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ICTY: AGOTIC ENDS TESTIMONY AGAINST MILOSEVIC

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, June 30 (Hina) - Cross-examining prosecutorial witness Imra Agotic before the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Monday, former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic tried to prove that Croatian Serbs were endangered after the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) had come to power in 1990.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, June 30 (Hina) - Cross-examining prosecutorial witness Imra Agotic before the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague on Monday, former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic tried to prove that Croatian Serbs were endangered after the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) had come to power in 1990. #L# Milosevic asked Croatian President Stjepan Mesic's advisor on national security if he had known about the armament of HDZ members in the summer of 1991 and if a party army had been set up in Croatia that year. "Those were preparations for defence," Agotic said, adding that the need for defence imposed itself after the then Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) had begun to turn into a Serb army and sided with Serbs. Milosevic asked the witness if he was familiar with the information about "the disappearance of 600 Serbs from Sisak and a large number of people from Split, Zagreb, Karlovac and Gospic". Agotic said he did not have such data, but that he had learned from the press of cases of murder of Serbs in areas controlled by the Croatian authorities. Trying to challenge the argument that only Croatia and Slovenia had been disarmed before the war, Milosevic claimed that in 1991 the JNA had decided to seize weapons from the Territorial Defence in all Yugoslav republics. "I don't know if weapons were seized in other republics as well, but I do know that those weapons were given to Serbs in Croatia," Agotic replied. Milosevic then asked the witness what he knew about the activities of Tomislav Mercep and Branimir Glavas in Vukovar and eastern Slavonia and the mass killings of Vukovar Serbs. "The defence forces in Vukovar was poorly armed and equipped and so small that they certainly could not have committed massacres against the other side," said Agotic. The former Serbian and Yugoslav president also tried to obtain confirmation for his claim that Croatian Army units had been deployed in Bosnia-Herzegovina back in 1992 and that Croatia had provided weapons and ammunition to Bosnian Croats, to which Agotic replied that he did not have any knowledge of that. "I only know that Croatian Army transport helicopters made over 100 flights evacuating the wounded from Bosnia-Herzegovina," Agotic said. (hina) rml sb

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