![]() ![]() THE PROSECUTOR OF THE TRIBUNAL AGAINST RADOVAN KARADZIC
RATKO MLADIC
Richard J. Goldstone, Prosecutor
of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia,
pursuant to his authority under Article 18 of the Statute of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ("The
Statute of the Tribunal"), charges
RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN
KARADZIC
with GENOCIDE, CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
and VIOLATIONS OF THE LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR, as
set forth below:
1. After war erupted in the Republic
of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnian Serb military forces occupied
Bosnian Muslim villages in the eastern part of the country, resulting
in an exodus of Bosnian Muslims to enclaves in Gorazde, Zepa,
Tuzla, and Srebrenica. All of the events referred to in this
indictment took place in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
2. On 16 April 1993, the Security
Council of the United Nations, acting pursuant to Chapter VII
of its Charter, adopted resolution 819, in which it demanded that
all parties to the conflict in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
treat Srebrenica and its surroundings as a safe area which should
be free from any armed attack or any other hostile act. Resolution
819 was reaffirmed by Resolution 824 on 6 May 1993 and by Resolution
836 on 4 June 1993.
3. Before the attack by Bosnian Serb
forces, as described in this indictment, the estimated Bosnian
Muslim population in the safe area of Srebrenica, was approximately
60,000.
4. On or about 6 July 1995, the Bosnian
Serb army shelled Srebrenica and attacked United Nations observation
posts that were manned by Dutch soldiers and located in the safe
area. The attack on the Srebrenica safe area by the Bosnian Serb
army continued through 11 July 1995, when the first units of the
attacking Bosnian Serb forces entered Srebrenica.
5. The Bosnian Muslim men, women
and children who remained in Srebrenica after the beginning of
the Bosnian Serb attack took two courses of action. Several thousand
women, children and some mostly elderly men fled to the UN compound
in Potocari, located within the safe area of Srebrenica, where
they sought the protection of the Dutch battalion responsible
for the compound. They remained at the compound from 11 July
1995 until 13 July 1995, when they were all evacuated by buses
and trucks under the control of and operated by Bosnian Serb military
personnel.
6. A second group of approximately
15,000 Bosnian Muslim men, with some women and children, gathered
at Susnjari during the evening hours of 11 July 1995 and fled,
in a huge column, through the woods towards Tuzla. Approximately
one-third of this group consisted of armed Bosnian military personnel
and armed civilians. The rest were unarmed civilians.
7. On 11 July 1995 and 12
July 1995, RATKO MLADIC and members of his staff met in
Bratunac with Dutch military officers and representatives of the
Muslim refugees from Potocari. At these meetings, RATKO MLADIC
informed them, among other things, that Bosnian Muslim soldiers
who surrendered their weapons would be treated as prisoners of
war according to the Geneva Conventions and that refugees evacuated
from Potocari would not be hurt.
8. On or about 12 July 1995, Bosnian
Serb military forces burned and looted Bosnian Muslim houses in
and around Potocari.
9. On or about 12 July 1995,
in the morning hours, Bosnian Serb military forces arrived at
the UN military compound in Potocari and its environs.
10. On or about 12 July 1995, RATKO
MLADIC arrived in Potocari, accompanied by his military aides
and a television crew. He falsely and repeatedly told Bosnian
Muslims in and around Potocari that they would not be harmed
and that they would be safely transported out of Srebrenica.
11. On or about 12 July 1995, at
the direction and in the presence of RATKO MLADIC, approximately
50-60 buses and trucks arrived near the UN military compound
in Potocari. Shortly after the arrival of these vehicles, the
evacuation process of Bosnian Muslim refugees started. As Muslim
women, children and men started to board the buses and trucks,
Bosnian Serb military personnel separated the men from the women
and children. This selection and separation of Muslim men took
place in the presence of and at the direction of RATKO MLADIC.
12. The Bosnian Muslim men who had
been separated from other refugees were taken to divers locations
in and around Potocari. On or about 12 July 1995, RATKO MLADIC
and Bosnian Serb military personnel under his command, informed
some of these Muslim men that they would be evacuated and exchanged
for Bosnian Serbs being held in Tuzla.
