BELGRADE EXPECTS SLJIVANCANIN TO SURRENDER TO ICTY BELGRADE, April 22 (Hina) - Serbian and Montenegrin Foreign Minister Goran Svilanovic said Tuesday he hoped Veselin Sljivancanin, indicted for war crimes in Vukovar, would follow in
the footsteps of Miroslav Radic and surrender to The Hague-based war crimes tribunal (ICTY).
BELGRADE, April 22 (Hina) - Serbian and Montenegrin Foreign
Minister Goran Svilanovic said Tuesday he hoped Veselin
Sljivancanin, indicted for war crimes in Vukovar, would follow in
the footsteps of Miroslav Radic and surrender to The Hague-based
war crimes tribunal (ICTY). #L#
Svilanovic told Radio B92 that Radic had surrendered to the ICTY
because he "accepted the facts that there are elements and evidence
pointing to the fact that some other people committed the crime at
Ovcara (a farm near Vukovar)".
Serbian and Montenegrin Defence Minister Boris Tadic said that
"there is much evidence that Radic might not even have participated
in the crime at Ovcara". He added that the voluntary surrender of
the former Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) captain would improve the
country's international standing and its cooperation with the
ICTY.
Radic's attorney Borivoje Borovic said Radic could appear before
the ICTY within ten to 15 days.
According to Interior Minister Dusan Mihajlovic, an investigation
into the assassination of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic
revealed direct perpetrators of the 1991 crime at Ovcara, who were
arrested. This could help Radic and Sljivancanin to clarify their
roles in this crime, say Belgrade officials.
Sljivancanin has told the media several times that he would "not
surrender alive".
Another former JNA officer, Mile Mrksic, also indicted for the
Ovcara crime, surrendered to the ICTY last spring.
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