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HRW: Croatia has improved cooperation with ICTY

WASHINGTON, Jan 18 (Hina) - In 2005, improved cooperation with theInternational Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)earned Croatia a positive decision by the European Union on openingnegotiations on membership. There was little progress, however, in thereturn of Serb refugees. With the majority of defendants continuing tobe ethnic Serbs, Croatia has yet to demonstrate that its efforts topursue war crimes suspects before domestic courts reflect a principledcommitment to justice over and above ethnic considerations, The USorganisation for the protection of human rights - Human Rights Watch(HEW) - said on Wednesday.
WASHINGTON, Jan 18 (Hina) - In 2005, improved cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) earned Croatia a positive decision by the European Union on opening negotiations on membership. There was little progress, however, in the return of Serb refugees. With the majority of defendants continuing to be ethnic Serbs, Croatia has yet to demonstrate that its efforts to pursue war crimes suspects before domestic courts reflect a principled commitment to justice over and above ethnic considerations, The US organisation for the protection of human rights - Human Rights Watch (HEW) - said on Wednesday.

In its "Human Rights Watch World Report 2006" on the state of human rights in the world in 2005, the HRW said that between three hundred thousand and 350,000 Croatian Serbs left their homes during the 1991-95 war, mostly for Serbia and Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. As of September 2005, the government had registered 122,000 Serb returnees, the report says. Croatian Serb associations and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) mission to Croatia assessed the actual number of returnees as significantly lower -between 60 and 65 percent of the registered figure- because many Croatian Serbs had left again for Serbia and Montenegro or Bosnia and Herzegovina after only a short stay in Croatia, the report said.

The report also notes that violent acts against ethnic Serbs suddenly increased during 2005. The May 18 killing of eighty-one-year-old Dusan Vidic in his house in Karin, near Benkovac, was particularly shocking, the report said, adding that the May 18 killing of eighty-one-year-old Dusan Vidic in his house in Karin, near Benkovac, was particularly shocking.

In Pakostani, Benkovac and Zagreb, attackers damaged vehicles with Serbian registration plates, the report said, adding that in all but a few cases the police failed to apprehend the perpetrators.

The report said there were some worrying trends in 2005 threatening to reverse the course. In the key multi-ethnic towns of Knin and Vukovar, local boards of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) formed municipal governments in coalition with ultra-nationalist Croat parties following the May 15 local elections, while sidelining the centrist Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS), the report read.

The number of war crimes trials against ethnic Serbs (eleven) greatly outnumbered trials of ethnic Croat indictees (six). Trials of ethnic Serbs also tended to involve more defendants, making the contrast between the numbers of individuals standing trial from each ethnic group even starker, according to the report.

The absence, for the second consecutive year, of any new indictment against accused Croats raises serious concerns about the sincerity of the Croatian government"s accountability efforts, the report said.

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