The former Bosnian Serb prime minister Vladimir Lukic told Ratko Mladics trial in The Hague that outsiders were responsible for wartime rapes and robberies and Serb forces werent involved in looting.
The former Bosnian Serb prime minister testified at Ratko Mladics trial in The Hague that he heard that individual soldiers committed crimes during wartime, but not the army itself.
Bosnian Serb forces did not have enough heavy weapons to terrorise the population of Sarajevo at the start of the siege, a defence witness told the war crimes trial of Ratko Mladic.
As the trial for crimes in Stupari, Kladanj municipality, continues, a State Prosecution witness says that Serbs from Kladanj and the surrounding villages were gathered in Stupari in 1992 for the sake of their own safety.
Former Vice-President of the municipal board of the Serbian Democratic Party, SDS, in Zenica, says, testifying at Ratko Mladics trial, that Muslim authorities did not let Serbs leave the town in 1992.
The State Court ordered one-month custody for thirteen people, who are suspected of crimes in Doboj and Teslic but the Defence teams object to the motion.
The lawyer for Milos Pantelic, accused of killings, persecution and other wartime crimes in Visegrad area in 1992, said that the defences witnesses were contradictory and unreliable.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Kakanj municipality, the former President of the wartime Presidency says that Serb citizens, who were held in the elementary school building in Stupari, were exchanged in the summer of 1993.
The Bosnian State prosecution has asked the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina to order one month custody for former member of the Bosnian Army Hasan Icanovic who is suspected of crimes in Velika Kladusa.