloyed success. It was slow to explain
itself to the people of the region. It became a divisive issue between
those who thought the proceedings were necessary and those who viewed
them as victor's justice, a mechanism by which those who won the
wars could punish those who lost.
The trial of former Yugoslav and Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic,
charged with genocide in Bosnia and war crimes in Kosovo and Croatia,
will soon enter its fourth year — an indication, some say,
that the process has defects. About 61 percent of Bosnians polled
last spring said they were dissatisfied with the tribunal's slow
pace of prosecutions. Half said the tribunal's work was helping
either very little or not at all in moving Bosnia's ethnic groups
toward forgiveness.
The two most prominent figures accused with crimes in connection
with the Bosnian conflict are still on the lam: former Bosnian President
Radovan Karadzic and his top military commander, Ratko Mladic, both
of whom have been charged with genocide in connection with the massacre
of 8,000 Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica in July 1995. Both are
thought to be receiving assistance from Serb nationalists and benefiting
from a reluctance of national governments to arrest them. In October,
Karadzic published a book of poems, Under the Left Breast of the
Century.
The tribunal was set up in 1993 by a resolution of the U.N. Security
Council. While its mandate has expanded to include crimes committed
in Croatia and Kosovo, its initial focus was mass killings and systematic
rape in Bosnia. Bosnia has accounted for the bulk of its work. So
far, 161 people have been indicted. The tribunal does not keep count
of where crimes occurred. But the Coalition for International Justice
estimates that 126 of those were charged with crimes in Bosnia.
The trials are held in a big stone building in The Hague that used
to house an insurance company. Visitors must pass through security
twice, once when entering the building and a second time upon entering
the area that houses the courtrooms. Of the 161 charged, Karadzic,
Mladic and five others remain at large. Of the remaining defendants:
•Thirty-two have been transferred to prisons of various countries
to serve their sentences (15 of them have finished their sentences).
•Seventy-nine are awaiting trial, either in detention or on
provisional release.
•Three have been transferred for trial to one of the countries
in the region — a process the tribunal hopes to accelerate
as local justice systems are strengthened.
•Thirty-five had their indictments withdrawn when they died.
•Five have been acquitted, either at trial or on appeal.
The tribunal has a staff of about 1,200. Its budget has risen over
the years to nearly $136 million in 2004. It hopes to complete its
work by 2008. Jim Landale, a tribunal spokesman, said its work has
been "a huge cathartic process in the region."
Other observers are more nuanced in their comments. "I think
it's an essential part of the process of reconciliation," said
Janet Anderson of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting. "However,
the physical distance between the tribunal and the countries it's
dealing with, and the perceived distance between reality on the
ground and 'international justice' with robed judges, is so great
that I think we have a long way to go." But, she added, "I
think it's set an example, it's blazed a trail, which means you
now have a recognition in all the Balkans that war crimes must be
dealt with."
From: http://www.globalpolicy.org/intljustice/tribunals/yugo/2005/1113success.htm
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