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Press Release
. Communiqué de presse
(Exclusively for the use of the media. Not an official document)
The
Hague, 9 November 2001
JL/P.I.S./632-e
INDICTMENT
AGAINST DRAGOMIR MILOSEVIC UNSEALED
On 2 November
2001, following an order from Judge Nieto-Navia, an indictment against Dragomir
Milosevic was unsealed. Dragomir Milosevic has been jointly charged with Stanislav
Galic who was detained and transferred into the Tribunal’s custody on 21 December
1999. According to the indictment, which was confirmed on 24 April 1998, Dragomir
Milosevic served as Chief of Staff to Stanislav Galic whom he then succeeded
as Corps Commander of the Bosnian Serb Army’s Sarajevo Romanija Corps on or
about 10 August 1994.
The Sarajevo Romanija
Corps formed a significant part of the Bosnian Serb Army under the ultimate
command of General Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic.
Dragomir
Milosevic, has been charged on the basis of individual criminal responsibility
and his command responsibility with four counts of crimes against humanity (murder
and inhume acts) and three counts of violations of the laws or customs of war
(infliction of terror and attacks on civilians) for his part as Commander of
the Sarajevo Romanija Corps between 1994 and 1995. The charges relate to the
deliberate campaign of shelling and sniping of the civilian population of Sarajevo
by forces under his command. The indictment states that,
"For
forty-four months, the Sarajevo Romanija Corps implemented a military strategy
which used shelling and sniping to kill, maim, wound and terrorise the civilian
inhabitants of Sarajevo. The shelling and sniping killed and wounded thousands
of civilians of both sexes and all ages, including children and the elderly.
The Sarajevo Romanija
Corps directed shelling and sniping at civilians who were tending vegetable
plots, queuing for bread, collecting water, attending funerals, shopping in
markets, riding on trams, gathering wood, or simply walking with their children
or friends. People were even injured and killed inside their own homes, being
hit by bullets that came through the windows. The attacks on Sarajevo civilians
were often unrelated to military actions and were designed to keep the inhabitants
in a constant state of terror."
*****
The full text of the indictment
is now available.
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