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Milosevic Is An 'Emotionless Cold Warmonger': Croatian President

Croatian President Stipe Mesic

THE HAGUE, October 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The President of Croatia, Stipe Mesic, told the UN war crimes tribunal that former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic wanted to destroy Yugoslavia and create a Greater Serbia. And he described the ex-leader as an emotionless warmonger, driven by his goals.

Mesic and Milosevic faced each other across a courtroom in The Hague Tuesday, October 01, 2002, and traded accusations of blame over the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia.

"What he was interested in was a Greater Serbia that would be created on the ruins of the former Yugoslavia," Mesic said in the first minutes of his testimony, according to BBC's online news service.

"Milosevic said he was fighting for Yugoslavia, but he was doing everything to destroy it."

The goal was an "ethnically pure" Greater Serbia, he said, "cleansed" of its non-Serbian population.

Mesic accused Milosevic of intentionally setting off ethnic violence in Croatia to spread the conflict to Bosnia.

"The Serbs in Croatia were needed to ignite the fuse, in order for the war to be transferred to Bosnia and Hercegovina," he said.

The prosecution also asked Mesic to describe Milosevic's character.

"I never saw him show any emotions - all he had was the goal he was implementing," Mesic said.

"He could have desisted from the option of war, but he never took any action to stop it."

Mesic is the first head of state to testify against Milosevic, in the dock on more than 60 charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his involvement in the 1990s wars in Kosovo, Croatia and Bosnia.

The unprecedented public appearance of the two men attracted a throng of curious onlookers to the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague, where Milosevic has been on trial since February.

And even before his old adversary Mesic entered the court, Milosevic addressed the judges and announced: "There is a problem with the next witness due to his personal criminal role in the breakdown of Yugoslavia," reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

But his protest was dismissed by presiding Judge Richard May.

Slobodan Milosevic

The war between Zagreb and Belgrade-backed Serb rebels, who opposed Croatia's bid for independence from the former Yugoslavia, claimed some 20,000 lives.

During the war a third of Croatian territory was occupied by Serb rebels.

In a letter to then UN secretary-general Javier Perez de Cuellar in 1991, Mesic accused the army, entirely loyal to Milosevic, of preventing him from traveling from Zagreb to Belgrade to attend meetings of the presidency, by blockading roads and airports with tanks.

The army was now entirely Serbian and acting autonomously, he said.

Mesic told the court he believed that as Milosevic was in control of the army, he effectively carried off a "military putsch" as the armed forces were protecting only Serbian ends and ignoring all requests by the President to return to barracks.

He also said the army was financed by funds Milosevic diverted from the federal coffers, notably tourist revenue contributed by Croatia.

Milosevic sat attentively throughout the session, his arms folded or with one hand in a pocket and the occasional sardonic grin lighting up his face, while Mesic, who already gave evidence in previous cases, appeared entirely unintimidated by coming face-to-face with his former rival.

After seven months of proceedings over events in the war in the southern Serbian province of Kosovo, the focus of the trial shifted last week to Milosevic's involvement in atrocities committed in Croatia and Bosnia, including a charge of genocide over the 1995 massacre of Muslims in Srebrenica.

He could spend the rest of his life behind bars if found guilty.

On Wednesday, October 2, Milosevic gets the chance to turn the tables as the day has been set aside for cross-examination - a potentially fiery confrontation eagerly awaited by followers of the trial.

 

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