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Press Release
. Communiqué de presse
(Exclusively for
the use of the media. Not an official document)
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TRIAL CHAMBER |
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CHAMBRE
DE 1ÈRE INSTANCE |
The
Hague, 2 November 2001
CC/P.I.S./631e
JUDGEMENT
IN THE CASE THE PROSECUTOR AGAINST MIROSLAV KVOCKA, MILOJICA KOS, MLADO RADIC,
ZORAN ZIGIC AND DRAGOLJUB PRCAC: (
OMARSKA/ KERATERM/ TRNOPOLJE )
The
five accused are sentenced from 5 to 25 years imprisonment for their participation
in a " hellish orgy of persecution"
Please find below
a summary of the Judgement read out in court on Friday 2 November 2001 by Judge
Almiro Rodrigues, the presiding Judge of Trial Chamber 1. The Trial Chamber
also consisted of Judge Fouad Riad and Judge Patricia Wald.
The full text
of the Judgement is available upon request at the Public Information Services;
it is also available on the Internet site of the Tribunal.
Introduction
"Injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere", as Martin Luther King
said so well. With this maxim in mind, and mindful of the need to ward off such
as a threat, the Chamber is today rendering its Judgement in the Prosecutor’s
case against Miroslav Kvocka, Milojica Kos, Mladjo Radic, Zoran Zigic and Dragoljub
Prcac, who stand accused of persecution, other crimes against humanity and war
crimes, committed in the region of Prijedor, between 26 May and 30 August 1992
and, more specifically, in the camps of Omarska, Keraterm and Trnopolje.
Before we consider
the merits of the case, a few preliminary remarks should be made.
We wish to comment
upon the procedural changes that this case has gone through. The time span of
the arrests was great: 9 April 1998 for the first (Kvocka, Radic) and 5 April
2000 for the last (Prcac). The Prosecution team changed Lead Counsel several
times. Mr. Zigic’s Defence team changed and the Chamber itself was composed
in several ways during the pre-trial stage. In all, the trial against the accused
Kvocka, Radic, Kos and Zigic opened only on 26 February 2000. Mr. Prcac was
arrested on 6 March 2000 and the Chamber, after discussions with the two parties,
ordered the joinder of trials out of a concern for the proper administration
of justice. The trial recommenced on 2 May 2000, this time against five accused,
and proceedings were declared closed on 19 July 2001. During the trial, sixty
or so decisions and written orders were rendered, excluding the countless decisions
delivered orally. There were six interlocutory appeals. The Chamber sat for
113 days in this case, while also holding hearings in the Krstic case at the
same time. The Chamber heard fifty Prosecution witnesses, eighty-nine Defence
witnesses and admitted a total of 489 exhibits.
We do not want
to elaborate here on the details of the proceedings. Two decisions of particular
importance in respect of this trial, however, deserve mention.
The first
is the judicial notice taken by the Chamber at the request of the Prosecutor.
The Chamber, relying on the Appeals Chamber’s Judgement in the Tadic case, decided
that "at the times and places alleged in the indictment, there existed
an armed conflict; that this conflict included a widespread and systematic attack
against notably the Muslim and Croat civilian population; and that there was
a nexus between this armed conflict and the widespread and systematic attack
on the civilian population and the existence of the Omarska, Keraterm and Trnopolje
camps and the mistreatment of the prisoners therein". This decision, largely
the result of agreement between the two parties, made it possible to limit the
facts at issue and to centre the discussion on the individual responsibility
of each of the accused.
The second decision
worth mention is the motion for
acquittal of 14 December 2000 presented by the Defence for the accused
Radic, Kos, Zigic and Prcac. The Chamber considered – even without a motion
from Kvocka’s Counsel – that the accused Kvocka, Radic, Kos and Prcac should
be acquitted of the crimes with which they were charged, allegedly committed
in Keraterm and Trnopolje, as well as for certain crimes committed against a
number of victims, some of whom have been listed. The accused Zigic too was
acquitted of a limited number of crimes for which he had been prosecuted.