13. Most of the Muslim men who had
been separated from the other refugees in Potocari were transported
to Bratunac and then to the area of Karakaj, where they were massacred
by Bosnian Serb military personnel.
14. Between 12 July 1995 and 13 July
1995, Bosnian Serb military personnel summarily executed Bosnian
Muslim men and women at divers locations around the UN compound
where they had taken refuge. The bodies of those summarily executed
were left in fields and buildings in the immediate vicinity of
the compound. These arbitrary killings instilled such terror
and panic amongst the Muslims remaining there that some of them
committed suicide and all the others agreed to leave the enclave.
15. The evacuation of all able-bodied
Muslim refugees concluded on 13 July 1995. As a result of the
Bosnian Serb attack on the safe area and other actions, the Muslim
population of the enclave of Srebrenica was virtually eliminated
by Bosnian Serb military personnel.
16. Between the evening of 11 July
1995 and the morning of 12 July 1995, the huge column of Muslims
which had gathered in Susnjari fled Srebrenica through the woods
towards Tuzla.
17. Bosnian Serb military personnel,
supported by armoured personnel carriers, tanks, anti-aircraft
guns and artillery, positioned themselves along the Bratunac -
Milici road in an effort to interdict the column of Bosnian Muslims
fleeing towards Tuzla.
18. As soon as the column reached
Bosnian Serb held territory in the vicinity of Buljim, Bosnian
Serb military forces attacked it. As a result of this and other
attacks by Bosnian Serb military forces, many Muslims were killed
and wounded and the column divided into several smaller parts
which continued towards Tuzla. Approximately one-third of the
column, mostly composed of military personnel, crossed the Bratunac-Milici
road near Nova Kasaba and reached safety in Tuzla. The remaining
Muslims were trapped behind the Bosnian Serb lines.
19. Thousands of Muslims were captured
by or surrendered to Bosnian Serb military forces under the command
and control of RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC.
Many of the Muslims who surrendered did so because they were
assured that they would be safe if they surrendered. In many
instances, assurances of safety were provided to the Muslims by
Bosnian Serb military personnel who were with other Bosnian Serb
soldiers wearing stolen UN uniforms, and by Muslims who had been
captured and ordered to summon their fellow Muslims from the woods.
20. Many of the Bosnian Muslims who
were captured by or surrendered to Bosnian Serb military personnel
were summarily executed by Bosnian Serb military personnel at
the locations of their surrender or capture, or at other locations
shortly thereafter. Incidents of such summary executions include,
but are not limited to:
20.1 On or about 13 July 1995, near
Nezuk in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a group of 10
Bosnian Muslim men were captured. Bosnian Serb soldiers summarily
executed some of these men, including Mirsad Alispahic and Hajrudin
Mesanovic.
20.2 On or about 13 July 1995, on
the banks of the Jadar River between Konjevic Polje and Drinjaca,
Bosnian Serb soldiers summarily executed 15 Bosnian Muslim men
who had surrendered or been captured. Amongst those killed were
Hamed Omerovic, Azem Mujic and Ismet Ahmetovic.
20.3 On or about 13 July 1995, in
the vicinity of Konjevic Polje, Bosnian Serb soldiers summarily
executed hundreds of Muslims, including women and children.
20.4 On or about 17 July 1995 or
18 July 1995, in the vicinity of Konjevic Polje, Bosnian Serb
soldiers captured about 150-200 Bosnian Muslims and summarily
executed about one-half of them.
20.5 On or about 18 July 1995 or
19 July 1995, in the vicinity of Nezuk, about 20 groups, each
containing between 5-10 Bosnian Muslim men, surrendered to Bosnian
Serb military forces. After the men surrendered, Bosnian Serb
soldiers ordered them to line up and summarily executed them.
20.6 On or about 20 July 1995 or
21 July 1995, near the village of Meces, Bosnian Serb military
personnel, using megaphones, urged Bosnian Muslim men who had
fled Srebrenica to surrender and assured them that they would
be safe. Approximately 350 Bosnian Muslim men responded to these
entreaties and surrendered. Bosnian Serb soldiers then took approximately
150 of them, instructed them to dig their own graves and then
summarily executed them.
