The appeals court threw out a plea bargain that would have seen a former Bosnian Serb fighter serve 10 to 13 years in jail for killing around 200 civilians at Koricanske Stijene in 1992.
The appeals court threw out a plea bargain that would have seen a former Bosnian Serb fighter serve 10 to 13 years in jail for killing around 200 civilians at Koricanske Stijene in 1992.
At the trial for Koricanske stijene crimes, the Defence of Radoslav Knezevic presents a few pieces of material evidence and examines a court medicine expert, who speaks about a foot injury the indictee had in 1992.
A Defence witness says at the trial for crimes at Koricanske stijene, that indictee Marinko Ljepoja was with him on August 21, 1992, after a bus, which transported civilians from Prijedor to Travnik, broke down.
Indictee Civcic, former member of the Interventions Squad with the Public Safety Station in Prijedor, says that he was in his hometown Kupres on the day when crimes were committed at Koricanske stijene, as he was trying to obtain documents for his employment with the police.
Testifying as a Defence witness, Ljubisa Cetic, who was sentenced for the shooting of civilians at Koricanske stijene, says that indictee Sasa Zecevic also participated in the murders.
The site of an infamous massacre of 200 men in 1992 is to be reexamined. But after 18 years of waiting, relatives fear they may never recover the remains of their loved ones.
Asima Memics son, Asmir, boarded a bus from Prijedor to Travniik as part of an exchange in July 1992. He never arrived, and only a single limb has ever been recovered.