==========================
ICDSM - Sezione Italiana
c/o GAMADI, Via L. Da Vinci  27
00043 Ciampino (Roma)
tel/fax +39-06-4828957
email: icdsm-italia @ libero.it

Conto Corrente Postale numero 86557006
intestato ad Adolfo Amoroso, ROMA
causale: DIFESA MILOSEVIC

sito internet:
http://www.pasti.org/linkmilo.htm
==========================


(english / italiano)

Peter Worthington

Due articoli dell'editorialista del "Toronto Sun" P. Worthington. Nel 
primo si racconta la storia del cineasta Garth Pritchard, che fu 
testimone - e filmo' - dei crimini dei separatisti croati contro la 
popolazione serba della Croazia, e che denuncia l'occultamento delle 
sue prove da parte dell'illegale "Tribunale" dell'Aia. Nel secondo si 
fa il punto sulla scandalosa conduzione del "processo".

1. Mysteries at The Hague

2. Credibility of court eroding

NOTA: SONO FINALMENTE DISPONIBILI ONLINE LE TRASCRIZIONI DELLA RIPRESA 
DEL "PROCESSO":
31 agosto
http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/040831ED.htm
1 settembre
http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/040901IT.htm
2 settembre
http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/040902IT.htm
NEI PROSSIMI GIORNI NE DIFFONDEREMO AMPI STRALCI, E SUCCESSIVAMENTE 
ANCHE IN LINGUA ITALIANA.

(a cura del coord. tecnico di ICDSM Italia)

---( 1 )---

http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Toronto/Peter_Worthington/
2004/08/25/pf-600588.html

Wed, August 25, 2004

Mysteries at The Hague

By PETER WORTHINGTON

Calgary filmmaker Garth Pritchard admits to being confused -- and 
angry. He has rejected Slobodan Milosevic's attempt to use him as a 
witness at his war crimes trial, but Pritchard says The Hague now wants 
him as a witness -- but not against Milosevic.

Instead they want him as a witness for atrocities and human rights 
abuses committed by Croats when they overran the centre of Knin, 
capital of Serbian-occupied Krajina, which Croatia attacked and 
conquered in 1995.

"I don't get it," says Pritchard. "Film footage I shot for the National 
Film Board around 1995 was turned over to prosecutors at The Hague, as 
evidence of massacres of people and all livestock in Knin. My tapes and 
testimony mysteriously disappeared -- were supposedly lost. Now they 
are found. Equally mysteriously."

After a report in the Sun last weekend, Pritchard says he was phoned 
yesterday by the RCMP working in The Hague, saying his video footage 
has since been found and he's wanted to testify.

"Something seems fishy," Pritchard says. "The Sun article was quoted, 
and I was told my tapes and testimony had been turned over to the 
Croats for prosecution."

He said RCMP officer Tom Steendoordan phoned him from The Hague, 
reported finding his "lost" material and it was now intended to 
investigate what happened in Knin.

Pritchard has fretted over the ignoring of Knin atrocities for years -- 
one of the Balkan war's horror stories.

When the Croats -- re-armed by the Germans -- occupied Krajina, 
attention focused on the Medak pocket where Canadians came under Croat 
fire.

"I was in Knin, where Maj. Gen. Alain Forand was in command of some 32 
Canadians and gave sanctuary to about 800 Serbian refugees, feeding and 
protecting them for close to two months."

The UN insisted these Serbs were not refugees and should not be 
protected. "We all knew they'd be killed if we didn't protect them. 
Forand told the world 'not on my watch' will they be turfed out to be 
killed. In my eyes, Forand is a hero for refusing to turn these people 
over to the Croats."

Eventually the 800 were safely delivered to Serbian territory, and Knin 
was relegated to the Memory Hole.

"But I had it all on video," Pritchard says. "Livestock slaughtered, 
women eviscerated, raped, burned."

He says Steendoordan told him 82 bodies were found in Knin, and that 
the Croats want to follow up on war crimes.

"That makes me suspicious," says Pritchard. "Croats investigating Croat 
war crimes in Knin? They've got to be kidding. It smells of coverup." 
As for Kosovo, Pritchard says, Steendoordan corrected his claim of only 
3,000 bodies found, not the widely accepted 200,000 dead in mass graves.

"He said 3,000 was accurate then. Now 5,080 bodies have been found -- 
but still no mass graves." Pritchard is pleased that some of the truth 
is beginning to come out. Pritchard told the Sun that Milosevic could 
"rot in hell" before he'd testify on his behalf that there were no mass 
murders in Kosovo.

