FILTER
Prikaži samo sadržaje koji zadovoljavaju:
objavljeni u periodu:
na jeziku:
hrvatski engleski
sadrže pojam:

EX CROATIAN OFFICIAL WRAPS UP INTERVIEW WITH ICTY INVESTIGATORS

ZAGREB, Feb 26 (Hina) - Expressing his knowledge relating to connections between former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and the Yugoslav Peoples' Army (JNA) and the leadership of rebelling Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, former head of the Croatian President's Office Hrvoje Sarinic on Wednesday ended his interview with UN war crimes tribunal's investigators.
ZAGREB, Feb 26 (Hina) - Expressing his knowledge relating to connections between former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and the Yugoslav Peoples' Army (JNA) and the leadership of rebelling Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, former head of the Croatian President's Office Hrvoje Sarinic on Wednesday ended his interview with UN war crimes tribunal's investigators. #L# The talks were led on the subject of Milosevic and his ties to the JNA as well as his ties to the leadership of the self-styled Republika Srpska Krajina in Croatia and Republika Srpska in Bosnia, as well as his role in the entire matter because he had always negated any such connections, Sarinic said after his talks with the ICTY representatives, which were held in the UN offices in Zagreb. Milosevic always denied any connections and portrayed himself as a peace-maker, and it is now at the tribunal which recognises only hard facts to prove those ties, Sarinic told journalists following his talks. The former head of the office of the first Croatian President Franjo Tudjman, who began his testimony on Monday, now is only speculating whether he might be subpoenaed as a witness in the Croatian section of the trial against Milosevic in The Hague. Sarinic, being aware of the fact that Milosevic was well versed in cross-examining witnesses, said that if he was to be subpoenaed he would be faced with a huge task. Several days prior to giving his testimony Sarinic said he was not called as a suspect and so did not have an attorney present during the talks. He, nevertheless, was not given any access to any documents either. He explained that as he did not hold any office in government at the moment, he could not have access to such documents, but he was, however, a little surprised that no-one in the government had contacted him or offered him any legal advice. "I did not require any assistance today but it would have been proper for the government to have done so," he said. Hrvoje Sarinic, who until 1998 was the chief of staff of President Franjo Tudjman and one of his closest associates, was engaged in negotiations during the Homeland War with Slobodan Milosevic who today is a defendant at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague, Sarinic described that period in his book entitled "All my Confidential Negotiations with Slobodan Milosevic 1993-1995". (Hina) sp ms

VEZANE OBJAVE

An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