JM: Hague doesn't oppose warrants

Serbia will convey to Interpol the Hague court’s opinion that there's no impediment to the issue of warrants in the Dobrovoljačka case, says JM Snežana Malović.

Izvor: FoNet

Saturday, 04.07.2009.

09:50

Default images

Serbia will convey to Interpol the Hague court’s opinion that there's no impediment to the issue of warrants in the Dobrovoljacka case, says JM Snezana Malovic. "Our court’s order to issue a warrant remains in force. All other court acts are valid and the case is still active for us,” Malovic told daily Politika. JM: Hague doesn't oppose warrants The minister said that the Bosnian judiciary’s proposal to try the suspects in their country of origin was unacceptable to Serbia. RS PM Milorad Dodik said earlier that Interpol’s decision to suspend Serbian warrants against Bosnian citizens in the Dobrovoljacka case was unacceptable and disgraceful. The Serbian War Crimes Prosecution issued international warrants for the attack on a column of Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) troops that were pulling out of Sarajevo in 1992. Among the names on the warrant were those of former members of the Bosnian wartime presidency, Ejup Ganic and Stjepan Kljujic. Dodik told reporters in Bijeljina that that act had “seriously compromised our trust in international law and the legal system,” and that the request to withdraw the warrants “was not taken by the Bosnian Council of Ministers, nor were representatives from the Republic of Srpska (RS) consulted.” The RS prime minister criticized the Bosnian Prosecution’s work, stressing that it, like the Bosnian courts, should not exist in its current form, RS media report. The Bosnian Security Ministry announced yesterday that Interpol’s General Secretariat had decided to definitively rescind the red warrants issued against Bosnian citizens in the Dobrovoljacka Street case. Snezana Malovic (FoNet, archive)

JM: Hague doesn't oppose warrants

The minister said that the Bosnian judiciary’s proposal to try the suspects in their country of origin was unacceptable to Serbia.

RS PM Milorad Dodik said earlier that Interpol’s decision to suspend Serbian warrants against Bosnian citizens in the Dobrovoljačka case was unacceptable and disgraceful.

The Serbian War Crimes Prosecution issued international warrants for the attack on a column of Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) troops that were pulling out of Sarajevo in 1992. Among the names on the warrant were those of former members of the Bosnian wartime presidency, Ejup Ganić and Stjepan Kljujić.

Dodik told reporters in Bijeljina that that act had “seriously compromised our trust in international law and the legal system,” and that the request to withdraw the warrants “was not taken by the Bosnian Council of Ministers, nor were representatives from the Republic of Srpska (RS) consulted.”

The RS prime minister criticized the Bosnian Prosecution’s work, stressing that it, like the Bosnian courts, should not exist in its current form, RS media report.

The Bosnian Security Ministry announced yesterday that Interpol’s General Secretariat had decided to definitively rescind the red warrants issued against Bosnian citizens in the Dobrovoljačka Street case.

Komentari 6

Pogledaj komentare

6 Komentari

Možda vas zanima

Podeli: