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EIGHTEEN PEOPLE TOOK PART IN SERBIAN PM'S ASSASSINATION

BELGRADE, April 21 (Hina) - Eighteen members of the Red Berets and the Zemun Clan took part in the assassination of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, Belgrade media editors-in-chief were told at a briefing at the Serbian government on Monday.
BELGRADE, April 21 (Hina) - Eighteen members of the Red Berets and the Zemun Clan took part in the assassination of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, Belgrade media editors-in-chief were told at a briefing at the Serbian government on Monday. #L# Among the 18 were two members of the Security Information Agency who were in charge of security at the villa Djindjic lived at in Belgrade's Dedinje district. One of the two was paid 1,200 euros for telling the assassins when the PM's car left for the government building. Journalists were told the entire operation was coordinated from one of his flats by Milorad Lukovic aka Legija, a former commander of the Special Operations Units aka Red Berets, who is at large. After the murder, one of the assassins buried the sniper gun used to kill the PM at a construction site near the Federation Palace in New Belgrade. The assassins had several cars which had been parked close to the government building, where Djindjic was killed, the night before the slaying. They also had elaborate plans which were to provide them with backing if something unexpected happened. Reporters were also told the names of the people who killed former Serbian President Ivan Stambolic, whose body was recently dug up at Fruska Gora hill. He had gone missing on 25 August 2000. According to founded suspicion, Stambolic was slain by Branko Bercek, whose helpers were Dusan Maricic aka Gumar, until recently the commander of the Red Berets, which were dissolved after the Djindjic murder, and Red Berets members Leonid Milivojevic, Nenad Sare, and Nenad Bujosevic. Bujosevic is in custody after being sentenced to 15 years in jail for participation in the assassination of Vuk Draskovic in late 1999, when four officials of Draskovic's Serbian Revival Movement, the most significant opposition party at the time, were killed. Journalists were also told that an anti-aircraft rocket launcher had been found at the villa Bosanka in Dedinje. This was the residence of Momcilo Mandic, a Bosnian businessman allegedly close to Bosnian Serb war crimes indictee Radovan Karadzic. Police will release a more detailed statement in a couple of days. (hina) ha

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