Radovan Karadzic | Radovan Karadzic | International A.N.S.W.E.R | Home Front: Politix | 20060501 | Link |
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New Zealand mosque attack suspect visited Croatia, police say, death toll rises to 50 | |||||
2019-03-17 | |||||
[AlAhram] The Australian holy warrior suspected of carrying out the New Zealand mosque massacre visited Croatia just over two years ago, police told the Hina news agency on Saturday. Brenton Tarrant was charged in court on Saturday, with Sherlocks now trying to piece together how his holy warrior views managed to go undetected by the intelligence services. "The police have information about the movements of this person in December 2016 and January 2017," a spokeswoman for Croatia police said. Earlier on Saturday, local media said Tarrant had visited Zagreb during that period as well as several other towns on Croatia's Adriatic coast, including Zadar, Sibenik and Dubrovnik. Croatian Sherlocks are looking into the reasons for his visit, Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic told HRT national television. On Friday, Bulgaria also began investigating a recent visit by Tarrant between November 9-15 last year, claiming he wanted "to visit historical sites and study the history of the Balkan country," chief prosecutor Sotir Tsatsarov said. He had also made a short visit to the Balkans from December 28-30, 2016, travelling by bus across Serbia, Croatia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina, they said. Media reports said the gunman had listened to a Serbian song about convicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic en route to the massacre, and also had the names of two historical Serbian and Montenegro leaders written in Cyrillic on his gun. Ethnic hatreds fuelled the bloody dissolution of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, sparking wars that left 130,000 dead and displaced millions as borders were redrawn.
The suspected assailant visited Bulgaria from November 9-15 last year claiming he wanted "to visit historical sites and study the history of the Balkan country", Bulgaria's public prosecutor Sotir Tsatsarov said, adding that the inquiry would establish if this was "correct or if he had other objectives."
Coleman didn't specify the comments he was referring to. Yiannopoulos said on Facebook that attacks like Christchurch happen because "the establishment panders to and mollycoddles extremist leftism and barbaric, alien religious cultures." Lawmakers within Australia's conservative government had been quarreling in recent weeks on whether the firebrand commentator should be allowed to tour Australia this year.
A TRT investigation shows that he included the name of Alexandre Bissonnette on his rifle. In 2017, Bissonnette murdered six people at a mosque in Canada. He also added Anton Lundlin Pettersson ‐ a student who murdered two migrant children in Sweden ‐ onto the stock of the gun. According to Italia’s The Local, he also added the name Luca Traini onto one of his clips of ammunition. In 2018, Traini injured six people in a racially motivated attack on black people in Macerata. Death toll rises to 50 as New Zealand mourns mosque massacre victims [IsraelTimes] Two other suspects arrested not connected to Brenton Tarrant’s assault on Christchurch mosques, police say, amid outpouring of grief in shaken nation The death toll from horrifying shootings at two mosques in New Zealand rose to 50, police said Sunday, as Christchurch residents flocked to memorial sites and churches across the city Sunday to lay flowers and mourn the victims. The additional death was discovered as bodies were being removed from the mosques in the southern city, police said, with forensic officers from across New Zealand flying into the city to assist with the identification process. Another man arrested on Friday will appear in court on Monday on charges that are “tangential” to the attacks, though he was not believed to be involved in the shootings, Police Commissioner Mike Bush told reporters Sunday. Two other suspects arrested at a police cordon during the attacks when a firearm was found in their car were not directly involved in Tarrant’s assault, he added. One of the two, a woman, has been released, and a man remains in custody on firearms charges, Bush said. “At this moment, only one person has been charged in relation to these attacks,” he said. Fifty people were wounded in the carnage, and doctors have worked around the clock to treat the 36 people still hospitalized for gunshot wounds and other injuries sustained in the attacks. Muslims make up just one percent of New Zealand’s population.
