YUGOSLAV LEADER STANDS UP TO NATO COURT/  WORLD  ANTI-WAR FORCES RESPOND TO MILOSEVIC KIDNAPPING

By Heather Cottin

July 4, 2001--Deriding the international court at The Hague as a  "political circus," Serbian Socialist Party Chairperson and  former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic defiantly told  tribunal officials who read him his rights, "You are  kidnapping me and you will answer for your crimes."

He opted July 3 not to have counsel represent him at his  arraignment before the court in The Hague, known as the  ICTY. Milosevic said there, "I consider this tribunal a  false tribunal and its indictments false indictments. It is  illegal, being not appointed by the UN General Assembly. So  I have no need to appoint counsel to this illegal organ."

Though tribunal Judge Richard May did his best to prevent  the former Balkans leader from making political statements,  even cutting off his microphone, Milosevic managed to get  out his main point: "This trial's aim is to produce false  justification for the war crimes of NATO committed in  Yugoslavia."

This point found an echo in the anti-war and anti- imperialist circles--whether from government leaders or  movement activists--that had stood in solidarity with the  Yugoslav people against NATO aggression.

Of course, politicians in NATO countries who had led the war  on Yugoslavia--from U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine  Albright to Germany's Foreign Minister Joseph Fischer to  Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair--praised it as a "great  step for democracy," although it obviously flouted the  Yugoslav Constitution.

But other leaders from around the world and representatives  of the movements in solidarity with Yugoslavia against NATO  have reacted strongly to this act of NATO terrorism.

In Havana, Cuba, Fidel Castro said, after addressing a crowd  of 40,000 people protesting the recent conviction of five  Cubans in Miami, "The sending of Milosevic over there is  illegal, it does not correspond with international laws."

Castro, who was one of the strongest opponents of the NATO- led bombing of Yugoslavia two years ago, added that it was  "madness" for the Yugoslav authorities "to concede the right  of extra-territorial action for their penal laws and  judicial authorities to NATO and the powerful nations.''

This "extradition under cover of the night," as Russia State  Duma Chair Gennady Seleznyov called it, was "undemocratic."  Seleznyov called instead for the Hague Tribunal to judge  NATO's supporters and allies, which had bombed that country  for 78 days, not the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia's  president.

Cambodia also faces a threat from courts controlled by the  same imperialists that waged war against it. Warning against  any similar attempt on Cambodian sovereignty, National  Assembly President Prince Norodom Ranariddh said Saturday he  would oppose any attempt to haul former Cambodian leaders to  an international court for trial in exchange for foreign  aid.

President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus also denounced the  seizure of Milosevic.

The Yugoslav government agreed to turn Milosevic over to the  court in "return" for $1.28 billion in foreign aid that is  slated to go directly into payment of International Monetary  Fund/World Bank service on Yugoslavia's $12.2 billion debt.  The Guardian of Britain noted, "It is no coincidence that  Slobodan Milosevic's first full day in a Hague prison cell  will be the same day that international donors convene to  pledge up to $1.3 billion."

MASS PROTESTS

The largest mass protests were in Belgrade itself, where  tens of thousands of people took to the streets to protest  against the new pro-Western government's sellout of  Yugoslavia's self-determination.

Hundreds of Greek demonstrators marched through Athens on  Friday shouting "Out with NATO and the Americans.'' The  Greek Center of Research and Action on Peace issued a  statement condemning the Hague tribunal's unlawful action,  saying, "Those who perpetrated the war have become the  prosecutors of the victims of the war. The aim is to impose  collective guilt on the Serbian people for everything that  happened. It is an attempt to present NATO with clean  hands."

Greek Communist Member of Parliament Stratis Korakas told  reporters at the protest that he was one of the last people  to see Milosevic before he was deported. "He said to me he  wouldn't change his position in jail for a position in a  government that bowed to the foreign interests that were  controlling the people and the country,'' Korakas said.

The Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) issued a strong  statement condemning the illegal action of the Hague  Tribunal. "This handover/extradition is the result of a  long, sophisticated and violent process of imperialist  meddling and blackmail on Yugoslavia, following NATOillegal  and criminal aggression on this sovereign country, and which  continues under different forms," it said.

The PCP characterized as cynical and shameful "The fact that  the handover took place under a U.S. ultimatum, on the eve  of the 'Donor Conference' with the blackmail of 'economic  aid.'" The PCP called for an "end to the presence of the  Portuguese troops in the Balkans and Portugal's involvement  in NATO's aggressive policy and the process of  militarization of the European Union."

