Where is milosevic buried




















She and her son Marko and daughter Marija were all wanted in Serbia for crimes ranging from corruption, abuse of office to the illegal possession of weapons. They are believed to have stashed tens of millions of euros in foreign accounts. However, Russia refused to extradite her to Serbia.

The Belgrade Appeals Court recently overturned a verdict that found Markovic guilty of abuse of office for interfering in the allocation of state-owned apartments, and sent the case for a retrial. Markovic has been accused of having been behind the killing of prominent journalist Slavko Curuvija in Belgrade in April — one of the most notorious Milosevic-era killings. Numerous prosecution witnesses testified that Serb and Yugoslav forces shelled their villages, and harassed, assaulted, and robbed them as they forced them to leave, as well as seizing and destroying their personal identity documents.

Some Prosecution witnesses, like witnesses K14, K20 and K9—who testified with their names withheld from the public—related how Serb forces sexually assaulted and raped them. One insider witness who corroborated these testimonies was protected witness K32, a Muslim from Montenegro who was in his early 20s in and serving as a driver in the VJ in Kosovo during the conflict.

The civilians were old men, women and children. K32 said that, in general, he did not see any young men there. Several Prosecution witnesses, including Serbian police officers, testified about how Serb police and Yugoslav military forces engaged in a cover-up operation to hide evidence of these crimes from the Tribunal. During the night of 7 and 8 April , they would unload 83 corpses and body parts of three more, including men, women, children and elderly.

Two years later, in May , a magazine published an article about a refrigerator truck containing human corpses being found in the Danube River near Kladovo. The majority of the non-Serbs that remained were then deported or forcibly transferred. According to the census, the Croat and other non-Serb population of these areas was approximately as follows:.

Virtually the whole Croat and non-Serb population of these areas was forcibly removed, deported or killed. The joint criminal enterprise did not achieve its goal of forcibly removing, deporting or killing the entire Croat and non-Serb population of the Dubrovnik Republic.

From 1 August until May , Slobodan MILOSEVIC , acting alone or in concert with other known and unknown members of the joint criminal enterprise, planned, instigated, ordered, committed, or otherwise aided and abetted the planning, preparation, or execution of the wanton destruction and plunder of the public and private property of the Croat and other non-Serb population, within the territories of the SAO SBWS, the SAO Western Slavonia and the SAO Krajina although these actions were not justified by military necessity.

This intentional and wanton destruction and plunder included the plunder and destruction of homes and religious and cultural buildings, and took place in the following towns and villages:.

From 1 October until 7 December , Slobodan MILOSEVIC , acting alone or in concert with other known and unknown members of the joint criminal enterprise, planned, instigated, ordered, committed, or otherwise aided and abetted the planning, preparation, or execution of a military campaign directed at the city of Dubrovnik and its surroundings in order to achieve the forcible removal of its non-Serb population. It was the objective of the Serb forces to detach this area from Croatia and to annex it to Montenegro.

While the Serb forces seized the territory to the south-east and north-west of the city of Dubrovnik within two weeks, the city itself was under attack throughout the time alleged in this indictment. During an unlawful extensive shelling campaign conducted from high ground east and north of Dubrovnik, with an unobstructed view of the city and its environs, and from JNA naval vessels offshore, forty-three Croat civilians were killed and numerous others wounded.

The shelling incidents and the names of the killed civilians are set out in Annex II attached to this indictment. From 1 October until 7 December , during this same shelling attack, Slobodan MILOSEVIC , acting alone or in concert with other known and unknown members of the joint criminal enterprise, planned, instigated, ordered, committed, or otherwise aided and abetted the planning, preparation and execution of the wanton destruction or wilful damage and plunder of the public and private property of the Croat and other non-Serb population within the area of the Dubvrovnik Republic.

This campaign included the destruction, damage or plunder of homes, religious, historical and cultural buildings and other civilian public or private buildings, not justified by military necessity. During this shelling campaign, approximately shells fired by the Serb forces impacted in the Old Town area of the city.

A number of the buildings in the Old Town and the towers on the city walls were marked with the symbols mandated by the Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict No military targets were located on or within the walls of the Old Town. During the shelling on 8 to 13 November of the city of Dubrovnik, buildings in the Old Town were damaged, as well as hotels, housing refugees and other civilian structures in other parts of the city.

During the shelling on 6 December of the city of Dubrovnik, at least six buildings in the Old Town were destroyed in their entirety and hundreds more suffered damage. Hotels, housing refugees and other civilian structures were severely damaged or destroyed in other parts of Dubrovnik, specifically in the Lapad and Babin Kuk areas.

In October , the Serb forces took control of the Croatian towns and villages Konavle, Zupa Dubravaccka, and Primorje in the proximity of the city of Dubrovnik. Much of this property was transported to Montenegro in JNA military vehicles. The JNA thereafter instituted measures to track and maintain the looted property. JNA troops also systematically destroyed public, commercial, and religious buildings as well as private dwellings in the above listed towns and villages. This destruction took place after the cessation of fighting when the areas were securely under the control of the JNA.

All acts and omissions alleged in this indictment between 1 August and June occurred on the territory of the former Yugoslavia. Between at least 1 August and at least June , a state of armed conflict existed in Croatia.

Until 7 October , this armed conflict was internal in nature. From 8 October an international armed conflict and partial occupation existed in the Republic of Croatia. All acts and omissions charged as Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions of occurred during the international armed conflict and partial occupation of Croatia.

At all times relevant to this indictment, the victims of Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions of were persons protected under the provisions of the relevant Geneva Conventions. All acts and omissions charged relative to the destruction of property as Grave Breaches of the Geneva Conventions of involved "protected property" under the relevant provisions of the Geneva Conventions.

At all times relevant to this indictment, Slobodan MILOSEVIC was required to abide by the laws and customs governing the conduct of armed conflicts, including the Geneva Conventions of and the additional protocols thereto.

All acts and omissions charged as Crimes against Humanity were part of a widespread and systematic attack directed against the Croat and other non-Serb civilian population of large areas of Croatia. The Republic of Croatia, formerly one of the six republics of the SFRY, is located in south-eastern Europe and borders Slovenia and Hungary to the north and north-east and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the east and south.

In the census, the population of the Republic of Croatia was 4,, of which 3,, In advance of the elections, the nationalistic Serbian Democratic Party SDS was founded in Knin, advocating the autonomy and later secession of predominately-Serb areas from Croatia. Between 19 August and 2 September , Croatian Serbs held a referendum on the issue of Serb "sovereignty and autonomy" in Croatia.

The vote took place in predominately Serb areas of Croatia and was limited only to Serb voters. Croats who lived in the affected region were barred from participating in the referendum.

The result of the vote was overwhelmingly in support of Serb autonomy. The leader was ousted by a popular uprising in after 13 years of solid rule in which he fuelled ethnic conflict and mass murder in the former Yugoslavia.

The late widow of the former Yugoslav president was born on July 10th She was a sociology professor at the University of Belgrade. In light of her death, many recalled her staunch backing of her husband's policies during the Balkan wars.



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