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Milosevic
Trial: Paramilitary Sex Crimes Alleged
By Stacy Sullivan in The Hague
May 8, 2003 (IWPRs Tribunal Update)
When witness B-1461 took the stand to testify against Slobodan Milosevic
on May 6, he didn't seem angry or intimidated by the prospect of
confronting the former president in the dock.
Rather, the 35-year-old farmer's tone was matter-of-fact as he told
the court that how Serbian troops rounded up all the Muslim men
in his eastern Bosnian village and locked them in a nearby cultural
centre where they were beaten, stabbed and forced to perform oral
sex on one another.
While stories of expulsion, imprisonment, rape and murder are almost
commonplace at the war crimes tribunal, witness B-1461's testimony
shocked the most jaded observers - and even rattled the usually
unflappable Milosevic.
Until the spring of 1992, B-1461 lived in Divic, a farming hamlet
on the bank of the Drina River just outside of Zvornik. The village
was home to around 300 families, most of whom were Muslim.
That March - shortly after Bosnia held a referendum on independence
- B-1461 said the residents of Divic saw Yugoslav army troops digging
in along the riverbank on the Serbian side of the Drina.
Soon, barricades went up in town, shelling and shooting began and
corpses began to float down the river, he said. The worried villagers
then formed a crisis staff, an ad hoc local administration, to defend
Divic in the event of a Serbian attack.
B-1461 said the villagers collected around 20 rifles, some of which
were privately owned and others which were "given to us by
the municipality".
On April 18, a Serb official visited Divic and demanded that the
villagers hand over their weapons. They refused, and eight days
later, Serbian troops attacked.
"The army came into the village and asked all men to assemble
in front of the mosque," B-1461 said. They were again asked
to surrender their weapons, and this time they complied.
In May, the paramilitaries returned and told the residents to leave
on the grounds that it was no longer safe for them to remain. The
soldiers assembled 11 buses and forced 500 men, women and children
to board them for what was to be a one-way trip to Olovo, a town
in Muslim-controlled territory.
The convoy, however, was stopped en route in the village of Han
Pijesak - where the Bosnian Serb army was headquartered - and forced
to turn back because of fighting. A trip to Tuzla the following
day was also stopped by hostilities, and the vehicles turned back
for Zvornik.
There, 174 men were separated from the women and children and taken
to a small room in the sports stadium's administration building.
While the space was large enough to accommodate the men standing
up, the witness explained, there was not enough room for them to
sit or to lie down during the nearly three days they were held there
- with little food and water.
At one point, 11 men were taken out of the room, allegedly to accompany
soldiers to their houses to search for weapons. They were never
seen again.
The remaining 163 were bused to Celopek, where they were locked
up in the town's cultural centre after being forced to give up their
ID papers and all other personal documents, as well as belts and
shoelaces, money, jewelry and anything else in their possession.
Over the next month, groups or men in military uniforms visited
the building to interrogate, beat and torture the men, B-1461 said.
The most regular visitor was Dusan Vuckovic, who was known by the
nickname Repic - which means ponytail in Serbo-Croatian. B-1461
told the court that Repic and his gang took sadistic pleasure in
beating the torturing the prisoners, often stabbing them in the
hands and thighs. The witness himself was stabbed in both hands.
During the Muslim holidays of Bajram on June 10-11, Repic came into
the cultural centre and asked all the fathers and sons to assemble
on the stage. The men were forced to strip, then perform oral sex
on one another.
"First the fathers had to give it to their sons, then the sons
to the fathers," the witness said. "They made the rest
of us watch."
After a while, B-1461 said Repic began choosing people at random
and sent them up on the stage to perform oral sex on one another.
In a description that shocked the courtroom, B-1461 described, without
emotion, how Repic and the others forced the prisoners to bite off
their friends' genitals.
"The asked one man to show the penis he had bitten off, then
forced him to swallow it," B-1461 said. "They made one
man push the handle of a broom into the behind of another."
Also on Bajram, Repic asked several men to take part in fistfights.
B-1461 said they ordered his father to fight his neighbour. When
the two men refused to hit each other, Repic's men said they would
beat the prisoners instead.
B-1461's neighbour was so severely injured that he fell into a coma
and eventually died. The witness' father survived, only to be killed
during a later attack.
"I think it was June 26, St. Vitus Day," B-1461 said,
referring to a holiday commemorating the anniversary of the battle
of Kosovo Polje when Serbian forces were defeated by the invading
Ottoman army.
Repic had arrived at the cultural centre at around 4 pm and demanded
information from the inmates. When none was forthcoming, the soldier
opened fire, killing several and wounding many others. B-1461 later
found his father among the dead.
The surviving prisoners were then transferred to Zvornik before
being taken to a camp in Batkovic in mid-July.
During his year-long stay, the camp was visited by the International
Committee of the Red Cross, which brought vital supplies to the
inmates. However, the witness claimed that all prisoners aged more
than 60 or under 16 years of age were taken away and hidden before
each visit, returning only after the aid workers
had left.
Although conditions were better in Batkovic than they were in Celopek,
inmates were still subjected to abuse - regular beatings and interrogations.
The witness was eventually released in a prisoner exchange.
During his cross-examination, Milosevic asked B-1461 if he was aware
that Repic was a well-known criminal who had already been punished
by the Serbian authorities.
When the witness replied that he had heard about this while he was
in Batkovic, Milosevic snapped back, "It doesn't matter where
you learned it. Are you aware of it? I want to inform you that when
the authorities in Serbia found out about their crimes, they tracked
down the perpetrators and punished them."
The former Serbian president then turned to address presiding judge
Justice Richard May, saying, "These men were prosecuted for
their war crimes, so I don't understand why this witness has come
to testify against me."
Judge May then asked Milosevic if he wanted to cross-examine the
witness or not.
Milosevic said that he did, and went on to ask the witness questions
about membership of the Muslim Party of Democratic Action, SDA,
whether he knew any of the municipal officials in Zvornik and if
he recalled the outcome of the first multi-party elections in Yugoslavia
- events B-1461 denied knowledge of.
Judge May again interrupted and asked Milosevic to limit his questioning
to the witness' testimony.
The defendant replied, "I and the authorities of Serbia punished
[those responsible for what the witness suffered in detention] a
decade ago. It's sick what happened - enough to turn the stomach
of any normal person but I have nothing to ask about it."
Stacy Sullivan is IWPR's project manager in The Hague.
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