Bosnia, yes, but not Kosovo.

"Yes, I want the truth to come out, but as a journalist I have no 
intention of testifying on behalf of Croats either. They only got my 
video footage in the first place because the film board owned it and 
gave it to them."

A test of The Hague's sincerity in exposing war crimes in Knin will be 
if Gen. Forand, now retired, testifies.

"This is a man whose courage and integrity saved the lives of 800 Serb 
refugees, when his Canadian superiors and the UN wanted them sacrificed 
to expediency." He adds: "Frankly, I don't trust much that happens at 
The Hague."


---( 2 )---

http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Toronto/Peter_Worthington/
2004/09/08/619600.html

Wed, September  8, 2004

Credibility of court eroding

By PETER WORTHINGTON -- For the Toronto Sun


After two years of conducting his own defence at his war crimes trial 
in The Hague, Slobodan Milosevic has been declared by the court as "not 
fit to represent himself."

Two British lawyers, Steven Kay and Gillian Higgins, who are "friends 
of the court," have been appointed -- over Milosevic's vehement 
objections --to represent him.

"Unfit to conduct his own defence" implies mental instability or 
incompetence. Though unpredictable, indignant, erratic and at times 
outrageous, Milosevic's mental state seems alarmingly acute. It's his 
physical health -- especially his heart -- that is questionable.

Scott Taylor, publisher of the military magazine Esprit de Corps, has 
agreed at Milosevic's request to testify at his trial. Taylor, whose 
articles have run in the Sun and other newspapers, spent three hours 
being interviewed by Milosevic, and although bound by oath not to 
reveal the discussions, is adamant that Milosevic is mentally competent.

"He's sharp, he's on top of things and he seems to know exactly what 
he's doing," said Taylor when I talked to him last week. "Tired, yes, 
maybe not well, but he's conducting his own defence better than anyone 
thought he could."

A cynic might argue that Milosevic's competence at his trial may be why 
he's been ruled "unfit" to continue.

Ironically, it casts more doubts on the International Criminal Court.

Calgary filmmaker Garth Pritchard has refused to testify, arguing that 
a journalist's job is to report, not take sides.

Taylor and Pritchard refute allegations of massacres and mass graves in 
Kosovo.

The United States, Russia, China, Israel and other nations don't agree 
with a permanent International Criminal Court, and won't subscribe to 
its terms. Although some 74 countries have ratified their support (of 
139 which have signed their intent), others view it as little more than 
a "kangaroo court," set up by winners to condemn losers. Canada is an 
enthusiastic supporter, as is the European Union.

The court's ruling that Milosevic is unfit to defend himself upsets 
many, including former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark, who usually 
supports left-wing causes, but is co-chairman of the committee to 
defend Milosevic.

"Under international law, every person accused of a crime has the right 
to represent himself," says Clark. "Milosevic is no exception."

By violating Milosevic's "fundamental human right," Clark feels the 
tribunal has "destroyed its last claim to legality."

He says appointing two lawyers who are "friends of the court" to defend 
Milosevic is a contradiction. "You cannot serve two masters."

In some 300 trial days and the examining of more 250 prosecution 
witnesses, creating 30,000 pages of testimony, Milosevic has been 
curiously effective at either manipulating the court as critics 
suggest, or confusing the process.

Witnesses like Scott Taylor will refute the prosecution's case of 
genocide in Kosovo, where former chief prosecutor Louise Arbour claimed 
200,000 were massacred and buried in mass graves. It has since turned 
out that no mass graves have been found in Kosovo and "only" 5,000 
bodies -- mostly war-related -- have been found.

Milosevic is easier to convict for mass murder in Bosnia, and may well 
be acquitted in Kosovo.

Milosevic's trial has been repeatedly delayed because of his high blood 
pressure -- which prosecutors claim is Milosevic's fault because he 
refuses to take heart medication. Milosevic says the drugs make him 
drowsy and unsure, thus preventing him from thinking clearly.

Whatever, the trial is already an endless ordeal -- and unnecessary.

After the Kosovo war, the newly elected government in Belgrade was 
moving to put him on trial. Then NATO intervened and hustled him off to 
The Hague.

If the Milosevic trial is something of a nightmare, there's growing 
unease that the trial of Saddam Hussein will be even more chaotic -- 
especially if the new Iraqi regime isn't allowed to dispense its brand 
of justice quickly and effectively.