BFF-36 ‘Butcher of Bosnia’ Mladic’s genocide appeal set for August

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BOSNIA-SERBIA-WARCRIMES

‘Butcher of Bosnia’ Mladic’s genocide appeal set for August

THE HAGUE, July 17, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Judges in The Hague will hold a
delayed appeals hearing in August for Bosnian Serb military chief
Ratko Mladic, sentenced to life imprisonment for genocide over the
Srebrenica massacre, the UN said Friday.

The hearing was initially scheduled for March and then June but was
repeatedly delayed after Mladic, 77, underwent an operation doctors
said was to remove a benign polyp from his colon.

The International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunal (IRMCT)
said the hearing will now take place on August 25 and 26.

Mladic, once dubbed the Butcher of Bosnia, was sentenced to life
behind bars in 2017 for war crimes, crimes against humanity and
genocide for his role in the bloody civil war in the 1990s.

This included for genocide committed by his Bosnian Serb forces in
the small eastern Bosnian town of Srebrenica in mid-1995, Europe’s
worst bloodshed since World War II, where some 8,000 Muslim men and
boys were killed.

About 100,000 people were killed and 2.2 million others displaced
in the 1992-95 Bosnian war, which erupted as communal rivalries tore
Yugoslavia apart after the fall of communism.

Judges at the court, which took over the duties of the
International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia after it wrapped up in
2017, said Mladic could be physically present in the courtroom or
attend via videolink.

The defence will speak first on August 25 followed by the prosecution.

Mladic will himself be allowed to speak on August 26 for 10
minutes, the court said.

Mladic had to be dragged out of the court in 2017 after an outburst
in which he accused the judges of lying, when they refused to adjourn
his judgment hearing because of his high blood pressure.

Along with Mladic, former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and
ex-Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic also faced international
justice over the Balkans wars.

Milosevic died in his cell in The Hague in March 2006, suffering a
heart attack before his trial had finished.

Karadzic was convicted of genocide in 2016 for the Srebrenica
massacre and other atrocities during the war and sentenced to 40
years.

After an appeal, judges increased his sentence to life, saying the
initial term had underestimated the “sheer scale and systematic
cruelty” of his crimes.

BSS/AFP/MRU/2258hrs