Person: Karadzic Radovan

Srebrenica2-1024x669.jpg

6. June 2012.
On June 4 the Trial Chamber of the Hague Tribunal, sitting in the case of Radovan Karadzic, former President of Republika Srpska, starts visiting locations in Srebrenica, which are important for the indictment, charging him with genocide against Muslims from Srebrenica in the summer of 1995. As announced by the Tribunal, the judges' visit to Srebrenica and its surroundings will last five days.


24. May 2012.
“In July 1995, in his position as a President of Republika and a supreme commander of the army and police, and as part of the organized criminal enterprise together with S.M and others in their positions as commanders and chief officers of the army and police of Republic, the accused R.K. incited, ordered and executed acts of genocide in municipality S., resulting in the death of approximately 8,000 people: E.K., A.B, etc.“


4. May 2012.
Testifying at the trial of Radovan Karadzic, former journalist from Belgrade Zoran Petrovic Pirocanac denies having told a London Independent reporter in July 1995 that hewas in big trouble, because the indictee was mad at him for having played adocumentary about Srebrenica, depicting bodies of Bosniaks.


24. April 2012.
Former Prime Minister of Republika Srpska Branko Djeric says at Radovan Karadzic’s trial at The Hague that, despite his warning, in 1992 the indictee did not want to deal with war crimes committed by Serb forces, saying that they could be dealt with later.


20. April 2012.
The Prosecution’s military analyst Richard Butler says, at the trial of Radovan Karadzic at The Hague, that Karadzic’s Directive no. 4, which was sent to the Republika Srpska Army, VRS in the fall of 1992, was “illegal”, because it ordered “a military attack against the civilian population” in Eastern Bosnia.