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The Karadzic Trial And Bosnian Realities

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  • The Karadzic Trial And Bosnian Realities

    THE KARADZIC TRIAL AND BOSNIAN REALITIES

    Agoravox
    http://www.agoravox.com/articl e.php3?id_article=10930
    Nov 4 2009

    The trial of the Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic is a test of
    justice and accountability over terrible crimes. But the trend of
    events in Bosnia itself also demands the international community's
    urgent attention. By Martin Shaw.

    he trial of Radovan Karadzic, leader of the Serbian nationalist regime
    in Bosnia in the early 1990s, resumed in The Hague on 27 October
    2009. The accused initially refused to appear in court on the basis
    that he needed more time to prepare his defence, but announced in a
    letter to the presiding judge on 2 November that he would indeed be
    present to face the court at a procedural hearing the following day.

    Karadzic is charged with genocide over the attempt "to permanently
    remove Bosnian Muslims [Bosniaks] and Bosnian Croats from the
    territories of Bosnia and Herzegovina claimed as Bosnian Serb
    territory" between 1992 and 1995, as well as over the infamous massacre
    at Srebrenica in July 1995. The other charges include extermination;
    murder; persecutions; deportation; inhumane acts; acts of violence
    the primary purpose of which was to spread terror among the civilian
    population; unlawful attacks on civilians; and the taking of hostages.

    These can be seen not as a series of different crimes but as components
    of a single campaign of genocide. Indeed the charges potentially
    broaden the overall legal assessment of the Serbian genocide in
    Bosnia-Hercegovina, which in earlier judgments - like that of the
    International Court of Justice in February 2007 - has been restricted
    to Srebrenica; the importance of the charges against Karadzic is that
    this enables understanding that Srebrenica was only the most murderous
    moment in the three years during which Serbian forces systematically
    targeted the destruction of the non-Serb population in the areas they
    controlled (see "The International Court of Justice: Serbia, Bosnia,
    and genocide", 28 February 2007).

    The trial - which starts sixteen months after Karadzic's arrest
    in Serbia in July 2008, following thirteen years in hiding there -
    is widely seen as the last major case of the International Criminal
    Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), which is scheduled to begin
    winding down from the end of 2009 - despite the scandalous failure
    to arrest Karadzic's fellow indictee Ratko Mladic, who commanded the
    Bosnian-Serbian forces at Srebrenica. The ICTY has had considerable
    success in arraigning secondary war-criminals of all nationalities,
    but no settling of the accounts of the post-Yugoslav wars of the
    1990s will be complete until Mladic joins Karadzic in the dock. The
    fact that prime architects of Yugoslavia's ethnic destruction in the
    1990s - Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic's (who died in March 2006, during
    his trial) and Croatia's Franjo Tudjman (who died before he could be
    indicted) - escaped justice, means that the tribunal's record will
    appear even more seriously flawed unless Mladic and Karadzic are
    successfully tried.

    The new trial will doubtless rekindle the deep divisions which Bosnia
    opened in western publics in the 1990s. A reminder of these came on
    29 October 2009 when Ed Vulliamy, the Guardian reporter who (with
    colleagues from the broadcaster ITN, Penny Marshall and Ian Williams,
    exposed the Serbian concentration-camps at Omarska and Trnopolje in
    August 1992) published an open letter to Amnesty International; this
    protests against the NGO's invitation to the radical academic Noam
    Chomsky to give the annual Amnesty lecture in Belfast on 30 October.

    Chomsky, says Vulliamy, has encouraged the "revisionist" view which
    denied the character of the camps (even if it was others such as
    Thomas Deichmann, writing in Living Marxism magazine, who were the
    direct authors of this denial [see Ed Vulliamy, "Poison in the well
    of history", Guardian, 15 March 2000]).

    In 2005, Chomsky told a Guardian interviewer: "Ed Vulliamy is a very
    good journalist, but he happened to be caught up in a story which
    is probably not true." Vulliamy reminds Amnesty that he directly
    witnessed the situation he described, and went on to collect hundreds
    of testimonies; he accuses the human-rights organisation of "giving
    comfort" to Mladic and Karadzic through its invitation to Chomsky.

    The logic of Dayton

    The political realities on the ground in Bosnia put some of these
    controversies in perspective. Radovan Karadzic may be in the dock
    in The Hague, but the Serbian statelet of Republika Srpska (RS)
    which he founded is firmly entrenched. The first phase of the Serbian
    campaign in 1992-93 left RS in control of a formerly mixed territory,
    from which 90% of the non-Serb population (principally Muslims and
    Croats) were expelled through the brutal methods described in the
    ICTY's indictment of Karadzic.

