Third article from
TRIBUNAL UPDATE No. 313, May 22, 2003
NEW AT IWPR.NET: INTRODUCTION TO THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL
SECOND SREBRENICA DEFENDANT PLEADS GUILTY Bosnian Serb officer offers
account of his role in killings in return for lesser sentence. By Emir
Suljagic in The Hague
SECOND SREBRENICA DEFENDANT PLEADS GUILTY
Bosnian Serb officer offers account of his role in killings in return for
lesser sentence.
By Emir Suljagic in The Hague
A second defendant has pleaded guilty in the trial of four Bosnian Serb
army officers charged with planning the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.
Appearing before the Hague tribunal on May 21, Dragan Obrenovic, 40,
looked visibly shaken as he pleaded guilty to persecution, a crime against
humanity.
His announcement was the second bombshell to hit the trial. Momir
Nikolic, indicted in the same case, pleaded guilty on May 7, a week before
the trial began.
Like Nikolic, Obrenovic agreed to testify against the remaining
defendants. His plea leaves Vidoje Blagojevic and Dragan Jokic still on
trial.
In return for Obrenovic's guilty plea, the prosecution withdrew four other
war crimes charges, including the most serious, genocide. In addition, the
prosecution said it would seek a sentence of between 15 and 20 years
rather than life.
Obrenovic was chief of staff and acting commander of the Zvornik brigade
in July 1995 when Bosnian Serb forces overran the UN safe haven of
Srebrenica.
Before the trial began, he denied planning or taking part in the killing
of more than 7,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys. He said he did not even
know that the men from Srebrenica were brought to Zvornik until July 23,
1995 when his wife told him.
The tribunal thought otherwise and in April 2001 it accused Obrenovic of
being a member of a "joint criminal enterprise" that aimed to "capture,
detain and summarily execute" the men and boys from the enclave.
In the weeks leading up to the trial, many suspected that either Obrenovic
or Jokic, not Nikolic, would be first to change his plea. In Obrenovic's
case this was partly because the prosecution held a damning piece of
evidence - an audio tape in which he was heard taking orders to execute
some of the men.
Like Nikolic, Obrenovic has now provided a written confession in which he
described how his soldiers became executioners and how he decided to turn
a blind eye to massacres. Unlike Nikolic, however, Obrenovic seemed to
express sincere regret for taking part in what is Europe's single worst
atrocity since the end of the Second World War.
His confession gives a terrifying insight into the murder operation
carried out at Srebrenica. It also illustrates what prosecutors say is a
"proud military tradition betrayed".
In his statement, Obrenovic said that on July 13, as a column of more than
10,000 Muslim men from Srebrenica was fleeing through the woods in an
effort to reach Tuzla, his security officer Drago Nikolic told him that an
order had come in from Colonel Vujadin Popovic, the Drina corps' security
officer, to kill all of them.
Obrenovic said he initially did not believe it could be true.
Then, on July 14, while he was at the front line, Obrenovic received
orders from Drina corps headquarters to send two men who could operate
bulldozers, diggers and other heavy machinery to Zvornik.
"The report was specific... and said they were to build a road. I knew
the
road-building story was not plausible," he said.
Obrenovic suspected his mechanics were being pulled from the front as a
personal favour, so he asked who had sent the message. "Five minutes
later I received a message from the radio centre that the request was
related to the work of Popovic and Drago Nikolic," he said.
It was then that Obrenovic knew that many of the men from Srebrenica had
been killed. The machinery, he reckoned, was going to be used to bury
them.
The next morning at the headquarters, he met Jokic, the chief of
engineering in the Zvornik brigade, who is now on trial in the same case.
"Before I reached my office, Dragan Jokic stopped me in the corridor.
Jokic told me he had a huge problem with the burials of those executed,
and with guarding those prisoners still to be executed," the defendant
said.
He suddenly grew afraid, not because of the killings, but because with so
many soldiers diverted from the battlefield to the "murder operation",
the
front lines had grown thin. As the remainder of the Bosnian Muslims from
Srebrenica approached Zvornik, Obrenovic feared that they might attack the
town. There were, he thought, more than 3,000 armed men in the column.
In a meeting that day with Zvornik police chief Colonel Dragomir Vasic and
two other special police officers, Ljubomir Borovcanin and Milos Stupar,
Vasic says he suggested "that a corridor be opened to let the column
through". This would avoid casualties and ensure that Zvornik wasn't
attacked. When Obrenovic, who was the only member of the Bosnian Serb
army at that meeting, called the general staff to make the suggestion, he
says his superiors "told him off".
General Radivoj Miletic, who was standing in for the Bosnian Serb army
chief of staff, forbade it. "He said I should use all possible military
hardware to stop and destroy the column, as I had been ordered to do,"
the
defendant said.
Vasic then called the Bosnian Serb interior ministry and managed to get
through to one of the minister's advisers. Vasic put the phone on speaker
so everyone in the room could hear what he had to say. "The advisor said
that he should find the army and alert the air force, and kill them all,"
Obrenovic said.
Obrenovic says that a month after the executions, in August 1995, he saw
the man responsible for planning the executions, General Radislav Krstic,
and expressed his disapproval of the operation.
"I said that we knew the people killed were all ordinary people, and asked
the reason why they had to be killed. I said that even if they had all
been chickens, there still had to be a reason," the defendant recalled.
Krstic, whom the tribunal convicted of genocide in 2000, apparently
disregarded Obrenovic's complaints. A month after that meeting, in
September 1995, he asked the defendant to help cover up the massacres. His
brigade received five tonnes of fuel for bulldozers, diggers and trucks to
rebury the remains in new locations.
Emir Suljagic is an IWPR reporter in The Hague.