20.7 On or about 21 July 1995 or
22 July 1995, near the village of Meces, an excavator dug a large
pit and Bosnian Serb soldiers ordered approximately 260 Bosnian
Muslim men who had been captured to stand around the hole. The
Muslim men were then surrounded by armed Bosnian Serb soldiers
and ordered not to move or they would be shot. Some of the men
moved and were shot. The remaining men were pushed into the hole
and buried alive.
21. Many of the Muslims who surrendered
to Bosnian Serb military personnel were not killed at the locations
of their surrender, but instead were transported to central assembly
points where Bosnian Serb soldiers held them under armed guard.
These assembly points included, among others, a hangar in Bratunac;
soccer fields in Kasaba, Konjevic Polje, Kravica, and Vlasenica;
a meadow behind the bus station in Sandici and other fields and
meadows along the Bratunac - Milici road.
22. Between 12 July 1995 and 14 July
1995, at various of these assembly points, including the hangar
in Bratunac and the soccer stadium in Kasaba, RATKO MLADIC
addressed the Bosnian Muslim detainees. He falsely and repeatedly
assured them that they would be safe and that they would be exchanged
for Bosnian Serb prisoners held by Bosnian government forces.
23. Between 12 July 1995 and 14 July
1995, Bosnian Serb military personnel arbitrarily selected Bosnian
Muslim detainees and summarily executed them.
24. On or about 14 July 1995, Bosnian
Serb military personnel transported thousands of Muslim detainees
from Bratunac, Kravica and other locations to an assembly point
in a school complex near Karakaj. At this assembly point, Bosnian
Serb military personnel ordered the Muslim detainees to take off
their jackets, coats and other garments and place them in front
of the sports hall. They were then crowded into the school building
and adjacent sports hall and held under armed guard.
25. On or about 14 July 1995, at
this school complex near Karakaj, RATKO MLADIC conferred
with his military subordinates and addressed some of the Muslims
detained there.
26. At various times during 14 July
1995, Bosnian Serb military personnel killed Bosnian Muslim detainees
at this school complex.
27. Throughout 14 July 1995, Bosnian
Serb military personnel removed all the Muslim detainees, in small
groups, from the school building and sports hall and loaded them
onto trucks guarded and driven by Bosnian Serb soldiers. Before
boarding the trucks, many of the detainees had their hands tied
behind their backs or were blindfolded. They were then driven
to at least two locations in the vicinity of Karakaj.
28. Once the trucks arrived at these
locations, Bosnian Serb military personnel ordered the bound or
blindfolded Muslim detainees off the trucks and summarily executed
them. The summary executions took place from approximately noon
to midnight on 14 July 1995.
29. Bosnian Serb military personnel
buried the executed Bosnian Muslim men in mass graves near the
execution sites.
30. On or about 14 July 1995, RATKO
MLADIC was present at one of the mass execution sites when
Bosnian Serb military personnel summarily executed Bosnian Muslim
men.
31. The summary executions of Bosnian
Muslim males, which occurred on 14 July 1995 in the vicinity of
Karakaj, resulted in the loss of thousands of lives.
THE ACCUSED
32. RADOVAN KARADZIC was born
on 19 June 1945 in the municipality of Savnik of the Republic
of Montenegro. From on or about 13 May 1992 to the present, he
has been president of the Bosnian Serb administration in Pale.
33. RATKO MLADIC was born
on 12 March 1943 in Kalinovik municipality of the Republic of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. He is a career military officer and holds
the rank of general in the Bosnian Serb armed forces. From on
or about 14 May 1992 to the present, he has been the commander
of the army of the Bosnian Serb administration.
SUPERIOR AUTHORITY
34. RADOVAN KARADZIC was a
founding member and president of the Serbian Democratic Party
(SDS) of what was then the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The SDS was the main political party among the Serbs in Bosnia
and Herzegovina. As president of the SDS, he was and is the most
powerful official in the party. His duties as president include
representing the party, co-ordinating the work of party organs
and ensuring the realisation of the programmatic tasks and goals
of the party. He continues to hold this post.
35. RADOVAN KARADZIC became
the first president of the Bosnian Serb administration in Pale
on or about 13 May 1992. At the time he assumed this position,
his de jure powers, as described in the constitution of
the Bosnian Serb administration, included, but were not limited
to, commanding the army of the Bosnian Serb administration in
times of war and peace and having the authority to appoint, promote
and discharge officers of the army. As president, he was and
is a position of superior authority to RATKO MLADIC and
every member of the Bosnian Serb army and all units and personnel
assigned or attached to the Bosnian Serb army.
36. In addition to his powers described
in the constitution, RADOVAN KARADZIC's powers as president
of the Bosnian Serb administration are augmented by Article 6
of the Bosnian Serb Act on People's Defence. This Act vested
in him, among other powers, the authority to supervise the Territorial
Defence both in peace and war and the authority to issue orders
for the utilisation of the police in case of war, immediate threat
and other emergencies. Article 39 of the same Act empowered him,
in cases of imminent threat of war and other emergencies, to deploy
Territorial Defence units for the maintenance of law and order.
37. RADOVAN KARADZIC's powers
are further augmented by Article 33 of the Bosnian Serb Act on
Internal Affairs, which authorised him to activate reserve police
in emergency situations.
38. RADOVAN KARADZIC has exercised
the powers described above and has acted and been dealt with internationally
as the president of the Bosnian Serb administration in Pale.
In that capacity, he has, inter alia, participated in international
negotiations and has personally made agreements on such matters
as cease-fires and humanitarian relief, and these agreements have
been implemented.
39. RATKO MLADIC was, in 1991,
appointed commander of the 9th Corps of the Yugoslav People's
Army (JNA) in Knin in the Republic of Croatia. In May 1992, he
assumed command of the forces of the Second Military District
of the JNA which then effectively became the Bosnian Serb army.
He holds the rank of general and from about 14 May 1992 to the
present, has been the commander of the army of the Bosnian Serb
administration. In that capacity, he was and is in a position
of superior authority to every member of the Bosnian Serb army
and all units and personnel assigned or attached to that army.
40. RATKO MLADIC has demonstrated
his control in military matters by negotiating, inter alia,
cease-fire and prisoner exchange agreements; agreements relating
to the opening of Sarajevo airport; agreements relating to access
for humanitarian aid convoys; and anti-sniping agreements, all
of which have been implemented.
GENERAL ALLEGATIONS
41. At all times relevant to this
indictment, a state of armed conflict and partial occupation existed
in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the territory of
the former Yugoslavia.
42. In each paragraph charging genocide,
a crime recognised by Article 4 of the Statute of the Tribunal,
the alleged acts or omissions were committed with the intent
to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, or religious
group, as such.
43. In each paragraph charging crimes
against humanity, crimes recognised by Article 5 of the Statute
of the Tribunal, the alleged acts or omissions were part of a
widespread or systematic or large-scale attack directed against
a civilian population.
44. RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN
KARADZIC are individually responsible for the crimes alleged
against them in this indictment pursuant to Article 7(1) of the
Tribunal Statute. Individual criminal responsibility includes
committing, planning, instigating, ordering or otherwise aiding
and abetting in the planning, preparation or execution of any
crimes referred to in Articles 2 to 5 of the Tribunal Statute.
45. RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN
KARADZIC are also, or alternatively, criminally responsible
as commanders for the acts of their subordinates pursuant to Article
7(3) of the Tribunal Statute. Command criminal responsibility
is the responsibility of a superior officer for the acts of his
subordinate if he knew or had reason to know that his subordinate
was about to commit such acts or had done so and the superior
failed to take the necessary and reasonable measures to prevent
such acts or to punish the perpetrators thereof.
46. The general allegations contained
in paragraphs 41 through 45 are realleged and incorporated into
each of the charges set forth below.
CHARGES
47. Between about 12 July 1995 and
13 July 1995, Bosnian Serb military personnel, under the command
and control of RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC,
arrived in Potocari where thousands of Muslim men, women and children
had sought refuge in and around the UN military compound. Bosnian
Serb military personnel, under the command and control of RATKO
MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC, summarily executed many
Bosnian Muslim refugees who remained in Potocari.
48. Between about 13 July 1995 and
22 July 1995, Bosnian Serb military personnel, under the command
and control of RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC,
summarily executed many Bosnian Muslim men who fled to the woods
and were later captured or surrendered.