We come now to
the actual pronouncement of the Judgement in the case The Prosecutor v. Miroslav
Kvocka, Milojica Kos, Mladjo Radic, Zoran Zigic and Dragoljub Prcac. We
will not read the entire written Judgement now but will present a summary which
will provide the accused and the public with the main reasons which led the
Chamber to decide as it did. We emphasise that the only authentic text is that
of the written Judgement and nothing in what we are now going to say can be
construed, even in the slightest way, as altering this Judgement.
Mr. Kvocka, Mr.
Radic, Mr. Kos, Mr. Zigic and Mr. Prcac, the crimes with which you were charged
are based on events which followed the attack of the Serb forces on the town
of Prijedor in April-May 1992, the arrests carried out by the Serbs and all
the mistreatment suffered by almost all of those arrested, mistreatment sometimes
as serious as rape, torture or death.
In reaching its
decision the Chamber had to respond essentially to three questions: what are
the facts? what crimes were committed? can we find you guilty, Mr. Kvocka, Mr.
Radic, Mr. Kos, Mr. Zigic and Mr. Prcac for one or any of these crimes?
What we will present
now is a summary of the conclusions reached by the Chamber on these three questions.
I - WHAT ARE THE
FACTS?
On 30 April 1992,
Serb forces took control of Prijedor. The take-over of Prijedor was followed
shortly afterwards by the removal of the non-Serbs, Muslims and Bosnian Croats,
from positions of responsibility. Many lost their employment, their children
were prevented from going to school and the radio broadcast anti-Muslim and
anti-Croat propaganda.
The Croats and
Muslims did not accept the situation and considered reacting. Whenever they
put up any significant resistance, the Serbs launched attacks, like those against
the villages of Hambarine and Kozarac. On 30 May, the Muslim attempt to regain
control of Prijedor failed. To avert any desire for resistance by the Croats,
and especially the Muslims, the Serbs interrogated any non-Serb who might present
a threat, and arrested in particular any persons exerting an authority, moral
or otherwise, or representing some kind of power, in particular economic. At
the same time, the men were separated from the women, children and elderly.
Men in particular were interrogated. The Serbs, thus, found reason to assemble
in centres the non-Serbs who had not left the region. This is how the camps
of Omarska, Keraterm and Trnopolje were established.
The evidence presented
to the Chamber makes it necessary to speak, not of investigation centres or
assembly points, but of camps. Trnopolje camp was in fact a rather disparate
collection of buildings in a village of the same name. Omarska camp was located
in the premises of a former iron mine and Keraterm camp in a ceramics factory.
In view of the
charges brought respectively against the accused and the Chamber’s final findings,
we will focus on Omarska camp.
Like Trnopolje
and Keraterm, Omarska camp was officially established on 30 May 1992 by Simo
Drljaca (I note that Drljaca was indicted by the Tribunal but died during an
attempt to apprehend him). Planned initially to function for a fortnight, it
in fact remained in operation until 20 August 1992. During this period of almost
three months, more than 3,334 detainees at least passed through the camp. Thirty
or so women must be added to this list, several of whom occupied high positions
locally. All those detained were interrogated. Almost all were beaten. Many
would not leave the camp alive.
The living conditions
in Omarska camp were appalling. Some of you, perhaps, remember the images filmed
by a television team showing emaciated men, with haggard faces and often a look
of resignation or complete dejection. These are the images which would make
the international community react and are, perhaps, one of the reasons the Tribunal
was established.
Let us picture
the Omarska camp.
An administrative
building, with a dining hall and kitchens on the ground floor, and offices used
mainly for interrogations upstairs. From the dining hall and the stairs leading
to the offices, we see the area separating the administrative building from
the hangars, called the Pista. A little further on is a grassy area with a small
light-coloured building called the White House. Further on again, which we cannot
see, a very small building, the Red House.
