Monday, May 30, 2011

Mladic "has nothing to do with Srebrenica" Maybe tomorrow the transfer to The Hague

The former Bosnian Serb general, Ratko Mladic, who was captured last Thursday in northeastern Serbia after 16 years on the run and accused of genocide by the international justice could be transferred to The Hague as early as Monday or Tuesday. He reports Judge Mehmet Guney said today the Turkish news agency Anadolu.

"Mladic could come Monday or Tuesday. In application of international law will be immediately submitted to the court, "said Guney that serves as the court added the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Guney also said that Mladic will be transferred after the administrative and financial issues related to his transfer.

The group of judges who will judge it is composed of three judges: a German, a South African and Dutch. Meanwhile, Mladic has issued statements through his son Darko. "I have nothing to do with the massacre at Srebrenica, where in July 1995 eight thousand Muslims were killed by Bosnian Serb troops he led.

Once out of the Special Court for war crimes where Mladic is held in a cell, the son, accompanied by his wife Bosiljka, said: "My father said that he saved Srebrenica women and children, and that orders he had been given to evacuate the wounded, women and children. "

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