He flew in from Moscow where he lives, accompanied by a team of Russian physicians led by Dr Leo Bokeria, the director of the Bakulev Institute of Cardiovascular Surgery, who were to examine the autopsy results amid uncertainties over the cause of Slobodan Milosevic's death.
Marko Milosevic insists his father was murdered. "He got killed. He didn't die. He got killed. There is a murder," he told The Associated Press on arriving at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.
Slobodan Milosevic was found dead in his cell in the detention unit of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague on Saturday morning. An autopsy performed by Dutch pathologists at the Dutch Forensic Institute in The Hague on Sunday showed that he had died of a heart attack.
An ICTY official told AP on condition of anonymity that the former Yugoslav president had free access to medication he was receiving without prescription and that alcoholic drinks had also been smuggled into his cell. He said that the ICTY detention unit administrator had notified the tribunal he could no longer guarantee for Milosevic's health, and that the prison authorities had on several occasions found illicit substances in his cell, including hard liquor and medicines obtained without prescription.
Detention unit administrator Timothy McFadden has refused requests for interviews, and ICTY spokeswoman Alexandra Milenov has said the tribunal cannot make any comments because the inquiry into the circumstances surrounding Milosevic's death is still in progress.
It is not yet known where and when Slobodan Milosevic will be buried.