The mistreatment
in the camp was constant and widespread and began with the arrival of the detainees.
As soon as they
arrived the prisoners were usually beaten, or in any case mistreated, as if
to demonstrate to them straight away that they were not to be considered human
beings. They were beaten as they were led out of the bus which brought them
to the camp; they were lined up against the wall and often an identity document
or money was often stolen from them; they were made to sing Serb songs; they
were made to sit on the ground or even lie face down on the burning asphalt
for hours without being allowed to move or find something to drink.
They were interrogated.
They were punched, kicked with boots, beaten with rifle butts and all kinds
of objects.
There were no
cells in the hangars, only large rooms, where detainees were held in unbearably
crowded conditions, sometimes with scarcely the room to move, forced to sleep,
in so far as they could, on the ground or on palettes.
The prisoners
were fed little, the food was usually rotten, and they had almost no water.
There were no real toilets and they had to use buckets or the corner of a room
to relieve themselves, or else soil themselves.
The sick or wounded
detainees received little or no treatment.
In general the
men were wasted, weakened, and exhausted from the fact of living in a climate
of violence and fear.
They did not know
when their name would be called.
They knew however
that when their name was called, it was not so much for interrogation as for
beating.
They were beaten
during interrogation, as we have said.
They were beaten
when they were going to eat, as they were forced to run to the dining hall,
they had only a few minutes in which to swallow a pitiful meal.
They were beaten
when they wanted to go to the toilets, so that most of them chose not to.
They were also
beaten for no other apparent reason than a guard or "visitor" being
overcome by the desire for violence. The Chamber received much evidence to demonstrate
that people often came from outside the camp and committed different acts of
violence on the prisoners. Mr. Zigic was one of these visitors.
Some women were
molested, others, or even the same, were raped.
In other words,
there was no area of the camp where a detainee could feel safe or, quite simply,
hope not to be beaten or subjected to some form of violence.
There were offices
in the administration building, in particular, those of the camp commander and
the one used for communications.
There were also
those for the interrogations. Men screamed. None of the accused heard their
cries. Men were beaten violently: when the women had to clean they found traces
of blood and human spatter. The accused saw nothing.
The women detainees
slept there. They were taken out from there at night. They were mistreated,
raped. Some remained prostrate, not speaking a word, during the day. None of
the accused noticed anything at all.
The detainees
spent hours on the Pista. It was June, July, August. It was often hot, very
hot. They did not have anything to drink but were violently hosed down with
fire hoses.
The men were dirty.
Their wounds became infected. Some had dysentery, attacks of diarrhoea. According
to many witnesses the odour was nauseating.
Did the accused
smell nothing?
The detainees
taken to the White House were almost always beaten, usually ferociously. The
men were tortured in front of each other. Sometimes they were made to beat one
another. A father was beaten to death in front of his son. The men shrieked
with pain. There was blood on the walls and on the ground. The men who came
out of there alive had open wounds, could not stand or were unconscious. The
corpses removed from there had open wounds to the skull, severed joints, slit
throats. Some of the victims were ultimately executed with a bullet.
The accused heard
nothing, saw nothing and did nothing.
Detainees sometimes
died as a result of beatings. Their bodies were left on the ground between the
White House and the Pista, sometimes for several days. They would be loaded
into small trucks by detainees.
Did the accused
still see nothing?
Some of the bodies,
including those of two women, would be discovered in mass graves much later.
The 12th
of July is Saint Peter’s day (Petrovdan) an important Orthodox celebration when
large bonfires are lit. On 12 July 1992, a large bonfire was lit using tyres.
Shots were fired at one of the rooms containing detainees. Some were called
out of the hangar. Screams were heard. The air smelt of burnt tyres and grilled
flesh.
Did none of the
accused smell anything or see anything?
