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Sarajevo is not your city, Mr Karadzic, but mine

02 March 2010 | By Nidzara Ahmetasevic

Radovan Karadzic Radovan Karadzic, Sarajevo is not your city, and you have no right to say that it is, just as you do not have the right to say in public, even if it’s in court, that someone has dug up bones around Bosnia and brought them to Srebrenica to make a fake graveyard. This is insulting.


Feith: ICJ Opinion May Ease Tensions
09 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

Pieter Feith, the head of the International Civilian Office in Kosovo, said that the opinion of the International Court of Justice on the legality of Kosovo's declaration of independence could help alleviate tense relations between Belgrade and Pristina.

Belgium Sends Back Asylum Seekers
10 March 2010 | Nikola Lazic

Belgium intends to begin sending back asylum seekers from Serbia and Macedonia this week. The first bus, carrying 44 passengers, left Brussels this morning.

Lalovic and Skiljevic: High Standards of Medical Treatment in Kula
11 March 2010 |

Slavko Zdrale, former Director of Kasindol hospital, says there was a dispensary which applied "high standards" in Kula Penal and Correctional Facility, adding that prisoners were taken to hospital if necessary.



Russia asks UN to Control International Judges in Bosnia

Sarajevo | 21 December 2009 |
 
Botsan-Kharchenko, fifth on the left, and other PIC ambassadors address a press conference
Botsan-Kharchenko, fifth on the left, and other PIC ambassadors address a press conference

Moscow will ask the United Nations to control the work of international judges and prosecutores who are handling war crimes cases at Bosnia's State Court after their mandate was recently extended by the top international envoy in the Balkan country.

"Russia believes that the work of international jurists has to be controlled directly by the (UN war crimes) tribunal in The Hague and by the United Nations to ensure that they will not be biased against anyone," Russian ambassador to Bosnia Alaxender Botsan-Kharchenko told journalists on Friday.

"We are extremely concerned because of the recently surfaced evidence that these people [international judges and prosecutors] are not unbiased," he added, without elaborating.

Botsan-Kharchenko spoke after a meeting in Banja Luka with Igor Radojicic, the speaker of the parliament of Bosnia's Serb dominated entity Republika Srpska.

The mandate of foreign war crimes judges and prosecutors at Bosnia's State Court, which was to expire at the end of the year, was extended on Monday by the international community's High Representative to Bosnia, Valentin Inzko.

Inzko’s decision was unanimously supported by the Peace Implementation Council, PIC, comprising 55 countries and international organisations, including Russia, that sponsor and direct the peace process in Bosnia.

Botsan-Kharchenko said that Russia was "not happy" that Inzko had used his far-reaching powers, but that it did not oppose it because war crimes processing is part of Bosnia's international obligations.

International judges and prosecutors were brought in to help Bosnia’s State Court when it was opened in 2002 and their presence is seen as a guarantee of the court's independence.

Inzko acted after Bosnia’s State Parliament failed to adopt a decision to extend their mandates due to opposition by Bosnian Serb MPs.  

The government of Republika Srpska has strongly rejected Inzko’s decision and said it will call for a referendum to allow Bosnian Serbs to decide on the issue. Bosnian Serbs have long accused international judges and prosecutors of bias, claiming they are intentionally ignoring crimes committed against the Serbs during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war.

However, Radojicic said that organising a referendum was a "very sensitive issue" and should be carefully thought through.



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