Miguel Figueroa, leader of the Communist Party of Canada,  strongly condemned the unlawful extradition of Milosevic:

"This act, taken under immense and unprecedented economic  and political pressure from the U.S. government, constitutes  a shameful denial of elementary democratic rights and due  process. It also reveals the true character of the  International War Crimes Tribunal as an instrument of  political vengeance and the imposition of a winners'  'justice,'" said Figueroa.

WORKERS WORLD PARTY CONDEMNS U.S. POLICIES

In a statement from its Secretariat, Workers World Party of  the United States said:

"The so-called trial of Slobodan Milosevic is a monstrous  example of 'adding insult to injury.' It is the NATO war  criminals who must be put in the dock, not the leader of a  small country ripped apart by decades of imperialist  intervention--from economic sanctions to political  subterfuge, and culminating in a completely one-sided and  devastating military attack on its people and vital  infrastructure.

"Chief of the NATO criminals is the United States  government. It is the height of gall that these servants of  the multi-billionaire corporations pretend to occupy the  moral high ground in international relations. They have gone  completely unpunished for their horrendous crimes over the  last half-century, including the invasion, devastation and  division of Korea, the war against Vietnam, Laos and  Cambodia, the 1961 invasion of Cuba, the trampling on little  Grenada, the blitzkrieg against Iraq, and the scores of not- so-hidden interventions that have brought misery to Congo,  Angola, Indonesia, Chile, Palestine, Iran, Russia and other  countries looted and pillaged by U.S. profiteers."

German opponents of NATO aggression joined the international  opposition to the illegal detention and extradition of  Milosevic. In Berlin, Laura von Wimmersperg of the Berlin  Peace Coordination and one of the conveners of the German  and European "people's tribunals" that found NATO leaders  guilty of war crimes, decried this travesty of justice.

"NATO will find 'proof,' exactly as they did with the lies  they used to usher in the barbaric air attacks. This show  trial is supposed to whitewash NATO and legitimize its war  of aggression."

Heinz Stehr, chairperson of the German Communist Party  (DKP), said, "The DKP condemns the decree of the Yugoslavian  regime and the extradition of the former Yugoslav President  Slobodan Milosevic to the UN tribunal as an anti-human- rights act of piracy."

Michel Collon, of the Belgian Workers Party and a well-known  NATO opponent, asked how those who made war on Korea, the  Suez, Algeria, Vietnam and Iraq could manipulate world  opinion to support Milosevic's extradition to the Hague  Tribunal.

Collon asked, "How could those who put Mobutu, Sharon and  Pinochet in power, and supported most of the military  dictators of the world for the last 50 years pretend to  judge those heads of state who displease them?"

Collon is recovering from surgery for cancer of the kidney.  He has evidence that the cancer was caused by exposure to  radioactive particles in his body. He was exposed to  depleted uranium weapon residues while reporting from Kosovo  in the past few years.

Collon noted that the Hague Tribunal was financed by the CIA- connected Soros Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation and Time  Warner, Inc.

INTERNATIONAL ACTION CENTER

In New York, the International Action Center condemned the  "illegal, U.S.-forced deportation of former Yugoslav  President Slobodan Milosevic to a NATO-sponsored court."  Returned from Yugoslavia, where he had gone to show  solidarity with Milosevic and his country, IAC founder  Ramsey Clark called the kidnapping "an enormous tragedy for  Yugoslavia and the rule of law."

"Serbian Prime Minister Djindjic and other officials should  be investigated for high crimes against the people, and if  found guilty should be sentenced in accordance with the  law," Clark said.

"Today's U.S.-engineered deportation of former Yugoslav  President Slobodan Milosevic is a gross violation of both  legality and Yugoslavia's national sovereignty," said IAC  West Coast Coordinator Richard Becker. "The ICTY's role as  an instrument of the United States and other NATO powers was  made apparent during the 1999 NATO war against Yugoslavia.

"Despite the fact that the massive bombing of Yugoslavia  constituted grave violations of international law--including  crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity- -the ICTY refused to even consider indicting the NATO  powers," Becker continued.

"Today, as a result, U.S. military bases dominate the region- in Croatia, Bosnia, Albania, Hungary, Macedonia and Kosovo  (Serbia)--where there were none 10 years ago. Yugoslavia's  real crime was that it resisted this re-colonization  process."

Sara Flounders, co-director of the IAC in New York, noted,  "The IAC stands with those in Yugoslavia today who are  resisting the U.S./NATO takeover of their country."

Behind the imprisonment of Milosevic at The Hague

 

 

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