Here, we could
only give you a broad idea of the horrifying living conditions in the camps,
especially Omarska. Clearly, these facts cannot be described as anything but
crimes. As one witness told us: "After the tragedy there,
I don’t think that I can say that I’ll ever be happy again. First, I lost my
father and sister. My daughter is suffering extremely serious after-effects
from the events and so am I. I would like to know who has the authority to make
me leave my house, my town, my country and so become a refugee somewhere on
the other side of the world.I hope that those responsible for it will be punished
both by God and by you, and I hope that you will do so honestly and fairly".
II - WHAT
CRIMES WERE COMMITTED?
The Prosecutor
characterised all the facts we have just set out and charged the accused with
committing:
- persecutions
under Article 5 of the Statute by means of murder, torture and beatings, sexual
assault and rape, harassment, humiliation and psychological abuse; and confinement
in inhumane conditions;
- torture under
Articles 3 and 5 of the Statute and cruel treatment under Article 3 of the
Statute;
- murder under
Article 5 of the Statute and murder under Article 3 of the Statute;
- and, in respect
of Mr. Radic alone, rape and torture under Article 5 of the Statute, for facts
also characterised as torture or outrages upon personal dignity under Article
3 of the Statute.
We must underscore
two things:
- first, the
Prosecutor singled out two of the accused as having personally and physically
committed many crimes, Mr. Radic, mainly for rape, and Mr. Zigic, for murder
and assault;
- second, at
the request of the Chamber then hearing the case, the Prosecutor presented
a list of each of the accused’s victims which made it possible, in particular,
to differentiate between the facts ascribed to Mr. Zigic and those to the
other accused.
The Defence did
not generally challenge the legal characterisation of the facts presented by
the Prosecution. What it did principally contest was the role of the accused
in the commission of the crimes.
In its Judgement,
the Chamber essentially relies on the Tribunal’s case-law to define the crimes.
For this reason, I will not elaborate here on how the crimes were characterised
except to recall that by taking judicial notice of many facts the Chamber decided
very early on in the trial that at the times and places alleged in the indictment,
there existed a widespread and systematic attack against the Muslim and Croat
civilian population in the municipality of Prijedor. Insofar as the same facts
were characterised in several ways, the Chamber concludes its Judgement by applying
the Appeals Chamber’s case-law on cumulative offences and, in particular,
follows the case-law according to which the same facts may give rise to convictions
under both Article 3 and Article 5 of the Statute.
Upon analysis,
the Chamber concludes that crimes of persecution, murder, torture and cruel
treatment were committed.
III - ARE
THE ACCUSED, KVOCKA, RADIC, KOS, ZIGIC AND PRCAC GUILTY OF ANY OF THE CRIMES?
The main question
which the Chamber must answer is whether the accused can be found guilty of
the crimes. Very briefly, the Prosecution and Defence arguments are as follows.
The Prosecutor
asserted that the facts which occurred in Omarska or Keraterm as charged must
be taken in the context of all the crimes committed in the Prijedor region at
the time. In essence, a discriminatory widespread and systematic attack coincided
with the commission of many crimes by different individuals. She argued that
some of the crimes could be isolated but that, at camps such as the ones at
issue here, the theory of common purpose or joint criminal enterprise had to
be applied. Thus, the Prosecutor held that the accused were not only responsible
for the crimes they directly and personally committed but also for all the crimes
falling within the common purpose. The Prosecutor claimed that the accused,
Kvocka, Radic, Kos, Zigic, and Prcac, were therefore responsible for all the
crimes committed in Omarska, with the accused Zigic also being responsible for
the incidents in Keraterm for which he is being prosecuted. As such, all the
accused were alleged to be responsible on the basis of Article 7(1) of the Statute,
that is, responsible individually. The Prosecutor further contended that the
accused, Kvocka, Radic, Kos and Prcac, were also responsible as command superiors
pursuant to Article 7(3) of the Statute.
In general, the
Defence stated that the Prosecution had not put forward the common purpose
theory in the indictment, that the accused held no position of authority in
the camp and that all of them had subordinate positions or professions unrelated
to their post at the time of the facts. Mr. Kvocka was a young policeman without
rank. Mr. Radic was an experienced policeman but likewise without rank. Mr.
