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Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition

October 2, 2005 Sunday Sha’aban 27, 1426


No place to hide for Serb war criminals



By Vesna Peric Zimonjic


BELGRADE: Serb war criminals are figuring that they might run, but they cannot hide forever. Ten years after the wars in Croatia and Bosnia ended and six years after Serb security forces withdrew from the southern Kosovo province, many suspects wanted for massacres of non-Serbs are being brought to justice. Over the past few weeks there has been a wave of arrests abroad.

Last week Canadian authorities announced the extradition of Dejan Demirovic (30), former member of the Serb paramilitary group ‘Scorpions’ that was notorious for war crimes against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo in 1999.

Demirovic is suspected in the execution of 14 people, including six children, in Podujevo town. His partner in the group Sasa Cvijetan was sentenced to 20 years for this crime by a Belgrade court. It was discovered in the course of Cvijetan’s trial last year that Demirovic was living with his parents in Windsor, Ontario. “Bringing war criminals to justice is the most important thing for the region,” head of the Humanitarian Law Centre Natasa Kandic told IPS. “The confusion in ordinary people’s minds about whether the executors were war heroes or merciless killers finally has to end. The recognition of war crimes is the starting point for the process of reconciliation in the Balkans.”

More than 200,000 people were killed in wars of the 1990s in former Yugoslavia, most of them non-Serbs. Memories of those days are still recent enough. “A while ago it was exactly 13 years since I became a person without home, name or nationality, and I’m happy that the man who caused all that is behind bars,” said Sarajevo journalist Nerma Jelacic (28). She was commenting on the arrest of Bosnian Serb Milan Lukic (37) in Argentina. He had been living before that in Serbia and the Serb region of eastern Bosnia.

Lukic was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment by a Belgrade court in absentia earlier this year for war crimes in Bosnia in 1992. He and his paramilitary group ‘Avengers’ pushed 140 Muslims including old men, women and children into a house in the small town of Visegrad and set it on fire. Lukic’s cousin Sredoje, accused in the same crime, was arrested earlier this month in Russia. They are both being extradited to the UN founded International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague.

Nerma Jelacic who fled Visegrad with her mother after the extermination of Muslims began, and lived as a refugee in Britain for 10 years, has said what Lukic meant to her. “It’s a small town and the only name mentioned, with fear, in connection to crimes was that of Milan Lukic,” she wrote in a column in the prominent Belgrade daily Danas. “I returned to Bosnia in 2003, as roots are deep,” she wrote. “I tried to find Milan Lukic as I knew he lived between Serbia and eastern Bosnia, I had to know why he did it, why some 3,000 people from my home town had to be killed. Unfortunately, I could not reach him.” Argentina became the sanctuary for another war crimes suspect, Nebojsa Minic, wanted for the execution of dozens of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo in 1999. He was arrested earlier this year.

In another development, 13 Bosnian Serb men were arrested in Phoenix in the United States on suspicion of giving false information when seeking migration a decade ago. Some of them come from Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia where more than 8,000 Muslim men were executed by the Bosnian Serb Army in 1995. —Dawn/Inter-Press News Service



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