In closing arguments at Radovan Karadzics trial, the indictees lawyer said the Bosnian Serb ex-leader did not order or know anything about the killings of 7,000 Muslims so was not guilty of genocide.
In his closing statement, former Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic said that he wants only the truth, for the sake of truth and international well-being and that the truth will free him of all charges of genocide and other crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
At the trial of Ostoja Stanisic and Marko Milosevic, who are charged with genocide in Srebrenica, the Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina includes, in the case file, transcripts of Dragan Obrenovics testimony before The Hague Tribunal in 2003.
At the trial of Ostoja Stanisic and Marko Milosevic, who are charged with genocide in Srebrenica, the Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina includes, in the case file, transcripts of Dragan Obrenovics testimony before The Hague Tribunal in 2003.
In its closing statement The Hague Prosecution requests that Radovan Karadzic be sentenced to life imprisonment in order to achieve justice for all victims from Sarajevo, Srebrenica and other towns in Bosnia and Herzegovina, BiH.
Testifying at the trial of Ostoja Stanisic and Marko Milosevic, who are charged with genocide in Srebrenica, a former Director of "Birac" Factory, Zvornik municipality, says that he heard about murders committed on a nearby dam much later.
First defence witnesses told the trial for genocide in Srebrenica that defendant Aleksandar Cvetkovic was a driver and that he did not participate in sabotage.
Testifying at the trial of Goran Saric, who is charged with genocide in Srebrenica, a State Prosecution witness says that a group of prisoners was killed in a warehouse, near Konjevic Polje, in mid-July 1995.
The Sense news agency, which covers war crimes trials, opened the new archive of case documents, witness testimonies and forensic evidence at the Srebrenica genocide memorial centre in Potocari.
The Bosnian prosecution filed an indictment against former Bosnian Serb police officers Miodrag Josipovic and Branimir Tesic for assisting the genocide in Srebrenica in July 1995.