Gacesa slobodan milosevic biography

  • 5 President of Serbia, Slobodan Milosevic, also reiterated his full.
  • BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE.
  • INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE.
  • Chapter 2 Struggling with State-Building in Interwar Yugoslavia

    Pavlaković, Vjeran and Jovanović, Vladan. "Chapter 2 Struggling with State-Building in Interwar Yugoslavia". Battling over the Balkans: Historiographical Questions and Controversies, edited by John R. Lampe and Constantin Iordachi, Budapest, Hungary: huvud European University Press, 2020, pp. 95-148. https://doi.org/10.1515/9789633863268-003

    Pavlaković, V. & Jovanović, V. (2020). Chapter 2 Struggling with State-Building in Interwar Yugoslavia. In J. Lampe & C. Iordachi (Ed.), Battling over the Balkans: Historiographical Questions and Controversies (pp. 95-148). Budapest, Hungary: huvud European University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9789633863268-003

    Pavlaković, V. and Jovanović, V. 2020. Chapter 2 Struggling with State-Building in Interwar Yugoslavia. In: Lampe, J. and Iordachi, C. ed. Battling over the Balkans: Historiographical Questions and Controversies. Budapest, Hungary: Central europeisk Universit

  • gacesa slobodan milosevic biography
  •  1                          Wednesday, 4 December 2002

     2                          [Open session]

     3                          [The witness entered court]

     4                          [The accused entered court]

     5                          --- Upon commencing at 9.24 a.m.

     6            JUDGE MAY:  Yes.  We've been delayed, as I understand it, because

     7    building works at the Detention Unit have delayed the accused's arrival.

     8    We will sit until 2.00 to try and make up some of the time.  We'll take

     9    the normal breaks at the normal times.

    10            Yes, Mr. Milosevic.

    11                          WITNESS:  MILAN BABIC [Resumed]

    12                          [Witness answered through interpreter]

    13                          Cross-examined by Mr. Milosevic:

    14            THE ACCUSED: [Interpretation] Do I recollect well that we

    15    discussed in public session the fact that the Defence Minister of Serbia,

    16    General Simovic, had appointed, or rather, given

    Petrinja killings

    1991 mass murder of Croat civilians

    The Petrinja Killings refers to a series of mass murders and other crimes that were committed by various Serb forces against Croat POWs and civilians, from September 1991 until June 1992, in the town of Petrinja and in surrounding areas.

    Croats were killed over several months, both during the battle to control the town and later during the occupation; in indiscriminate artillery attacks against civilian areas and in instances of wilful killings against civilians and POWs. Croatian sources state that over 250 people were killed (including at least 120 civilians) during these crimes.[3][4]

    Background

    [edit]

    In 1990, ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats worsened after the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the Croatian Democratic Union (Croatian: Hrvatska demokratska zajednica – HDZ). The Yugoslav People's Army (Serbian: Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA