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The NIN weekly, June 3, 2005 (excerpts)
06/08/2005
The Genocidal Circle Completes
SREBRENICA AS A FATE
By Ljiljana Smajlovic
Eight non-governmental organizations from Belgrade requested the Serbian
Assembly to adopt a declaration obliging the state of Serbia to acknowledge the judgments
that have "clearly defined the character of the crime of genocide committed in
Srebrenica," to "candidly address" the victims of the Srebrenica genocide
and to "confess" that the "crime of genocide has been committed on our
behalf." Local human rights activists (Natasa Kandic, Borka Pavicevic, Biljana
Kovacevic-Vuco, Miljenko Dereta and others) enjoy international support: the International
Helsinki Federation, under the auspices of which acts the local Helsinki Committee for
Human Rights - has teamed up with their request.
The IHF's message of support to its Belgrade colleagues overstepped the
cautiously worded domestic "Declaration on the State of Serbia's Obligation To
Undertake All Measures Aimed at Protecting the Rights of the Victims of War Crimes,
Particularly the Rights of the Victims of the Srebrenica Genocide." The document that
mostly revokes generally recognized principles and values of the protection of human
rights and freedoms ends up by demanding moral confession that the crime "has been
committed on our behalf." The IHF wants the Serbian authorities (actually,
"Prime Minister Kostunica, the President of the Parliament and other representatives
of the government") to confess to domestic and international publics that "Serb
forces" have committed the Srebrenica genocide and, in this context, to apologize to
the families of the victims. The IHF explicitly quotes the "Serb forces" that
have committed the genocide in Srebrenica: the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), the Yugoslav
Army (VJ), the Bosnian Serb Army (VRS), local Territorial Defence (TO) units, local and
Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs (MUP) police units and paramilitary groups.
It is common knowledge that The Hague tribunal has already ruled one
case of genocide: General Radoslav Krstic has been sentenced for aiding and abetting
genocide in Srebrenica. The ex-Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, is also charged
with genocide. Of course, it's nowhere near proving that units of the VJ or MUP have taken
part in genocide, as claimed by the IHF. On the contrary. This is where the prosecution
wages its major battle, while international legal experts who have spoken their mind on
the issue, have expressed serious doubts about the strength of the evidence presented so
far in The Hague when it came to Milosevic's personal involvement in the Srebrenica crime,
let alone that of VJ or MUP troops. As it seems, the prosecution now hopes and prays that
the tape they have apparently just acquired through Ms. Natasa Kandic's Center would prove
that one MUP unit has been involved in the Srebrenica massacre.
The prosecution claims that that the tape shows members of the
"Scorpion" unit that was allegedly under the control of the Serbian MUP.
Regardless of whether or not the tape will be proved authentic, it is
already evident that the declaration on Srebrenica, put forth by eight non-governmental
organizations, stands poor chances to be adopted by the Serbian Assembly. The very fact
that MPs from the Democratic Party's (DS) list, Natasa Micic and Zarko Korac, have set
their heart on this task is a kind of anti-propaganda ("They've only omitted Carla
del Ponte," commented Ivica Dacic) of the document the DS vice-president, Dusan
Petrovic, had not even set his eyes on (though, like most citizens, he deems it
"necessary that Serbia faces up the past.").
Being proposed by the organizations that always join hands in the
defense Vladimir Popovic and Cedomir Jovanovic, the declaration will probably have even
smaller chances before the Serbian Assembly. The European Movement that has recently gave
a helping hand to Biljana Kovacevic-Vuco and Vladimir Popovic's joint project against
Aleksandar Tijanic also backed up these organizations.
The declaration's prospects are further diminished by the fact that
Belgrade is a party to a suit before the International Court of Justice in The Hague,
where Bosnia-Herzegovina sues Yugoslavia for genocide and announces to request huge war
reparations whereby generations of citizens of Serbia and Montenegro would have to
finances its reconstruction. Legal experts, interviewed by the NIN, take that even
confession that genocide has been committed "on our behalf" (which, literally,
does not imply acknowledgment of responsibility for crime, but rather a kind of moral
stand taken by political collectivity) could harm Belgrade when and if
Bosnia-Herzegovina's charges are sustained by the International Court of Justice. There
are still chances that the Court drops the charges on the grounds of non-competence.
Anyway, Serbia-Montenegro's legal representatives disagrees that genocide has taken place
in Srebrenica and founds his future defense on the thesis that genocide never took place,
as there have not been genocidal intent, i.e. the plan to exterminate Muslims as people.
Of course, one should not rule out the possibility that the
International Court of Justices rules contrary to the judges of The Hague, who have
already decided in the Krstic case that genocide had been committed in Srebrenica.And, yet
one should not much count on such an outcome, and Belgrade, like any party in a difficult
lawsuit, should be on its guard and avoid making a rod for its own back and arming the
other party with arguments against itself.
Would that be ethical? And, do Serbs - in whose name Srebrenica has been
"liberated" - have any moral obligations towards the victims that would
overpower all national concerns and reasons? That is written between the lines of the
request submitted by non-governmental organizations that probably genuinely believe that
moral acknowledgment would more help than disadvantage the Serbian side before the
international public for sympathy of which Serbs must strive, but also before the
International Court of Justice. The argument that acceptance of moral responsibility for
the crime committed "in our name" would not weaken our international and legal
position, and would, moreover, back up the claim that this state and its government are
breaking political and moral continuity of Milosevic's era might be defendable. Anyway,
even should this government, tomorrow, all of sudden and of its own free will, confess
genocide, that would be no evidence whatsoever from a legal point of view. No court of law
would admit a confession in itself as evidence, particularly not a confession made by the
side that has not been involved in crime at all.
Namely, it is widely felt over here that some non-governmental
organizations are acting as if they were branches of the American Sixth Fleet, and that
their moral propositions and political moves are always close or identical to the
interests of our enemies. This is not mere paranoia only: such belief is based on
empirical knowledge of always the same organizations raising more hue and cry about
Serbian crimes than those against Serbs, and is based on the perception that digging up
Serbian crimes is morally, politically and financially more profitable for them. On the
other hand, bringing to light crimes the victims of which were Serbs would hardly secure
them donors and powerful, influential friends who would promote and advertize their
findings at international panels. The eight non-governmental organizations suggesting that
the Assembly should recognize genocide keep low profile at the anniversary of NATO
bombardment, join not the Amnesty International thundering that bombardment of the Radio
& Television of Serbia was a war crime, rather than an attack on "a legitimate
military target," protest not when by some miracle the pits with bones of Serbian
civilians shot in Kosovo are discovered only after The Hague's deadline for raising
indictments for war crimes. Moreover, they show up at the political scene as most
concerned supporters of specific political options, and totally out of the context of the
struggle for universal human rights.
Their popularity hardly benefits from the fact that they rant and rail
against ideological opponents and demonstrate not a high threshold of tolerance for
different views, even when those different views reflect the best liberal traditions. So
it happened that last week those allegedly liberal and enlightened intellectuals and human
rights activists thundered against Serbian President Boris Tadic, who, look, dared say
that "in any country, citizens have the right to freely express their stand, even
when it contradicts the country's official politics." Tadic had no doubts that the
panel organized at the Belgrade Law School was adverse for the country or that denial of
the Srebrenica crime was disgusting. He just stood up for the freedom of expression in
Serbia.
HCHRS |