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SERBIA EMIGRANTS ASSOCIATION SENT ARMS TO SERBS IN CROATIA, BOSNIA- WITNESS

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Sept 15 (Hina) - Weapons and military equipment were dispatched in mass quantities to Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia in the 1990s through the Serbian Emigrants Association, a protected witness in the trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic told the Hague war crimes tribunal on Monday.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Sept 15 (Hina) - Weapons and military equipment were dispatched in mass quantities to Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia in the 1990s through the Serbian Emigrants Association, a protected witness in the trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic told the Hague war crimes tribunal on Monday. #L# A former official with the Association, witness B-179 described how he led convoys of the association's trucks with weapons and ammunition for several towns in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1992 alone, 1,200 trucks with military equipment for Serb rebels were dispatched from a Yugoslav People's Army barracks in Bubanj potok near Belgrade. The operation was carried out in secrecy, under the guise of humanitarian aid, and was led by people from the Serbian Interior Ministry's State Security Service (SDB) and Association president Brane Crncevic, said the witness. Only a small number of people knew about the operation, including Milosevic, whom the SDB regularly informed about the dispatches, he added. The weapons were picked up by persons selected by the Serbian Interior Ministry, the witness said, adding that arms and equipment also came from Territorial Defence and Interior Ministry warehouses. The witness said he led the first convoys for Knin in Croatia and Pale in Bosnia. He also led a convoy of eight tons of Republic of Serb Krajina dinars for Knin, returning back with sacks of different foreign currencies. The deliveries continued undisturbed even during Belgrade's 1992 embargo towards Bosnian Serbs, said the witness. The prosecution entered documents about the deliveries, and the witness said that many were burned after the war. Milosevic said the entire testimony was false, insisting the Serbian Emigrants Association "sent only humanitarian aid to endangered Serbs". He did not dispute the witness' claims about routes by which weaponry was dispatched from Serbia. Milosevic was puzzled by claims that "eminent writer and my friend Brane Crncevic" was involved in the weaponry deliveries. When the witness said that he once drove Crncevic to Milosevic's residency, the defendant said Crncevic was never at his house. The witness went on to say that he and his family were exposed to death threats since March, when he accepted to cooperate with the tribunal's investigators. (hina) ha

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