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General of Darkness
16th November 2012, 06:57 AM
FINALLY SOME GOOD NEWS FOR A CHANGE.

Croatian hero Ante Gotovina acquitted of war crimes Croatia's national hero General Ante Gotovina has been acquitted of war crimes after an appeal at a United Nations tribunal. http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/02400/Gotovina_2400907b.jpg Former Croatian Army General Ante Gotovina Photo: AFP/Getty Images








http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01768/Waterfield_60_1768790j.jpg (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/bruno-waterfield/)
By Bruno Waterfield (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/bruno-waterfield/)

12:36PM GMT 16 Nov 2012




The unexpected result has sparked jubilant scenes in Croatia (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/croatia) as people cheered and wept with joy as they watched a live broadcast of the UN court in Zagreb's central square.



"A huge weight has been lifted off my shoulders," said Zoran Milanovic, the Croatian Prime Minister in Zagreb. "I say thank you to them for surviving so long for the sake of Croatia."



Last year's conviction of General Gotovina for a criminal conspiracy to commit war crimes dealt a severe blow to Croatia's image as victim of Serb aggression during the break-up of Yugoslavia.


Gen. Gotovina, and a more junior general, Mladen Markac, were acquitted on appeal by a 3-2 majority in the five judge UN appeals chamber in the most stunning reversal in the war crime court's 18-year history.



Both men showed no emotion at the decision but their Croatian supporters in the court's packed public gallery cheered and clapped the court ordered them to be freed immediately.


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The generals were returned to their jail cells to complete release paperwork before being flown back to Croatia on Friday afternoon.

"I think right now what he wants to do is go home to his wife, his little boy, his daughter," said Gotovina's American lawyer, Greg Kehoe.


The two men will be driven to nearby Rotterdam airport in diplomatic limousines and flown back in a Croatian plane to a hero's welcome in Zagreb.


The decision has angered Serbia, after the country's former president Slobodan Milosevic died in a Dutch jail six years ago during his trial on genocide charges, many other Serbs have been convicted and imprisoned by the UN court.


Tomislav Nikolic, the Serbian President, accused the UN judges of taking a "political decision" that showed the court's bias against Serbs and warned the release would stir up old enmities in the region.

"It is now quite clear the tribunal has made a political decision and not a legal ruling. Today's ruling will not contribute to the stabilisation of the situation in the region and will open old wounds," he said.

"If we had reasons to believe that the tribunal is neutral, fair and more than a court only for Serbia and its people, these reasons are now anulled with the acquittal of war criminals."


In Croatia, thousands of people had gathered in Zagreb's main square to watch a live broadcast of the verdict.


Men dressed in uniform and carrying the Croatian flag held placards saying "Our generals are heroes, not criminals". Others carried pictures of the two men with the slogan "Croatia's honour".

"I am very happy, we have won," 70-year-old Anica Pecar said, tears streaming down her face as fireworks erupted around her and people waved Croatian flags.


The acquittal is a major moment as the former Yugoslav republic prepares to join the EU in July 2013, Britain and other countries had made Gen. Gotovina's capture and trial a condition of membership.

For most Croats, Gen. Gotovina symbolises the country's independence and the beginning of his military "Operation Storm", for which he was convicted of war crimes, is celebrated as a public holiday called Victory Day.


In its 2011 verdict, the 56-year-old former French legionnaire, with far-Right links, was sentenced to 18 years imprisonment for war crimes and crimes against humanity charges.

He was accused of seeking the "permanent removal of the ethnic Serb population from the Krajina region" during the war for Croatia's independence in 1995.


A lightning military operation commanded by Gen. Gotovina led to the recapture of Krajina, destroying one of the last pockets of Serb resistance in an area where their community had roots going back centuries.

But the UN appeals judges rejected the key premise on which the initial conviction had been based, dimissing the prosecution argument that any artillery shells that landed on Serb-inhabited towns more than 220 yards from a military target amounted to an attack on civilians.


The judges then overturned the finding of "a joint criminal enterprise whose purpose was the permanent and forcible removal of Serb civilians from the Krajina region".

"This has gone on for 17 years, and two innocent people can go home. But that doesn't mean the war wasn't bloody and Croatia will do its part to achieve justice," said Mr Milanovic, the Croatian leader.

"Clearly mistakes were made during the course of the conflict. Mistakes for which the Croatian state should be held responsible, not Gotovina and Markac. For those wronged by the state of Croatia, Croatia will settle
its debts. We should not forget in this moment that these cases also exist."


Gen Gotovina is regarded as a national liberator in Croatia and he became a popular folk hero after successfully dodging an international manhunt for four years before his capture in 2005.

Serbia, which has handed Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic over to the the court under EU pressure, warned that Belgrade's cooperation with UN war crimes investigators might be under threat following the verdict.


"The UN war crimes court has lost all credibility," said Rasim Ljajic, the minister responsible for the country's cooperation with the tribunal. "Today's decision is proof of selective justice which is worse than any injustice."

PlatinumBlonde
16th November 2012, 08:18 AM
Good for him! I've followed his story for some time now..

Neuro
16th November 2012, 09:31 AM
Good for him! I've followed his story for some time now..
I haven't, but it seems the Serbs are very upset about this... I don't know about this particular case, but it seems it is always the losers in a war that are war criminals, never the winners. I guess the lesson the UN war tribunal is trying to teach, is if your engaged in war, always win, doesn't matter how many innocents you kill, you are only guilty if you lose!

PlatinumBlonde
16th November 2012, 09:50 AM
I don't like the idea of the UN putting anyone on trial.

Actually I don't like the idea of the UN..

Ponce
16th November 2012, 10:33 AM
When a cop is the judge another cop will go free....... to kill civilians in the name of whatever is murder.

woodman
16th November 2012, 11:15 AM
Can anyone give me a quick and concise primer on just what happened over there with Serbia and Croatia? I never really trusted the news I was getting from Mainstream media. My old German neighbor was quite upset about the whole thing. He must have had family somewhere there. He thought we shouldn't be there but he never really filled me in on why. Said it was none of our business. I know that things seemed prosperous for Yugoslavia and then all of a sudden it all blew up.

joboo
16th November 2012, 11:58 AM
"The acquittal is a major moment as the former Yugoslav republic prepares to join the EU in July 2013."

Out of the frying pan, into the fire.

General of Darkness
16th November 2012, 03:14 PM
Can anyone give me a quick and concise primer on just what happened over there with Serbia and Croatia? I never really trusted the news I was getting from Mainstream media. My old German neighbor was quite upset about the whole Boing. He must have had family somewhere there. He thought we shouldn't be there but he never really filled me in on why. Said it was none of our business. I know that things seemed prosperous for Yugoslavia and then all of a sudden it all blew up.

Basically the war started because Croatia then Slovenia succeeded from Yugoslavia. It was about land and money. Then the UN came in and created Bosnia out of thin air, it should have been divided between Croatia and Serbia. Gotovina was accused of shelling civilians, but it never happened. I do agree with people saying that the losers are always the war criminals but you have to understand Yugoslavia. The Serbians ran the show, they had the tanks the guns etc. NO ONE, and I mean NO ONE helped Croatia other than Germany. Then NATO gets involved, creates both Bosnia and Kosovo out of thin air. Overall I think Serbia got fucked, and this is coming from a Croatian, but then again they started the war.

Gotovina being acquitted was the right thing to do, but I also think it was for political reasons to make Croatian happy so they still get on the sinking ship called the EU.