Kos a waiter. Mr. Zigic a taxi driver and musician. And lastly, Mr. Prcac was
in retirement when recalled to serve at Omarska. Furthermore, the Defence for
the accused, Kvocka and Prcac, stated that their clients had spent little time
in Omarska camp while Mr. Zigic, it was claimed, had spent only eight hours
at Keraterm, over the course of ten or so days. And it was argued that although
Mr. Zigic might have committed a few excesses due, in particular, to his bad
temper and impulsive nature, he could not have committed many of the murders
and assaults ascribed to him, especially given a wound he received at the time.
The Chamber
was therefore confronted with very different questions, with the response to
the first "Was there a joint criminal enterprise?" to a large extent
determining the responses to the others.
The Chamber first
notes that, in the Celebici case, the Appeals Chamber considered that, desirable
as it may be, identifying exactly how the accused participated in the crimes
in the indictment is not in and of itself decisive. Put otherwise, though the
Prosecutor did not expressly refer to the common purpose in the indictment,
indeed far from it, nothing prohibits the Chamber from taking into consideration
the theory which, after all, constitutes only one of the many forms of participation
covered by the Statute. To borrow the words of the Appeals Chamber in the Tadic
case: “₣The Statuteğ does not exclude those modes of participating
in the commission of crimes which occur where several persons having a common
purpose embark on criminal activity that is then carried out either jointly
or by some members of this plurality of persons. Whoever contributes to the
commission of crimes by the group of persons or some members of the group, in
execution of a common criminal purpose, may be held to be criminally liable,
subject to certain conditions ₣…ğ ”
The Chamber carefully
assessed all the arguments presented and assiduously examined all the material
in the record as well as the testimony of the very many victims. In so doing,
it took care to verify the reliability of all the statements and refrained from
taking any systematic or rigid approach. Thus, a witness viewed as credible
on one incident could be disregarded on another. The Chamber meticulously weighed
all the information which could provide an indication as to the exact position
of an accused within the camp, his acts or omissions and the potential nexus
between each of the accused and the camps established on 30 May 1992.
And no doubt is
possible.
Omarska, Keraterm
and Trnopolje camps were not an accident. They were not set up by chance. The
evidence demonstrates that they were the result of an intentional policy to
impose a system of discrimination against the non-Serb population of Prijedor.
The Chamber quite agrees that none of you accused may be charged with participating,
even remotely, in producing or planning the system. Moreover, the Chamber does
not believe that you were involved in any way in the conception of the camps
or in the decision to open them.
When you were
working at Omarska camp, Messrs. Kvocka, Radic, Kos and Prcac, you knew full
well what was happening. And you, Mr. Zigic, when you entered a camp, it was
not so much to work as a guard, which you were only at Keraterm and for a very
short time, than to delight in the sadistic pleasure of beating the detainees
which you did, alone or with others, without the slightest concern in the world
for the suffering you were inflicting on them, sometimes until they died.
However, the Chamber
cannot accept that you were not aware you were directly participating in the
"camp" component of the system of persecution. The discriminatory
policy implemented by others than you did not stop at the gates of the camps.
Quite on the contrary.
Operating on the
pretext that they were seeking out possible criminal enemies, the camps were
merely one more cog in the machine for persecuting the non-Serb population in
Prijedor municipality.
This cog was,
of itself, discriminatory by definition. There were not any, so to speak, Serb
detainees at Omarska and those who were were accused of collaborating with the
non-Serb enemies.
Each of you, in
a different way, made it possible for the cog to turn.
For the camps
to operate, there had to be a commander, a deputy or acting deputy commander,
administrators to keep lists of prisoners, and shift commanders so that the
guards could work in rotation.
None of you can
reasonably claim that the sole purpose of the camps was to make it easier to
carry out investigations and so identify potential criminals, which in and of
itself might have been conceived.
