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PROTECTED WITNESS TESTIFIES IN MILOSEVIC TRIAL

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, July 2 (Hina) - Protected witness C-006 said in his testimony at the trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic on Wednesday that on the day of the massacre of 200 Croats at Ovcara outside Vukovar he had seen Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) Major Veselin Sljivancanin on several locations where the imprisoned had been detained, including Ovcara.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, July 2 (Hina) - Protected witness C-006 said in his testimony at the trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic on Wednesday that on the day of the massacre of 200 Croats at Ovcara outside Vukovar he had seen Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) Major Veselin Sljivancanin on several locations where the imprisoned had been detained, including Ovcara. #L# The witness, a former member of Vukovar's Territorial Defence (TO), said that on 20 November 1991 he had seen Sljivancanin in front of a hangar at a farm where prisoners from the Vukovar hospital had been detained. Previously on the same day, the witness saw Sljivancanin in a JNA barracks in the city where prisoners were kept before they were transferred to Ovcara by buses, as well as near the buses. He said that the buses had been escorted by military police and JNA armoured vehicles. As they were getting out of the buses, on the way to the hangar, the prisoners had to run the gauntlet of soldiers with batons. Late on Tuesday night Sljivancanin was secretly transferred to the detention centre of the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague. He is indicted, together with Mile Mrksic and Miroslav Radic, for the massacre of more than 200 Croat prisoners at Ovcara on 20 November 1991. The witness said that while at the hangar, on 20 November he had seen TO commanders Miroljub Vujovic and Stanko Vujovic, with whom Sljivancanin that day had got into an argument, however, the witness could not hear what they were arguing about. The witness said he had not heard Sljivancanin issue any orders that day. He confirmed that JNA troops were more numerous than TO and had armoured carriers and tanks. The witness saw Sljivancanin on 19 November 1991, in front of the Vukovar hospital, as the prisoners were being transferred from the hospital to the Velepromet warehouse, where they were told that they would be executed. The witness said that he left Ovcara on 20 November in the afternoon and that the following day he heard that all Croats who remained at Ovcara had been killed. The witness, who spoke in fluent English, lived in Vukovar until the beginning of the war, when he fled to Belgrade. He later returned to Vukovar, where he continued to live for another six years. A child from a mixed marriage, the witness said his family had received anonymous threats before the war because his mother was a Serb, as did other people who had Serb relatives. The tribunal today stated that one of the three amici curiae in the Milosevic trial, Belgrade attorney Branislav Tapuskovic, would no longer hold that post after the prosecution completed presenting evidence in the case. The tribunal offered no explanation for this decision and Tapuskovic will be replaced by a British lawyer. The trial resumed with the closed-door testimony of another witness for the prosecution. (hina) rml

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