49. Thousands of Bosnian Muslim men,
who fled Srebrenica and who surrendered or had been captured,
were transported from various assembly locations in and around
Srebrenica to a main assembly point at a school complex near Karakaj.
50. On or about 14 July 1995, Bosnian
Serb military personnel, under the command and control of RATKO
MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC, transported thousands
of Muslim men from this school complex to two locations a short
distance away. At these locations, Bosnian Serb soldiers, with
the knowledge of RATKO MLADIC, summarily executed these
Bosnian Muslim detainees and buried them in mass graves.
51. RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN
KARADZIC, between about 6 July 1995 and 22 July 1995, individually
and in concert with others, planned, instigated, ordered or otherwise
aided and abetted in the planning, preparation or execution of
the following crimes:
a) summary executions of Bosnian
Muslim men and women in and around Potocari on 12 July 1995 and
13 July 1995,
b) summary executions, which occurred
between 13 July 1995 and 22 July 1995, of Bosnian Muslims who
were hors de combat because of injury, surrender or capture
after fleeing into the woods towards Tuzla,
c) summary executions of Bosnian
Muslim men, which occurred on or about 14 July 1995 at mass execution
sites in and around Karakaj.
By their acts and omissions in relation
to the events described in paragraphs 13, 14, 20.1-20.7, 23, 26
and 28, RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC committed:
Count 1:
GENOCIDE as recognised by Article 4(2)(a) (killing members
of the group) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 2: A
CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY as recognised by Article 5(b) (extermination)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
52. By their acts and omissions in
relation to the summary executions of Bosnian Muslim men and women
that occurred in and around Potocari between 12 July 1995
and 13 July 1995, described heretofore in paragraph 13, RATKO
MLADIC and RADOVAN KARADZIC committed:
Count 3: A
CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY as recognised by Article 5(a) (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 4: A
VIOLATION OF THE LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR as recognised by
Article 3 (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
53. By their acts and omissions in
relation the summary executions of Bosnian Muslims who fled Srebrenica
into the woods between 13 July 1995 and 22 July 1995 as described
heretofore in paragraphs 20.1 to 20.7, RATKO MLADIC and
RADOVAN KARADZIC committed:
Count 5: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph 20.1) as recognised by Article
5(a) (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Counts 6: A VIOLATION OF THE LAWS
OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in relation
to paragraph 20.1) as recognised by Article 3 (murder) of the
Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 7: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph 20.2) as recognised by Article
5(a) (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Counts 8: A VIOLATION OF THE LAWS
OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in relation
to paragraph 20.2) as recognised by Article 3 (murder) of the
Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 9: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph 20.3) as recognised by Article 5(a)
(murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Counts 10: A VIOLATION OF THE
LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in
relation to paragraph 20.3) as recognised by Article 3 (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 11: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph 20.4) as recognised by Article 5(a)
(murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Counts 12: A VIOLATION OF THE
LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in
relation to paragraph 20.4) as recognised by Article 3 (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 13: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph
20.5) as recognised by Article 5(a) (murder) of the Statute of
the Tribunal.
Counts 14: A VIOLATION OF THE
LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in
relation to paragraph 20.5) as recognised by Article 3 (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 15: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph
20.6) as recognised by Article 5(a) (murder) of the Statute of
the Tribunal.
Counts 16: A VIOLATION OF THE
LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in
relation to paragraph 20.6) as recognised by Article 3 (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 17: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
(in relation to paragraph 20.7) as recognised by Article
5(a) (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Counts 18: A VIOLATION OF THE
LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR (in
relation to paragraph 20.7) as recognised by Article 3 (murder)
of the Statute of the Tribunal.
54. By their acts and omissions in
relation to the summary executions of Bosnian Muslim men at mass
execution sites in and around Karakaj, on or about 14 July 1995,
as described in paragraph 28, RATKO MLADIC and RADOVAN
KARADZIC committed:
Count 19: A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
as recognised by Article
5(a) (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal.
Count 20: A
VIOLATION OF THE LAWS OR CUSTOMS OF WAR as recognised by
Article 3 (murder) of the Statute of the Tribunal. ______________________ _________________ The Hague, The Netherlands Richard J. Goldstone
Prosecutor
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