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Sunday 27 May RNW - News and analysis from the Netherlands in 10 languages, worldwide 24/7 on radio, television and online
Ejup Ganic
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London, United Kingdom
London, United Kingdom

Former Bosnian leader Ganic arrested in London

Published on : 2 March 2010 - 11:21am | By International Justice Desk (rnw.nl)
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A former member of Bosnia's wartime presidency Ejup Ganic was arrested in London on an extradition warrant from Serbia for alleged war crimes during the 1990s Balkans conflict, police said.

Officers from Scotland Yard's Extradition Unit detained the 63 year old at London’s Heathrow airport Monday over the killing of injured soldiers in 1992, said Scotland Yard.
 

Ganic "was arrested on behalf of the Serbian authorities under a provisional extradition warrant alleging 'conspiracy to murder with other named people and breach of the Geneva Convention, namely killing wounded soldiers [...],'" it said.
 

A Foreign Office spokesman confirmed Ganic's arrest following "a provisional extradition request from the Republic of Serbia in respect of conspiracy to murder and breach of the Geneva Convention," which deals with war crimes.
 

Ganic - a Muslim member of Bosnia's presidency during the 1992-95 war - appeared at the City of Westminster Magistrates Court after his arrest, the spokesman said.
 

He was remanded in custody following the hearing and appears in court again on 29 March, said police.

Extradition
"The Serbian authorities must now provide full papers to support their extradition request before a date can be fixed for an extradition hearing. A judge will then consider whether there are any bars to the extradition," said the Foreign Office spokesman.

Ganic had already been detained Friday after arriving in London but was released almost immediately as no extradition request had been received, Britain’s Press Association news agency reported, citing sources.
 

Belgrade wants to try Ganic and 18 other former Bosnian officials suspected of involvement in an attack on a Yugoslav army convoy in Sarajevo, as well as alleged incidents at a hospital and military barracks in the Bosnian capital.

At the time Ganic, the highest-ranking ex-Bosnian official named in the warrant, dismissed the allegations as "ridiculous."
 

Eighteen people were killed and many officers, soldiers and civilians wounded in the May 1992 convoy attack, at the start of Bosnia’s three-and-a-half year war.
 

Bosnia's inter-ethnic war between its Croats, Muslims and Serbs claimed some 100,000 lives. It left the country split into two semi autonomous halves - the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Serbs' Republika Srpska.

Karadzic trial
Ganic's arrest came as Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic told his genocide trial that the conflict launched in Bosnia had been a "holy" cause against Muslim aggression.
 

Ending his boycott of the UN's International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Karadzic said he would use the trial "to defend the greatness" of his people who had endured centuries of persecution.
 

The 64 year old, who is conducting his own defence, stands charged as the "supreme commander" of an ethnic cleansing campaign targeting Croats and Muslims in the war that displaced 2.2 million people.
 

In Belgrade, Serbian Justice Minister Snezana Malovic told the Beta news agency that her ministry would send an extradition request for Ganic on Tuesday.
 

The Serbian interior ministry issued a warrant for Ganic and the other suspects in 2009 because of the "armed attack on a Yugoslav army convoy in Sarajevo in May 1992."
 

The convoy was withdrawing from central Sarajevo towards the military barracks in Lukavica suburb. Serbian sources said 41 Yugoslav army soldiers and officers were killed, 71 were wounded and 215 detained in the attack.

The head of an association of Bosnian Serb wartime detainees urged British authorities to extradite Ganic to Serbia.

"By arresting Ganic the international community has finally understood that the time has come that war crimes committed against Bosnian Serbs be processed also," Branislav Dukic, of the the Association of detainees of Republika Srpska, told the Bosnian Serb SRNA news agency.
 

Source: AFP

 

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From the former Yugoslavia to Rwanda, Cambodia and Lebanon, Radio Netherlands Worldwide reports on international justice. We offer background news and reporting on war crimes, human rights abuses and genocide.

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