    The Serb forces failed fully to defeat Bosnian and Croatian forces, but
    the diplomatic settlement of November 2005 - the Dayton (Ohio) peace
    accords, agreed by Bill Clinton (the United States president), Slobodan
    Milosevic, Franjo Tudjman, and Alija Izetbegovic (Bosnia's president)
    - left the Serbian nationalists in control of the RS, even if it was
    reincorporated into a nominally unified and internationally supervised
    Bosnia-Herzegovina. The international regime was supposed to support
    the return of refugees to RS (as to Croatian- and Bosnian-controlled
    areas). In the event, the small number of returns achieved have not
    altered the outcome of the genocidal war: Serbs today form almost 90%
    of RS's population.

    The Dayton settlement thus (in Marko Attila Hoare's words) "established
    a Bosnia-Hercegovina that was more partitioned than united", and
    subsequent developments have reinforced the partitionist logic. For
    every year that the Dayton settlement persists it brings Bosnia another
    step closer (Hoare again) "to full and complete partition. Every
    year, Republika Srpska further consolidates itself as a de facto
    independent state; the Office of the High Representative [OHR;
    Bosnia's international overseer] declines in power and authority;
    the international community's will and ability to coerce the Republika
    Srpska are that much weaker; the already dim prospect of Bosniaks and
    Croats returning to Republika Srpska recedes further; and the share
    of the Bosnian population that can remember the unified, multinational
    country that existed before 1992 becomes smaller."

    Even in late 2007 it was possible for Peter Lippman to argue that the
    international regime was having some success in integrating the police
    and the army into a unified Bosnian force (see "Crisis and reform: a
    turnaround in Bosnia?", 18 December 2007). Two years on, the low-key
    current international efforts to move Bosnian politicians towards
    reform are completely deadlocked. Serbian secessionist impulses -
    part-cause and part-consequence of this situation - are never far
    from the surface. Moreover the current RS administration of Milorad
    Dodik is growing in its defiance of the international regime and
    (a linked matter given the statelet's provenance) its denial of the
    very crimes of which Karadzic is accused.

    Dodik, who has denied that genocide was committed at Srebrenica,
    further provoked the non-Serb population of Bosnia in September 2009
    by pointedly denying one of the worst Serbian atrocities of the war:
    the massacre of seventy young people in a square in Tuzla in May 1995.

    (In this context, Ed Vulliamy is right to say that the questioning of
    well-documented atrocities such as the concentration-camps by western
    commentators is no academic matter; and that Noam Chomsky's attitude
    to these issues raises questions about Amnesty's choice of lecturer).

    Against this background, even a conviction in the Karadzic trial -
    assuming the accused's spoiling tactics are unsuccessful - will be
    a hollow victory for his victims. The danger, Hoare suggests, is
    that "however monstrous the injustice that Bosnian partition would
    represent, with every year that passes, the injustice is further
    forgotten by the world and full partition - like death - draws nearer.

    We need only look at the other injustices that have become realities
    on the ground: the three-way partition of Macedonia in 1912-13;
    the dispossession of the Armenian population of Anatolia; the
    dispossession of the Palestinian population of present-day Israel -
    these are realities on the ground" (see "Bosnia: weighing the options",
    Bosnian Institute, 13 October 2009).

    The cost of failure

    It is difficult to gainsay this bleak assessment of the historical
    record: partitions have always involved appalling injustices which
    have rarely been reversed (see Sumantra Bose, "The partition evasion",
    23 August 2007). The Indian partition of 1947 is one of the worst
    examples. For a century, western "statesmen" have been tempted to draw
    lines on maps and consign hundreds of thousands of people to suffering;
    all the more reason by now to have learned from these experiences.

    If the partition of Bosnia is indeed steadily becoming irreversible,
    this should cause alarm across Europe. It should not be assumed that
    Balkan politicians' need for European recognition and funding will
    always inhibit radical moves that would once again destabilise the
    region. The integration of southeastern Europe into the European Union
    and western institutions has not proceeded so far as to provide full
    insurance against a new Bosnian - or even wider Balkan - war.

    The situation of Bosnia, and especially of its Bosniak majority areas,
    is - under the pressure of Serbian separatism - getting more serious.

    It is time for western politicians, having accepted responsibility
    for Bosnia, to consider and take the steps necessary to prevent this
    already divided country from moving towards new and dangerous schisms.

    Peter Lippman also argued in 2007 that "nationalist leaders -
    Serbs, Croats, and Bosniaks" had a responsibility "to show that they
    are serious about developing the reforms that would allow Bosnia &
    Herzegovina to exist as a functional state that can join the European
    Union on its own." But it is even more urgent that "the international
    community and the OHR maintain a robust stance with regard to these
    reforms, in order to prompt and encourage Bosnian leaders to see them
    through." The Radovan Karadzic trial is a reminder of the worst that
    could happen if they fail.
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