ZAGREB, March 8 (Hina) - Croatian Justice Minister Vesna Skare Ozbolt has confirmed that a sealed indictment against generals Ivan Cermak and Mladen Markac and an amended indictment against General Ante Gotovina arrived in Zagreb from
The Hague some ten days ago.
ZAGREB, March 8 (Hina) - Croatian Justice Minister Vesna Skare Ozbolt
has confirmed that a sealed indictment against generals Ivan Cermak
and Mladen Markac and an amended indictment against General Ante
Gotovina arrived in Zagreb from The Hague some ten days ago.#L#
The indictments arrived on March 1 and their content will be kept
confidential until a competent judge of the UN war crimes tribunal
decides that they can be made public, Skare Ozbolt said at a news
conference at the ministry on Monday.
She said that Cermak and Markac would leave for The Hague by the end
of this week.
The minister voiced hope that the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and its chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte
would welcome the decision of the accused to appear voluntarily before
the tribunal and that they would be granted release pending trial upon
their initial appearance.
She said the government would extend all legal, expert and other
assistance to the accused, including the engagement of domestic and
foreign legal experts as "amici curiae" (friends of the court).
"By providing guarantees the government shows that it believes in
their innocence and reiterates that it will extend all legal, expert
and other assistance in their defence, as well as in the defence of
the truth about the Homeland War," the minister said.
The indictments were sealed at Del Ponte's request and for the time
being only the government and the indictees and their lawyers can be
informed about their content.
Government members were not able to speak about or comment on the
indictment due to a confidentiality clause, although they were
informed about its content, the minister said when asked to comment on
the government's keeping silent about the indictment.
She added that the government was granted permission by the
prosecutor's office to go public with the identity of the accused
today.
Along with the indictment against Cermak and Markac, the government
also received an amended indictment against General Gotovina, which
will be forwarded to the competent county court in Zagreb as Gotovina
is on the run and an agreement on his voluntary surrender to the
tribunal is not possible, the minister said.
Skare Ozbolt added that Markac and Cermak and their attorneys were
informed about the indictments immediately upon their receipt. The
government decided to act that way bearing in mind their previous
statements about their readiness to appear voluntarily before the
Hague tribunal if indicted. The indictees confirmed to the government
their readiness to do so, she said.
The minister said that the government's conduct in the case confirmed
its position that relations with the tribunal were of a legal nature
and should be treated as such, respecting the Constitutional Law on
Cooperation with the ICTY and assumed international obligations.
The government is demonstrating readiness to consistently fulfil its
obligations, showing that Croatia is functioning as a law-based state,
she said.
Answering a reporter's question, Skare Ozbolt said it was up to the
parliament to decide if it would discuss some allegations from the
indictments.
Commenting on previous proposals by the Croatian Democratic Union
(HDZ) to amend the Constitutional Law on Cooperation with the ICTY,
Skare Ozbolt said the HDZ should be asked if it stuck to its
proposals. Asked about the position of her party, the Democratic
Centre (DC), she said she would present the DC's position at a news
conference.
The spokeswoman for the ICTY's Office of the Prosecutor, Florence
Hartmann, has said in a phone interview with Hina that the tribunal
unsealed indictments against Markac and Cermak and the amended
indictment against General Ante Gotovina this morning.
Hartmann said that Markac and Cermak were charged with crimes against
humanity and violations of the laws and customs of war during the 1995
Operation "Storm".
At the time, Cermak was the civil administrator of Knin and Markac
commanded special police forces.
(Hina) rml