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HAD GOTOVINA MET WITH INVESTIGATORS THINGS WOULD BE DIFFERENT - PM

ZAGREB, June 11 (Hina) - Prime Minister Ivica Racan said on Wednesday he believed that had Ante Gotovina been recommended or allowed to speak to investigators from the Hague war crimes tribunal in 1998, the fugitive general would have been able to answer certain questions and that developments with the indictment against him would have been different.
ZAGREB, June 11 (Hina) - Prime Minister Ivica Racan said on Wednesday he believed that had Ante Gotovina been recommended or allowed to speak to investigators from the Hague war crimes tribunal in 1998, the fugitive general would have been able to answer certain questions and that developments with the indictment against him would have been different. #L# "I expect those involved at that time to say something and assume their share of the responsibility," Racan said during question time in parliament to Anto Kovacevic of the Christian Democrats, who wanted to know who would be held to account for the fact that Gotovina was not enabled to speak to the Hague's investigators five years ago. "Everything that happened needn't have happened," said the PM. "It was far easier to raise a fuss over the indictment than consider why it had to happen." Racan reiterated Gotovina would have to appear before the Hague court as a defendant. He is confident that with the government's help, Gotovina will manage to defend himself from the contentious parts of the indictment. The PM recalled he and his cabinet had not agreed with the key points in the Gotovina indictment. He also reminded MPs of his June 2001 letter to chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte, as well as of the government's reply to an interpellation by opposition MPs concerning the Gotovina case, saying that both documents expressed his cabinet's willingness to participate in a certain way in Gotovina's defence once the trial started. The PM did not answer Kovacevic's question whether the government would ask for a revision of the indictment, considering that a Croatian weekly has found Serb civilians, which the indictment claims were killed after 1995's Operation Storm, to be alive. Commenting on Gotovina's recent interview with Nacional weekly, Interior Minister Sime Lucin said it had not been the author of the interview who had contacted Gotovina but that the retired general had got in touch with Ivo Pukanic via a mediator. Pukanic said he met Gotovina abroad, Lucin told Marin Jurjevic of the Social Democrats, who asked how had Pukanic managed to reach Gotovina when the police could not. (hina) ha

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