SARAJEVO, Jan 26(Hina) - Graham Blewitt, deputy chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), believes that former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic is still at large because the West
lacks the political will to arrest him.
SARAJEVO, Jan 26(Hina) - Graham Blewitt, deputy chief prosecutor of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY),
believes that former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic is still at
large because the West lacks the political will to arrest him.#L#
In an interview with Monday's issue of the Sarajevo-based Dnevni Avaz
daily, Blewitt said the ICTY had always been assured that the West had
the political will to arrest Karadzic, but added that he no longer
believed this would happen.
Confirming that he would return to Australia in the middle of the year
after ten years of service with the ICTY, Blewitt said Saddam
Hussein's arrest was the best proof that everything could be done if
there was political will.
The failure to arrest Karadzic is primarily the fault of the
authorities of Bosnia-Herzegovina, especially Republika Srpska,
Blewitt said, adding that the Stabilisation Force shared the
responsibility because it had the opportunity to arrest the Serb
war-time leader.
Blewitt claims that Karadzic is moving along the border area between
Bosnia and Montenegro and that he enjoys protection from the Serb
Orthodox Church and his numerous friends from the Serb Democratic
Party, who are still in power.
Asked whether he believed that sanctions could be imposed on the
Bosnian Serb entity over non-cooperation with the ICTY, Blewitt said
he did not believe that could happen.
The deputy prosecutor believes that charges against former Yugoslav
president Slobodan Milosevic, including charges of genocide, would be
successfully proven by the end of his trial.
He confirmed that the Prosecution was conducting another 12-15
separate investigations against 26-30 people.
It is expected that the investigations, which refer to Serbs, Croats
and Muslims from Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbs and Croats from Croatia,
Kosovo Albanians, and Macedonians from Macedonia, will be completed by
the end of the year.
Depending on the accused, some of the cases may be transferred to
domestic courts while the ICTY will keep more important cases, he
said.
(Hina) rml