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ZAGREB/SARAJEVO, Apr 2 (Hina) - The deployment of large troops of
the NATO-led Stabilisation Force in Bosnia-Herzegovina noticed
Thursday in the area of Bosnian Serb stronghold Pale, in the
vicinity of former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic's house,
has nothing to do with the arrest of persons accused of war crimes
but is a regular inspection of the Bosnian Serb special police
force, SFOR representatives stated Thursday.
SFOR spokesman in Sarajevo Major Peter Clark answered Hina's
inguiry about the movements of SFOR units around Pale by saying that
they were regular and previously fully agreed inspection
activities.
Major Clark stressed that was in accordance with the second part of
the Dayton peace agreement, Article 1 Provision 8, which regulates
military issues and details the control of special military and
police units.
This has been done in other parts of the Bosnian Serb entity as well
and is now being done in Pale, Clark said.
This was confirmed by SFOR's spokesman in Zagreb, Lt. Col. Hans
Joachim-Becker.
According to Reuters, an unnamed diplomatic official at NATO
confirmed that the deployment was an inspection and not an attempt
to arrest Karadzic. The source at NATO however said there was an
unusually large number of armoured vehicles and soldiers for that
kind of activity.
AFP earlier reported there were in the Pale area between 400 and 500
SFOR soldiers and 100 armoured vehicles backed by helicopters.
(hina) ha
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