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VUKOVAR THREE CHARGED WITH OVCARA MASSACRE TO ENTER PLEAS BEFORE HAGUE TRIBUNAL MONDAY

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Feb 15 (Hina) - The U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague is due to hold a status conference on Monday in the case of former Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) officers Mile Mrksic, Miroslav Radic and Veselin Sljivancanin at which the three will plead to the consolidated amended indictment charging them with the 1991 slaughter at eastern Croatia's Ovcara farm.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Feb 15 (Hina) - The U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague is due to hold a status conference on Monday in the case of former Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) officers Mile Mrksic, Miroslav Radic and Veselin Sljivancanin at which the three will plead to the consolidated amended indictment charging them with the 1991 slaughter at eastern Croatia's Ovcara farm.#L# The original indictment against the so-called Vukovar Three was issued on 2 December 1997, when all three were unavailable to the tribunal. Following Mrksic's surrender in May 2002, the case against him was separated, but the spring 2003 arrests of Radic and Sljivancanin resulted in the tribunal deciding to try them together, so the Office of the Prosecutor's filed a consolidated amended indictment on February 9 this year. The three pleaded not guilty to the previous indictments. The new one charges them with participation in the "joint criminal enterprise" whose objective was the persecution of Croats and other non-Serbs staying at the Vukovar Hospital following the eastern city's fall on 19 November 1991, specifically with the "extermination or murder of at least two hundred sixty-four Croats and other non-Serbs, including women and elderly persons". The Vukovar Three are charged with eight counts -- persecution on political, religious and racial grounds and extermination and murder as crimes against humanity, and torture, cruel or inhumane treatment as violations of the laws and customs of war. The consolidated amended indictment brings a far more precise picture of the three's command and individual responsibility and the circumstances in which the Ovcara crime was committed. The indictment identifies as the physical perpetrators of the massacre the local Serb Territorial Defence unit Petrova gora, under the commanded of Miroljub Vujovic and Stanko Vujanovic, who are identified as participants in the "joint criminal enterprise" alongside Mrksic, Sljivancanin and Radic. The indictment says that at the time of the crime, the 57-year-old Mrksic was a colonel in the JNA and commander of the 1st Guards Motorised Brigade and Operational Group South, and that he controlled all Serb units which had seized Vukovar, including the local Territorial Defence, volunteers and paramilitary units. Mrksic is charged with directing, commanding and controlling Serb forces that evacuated non-Serbs from the Vukovar Hospital, guarded detainees at the JNA barracks in Vukovar, transferred and kept these detainees at the Ovcara farm building, and then mistreated and killed them. The indictment also says that he "ordered or permitted JNA soldiers under his command to deliver custody of detainees taken from the Vukovar Hospital to other Serb forces... who physically committed the crimes charged in this indictment, knowing... that the detainees would be subjected to further persecution and murder". The same allegations apply to the 51-year-old Sljivancanin, a JNA security officer under Mrksic's command, who is also charged with being personally responsible for the evacuation from the Vukovar Hospital, personally preventing international observers from entering the hospital, and being at Ovcara on November 20 when the crimes from the indictment were committed. The 42-year-old Radic, at that time a JNA captain who commanded an infantry company in the Guards Brigade, is accused of directing, commanding and controlling Serb units responsible for the mistreatment and killing of non-Serbs at Ovcara, and of personally participating in the removal and selection of 400 non-Serbs from Vukovar Hospital on 20 November 1991. All three took steps to hide and conceal the crime, says the indictment. It goes on to state that on the morning of November 20 about 400 people were removed from the hospital, including "wounded patients, hospital staff, family members of hospital staff, former defenders of the city, Croatian political activists, journalists, and other civilians". JNA soldiers loaded about 300 Croats and other non-Serbs on buses and took them to a JNA barracks in the south of Vukovar, where about 15 were selected and returned to the hospital because they were part of the medical staff. After two hours the rest were taken to the Ovcara farm, where they were forced to run between two lines of soldiers who beat the men as they passed. These Serb forces continued to beat and assault the detainees inside the farm building. About seven detainees were selected and returned to Vukovar after Serbs, who were present, intervened on their behalf. Members of the JNA listed the rest. Afterwards, Serb forces comprised of JNA, Territorial Defence and volunteers divided the detainees into groups of 10 to twenty, which were then individually loaded into a truck and taken in the direction of Grabovo to a wooden ravine approximately one kilometre south-east of Ovcara where these Serb forces removed the detainees from the truck. At this spot, these Serb forces then killed at least 264 Croats and other non-Serbs and used a bulldozer to bury the bodies in a mass grave. Two-hundred bodies were discovered when the grave was exhumed while at least 50 more of those removed from the Vukovar hospital are listed as missing. (Hina) ha

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