Wednesday, 5 november 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

The Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals on Thursday denied Radovan Karadzic’s motion for an appeal chamber to be appointed at the Hague court to decide on his request to review a previous decision that rejected his appeal against the final verdict in his trial sentencing him to life in prison.

In March this year, the Hague court sentenced Karadzic to life in prison for the 1995 genocide of Bosniaks from Srebrenica, for terrorising the civilian population of Sarajevo with a long-running campaign of shelling and sniper attacks, for the persecution and extermination of Bosniaks and Croats in 20 municipalities across the country, and for taking UN peacekeepers hostage.

The final verdict, handed down after Karadzic appealed against his conviction in the UN court’s first-instance judgment, also acquitted him of genocide in other municipalities in 1992.

The UN court on Thursday also rejected Karadzic’s motion to submit his request to judge Jean-Claude Antonetti, rather than the president of the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals, Carmel Agius, or its most experienced judge, Theodor Meron.

Karadzic had called for the decision on his request for an appeal to be made by Antonetti, as he alleged that both Agius and Meron were biased against him because they had previously sentenced his subordinates for similar crimes.

Immediately after Thursday’s decision, Karadzic’s lawyer Peter Robinson filed another request to appeal against it and to remove Agius and Meron from deciding on it.

Najčitanije
Saznajte više
Moscow’s Balkan Recruits: Russia’s Drive to Enlist Serb Fighters for Ukraine War
BIRN journalists obtained access to private Telegram groups where recruiters lure Serb mercenaries from Bosnia and Serbia to join Russian forces in Ukraine with promises of lucrative contracts and veterans’ benefits.
BIRN BiH Presents Database and Film on Wartime Missing Children
The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network of Bosnia and Herzegovina, BIRN BiH, presented a database of children still being searched for after the 1992-5 war, as well as a documentary, The Unlived Lives, telling a story of three families whose newborn babies disappeared without a trace.