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GENOCIDE EXPERT TESTIFIES AGAINST MILOSEVIC

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Jan 20(Hina) - The trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic before the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague resumed on Tuesday with the testimony of prosecution witness Anthon Zwan, who spoke about the phenomenon of genocide.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Jan 20(Hina) - The trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic before the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague resumed on Tuesday with the testimony of prosecution witness Anthon Zwan, who spoke about the phenomenon of genocide.#L# Zwan, a sociologist working at Amsterdam's Genocide Research Institute, prepared for the prosecution a report on genocide and other mass crimes whose targets are specific ethnic, religious and minority communities. Zwan was asked not to mention the genocide on the territory of the former Yugoslavia, so he based his report on the Holocaust, the pogrom of Armenians in Turkey in 1915, and genocides in Cambodia and Rwanda. He said today the Holocaust of World War Two constituted the standard model of genocide, but added that all genocides had common traits -- state authorities as organisers of attacks, the collective perpetrator, and victims from a specific group. For genocide it is typical to develop from the top down, a process for which the most senior state bodies are the most responsible, Zwan said. Genocide is always preceded by a decision from top state officials, but they are difficult to catch in flagrante since they, aware of the extreme nature of genocide, leave no traces, he added. Adolf Hitler was never an eyewitness to acts of genocide nor did he sign an order to kill Jews but he did ask in debates that it be done, Zwan said. Although he did not speak of genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina, with which Milosevic is charged, Zwan's report mentioned all the traits which that crime had during the 1992-1995 Bosnian war. In the wake of Milosevic's attempt in his defence to attribute the mass crimes in Bosnia to local leaders and paramilitary groups, Zwan described, at the prosecution's request, how the pogrom of the Jews in Poland was organised by 30 local leaders but only after the Germans had started doing it. The Milosevic trial resumes on Wednesday. The trial chamber has given him 90 minutes to cross-examine Zwan, after which the prosecution will call a new witness. According to prosecutor Geoffrey Nice's announcements last week, former Croatian President Franjo Tudjman's chief of staff Hrvoje Sarinic, who conducted secret negotiations with Milosevic from 1993 to 1995, is due to take the stand tomorrow. (Hina) ha sb

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