Hague: State security operative testifies

Ramush Haradinaj’s defense claims that Serbian police, not the KLA, left the bodies in the Radonjić Lake.

Izvor: SENSE

Wednesday, 27.06.2007.

14:17

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Hague: State security operative testifies

Bogdan Tomas, an operative of the Serbian State Security Service (DB), claimed that the bodies of the Serbian, Albanian and Roma civilians were discovered in the Radonjić Lake canal on September eighth, 1998, and that the information leading to the discovery had come from an interrogation of two Kosovo Albanians by him and his colleague, Dejan Jovović.

Testifying at the trial of Ramush Haradinaj, Idriz Balaj and Lahi Brahimaj, Tomas said that Zejnel Alija and Lul Musaj, were interrogated on September seventh in the local Đakovica police headquarters (SUP), following their arrest for possession of arms and suspicion of being KLA members.

The witness worked in the State Security Service in Belgrade, and was sent to Đakovica “to help.”

The prosecution claims that the KLA is responsible for the death of the civilians whose bodies were found in the Radonjić lake canal. During the trial so far, the defense counsel of the three accused challenged that allegation, noting that the Serbian police could have brought the bodies to that location.

That is why in the cross-examination today, Ramush Haradinaj’s defense counsel tried to prove that the Serbian police had had access to the Radonjić lake canal even before September eighth, when the bodies had been discovered according to the official version of the events.

Defense counsel Ben Emmerson put it to Tomas at the beginning of the cross-examination that the two Albanians in custody had been “beaten and abused for days” in the Đakovica police building, and forced to sign prepared statements.

According to the defense counsel, when the Serbian police went to the lake canal, this was “just a show for the international community.” When the witness said that the suggestion was not true, Emmerson showed him statements Zejnel Alija and Lul Musaj gave to the defense investigators, in which they say they were mistreated and forced to sign things they did not say.

The witness said he did not know what happened when the other police officers in the Đakovica police interrogated the two, but that they were not beaten during the interrogation he conducted.

He stressed he was from the Belgrade State Security Center, where “such methods are impermissible.”

In an effort to prove that the Serbian authorities knew there were bodies in the Radonjić Lake canal even before September eighth, the defense counsel showed minutes from the meetings of the Joint Command of the Serbian military and police on September first and fourth, 1998.

It says in the minutes that there are indications that the bodies of some 40 Serbs, Albanians and Roma were thrown into the canal, and orders are issued to search the terrain.

The witness replied it was possible intelligence existed before about the bodies in the lake canal, but he maintained that the police did not go there before he took the statements from Alija and Musaj.

The trial of the three former KLA commanders will continue today, but the next prosecution witness failed to arrive in The Hague, despite the binding order to come and testify issued by the Chamber.

The presiding judge indicated the Trial Chamber would soon notify the parties about the steps it intended to take in that regard.

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