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International-UN-NGOs | |
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic convicted of Srebrenica genocide, war crimes | |
2016-03-24 | |
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The International Criminal Court Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia did not, however, find evidence of Serbian forces' "genocidal intent" during the war in Bosnia, CNN reports. Karadzic, 70, who has been nicknamed the "Butcher of Bosnia," faced 11 counts of war crimes. He was allegedly behind the siege of Sarajevo, which left 11,000 dead, as well as the Srebrenica massacre, which took the lives of nearly 8,000 Muslim boys and men and was the worst mass killing in Europe since the Holocaust. Karadzic went into hiding in 1996, only to be discovered 12 years later heavily disguised in Belgrade, assuming a false identity as a "healer." He was extradited to the Hague and pleaded not guilty. His trial, which came to an end in 2014, lasted 500 days, and included evidence from 586 witnesses. | |
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Europe |
'I will be acquitted,' Karadzic tells court |
2014-10-03 |
[ARABNEWS] Radovan Karadzic did not know of the 1995 massacre of thousands of Moslems at Srebrenica, his lawyer said Thursday, with the former Bosnian Serb leader defiantly telling the UN tribunal he would be acquitted. "There is not a single piece of evidence that Dr. Karadzic planned or ordered the execution of prisoners (at Srebrenica), or that he knew about it," his legal adviser Peter Robinson told the Hague-based UN Yugoslav war crimes court. "In fact they (the events) were concealed from him and therefore he is not guilty of genocide," Robinson said in the second and final day of the defense's closing arguments before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). |
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Europe |
Genocide charge against Karadzic reinstated |
2013-07-12 |
![]() The decision by a five-judge appeals panel coincided with a ceremony in Srebrenica, where the recently identified remains of 409 victims were reburied. Karadzic and Bosnian Serb army commander Gen. Ratko Mladic face charges in their concurrent war crimes trials for their alleged roles in orchestrating the slaughter on July 11, 1995. In the appeals panel's ruling posted on the tribunal's website, the appellate judges cited evidence presented by the prosecution last year that Karadzic took part in meetings where "it had been decided that one-third of Muslims would be killed, one third would be converted to the Orthodox religion and a third will leave on their own," purging the proclaimed state of Republika Srpska of all Muslims. Karadzic was also involved in subjecting Muslim captives to inhumane and physically destructive conditions, packing hundreds in single rooms, denying them food and water and depriving them of toilets or bathing facilities, causing the spread of disease and death, the appellate judges noted. |
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Karadzic tells war crimes court he should be rewarded | |
2012-10-17 | |
THE HAGUE: Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic told the UN Yugoslav war crimes court on Tuesday that he should be rewarded as he had done everything to avoid war.
Arrested in 2008, Karadzic, 67, is notably on trial for his role in masterminding the massacre of almost 8,000 Muslim men and boys at the eastern Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica in July 1995. It was the worst atrocity on European soil since World War II. Bosnian Serb troops under the command of wartime general Ratko Mladic overran Dutch UN peacekeepers in the enclave and systematically killed their Muslim victims over several days. Although he does not deny that killings took place, Karadzic has always questioned the scale of the massacre and said he was unaware that those taken prisoner by Bosnian Serb forces would be executed. Karadzic is also being prosecuted by the UN court for his role in the 44-month siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo between May 1992 and November 1995 in which 10,000 people died under terrifying sniper and artillery fire. Like Mladic, he faces charges for his role in taking hostage UN observers and peacekeepers to use them as human shields during a NATO bombing campaign against Bosnian Serb targets in May and June 1995. | |
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Europe |
Defense Seeks Karadzic Acquittal, Says No Genocide in Bosnia |
2012-06-12 |
[An Nahar] Radovan Karadzic and his lawyers on Monday asked the Yugoslav war crimes court to acquit the former Bosnian Serb leader on all counts, arguing that no genocide took place in Bosnia in 1992. "Dr. Karadzic requests a judgment of acquittal pursuant to rule 98bis for counts one to 11," said his lawyer Peter Robinson at a public hearing at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague. "There was no genocide in the municipalities in Bosnia in 1992... there is no way the trial can conclude that Dr. Karadzic is guilty of genocide," he added. Once the most powerful leader among Bosnian Serbs, Karadzic, 66, faces 11 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes for his role in the conflict which left some 100,000 people dead and 2.2 million homeless. He is particularly wanted for masterminding the killings that followed the Serbs' capture of the eastern Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica in July 1995. |
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Europe |
Srebrenica survivors bury dead, want quick Mladic conviction |
2011-07-12 |
SREBRENICA, Bosnia: Thousands of grieving Bosnian Muslims on Monday buried hundreds of newly-identified victims of a notorious Balkan war massacre and expressed hope justice would finally be done now that Serb commander Ratko Mladic is on trial. Survivors and relatives of the dead wept in scorching heat at the scene of the Srebrenica atrocity, where the remains of 613 Muslim men and boys shot and bulldozed into the earth by Bosnian Serb forces 16 years ago were being buried. The bodies were only recently identified from mass graves. Having him (Mladic) behind bars brings some comfort but the true relief will come only once I find the body of my 18-year-old son who was sent to death by Mladic, said Munira Subasic, a member of the Mothers of Srebrenica group. Serb troops overran the eastern town, declared a United Nations safe haven, on July 11, 1995 and went on a week-long killing spree in nearby woods as a lightly-armed Dutch UN battalion protecting the town stepped aside. Mladic was arrested in neighboring Serbia in May, after years in hiding, and handed over to the UN war crimes tribunal. He and his political master, Radovan Karadzic, are on trial for genocide over Srebrenica and the 43-month siege of Sarajevo. Both have denied all charges. Subasic said she had begged Mladic to spare her son as his soldiers separated men from women, children and the elderly. He promised he would but did not keep the promise. I wish him a long life in prison to pay for this, she said. Subasic said she hoped a legal case brought by Srebrenica survivors against the Dutch state, now before that countrys supreme court, would finally be resolved. This will be yet another step forward in our fight for the truth, she said. An appeals court ruled last week that the Dutch state was responsible for the deaths in Srebrenica of three Bosnian men whose families had filed a legal case. If confirmed by the supreme court, the ruling paves the way for financial compensation and similar legal action from other Srebrenica survivors. |
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Serb general Mladic to boycott war crimes court | ||
2011-07-04 | ||
AMSTERDAM: Former Bosnian Serb army commander Ratko Mladic will boycott the UN war crimes court, where he is scheduled to enter a plea on Monday against charges of genocide during the Bosnian war, his lawyer said on Sunday. Arrested in May after 16 years on the run, Mladic formally was charged by the Yugoslavia tribunal in The Hague last month when the defiant general rejected war crimes charges against him as obnoxious and monstrous. Mladic is accused over a campaign to seize territory for Serbs after Bosnia, following Croatia, broke away from the Yugoslav federation in the 1990s as the Balkan state broke up during five years of war that killed at least 130,000 people. The 69-year-old career soldier is due to enter the plea after refusing to do so last month, but Belgrade-based attorney Milos Saljic said Mladic would boycott the hearing to demand that he be represented by his own defense lawyers.
If Mladic boycotts the hearing or refuses to enter a plea at Mondays hearing, judge Alphens Orie will likely enter one of not guilty for him.
The tribunal has no official indication or confirmation that Mladic is not going to appear so I am unable to comment, court spokeswoman Nerma Jelacic said. Mladic, who has said he was only defending his country and people during the 1992-5 Bosnia war, has lodged a list of preferred defense lawyers with the court, including Saljic and a Russian lawyer, but the tribunal is still verifying the qualifications and eligibility of the attorneys. Court-appointed lawyer Aleksandar Aleksic, who represented Mladic at his first hearing, will represent him on Monday. Mladic is accused in connection with the 43-month siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo and the massacre of 8,000 Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica Europes worst massacre since World War Two. Hague prosecutor Serge Brammertz has said Mladic used his power to commit brutal atrocities and must answer for it, but Serb nationalists believe Mladic defended the nation and did no worse than Croat or Bosnian Muslim army commanders. | ||
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Hague Recognises Propaganda's Role in Srebrenica Genocide | |||||||||||
2010-07-07 | |||||||||||
The news continued: "This took place after the Muslim side attacked the area outside the protected zone of Srebrenica and burned down some villages around the town. At this moment, the reception of the civilians and UNPROFOR representatives is going on. Everything is under control and in accordance with the Geneva Conventions. "Every armed man will be treated in accordance with international conventions. At this moment, the [Muslim] soldiers are giving up their arms. During the night, it is expected that even paramilitary forces around Zepa will give up fighting... Muslims, especially those who did not commit any kind of crime, have no reason to be afraid." The same announcement was read out three times during the half-hour news broadcast. No pictures from the town were shown.
