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11 Oct 2005 13:48:04 GMT
Officers let Vukovar killings go ahead-prosecutor


(Adds survivor comments in Vukovar)

By Nicola Leske

THE HAGUE, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Three former Yugoslav army officers knowingly allowed soldiers under their command to commit mass murder in the eastern Croatian town of Vukovar in 1991, prosecutors said at the start of their trial on Tuesday.

More than 200 people were removed from a hospital in the town and taken to a farm where they were shot and buried in a mass grave. The massacre has came to symbolise the brutality of wars that tore apart Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Prosecutor Marks Moore said the men, known as the "Vukovar Three", ignored orders from superiors to ensure soldiers carried out no acts of retribution and, as a result, were complicit in one of the worst atrocities of the Balkan wars.

The executions followed a brutal three-month siege of Croatia's easternmost town, close to the border with Serbia, by local Serb rebels reinforced by Yugoslav army troops and artillery, which reduced much of the town to rubble.

Mile Mrksic, Miroslav Radic and Veselin Sljivancanin are accused of crimes against humanity and of violations of the laws or customs of war. They have pleaded not guilty.

"The failure of the accused to prevent or punish their subordinates makes them criminally liable," Moore told the court.

He added that the men had clearly breached an agreement to evacuate the hospital under the auspices of the International Red Cross.

Up to 2,000 people, including the families of hospital staff and some Croatian soldiers, sought refuge in the hospital, in the belief they would be evacuated in the presence of international observers.

ORDERS WERE BREACHED

Anticipating retribution and acts of revenge by local Serbs after the fall of Vukovar in November 1991, Mrksic's superior officer had ordered that all aspects of the Geneva Convention be observed and all acts of retribution or revenge be punished.

"The language was plain as a pikestaff", Moore said.

Instead, local armed Serbs were allowed into the hospital on November 19 where they started abusing and beating patients.

In spite of protests by the head of the hospital, soldiers separated the men from the women, taking about 400 people from the facility and then transporting 300 to a farm building in nearby Ovcara.

There, the captives were beaten for several hours and afterwards transported in groups of about 10 to 20 to a site close by. At least 264 people, most of them Croatians, were killed and their bodies bulldozed into a mass grave.

In Vukovar, still pockmarked with ruins and shell holes although the war ended in 1995, the trial revived bad memories.

"This deserves a life sentence because there is no death penalty, but even the death penalty would not be enough for them," Zeljko Hirjovati, who was hospital technician at the time, told reporters as he showed them the hospital's wartime ward in the basement.

The case of the Vukovar massacre was one of the first investigations of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia after it was set up by a U.N. Security Council resolution in 1993.

Vukovar was the last city captured by Serb rebels early in the Croatian war for independence. The city was of strategic and symbolic importance to both Serbs and Croats.

"The plan of Mrksic, Sljivancanin and Radic was to identify and isolate those individuals they believed had committed crimes against local Serbs", Moore said.


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Last updated:Fri Nov 11 14:26:27 2005