Croatian Generals Gotovina and Markac: ICTY prosecutor seeks interference with justice

Croatian Generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac

The ICTY prosecutor has, as expected, filed August 10 briefs to the Appeal Chamber as to alternate modes of liability the appeal should result with in Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac appeals.

In short, the prosecutor submits that if the Appeal Chamber upholds the Generals’ appeals and finds against joint criminal enterprise and unlawful artillery shelling during Operation Storm (which according to the prosecutor defines the joint criminal enterprise/ persecuting -causing fear by excessive artillery shelling – and, hence, deportation of Croatian Serbs) then the Appeal Chamber should find the generals guilty of aiding and abetting persecutions, deportation, murder, wanton destruction and plunder, other inhumane acts and cruel treatment, even though the Trial Chamber did not in April 2011 find the generals guilty of these crimes. I.e. the Trial Chamber only focused on convictions of joint criminal enterprise that was, according to Trial Chamber, evident in unlawful artillery shelling.

Furthermore, the ICTY prosecutor did not appeal any of the Trial Chamber’s decisions in any shape or form.

The prosecutor further states that the Trial Chamber found (in April 2011) the fear instilled by the shelling attack during Operation Storm was the primary and direct cause of the mass flight of more than 20,000 Serb civilians from Krajina and that the Croatian Army committed deportation.  The prosecutor states that Croatia’s president Franjo Tudjman and other senior figures shared the intent to drive the Serb civilians out of Krajina and used the army to implement their criminal intent through Operation Storm. That Gotovina knew of this intent…

According to the prosecutor Gotovina knew of this criminal intent and sent his troops into Operation Storm knowing that these crimes would probably occur and therefore aid and abetting should be found!

The prosecutor is telling the world that Gotovina was a mind reader – could read minds of individual soldiers – and that he, therefore, could predict the future.

The fact that Operation Storm occurred and was mounted in order to bring about liberation of occupied territory, to stop further bloodshed, to ensure that the homes of the Croatian and non-Serb people in Krajina deported from Krajina prior to Operation Storm remained the homes belonging to those people (and not rebel Serbs) does not factor in the prosecutor’s brief.

So the prosecutor maintains that even if the Appeal Chamber finds that there was no joint criminal enterprise via unlawful artillery shelling (for which the prosecutor originally said was the culprit in frightening the Serb civilians to flight), persecution and deportations were committed, anyway!

During the Trial the prosecutor insisted that persecutions and deportation of Serbs (joint criminal enterprise) occurred through excessive/unlawful artillery shelling. Now that at the Appeal it seems that there may not have been excessive/unlawful shelling during Operation Storm the prosecutor introduces “intent” by Croatian leaders (half of whom are dead and have not contributed to the evidence) to persecute and deport Serb civilians as specific crimes.

Basically, in simple words, the prosecutor says that since it might not have been a case of violent or excessive artillery shelling then the crimes were in the heads (thoughts) of Croatian leaders. To “evidence” the potency of the unknown and un-provable beyond reasonable doubt the prosecutor enumerates things such as Peter Galbraith’s (US Ambassador) statements (or should I say whimsical ramblings?) that Tudjman saw Serbs as a threat to Croatia.

Excuse me Mr Prosecutor, Serbs were a threat to Croatia and they executed their threats. They attacked Croatia, they ethnically cleansed 1/3 of Croatian territory of Croatians and non-Serbs, they murdered and plundered Croatian homes, they occupied Croatian territory. But in no way was Operation Storm an instrument to persecute and deport – it was an instrument of liberation of occupied territory without plans to deport Serbs, who, by the way, were guaranteed safety and asked by Tudjman not to leave their homes.

While the prosecutor admits that Gotovina issued clear orders to prevent crimes, they say that Gotovina failed to implement follow-up measures to ensure compliance with his orders by soldiers or subordinates. Therefore, the prosecutor maintains, Gotovina should be found guilty of aiding and abetting these crimes.

So, Gotovina, according to the prosecutor, gave orders to subordinates not to commit crimes, knew in his head that they would commit crimes regardless of his orders and failed to install follow-up measures on compliance with his orders!

What would have been any reasonable measures of follow-up as procedure in the circumstances of war and in the days that followed Operation Storm when Gotovina went on to lift Serb siege of the town Bihac, preventing an another Srebrenica genocide, has not been tested in court. In fact, many of the bits and pieces from the original trial that the prosecutor submits qualify for a conviction of aiding and abetting crimes have not, as far as I can ascertain, been properly tested in court neither in favour nor against such criminal conviction.

