BELGRADE, May 3 (Hina) - The principal indictee in the assassination of Serbian Premier Zoran Djindjic and former commander of Serbia's special police units, Milorad Lukovic aka Legija, who surrendered to the police in front of his
Belgrade home on Sunday evening, will be questioned in continuation of the trial of 13 persons accused of the assassination, due to resume at Belgrade's Special Court for Organised Crime on May 10, an attorney for Djindjic's family told BK Television.
BELGRADE, May 3 (Hina) - The principal indictee in the assassination of
Serbian Premier Zoran Djindjic and former commander of Serbia's
special police units, Milorad Lukovic aka Legija, who surrendered to
the police in front of his Belgrade home on Sunday evening, will be
questioned in continuation of the trial of 13 persons accused of the
assassination, due to resume at Belgrade's Special Court for Organised
Crime on May 10, an attorney for Djindjic's family told BK
Television.#L#
Lukovic's attorneys Momcilo Bulatovic and Slobodan Milivojevic told
the same TV station they had no information on the arrest of their
client nor had they tried to check reports about his arrest with the
police.
Milorad Lukovic Legija is the principal indictee in the Djindjic
assassination trial and the trial of people accused of killing former
Serbian Premier Ivan Stambolic and of the attempted murder of Serb
Revival Movement party leader Vuk Draskovic in Budva. The police have
just completed an investigation against Lukovic in the case of an
incident which happened on a highway near Belgrade when four senior
officials of the Serb Revival Movement were killed in a car crash.
Nikola Barovic, legal representative for the Stambolic family, said on
Monday that considering the numerous trials that were being conducted
against Lukovic, it would be best to grant him the status of a
protected witness in some trials so light could be shed on the crimes
and the people who ordered them.
Under the Law on the Prevention of Organised Crime, the status of a
protected witness cannot be granted to an organiser of a criminal act,
but possible decisions on that matter will be made by the prosecution,
said Maja Kovacevic Tomic, spokeswoman for the Special Court.
Shortly before midnight on Sunday, the Serbian Interior Ministry
confirmed Lukovic's arrest and transfer to Belgrade's Central Prison.
(Hina) rml