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SIX BOSNIAN CROAT WAR CRIMES INDICTEES LEAVE FOR HAGUE

ZAGREB, April 5 (Hina) - Six Bosnian Croats accused of war crimes by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Monday morning left Zagreb for Amsterdam aboard a regular Croatia Airlines flight.A former prime minister of the Croatian Republic of Herceg Bosna (HR HB), Jadranko Prlic, former commanders of the Croatian Defence Council (HVO), Slobodan Praljak and Milivoj Petkovic, former HR HB defence minister Bruno Stojic, former HVO Military Police commander Valentin Coric, and a former head of the HR HB office for missing and detained persons, Berislav Pusic, left for The Hague in the company of their attorneys to enter their pleas to charges of war crimes in Bosnia-Herzegovina.Speaking to reporters at Zagreb airport, Prlic said he did not want to prove his innocence before the UN tribunal, but the tribunal had to prove his guilt.Prlic, who was also Bosnia's foreign minister, told reporters in a packed
ZAGREB, April 5 (Hina) - Six Bosnian Croats accused of war crimes by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Monday morning left Zagreb for Amsterdam aboard a regular Croatia Airlines flight. A former prime minister of the Croatian Republic of Herceg Bosna (HR HB), Jadranko Prlic, former commanders of the Croatian Defence Council (HVO), Slobodan Praljak and Milivoj Petkovic, former HR HB defence minister Bruno Stojic, former HVO Military Police commander Valentin Coric, and a former head of the HR HB office for missing and detained persons, Berislav Pusic, left for The Hague in the company of their attorneys to enter their pleas to charges of war crimes in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Speaking to reporters at Zagreb airport, Prlic said he did not want to prove his innocence before the UN tribunal, but the tribunal had to prove his guilt. Prlic, who was also Bosnia's foreign minister, told reporters in a packed VIP lounge at the airport his case would prove that the policy which he pursued was correct. "It was the most honest attempt to build a normal, European Bosnia-Herzegovina, which is what it will be like," Prlic said. In an emotional address to some 300 supporters and former fellow fighters, the former HVO commander, General Slobodan Praljak, said that bad things might have happened in the Homeland War, "but 98 or 99 percent of it was white, and can serve credit to every army and nation". "We are leaving innocent, and we will return innocent. We defended ourselves, we are not guilty," Praljak told his supporters after he chanted the Croatian anthem with them. There were no state officials at the airport. Miroslav Tudjman, leader of the Croatian True Revival party and son of the first Croatian president, the late Franjo Tudjman, recalled that seven of ten officials from the first group of indicted officials of the former Herceg Bosna were acquitted and voiced hope this would happen in the latest case as well. He would not comment on the indictment in which his father and Croatia's former defence minister, the late Gojko Susak, are charged with a joint criminal enterprise. "It is obvious that attempts are made to declare the establishment of the Croatian state a criminal enterprise, and there is nothing to comment on about that," Tudjman said. (Hina) rml

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