"While the release of false information to the media and international authorities does not constitute a criminal act, the purpose of the release was not an innocent one," the verdict said. "The only reasonable inference as to the goal behind this communiqué is that it was intended to mislead, in particular the international authorities concerned with protecting the enclave, with a view to delaying any action on their part that might thwart the VRS's military efforts," it concluded.
This could be a monumentally important precedent, IF we don't let it slip through our hands. For instance, in spreading willful lies about starvation and suffering in Gaza, Al Reuters and other whorehouse media outlets are engaged in a calculated effort to break the Israeli blockade and facilitate arms deliveries to Hamas with the eventual (and openly stated) goal of genocide. Remember Julius Streicher, media shills: Follow his path, share his fate.
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Bosnia: Humanitarian convoys smuggled weapons |
2010-05-11 |
[ADN Kronos] Wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, accused of genocide and war crimes, told the United Nations Yugoslav war crimes tribunal on Monday that humanitarian convoys were used to smuggle weapons to Muslims during Bosnia's 1992-1995 war. "Everything was smuggled through these convoys - weapons, military equipment, cameras, food," Karadzic said, cross-examining prosecution witness David Harland. Karadzic said Bosnian Serb forces stopped only a few convoys, but accused Muslim officials of storing away humanitarian aid and selling it at black market. Harland, who served with international peacekeepers (UNPROFOR) in Bosnia from 1993 to 1995, said Karadzic's accusations were "absolutely false.'' "The things you mention were never seen in the hands of Muslims soldiers," Harland said. "There were criminal elements among Muslim authorities, but it was Serbs who cut and reduced humanitarian aid for the suffering population," Harland said. "We knew that food was partly being diverted to black market and to the Bosnian army, but you were robbing the convoys," Harland retorted. Pressed by Karadzic, Harland conceded that 10,000 humanitarian flights landed at Sarajevo airport during the war and only few were stopped. "I think that at the beginning of the war one plane was shot down and that it was done by (Bosnian) Croats," said Harland, who is the sixth of 410 prosecution witnesses, said. Harland acknowledged that some peacekeepers were involved in black marketing food and oil from humanitarian aid, mentioning in particular the Ukrainian contingent. He conceded that weapons were being smuggled by Muslims to UN protected zones, which were supposed to be demilitarized. "Yes, there had been significant weapons shipments," he said. "UNPROFOR had banned flights over Bosnia, but it was easy for short distance helicopter flights to avoid it." Harland said. |
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Europe |
Hague Trial Continues, Despite Karadzic No-Show |
2009-10-28 |
In a repeat of Monday, Radovan Karadzic again boycotted his trial and refused to appear in court to face charges of genocide and war crimes stemming from the 1992-95 Bosnian war. That did not stop the trial from going ahead. This time, Presiding Judge O-Gon Kwon moved quickly into session. He said Karadzic regrettably chose his course and now must face the consequences. "In light of the accused voluntarily and unequivocally waiving his right to be present at these proceedings, the chamber is of the view that this hearing can proceed in his absence," Kwon said. Prosecutor Alan Tieger wasted no time, dramatically launching into the case he intends to present. He started off with the Srebrenica, where the 1995 massacre of about 8,000 Muslim men and boys took place. He said shortly after the largest mass murder since World War II, the supreme commander of its forces was telling his parliament how he ordered that attack. "This case, your honors, is about that supreme commander. A man who harnessed the forces of nationalism, hatred and fear to implement his vision of an ethnically separated Bosnia. Radovan Karadzic," Tieger said. |
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Karadzic delays genocide trial with boycott | ||
2009-10-27 | ||
[Al Arabiya Latest] The genocide trial of Radovan Karadzic started on Monday with a battle of wits between the Bosnian Serb leader and the United Nations court as he boycotted the hearing, delaying proceedings.
The Bosnian Serb leadership has achieved notoriety in history because of the Srebrenica massacre of 7,000 Muslim men and boys and the siege of Sarajevo in which another 10,000 were killed.
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