Sat, May 26 2012
Photo: MoRsE
The four-judge panel – along with the prosecution and defence – from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) is visiting several sites in Sarajevo and surrounding areas at the request of Radovan Karadžic
Judges in the Hague tribunal say the nearly seven-week adjournment will last from March 21 to May 5 2011.
Judges also sentenced five other former military and police officers to lengthy terms in prison for their role in the killings at Srebrenica and another safe haven of Žepa – events the court said were unprecedented in scale and brutality.
The Hague tribunal receives Mladic diaries, upholds Serb party leader Vojislav Šešelj’s conviction for contempt and confirms the 2008 conviction of Johan Tarculovski for murders and other actions in Macedonia.
But survivors says that the resolution, adopted by a narrow majority in the parliament in Belgrade, does not go far enough because it failed to label the killings as genocide.
Two leading suspects remain at large, Bosnian Serb military chief Ratko Mladic and ethnic Serb politician Goran Hadžic, with both facing a lengthy series of charges.
Judicial reform, co-operation with ICTY, regional co-operation to solve bilateral issues are all essential, Serbian prime minister Mirko Cvetković is told - while being offered encouragement about Serbia's EU prospects.
European Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele, on the eve of the inauguration of Croatia’s new president Ivo Josipovic, will underline his reform message to senior leaders.
Former Bosnian Serbian leader Radovan Karadzic has written to the ICTY saying he will not come to his trial, saying he is not ready and has not had time to read a million page of prosecution documents.
Belgrade hails acknowledgement of its ‘clear progress’ while Pristina was also content with the EC’s statements – although Brussels remained carefully ‘status neutral’ about Kosovo.
For the Western Balkans and Turkey, the prospect of EU membership has been a factor for stability and societal progress, and for democratic and economic transformation, Enlargement Commissioner says.
Governments in Prague and Bucharest could soon join Sofia in instituting temporary moratoriums on shale gas exploration.
Coalition around ruling Democratic Party has largest share of vote in Serbia's parliamentary election, according to exit polls.
Centre-right New Democracy is said by exit polls to have largest share of votes, but diminished even from its 2009 defeat, while socialists Pasok – the 2009 victors – gets somewhere around 14 to 17 per cent.
An agreement reached with the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) will allow voters with dual citizenship in Kosovo to vote in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections in Serbia.
Twenty radical Muslims suspected of being members of a terrorist group that has been linked to the murder of five fishermen in early April.