Regardless of that and regardless of the fact that the prosecutor’s brief is nothing more than a preposterous premise (just as joint criminal enterprise riding on supposed unlawful shelling was), untried to acceptable standards of evidence in criminal proceedings, the prosecutor wants the Appeal Judges to find Gotovina guilty of aiding and abetting crimes and Markac of aiding these crimes. In the mind of the prosecutor all this aiding and abetting amounts to joint criminal enterprise because “they knew that crimes may occur”.

Oh, for God’s sake!

The prosecutor wants the Appeal Chamber to convict Gotovina and Markac of crimes they have not been specifically and beyond reasonable doubt convicted of in the original trial. The prosecutor is, thereby, asking the Appeal Chamber to take on the role of the prosecutor (given that the prosecutor failed to insist in original trial on exhaustive evidence for alleged crimes in original indictment) and to act as judges at the same time without any further reference to any defence that would come under due process. The prosecutor is asking the Appeal Judges to act with grave bias and injustice against appellants’ right to due process. The prosecutor wants the Judges to interfere with justice of due process and with natural justice.

The full truth, both real and from the original trial, is that Generals Gotovina and Markac never personally ordered or tolerated the commission of any crimes.

The full truth is that the orders to evacuate the Serbian population from the liberated by Operation Storm Krajina region came from Belgrade and we do not know yet whether the Appeal Chamber will allow filing of additional evidence sought by Gotovina’s defence that reportedly proves that real truth. One would think that now the prosecutor has asked the Appeal Chamber to find Gotovina and Markac guilty of aiding and/or abetting crimes of deportation the Appeal Chamber has no choice but to allow the additional evidence that actually points to the facts of Serbs leaving Croatia not out of fear for their lives but out of politically installed orders from Belbrade in August 1995 or thereabouts. Ina Vukic, Prof. (Zgb); B.A., M.A.Ps.(Syd)

Comments

  1. Reblogged this on Eyes of the Mind and commented:
    The essence of this latest development is that although the generals have been found guilty on the basis of x, the prosecutor has submitted that if the Appeals Chamber decides they are not guilty on the basis of x they should instead be fou
    nd guilty on the basis of y, even though y was not the grounds for the original guilty verdict. This amounts to a retrial without the trial… a demand to ‘have it both ways’. It is a blatant and appalling abuse of justice. If the Appeals Chamber allows such nonsense they will confirm to the world that they are a kangaroo court.

    • Exactly. The prosecutor pushed, and pushed and pushed to get conviction for “x” – they got it on very shaky and suspect grounds, albeit to their twisted political agenda – and now that they were wrong in “x” they want “y” which they say the dead people carried in their minds. Sort of reminds one of Paddy Ashdown’s serviette on which the late Tudjman, he said, drew a map of Croatia he imagined. Lots to do with dead people who can’t say a word about it, lots to do with mind-reading and thoughts never uttered by the dead people but never mind the ICTY prosecutor knows what was in those minds. Amidst all this the Croatian generals committed no crime.

  2. If this standard is upheld by the Appeals Judges, then every politician and military leader is guilty of aiding and abetting crimes in war no matter how righteous or justified the war. Leaders take calculated risks, issue orders and believe the risk can be managed, that the benefits outweigh the risks…this now becomes criminal behaviour.

  3. (Part Deleted by Admin). The wars were 20 years ago and everyone else is trying to move on to have better lives together.

    • Bozana, we can only move on successfully when justice is done for everyone, every side. Thank God there are people in the world who care about justice and who care about the truth. Pursuit of justice is not hatred (as you suggested in the deleted part of your comment), writing about public matters published by ICTY is not hatred (as you suggested in the deleted part of your comment) but hatred (of justice) is when anyone promotes the idea that crimes should not be addressed properly by the courts for the sake of the truth, for the sake of victims.

      • Every Croat should give you full support in the name of a few hundred thousand Croats who lost their life’s in 20th century as innocent victims or defenders of their homes during the Serbian occupation or aggression on a few occasions since 1918. You as well as Mishka Gora stand out online as the last defenders of truth and last seekers of justice since all of the governments of Croatia since 2000 failed to do so. People, ah the people, they maybe the answer too why Croatia was under foreign rule, one, another, third, forth… for the past 900 years, not only the nobleman then and now.

