Sunday, 27 july 2025.
Prijavite se na sedmični newsletter Detektora
Newsletter
Novinari Detektora svake sedmice pišu newslettere o protekloj i sedmici koja nas očekuje. Donose detalje iz redakcije, iskrene reakcije na priče i kontekst o događajima koji oblikuju našu stvarnost.

This post is also available in: Bosnian

A protected prosecution witness codenamed RFJ-165, who said he was a member of the Red Berets under the command of Radojica Bozovic in May 1992, had told the trial that Bozovic was an officer of the Serbian State Security Service, SDB, and participated in capturing the town of Doboj.

The witness said that members of ‘Red Berets’ participated in the deportation, murder and torture of the non-Serb population in the area.

But Simatovic’s defence sought to prove that Bozovic was not an officer of the Serbian SDB at that time, while not denying that he became one later.

As indicated in Serbian SDB documents, which defence lawyer Mihajlo Bakrac cited in court, Bozovic was admitted to the Anti-Terrorist Action Unit or JATD of the Serbian SDB, also known as the ‘Red Berets’, as permanent staff only in November 1993 – after the alleged crimes.

“The evidence shows that Bozovic had neither been employed in the Serbian SDB nor JATD prior to that date,” Bakrac said.

But the witness insisted that in the spring of 1992, Serb policemen in Doboj told him that Bozovic and instructors at a Red Berets camp on Mount Ozren were members of the Serbian SDB.

When asked if he had any material evidence to support his allegation that Bozovic was a member of the Serbian SDB, witness RFJ-165 said no, adding that it was not possible to get hold of such evidence.

Jovica Stanisic, the former chief of the Serbian State Security Service, and his former assistant Franko Simatovic are being retried for persecution, murders and deportations during the wars in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

According to the charges, the Red Berets were under the control of the Serbian State Security Service.

The indictment alleges that Stanisic and Simatovic committed their crimes as part of a joint criminal enterprise aimed at forcibly and permanently removing Croats and Bosniaks from large parts of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, which would then be incorporated into a unified Serb state. The enterprise was allegedly led by Slobodan Milosevic.

Stanisic and Simatovic both pleaded not guilty in December 2015 after the appeals chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia overturned their acquittal in their first trial.

The appeals chamber ruled that there were serious legal and factual errors when Stanisic and Simatovic were initially acquitted of war crimes in 2013, and ordered the case to be retried and all the evidence and witnesses reheard in full by new judges.

The trial continues on Tuesday.

Najčitanije
Saznajte više
Disruptors: Inside Russia’s Balkan Training Camps for Moldovan ‘Destabilisation’
A joint investigation by BIRN’s Bosnia and Hercegovina outlet Detektor and Moldovan CU SENS sheds new light on the training camps run by Russian operatives in Bosnia and Serbia that Chisinau says were used to train Moldovans in destabilisation techniques ahead of last year’s Moldovan presidential election.
Detektor Journalist Wins ‘Nino Catic’ Journalism Award
Aida Trepanic Hebib, a BIRN BiH journalist, has won the “Nino Catic” award for her story about the removal of denial from social media in which she addressed crime minimization and relativization, as well as hate comments, targeting the children of those killed in the 1995 Srebrenica genocide.
Who Has Been Convicted of Crimes in Srebrenica?
How the Bosnian Judiciary Turned Off the Light of Justice
Srebrenica Memorial Stones to be Unveiled in The Hague
Bosnia Jails Man for Planning Terror Attack on Mosque