Milan Babić
Milan Babić Милан Бабић | |
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Babić in front of the Serb tricolour, 1992 | |
1st President of Republic of Serbian Krajina | |
In office 19 December 1991 – 16 February 1992 | |
Prime Minister | Dušan Vještica |
Succeeded by | Goran Hadžić |
5th Prime Minister of Republic of Serbian Krajina | |
In office 27 July 1995 – 7 August 1995 | |
President | Milan Martić |
Preceded by | Borislav Mikelić |
Personal details | |
Born |
Kukar, Vrlika, Croatia, Yugoslavia | 26 February 1956
Died |
5 March 2006 50) The Hague, Netherlands | (aged
Nationality | Serb |
Political party | Serb Democratic Party |
Religion | Serbian Orthodox |
Milan Babić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Бабић; 26 February 1956 – 5 March 2006) was from 1991 to 1992 the first President of the Republic of Serbian Krajina, a self-proclaimed state largely populated by Serbs of Croatia that wished to break away from Croatia.
He was indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in 2004 and was the first ever indictee to admit guilt and make a plea bargain with the prosecution, after which he was sentenced to 13 years in prison. He expressed "shame and remorse" in a public statement and declared that he had acted to relieve the collective shame of the Croatian Serbs, asking his "Croatian brothers to forgive their Serb brothers" for their actions. He was found dead in his prison cell in The Hague in March 2006, an apparent suicide.
Early life
Milan Babić, the son of Bozo Babic, was born in the village of Kukar near the town of Vrlika, in SR Croatia, Yugoslavia. He was originally a dentist by profession. In 1981 he graduated from Belgrade University's School of Dentistry. In 1989, he became one of the directors of the medical centre in Knin, a largely Serb-inhabited town in southwestern Croatia. He entered politics in 1990, as Yugoslavia began to disintegrate, leaving the League of Communists of Croatia and joined the newly established nationalist Serbian Democratic Party (SDS) at its inception, on 17 February 1990. He was elected President of the Municipal Assembly of Knin shortly afterwards. At the time, Serbs comprised about 12.2% of Croatia's population, forming a majority in a strip of land known as "Krajina" along the Croatian-Bosnian border. Croatia's moves towards independence following the election of the President Franjo Tuđman were strongly opposed to the partitioning of their country by their Serbian minority, which was supported both politically and militarily by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and Serbia under President Slobodan Milošević. Nationalist Serbs in the "Krajina" established a Serbian National Council to coordinate opposition to Croatia; Babić was elected its President.
Croatian war
Serbs became opposed to any status that would make them remain in an independent Croatia. After Tuđman was elected, the first democratic constitution was drafted and gave the Serbs a minority status within Croatia.
In September 1990, a referendum was held in the Krajina on the question of Serb "sovereignty and autonomy" in Croatia, which was passed by a majority of 99.7%. The vote was declared illegal and invalid by the Croatian government. Babić's administration in Knin then announced the creation of a Serbian Autonomous Oblast SAO Krajina on 21 December 1990 and on 1 April 1991, declared that it would secede from Croatia to join Serbia. Other Serb-dominated communities in eastern Croatia announced that they also would join the SAO. Babić was elected President of the Executive Council of the SAO on April 30 and was subsequently appointed Minister of the Interior and Minister of Defence by the Krajina Serb Assembly. In this capacity, he established an armed militia, blockading roads and effectively severing the Croatian coastal region of Dalmatia from the rest of the country. Clashes between Krajina Serbs and Croatian security forces broke out almost immediately after Croatia declared independence, leaving dozens dead.
Around August 1991, Babić became a party to what war crimes prosecutors would later describe as a "joint criminal enterprise" to permanently forcibly remove the non-Serb population of the territory under his control in order to make them part of a new Serb-dominated state. His chief accomplices allegedly included Slobodan Milošević, other Krajina Serb figures such as Milan Martić, the Serbian militia leader Vojislav Šešelj, and Yugoslav Army commanders including General Ratko Mladić, at the time the commander of JNA forces in Croatia, all of them accused of and some by now convicted for war crimes. According to Babić's testimony during his war crimes trial, during the summer of 1991 the Serbian secret police – under Milošević's command – set up "a parallel structure of state security and the police of Krajina and units commanded by the state security of Serbia". A full-scale war was launched in which a large area of territory, amounting to a third of Croatia, was seized and the non-Serb population was either massacred or ethnically cleansed. The bulk of the fighting occurred between August and December 1991. Thousands more died and were deported in fighting in eastern Slavonia, but the JNA was the principal actor in that part of the conflict.
The international community attempted to resolve the conflict in November 1991 by proposing a peace plan put forward by the UN Special Envoy Cyrus Vance, under which the Krajina would be demilitarised and protected by a UN peacekeeping force while political talks on its future took place. Babić strongly opposed this, instead renaming the SAO as the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) on 19 December 1991 (to which was added the Serb-held areas of eastern Croatia in February 1992). He urged the Krajina Serb Assembly to reject the Vance plan. However, Milošević disagreed with this position: his strategic aims in Croatia had largely been achieved and the JNA was needed for the looming war in Bosnia. Babić was sidelined and the Vance plan was pushed through the RSK Assembly on 16 February 1992. On 26 February 1992, Milošević engineered Babić's removal in favour of Goran Hadžić, a more pliant figure who was reported to have boasted that he was merely "a messenger for Slobodan Milošević".
Although Babić remained active in RSK politics as its Minister of Foreign Affairs, he was a greatly weakened figure. Babić stated that Krajina policy was "driven" from Belgrade via the Serbian secret police; Milošević later denied this, claiming that Babić had made it up "out of fear".
On July 3, 1992, The Washington Post reported that aides to Milan Babic said he had been shot "...in an attack by bodyguards of a rival leader and was 'fighting for his life'..."[1]
The Bosnian Serbs' military collapse in July–August 1995 propelled Babić into the post of RSK Prime Minister, but he held this for only a few weeks. In early August 1995, the Croatian government launched Operation Storm to retake the entire area of the Krajina (with the exception of the strip in eastern Slavonia, which remained under Serb control until 1998). Babić fled to Serbia along with the entire Krajina Serb leadership and 200,000 Serbian refugees from the region (most of the Serb population in the Krajina). He was said to have retired to a chicken farm in Vojvodina.
Trial and plea bargain
In December 2002, Babić was unexpectedly revealed as a witness against as part of a plea bargain, testifying before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia that Milošević had been personally involved in the Croatian conflict. The following November, he was indicted on five charges of crimes against humanity and violations of the laws and customs of war. Although he did not initially enter a plea, he pleaded guilty on 27 January 2004 to one count of crimes against humanity in an apparent plea-bargain with prosecutors under which the remaining charges were dropped. He expressed "shame and remorse" in a public statement and declared that he had acted to relieve the collective shame of the Croatian Serbs, asking his "Croatian brothers to forgive their Serb brothers" for their actions. His confession to the charge of persecution, a crime against humanity, marked a major victory for the ICTY prosecutors, as Babić was, prior to his death, the only participant in the Croatian war to admit guilt. His testimony was of great importance to the prosecution in bolstering their contention that Milošević was the main actor in the "joint criminal enterprise" in Croatia.
In his own trial, Babić gave testimony that was used to indict Milošević. The former also appeared at the trial of the latter to give evidence. In one case, Milošević denied that he supported Babić by quoting transcripts of his tapped telephone, where he referred to Babić as "an idiot", "ordinary scum" and "Tudjman's trump."[2]
In June 2004, Babić was sentenced to 13 years imprisonment when the court rejected the prosecutors recommendation for an 11-year sentence. The court found him more responsible than the prosecutor characterized him but also gave him credit for voluntarily surrendering and pleading guilty. The court found that while "Babić was not the prime mover, ... Babić chose to remain in power and provided significant support for the persecutions." [3] He was sent to a secret location in Great Britain[4] to serve his sentence, which was an unprecedented move by the court. This led to some unproven speculations that Babić had been given a privileged treatment in exchange for his testimony against other defendants. The official justification for not disclosing his location was concerns for his safety from people against whom he testified.
Fellow Serbs that Babić accused for war crimes in Croatia, during his trial in The Hague: [5]
Death
Milan Babić was found dead after he reportedly committed suicide on 5 March 2006 while in the ICTY detention unit in The Hague, Netherlands, where he was in the midst of giving evidence against Milan Martić, his successor as President of the breakaway RSK. The New York Times reported that Babić had hanged himself "using his own leather belt."[6]
See also
Notes
- ↑ https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1992/07/03/california-businessman-to-be-yugoslav-premier/d7e2c33d-7ed8-431e-91ca-1f8e4a336707/
- ↑ Mirko Klarin, "Milosevic trial: protected witness goes public", I.P.Q.R. tribunal update 292, 2 December 2002.
- ↑ ICTY (2004). "Judgement in the Case the Prosecutor v. Milan Babic". Archived from the original on 17 July 2007. Retrieved 3 July 2006.
- ↑ The Order of the President of the ICTY (16 August 2005) - Confidential http://www.icty.org/x/cases/babic/presord/en/050816.pdf
- ↑ http://www.srpskapolitika.com/Tekstovi/Komentari/2006/043.html
- ↑ "UN finds no foul play in Serb's death - Europe - International Herald Tribune" http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/09/world/europe/09iht-balkans.1940560.html
External links
- ICTY – Initial Indictment of Milan Babić at the Wayback Machine (archived February 28, 2008)
- ICTY press release confirming Babić's death at the Wayback Machine (archived March 22, 2008)
- ICTY Sentencing Judgement at the Wayback Machine (archived March 10, 2007)
- http://www.srpskapolitika.com/Tekstovi/Komentari/2006/043.html
- (Russian) A. Samigullina. Milosevic's accuser commits suicide
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