      • Thank you Kristijan on your support. Support networks and expressions of such give strength and energy to the truth

  4. Zrinka Stampalia says:

    Draga Ina!
    Neka te Dragi Bog Blagoslovi i dade ti snage i Tebi i nasim prekrasnim Generalima Herojima i svima nama koji volimo nasu Hrvatsku, Boga i Pravdu da izdrzimo i pobjedimo ovaj akt okrutnog Vraga u liku ICTY-a, te da prestane povijesna tortura nad nadasve nevinom Hrvatskom i njenim narodom.
    Hvala ti za Tvoj ;inspirativni rad i to, posebno sto pises na engleskom jeziku tako da se rijec Istine i Pravde prosiri dalje od vrazjeg djelokruga. Pravda je vrlo spora a posebno je spora i puna prepreka za Hrvatsku i njen narod kroz cijelu njenu povijest.
    Ja, osobno imam slucaj moga strica: Veljko Zoric, koji je ubijen za vrijeme 1944 ili 1945 u Zagrebu, kao student Medicine od partizana pod rukovdstvom Koce Popovica, ne zna mu se grob ni njegov zadnji moment, a moja je baka od tuge placuci za njim dobila glaukom u ocima i oslijepila. Ja sam bila samo sest godina kad sam je pratila sa stapom do nase Katedrale Sv. Jakova u Sibeniku, gdje bi ona redovito isla na svetu misu svake nedjelje.
    Ja imam puno prica od moga oca i majke, koje su vezane za teska vremena i krize kroz koje je prolazila i jos prolazi nasa Hrvatska da sam uvijek imala zelju o tome pisati ili pricati kad sam za to dobila priliku ali slusatelja je jako malo.

    • Translation of Zrinka Stampalia comment
      Dear Ina!
      Let dear God bless you and give you,our lovely Generals and heroes and all of us who love Croatia strength. God and Justice for us to endure and overcome this cruel devil with the likeness of ICTY, and historical turture to stop over innocent Croatia and her people.
      Thank you for your inspirational work and that especially because you write in English so that the word of truth and Justice spreads wider from the devil’s grounds. Justice is very slow and it’s especially slow and full of obstacles for Croatia and her people throughout her whole history.
      I personally have a case of my uncle: Veljko Zoric, who was murdered during 1944-1945 in Zagreb, as a student of Medicine, by Partisans under directions of Koca Popovic, the place of his grave is unknown and so too his last moments and my grandmother, in sorrow for him, crying got her glaucoma and blindness. I was only six years old when I followed her with a walking stick to our Cathedral St Jacob in Sibenik, where she went regularly to Mass every Sunday. I have lots of stories from my mother and father, that are associated with hard times and crises through which our Croatia went and is going through and I’ve always had a wish to write or talk about them whenever the opportunity arose but there are so few listeners.

Trackbacks

  1. […] 31 August Croatian General Mladen Markac’s defence has filed its full reply to the ICTY Prosecution’s Brief that Generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac, in case the Appeal Chamber found no case for joint […]

  2. […] 31 August Gotovina’s defence has filed a reply to ICTY Prosecution’s brief on why the Croatian Generals should be found guilty of alternate modes of […]

  3. […] 31 August Gotovina’s defence has filed a reply to ICTY Prosecution’s brief on why the Croatian Generals should be found guilty of alternate modes of […]

  4. […] you still have any doubts about the former USA Ambassador Peter Galbraith’s vicious opinion (recorded also in the ICTY transcripts where Galbraith served as witness for the […]

Leave a Reply

Disclaimer, Terms and Conditions:

All content on “Croatia, the War, and the Future” blog is for informational purposes only. “Croatia, the War, and the Future” blog is not responsible for and expressly disclaims all liability for the interpretations and subsequent reactions of visitors or commenters either to this site or its associate Twitter account, @IVukic or its Facebook account. Comments on this website are the sole responsibility of their writers and the writer will take full responsibility, liability, and blame for any libel or litigation that results from something written in or as a direct result of something written in a comment. The nature of information provided on this website may be transitional and, therefore, accuracy, completeness, veracity, honesty, exactitude, factuality and politeness of comments are not guaranteed. This blog may contain hypertext links to other websites or webpages. “Croatia, the War, and the Future” does not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness or completeness of information on any other website or webpage. We do not endorse or accept any responsibility for any views expressed or products or services offered on outside sites, or the organisations sponsoring those sites, or the safety of linking to those sites. Comment Policy: Everyone is welcome and encouraged to voice their opinion regardless of identity, politics, ideology, religion or agreement with the subject in posts or other commentators. Personal or other criticism is acceptable as long as it is justified by facts, arguments or discussions of key issues. Comments that include profanity, offensive language and insults will be moderated.

Discover more from Croatia, the War, and the Future

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading