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WITNESS SAYS MILOSEVIC DECIDED ABOUT EVERYTHING

THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Oct 8 (Hina) - Witness for the prosecution Milan Milanovic, one of the former rebel Serb leaders in eastern Croatia's Slavonia, confirmed before the Hague war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on Wednesday that the accused, ex-Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, had a decisive influence on the waging of the war and the creation of a parastate in that region in the 1990s.
THE HAGUE/ZAGREB, Oct 8 (Hina) - Witness for the prosecution Milan Milanovic, one of the former rebel Serb leaders in eastern Croatia's Slavonia, confirmed before the Hague war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on Wednesday that the accused, ex- Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, had a decisive influence on the waging of the war and the creation of a parastate in that region in the 1990s. #L# Milanovic said that in 1991, Serbian troops in eastern Slavonia were commanded by Serbian Interior Ministry officer Radovan Stojicic aka Badza, who briefed Milosevic about the war, in the witness' presence, on a regular basis. In 1991 "official authorities in Belgrade" sent Stojicic with equipment and Serbian Interior Ministry personnel to eastern Slavonia, where he was appointed Territorial Defence commander, said Milanovic, former assistant defence minister in rebel Croatian Serbs' self-styled Republic of Serb Krajina and chief Serb negotiator for the Erdut Agreement in 1995. The witness described the armament of Serbs in the area and the founding of a Serb National Council for the purpose of "keeping Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium within Yugoslavia". He spoke about attacks by the former federation's army, the JNA, on Vukovar and Croat- and Hungarian-populated villages and the mass expulsion of locals. Milanovic said that the Serbs' political leader in eastern Slavonia, Goran Hadzic, exercised his influence only because he was "very close to Milosevic" but had no required skills. The witness confirmed that Milan Babic and Milan Martic, Serb leaders in southern Croatia's Knin, would often meet with Milosevic. Answering questions from prosecutor Hildegard Uertz-Reztlaff, Milanovic said power in the region of eastern Slavonia was in the hands of the JNA which took the Serbian side in August 1991. He added that troops of the Novi Sad Corps, the Belgrade Guard Brigade, Serbia's Territorial Defence and Interior Ministry, Arkan's Tigers and other paramilitary units led by Serbia's State Security took part in the war. Illustrating Milosevic's order-giving role in the Yugoslav Army (VH), the witness described an event from 1993, when the troops withdrew from the border separating Slavonia and Serbia. Milosevic asked via his "personal friend" Stojicic that the decision on the withdrawal be altered. From Milanovic's flat, Stojicic phoned Milosevic, who rang General Momcilo Perisic ordering that the troops return to the borders, which Perisic did, said the witness. The witness went on to say that from 1991 to 1996, when he was assistant defence minister of the "Serbian Autonomous District of Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium", he was employed as a civilian in the VJ and was on its payroll. He added this was the case with everyone at his ministry as well as with Serbia's Territorial Defence command, which was comprised of officers from the JNA and the VJ. Milanovic said the Serb parastate in Croatia and its troops were financed via "government" accounts in banks in Serbia. Said troops were regularly sent equipment from the JNA and the VJ, including "50 tanks from Perisic," he added. The Milosevic trial resumes on Thursday when he is due to cross- examine Milanovic. The next witness will be British General Rupert Smith, UNPROFOR commander in Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1995. (hina) ha

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