Balkan War Crimes Tribunal Gives Karadzi a Lawyer
New York, Nov 5 2009 12:10PM
The United Nations war crimes tribunal set up to prosecute the worst offences committed during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s today instructed its registrar to appoint a defence lawyer for former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadži, who stands accused of genocide.
As the court-appointed counsel
for Mr. Karadži; will need time to prepare his case, the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(http://www.icty.org/)
in The Hague also issued the decision to resume the trial on
1 March 2010.
Mr. Karadži; refused to appear at the
start of his trial on 26 October, claiming his defence –
which he has been preparing himself – was not ready,
despite ICTY decisions stating that he had been given
adequate time.
Mr. Karadži; received four separate
warnings before and after the trial’s scheduled
commencement date that his obstructive conduct would result
in the Court assigning a lawyer to him and proceedings
continuing without him.
Given his right to self-representation, Mr. Karadži; will continue to
act in his own defence, including the handling of day-to-day
matters, such as filing motions and responses to motions
issued by the prosecution, as well as preparing himself for
trial next year.
The ICTY said in a (http://www.icty.org/sid/10262)
news release that should he be absent when the trial
restarts in March or engage in other obstructive behaviour,
he will forfeit the right to self-representation and the
appointed counsel will take over his entire defence. The
appointed defence lawyer will attend the trial in any case
to step in at any time the trial chamber determines
necessary.
Mr. Karadži, who served as president of
Republika Srpska and as head of the Serb Democratic Party
and supreme commander of the Bosnian Serb military forces,
was arrested last year and transferred to the custody of the
ICTY after more than 13 years on the run.
He is
charged with two counts of genocide and a series of other
crimes, including murder, extermination, persecution,
deportation and the taking of hostages, related to actions
taken against Bosnian Muslims, Bosnian Croats and other
non-Serb civilians in Bosnia and Herzegovina between 1992
and 1995.
The indictment against him alleges he is
responsible for the murder of more than 7,000 Bosnian Muslim
men and boys in the town of Srebrenica – supposedly a
“safe haven” – in July 1995 in one of the most
notorious events of the Balkan wars.
Mr. Karadži is
also accused of being responsible for the shelling and
sniping of civilian areas of Sarajevo during a 44-month
siege of the
city.
ENDS