Anyone entering
one of the camps could immediately see what was really going on there, that
is, in the confinement cells where violence was unceasing, deliberate and inflicted
by both the people supposed to guard the prisoners and persons from outside;
violence inflicted on malnourished and unwashed detainees suffering from dysentery
and given little or no treatment; violence which ended with murder. These were
the corpses which were left out in the open, in the full view and knowledge
of everyone.
Under these circumstances,
how can you legitimately claim that you did not know?
You knew this
full well, Mr. Kvocka, because you wanted to get your brothers-in-law out of
Omarska camp. As a policeman, you were perfectly aware of the difference between
a beating and an interrogation.
You knew full
well, Mr. Radic, that considerable violence was being used during the interrogations,
because, as you yourself said, you spent a great deal of time in the offices.
You too, Mr. Prcac,
who were quick to emphasise that your tasks were strictly administrative, as
if the whiteness of the paper could conceal the colour of the blood on the walls
or the all-pervading stench.
You knew this
full well, Mr. Kos, you who put forward your position as a waiter to emphasise
that you were not even a policeman and that you were not therefore in command
of anything or anyone. But, we know that the guards worked in three shifts of
eight hours. We therefore know that you were there at least eight hours a day.
That is why the victims were able to identify you as a shift commander and it
is of little importance that you were not a policeman beforehand. We must even
believe that you liked it because you remained at the camp for the whole while
it operated and you later took a police training course.
And you, Mr. Zigic,
we know very well that you liked to turn up unexpectedly at Omarska, Keraterm
and Trnopolje camps. We know this because you were so excessive that even the
other guards complained about you and because reports were prepared so that
measures would be taken to prevent you from returning.
The Chamber wishes
you to understand fully. The Chamber is not saying that you foresaw or that
you wished for events to unfold as they did.
The Chamber states
that you were perfectly aware of the system of persecution set in place in Omarska,
Keraterm and Trnopolje camps and that you participated in it, each in your own
way, fully aware of what you were doing.
You participated
in this hellish orgy of persecution.
MR. KVOCKA,
PLEASE RISE.
Mr. Kvocka, you
are a professional policeman, very knowledgeable about the rules which apply
to police work.
While working
at Omarska camp from 29 May to 23 June 1992, you were, as you stated yourself,
a duty officer. You had no official function, no specific responsibility. You
did witness several acts of violence but never participated in them. On the
contrary, you claim that you wanted to help some people, in particular, your
Muslim brothers-in-law.
Nonetheless, the
Chamber considers that isolated acts of kindness to some prisoners do not absolve
an individual of crimes which may have been committed.
You were not a
low-level official at the very bottom of the ladder and so totally unable to
exert an influence on what was happening. The evidence presented at trial demonstrates
that you were the camp commander’s right hand and, as such, passed on the orders
which he issued. Your role, however, did not end there because you replaced
the commander in his absence. And you could intervene so that the mistreatment
of a detainee would be stopped. You knew that sanctions could be taken against
those guards responsible for crimes but you did not take any meaningful steps
to do so. You observed the climate of constant violence in the camp and still,
day after day, returned to carry out your responsibilities in Omarska. You told
us that you would have remained longer in the camp had you been given the choice.
In short, not
only did you know of the system of persecution which Omarska camp represented
but you also agreed with it and made it possible for the system to function.
You did your work so well that the victims had no doubt that you were the camp’s
deputy commander.
The Chamber accepts
that you are a professional policeman who loves his work. The Chamber can accept
that of your own accord you would not have taken the decision to mistreat non-Serbs
systematically and repeatedly.
But you participated
in the workings of that system and, in so doing, incurred criminal responsibility.
For the reasons set out in detail in the Judgement, the Chamber finds you guilty
of the crime against humanity, persecution, and the war crimes, murder and torture.
You may be seated.
MR. KOS,
PLEASE RISE.
When you were
mobilised into the reserve police on 6 May 1992, Mr. Kos, you were a waiter.
