ZAGREB, April 7 (Hina) - During her brief visit to Sarajevo on Tuesday, Hague war crimes tribunal chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte did not meet Bosnian government officials or media representatives, which has given rise to speculation
in the media about the reason of her unannounced visit. According to some media, she asked the NATO-led Stabilisation Force (SFOR) to continue tough action to track down war crimes suspects.
ZAGREB, April 7 (Hina) - During her brief visit to Sarajevo on Tuesday,
Hague war crimes tribunal chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte did not
meet Bosnian government officials or media representatives, which has
given rise to speculation in the media about the reason of her
unannounced visit. According to some media, she asked the NATO-led
Stabilisation Force (SFOR) to continue tough action to track down war
crimes suspects.#L#
All Bosnian media reported on Wednesday that Del Ponte had met only
the SFOR chief commander, US General Virgil Packett, and that she even
bypassed the international community's high representative to the
country, Paddy Ashdown.
"The prosecutor met General Packett and they discussed the
apprehension of war crimes indictees," the Banja Luka-based newspaper
Nezavisne Novine quoted SFOR spokesman Dave Sullivan as saying.
Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor Florance Hartmann, who
was mainly unavailable for comment on Tuesday, was even more reserved.
She said that it was "a working meeting", but declined to reveal any
details as to its subject.
Before Del Ponte's arrival, media assumed that she was coming to
criticise the Bosnian Serb government for lack of any serious
cooperation with the Hague tribunal.
Bosnian state television BH TV 1 and the Muslim-Croat Federation's FTV
television network claimed that the real purpose of the prosecutor's
visit was fresh indictments to be issued against senior Muslim wartime
political and military officials.
Ejup Ganic, a wartime member of the Bosnian Presidency, General Rasim
Delic, the Bosnian Army commander, and General Sakib Mahmuljin, the
commander of the Bosnian Army Third Corps, were cited as potential
indictees.
Citing an unnamed source from the tribunal, the Sarajevo daily
Oslobodjenje said on its front page on Wednesday that Del Ponte had
visited Sarajevo to support SFOR in its efforts to arrest war crimes
suspects, particularly Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic.
Oslobodjenje said that Del Ponte's meeting with General Packett should
be seen as additional support to SFOR to continue the hunt for
Karadzic regardless of negative responses from Serb politicians and
the Serb Orthodox Church following last week's raid in Pale when a
Serb priest and his son were injured.
The Dnevni Avaz daily, quoting anonymous Bosnian intelligence sources,
wrote on Wednesday that Karadzic had indeed been in Pale last week
visiting parish priest Starovlah at his home, which was established by
tapping the priest's phone.
According to this source, Karadzic managed to evade the attempted
arrest thanks to information and logistical support from the Bosnian
Serb intelligence service, whose agents transferred him out of Pale
towards Zvornik before the SFOR raid.
(Hina) vm