Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Ratko Mladi?, a former Bosnian Serb general, is allegedly too ill to face trial for war crimes. According to his lawyer, 69-year-old Mladi? will not survive to see the start of proceedings.

Concerns for the health of Mladi? come despite a Serbian judge having ruled him fit for extradition to the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague only last Friday, a ruling which his lawyer seeks to appeal.

“It was impossible to have a coherent conversation with him or to talk of his defence,” said lawyer Milos Saljic, after meeting with Mladi? on Sunday.

According to doctors, he doesn’t need hospitalisation.

Serbian deputy war crimes prosecutor Bruno Vekaric believes Mladi? is using his illness in an attempt to delay his extradition.

“He’s a man who has not taken care of his health for a while, but not to the point that he cannot stand trial,” says Vekaric. “According to doctors, he doesn’t need hospitalisation.”

Chief prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic echoed these sentiments, stating that Mladi? was both well enough to make the two-hour flight to the Netherlands and is conscious of the charges against him, despite claims from family members that the former general is not lucid.

Mladi?’s son, Darko Mladi?, is calling for his father’s health to be reviewed by independent experts. Mladi? has reportedly suffered three strokes, the last in 2008, resulting in the partial paralysis of his right side. His family has expressed concerns he will not receive adequate treatment in The Hague.

Mladi? is being indicted for crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide, notably the Srebrenica massacre during the Bosnian war.

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