You were assigned to Omarska camp from late May until at least early August
1992. Your counsel maintained that, at Omarska camp, you were a young inexperienced
recruit with no authority of any kind. The Prosecutor claimed that you were
a guard shift commander. The evidence produced has completely satisfied the
Chamber that you were indeed the shift commander known by the nickname "Krle".
It is interesting to note briefly that Mr. Kvocka described the functions allegedly
assigned to you by Zeljko Meakic in the same way that Mr. Radic defined his
own: responsible for radio and telephone communications. In fact, you were a
shift commander. The guards addressed you as such and you issued instructions
to them. Admittedly, on a very few occasions, you did intervene in order to
prevent violent acts from being perpetrated on a detainee.
However, many
witnesses implicated you. Firstly, for unquestionably having been in a position
to observe that crimes had been or were being committed and for not reacting.
Secondly, for having yourself participated in acts of violence against detainees.
And, lastly, for having occasionally extorted money from detainees. You were
not only a cog in the wheel turning passively with it. You were a major part
of that wheel and did not hesitate, at times, to contribute actively to raising
the level of violence and terror in the camp. The Chamber thus finds you guilty
of the crime against humanity, persecution, and the war crimes, murder and torture.
MR. RADIC,
PLEASE RISE.
Mr. Radic, since
1972 you have also been a professional policeman. According to your own statements,
you worked at Omarska camp from 28 May 1992 until late August 1992, first as
a guard and then as the person responsible for radio and telephone communications.
The evidence heard
by the Chamber shows that, more specifically, you carried out the functions
of shift commander. There were three shift commanders in Omarska: yourself,
Mr. Kos and a man named Ckalja. In addition, you were known to the detainees
more by your nickname "Krkan" and you had the reputation of being
the most violent of the shift commanders.
As shift commander,
you were free to move about in the camp, in the offices, on the Pista, and in
the White House. Above all, you issued orders to the guards and, in any case,
exercised authority over them by assigning their posts and by telling them to
take the detainees to various locations. Your authority was so great that, as
witnesses told us, you could put an end to violence against prisoners (in particular
when they were from the town where you had been a policeman) or reassure a women
about one of the guard’s frightening behaviour toward her.
However, this
generosity was very selective.
Testimony clearly
showed that the guards in your shift were particularly brutal. You accompanied
detainees to the offices where they were to be interrogated and took them out
after they had been not only interrogated but also beaten. You did not prevent
outsiders, among others, Mr. Tadic and Mr. Zigic, from coming into the camp
and being violent with the detainees. Several of them died from the beatings
administered by the guards in your shift. You rarely took measures to prevent
their violence. Such an attitude could only be encouragement for them to continue.
In addition, your
attitude to several of the women detained in Omarska was completely unacceptable.
The evidence against you is overwhelming. You did not limit yourself to inappropriate
gestures, offensive language or trying to make coinage of your position. You
fondled them. You raped them too. Considering the vulnerability of the victims,
the deliberately inflicted pain they suffered, and the state of anxiety in which
you kept the women detainees in Omarska, the Chamber characterises the acts
of sexual violence you committed as acts of torture within the meaning of Article
3 of the Statute.
The Chamber finds
you guilty of the crime against humanity, persecution, and the war crimes, murder
and torture.
You may be seated,
Mr. Radic.
MR. ZIGIC,
PLEASE RISE.
The crimes ascribed
to you, Mr. Zigic, are different from those ascribed to your co-accused because
they occurred not only at Omarska but at Keraterm and Trnopolje as well.
Many witnesses
testified to your violent behaviour even against those who barely a few days
earlier had been your close friends. The facts are absolutely clear. Sometimes
alone, sometimes with others like you, you would grab hold of a detainee. Sometimes
you would demand money although that was not always enough to satisfy you.
You enjoyed using
force, you enjoyed inflicting pain, you enjoyed pushing the detainees to the
limits of their ability to endure suffering and did not hesitate to use weapons
sometimes, such as a rod with a metal ball attached to one end. You also enjoyed
humiliating detainees by forcing them to lap up water like dogs or to drink
their own blood. You persisted in such action when, for example, you forced
a detainee to run with a machine-gun while beating him. Your violence was so
extreme that a report denouncing you was prepared.
In respect of
the crimes for which you stand accused, the Chamber wished to distinguish between
those ascribable to you and those for which doubt remains. You are therefore
acquitted of the incident known as the "Room 3 massacre" at Keraterm
camp and several others as well.
Still, the list
of your victims about whom no reasonable doubt persists is long. Very long.
Although you may
have abused alcohol and tranquillisers, you were not in such a state of acute
intoxication at the time of the facts that your ability to act was gone.
In its Judgement,
the Chamber finds you guilty of the crime against humanity, persecution, and
the war crimes, torture and cruel treatment.
Mr. Zigic, be
seated.
MR. PRCAC,
PLEASE RISE.
At almost 55 years
of age, you were retired when on 29 April 1992 you were mobilised in order for
you to resume your profession as a police forensic specialist at the Omarska
police station. You were assigned to Omarska camp on 14 July where you remained
until 6 August 1992. The core issue where you are concerned was to determine
your position at the camp. According to the Prosecution, you were the deputy
commander whereas the Defence alleged that you were only an administrator with
no authority.
The witnesses
confirmed that you spent most of your time in a room in the administrative building.
The room, however, was only a few metres from the offices in which the detainees
were interrogated. You had free movement within the camp and were frequently
seen carrying lists which were used to call the detainees so that they could
be moved from one location in the camp to another, in particular, when they
were to be interrogated or when transfers from Omarska camp to another camp
or another destination were being organised. The guards turned to you when problems
arose. For example, they asked you for permission to bring a detainee out of
the White House. The detainees saw you as the camp’s deputy commander. The Chamber
finds that no proof was offered as to your exact position but notes that you
were fully aware of the violence in the camp and of the crimes being committed
there. Nonetheless, you almost never intervened and performed your duties diligently,
thereby actively contributing to the system of persecution which had been set
up. The Chamber finds you guilty of the crime against humanity, persecution,
and the war crimes, murder and torture.
IV – SENTENCE
As Berthold Brecht
has written, "the womb from which the vile beast emerged is still fertile".
We must give the lie to Brecht. Justice can contribute to this end through the
measure of the judgements it pronounces. Each individual situation is unique.
In determining
the sentence each of you deserves, we of course took into account the gravity
of the crimes respectively ascribed to you.
Furthermore, we
wished to state clearly three elements which we find decisive for establishing
what sentence is to be pronounced:
- the first relates
to the combination of an accused’s position in the chain of command and his
physical participation in the crimes;
- the second
is the need to bring comfort to the victims and to discourage any desire for
revenge because, as the Chinese proverb says so judiciously, "if you
are looking for vengeance, dig two graves".
- the third,
however, produces an opposite effect and is the observation that, as regards
the crimes committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia, and in Prijedor
in particular, there are certainly people whose individual responsibility
is much greater than your own; this unquestionably plays a role in mitigating
sentence.
For all the reasons
we have just stated and which are set out in detail in the Judgement, the Chamber
convicts each of you as a member of a criminal enterprise for the crimes committed
in Omarska and Mr. Zigic, alone, for the crimes committed in Keraterm and Trnopolje
and pronounces the following sentences on you. I ask all the accused to rise.
- Mr. Kvocka,
the Chamber sentences you to 7 years in prison;
- Mr. Kos, the
Chamber sentences to 6 years in prison;
- Mr. Radic,
the Chamber sentences you to 20 years in prison;
- Mr. Zigic,
the Chamber sentences you to 25 years in prison.
- Mr. Prcac,
the Chamber sentences you to 5 years in prison.
The Tribunal stands
adjourned.
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