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Ratko Mladić

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General Ratko Mladić during UN-mediated talks at Sarajevo airport in 1993. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

Ratko Mladić [ˈmlaːditɕ] (Cyrillic: Ратко Младић) (born March 12, 1942) was the Chief of Staff of the Army of the Republika Srpska (VRS) (the Bosnian Serb Army) during the 1992-95 war in Bosnia.

Mladić was indicted on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague in connection with the 1992-1996 siege of Sarajevo and the massacre of around 8,300 Bosniak men and boys on July 11, 1995 at Srebrenica.[1]

There is currently an outstanding international arrest warrant against Mladić following the Rule 61 of ICTY which concluded that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the accused has committed the crimes in question including genocide.[2] The United States government has since offered a $5 million reward for his and Radovan Karadžić's arrests.[3]

His whereabouts are currently unknown.

Early life

Mladić was born in the village of Božinovići located near the Jahorina mountain, southeast of Sarajevo, northeast of Kalinovik and west of Goražde (43°37′55″N 18°42′50″E / 43.63194°N 18.71389°E / 43.63194; 18.71389)[dubiousdiscuss]. The place was at the time a part of the short-lived Independent State of Croatia, a puppet-state created after the Nazi German and Italian Fascist invasion and dismemberment of Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941. His father, Neđo, was a Partisan guerrilla fighter and was killed in the spring of 1945 during a raid on the birthplace of Croatian Ustasha leader Ante Pavelić.

Early military career

Mladić entered the Military Industry School in Zemun in 1961, then went on to the KOV Military Academy, and then Officers Academy, graduating at the top of his class with a grade of 9.57. Upon his graduation in 1965, his first post as an officer was in Skopje, where he was the youngest soldier in the unit which he commanded. Beginning as a second lieutenant, he proved himself to be a capable officer, first commanding a platoon, then a battalion, then a brigade, and in 1989 was promoted to Training Section Head for the Third Army District.[citation needed]

Role in the Yugoslav wars

In June 1991, Mladić was promoted to Assistant Commandant of the Pristina Corps in the tense Kosovo province, dominated by separatist ethnic Albanians. As the situation in Croatia rapidly devolved, he was almost immediately re-posted to Knin as a Commander of the 9th Corps of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), during fighting between the JNA and the newly-formed Croatian Army. On October 4, 1991, he was promoted to Major General. The JNA forces under his command participated in the Croatian War, notably during Operation Coastline 91 in an attempt to severe Dalmatia from the rest of Croatia, which failed. Among other things, Mladić helped Martić's paramilitary take the village of Kijevo, where war crimes were committed.

On April 24, 1992, Mladić was promoted to the rank of General Lieutenant-Colonel. On May 2 1992, one month after the Bosnian Republic's declaration of independence, Mladić and his generals, acting under orders from Belgrade, blockaded the city of Sarajevo, shutting off all traffic in and out of the city, as well as water and electricity. This began the four-year Siege of Sarajevo, the longest siege in the history of modern warfare. The city was bombarded with shells and random shooting from the guns of snipers. On May 9, 1992, he assumed the post of Chief of Staff/Deputy Commander of the Second Military District Headquarters of the JNA in Sarajevo. On 10 May 1992, Mladić assumed the command of the Second Military District Headquarters of the JNA.

On May 12, 1992, the separatist Bosnian Serb Parliament voted to create the VRS, or Army of Republika Srpska. At the same time, Mladić was appointed Commander of the Main Staff of the VRS, a position he held until December 1996. (In May 1992, after the withdrawal of JNA forces from Bosnia, the JNA Second Military District became the nucleus of the Main Staff of the VRS.) On June 24, 1994, he was promoted to the rank of General Colonel over the approximately 80,000 troops stationed in the area.

General Ratko Mladić (centre) arrives for UN-mediated talks at Sarajevo airport, June 1993. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

By 1994 relations between Mladić and Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadžić had gradually cooled.[citation needed] Karadžić thought Mladić pretentious, arrogant, and overly-pious, Mladić thought his President to be a corrupt, manipulative war profiteer.[citation needed] There were occasional public outbursts of animosity, such as when Mladić, upon being told that NATO would bomb Serbian positions, retorted "then I'll bomb London!" The horrified Karadžić announced to the press that Mladić was "[a] fool, making idiotic and irresponsible statements." The break came on August 1, when Slobodan Milošević sent a peace proposal to the Bosnian Serbs and Bosniaks. The letter to the Bosniaks was addressed to Alija Izetbegović, the president of Bosnia-Herzegovina. The letter to the Bosnian Serbs was addressed to Mladić, an open snub of Karadžić. When Karadžić refused to sign, the openly pro-Milošević Mladić calmly made it known to Karadžić that there would thenceforth be a division of labour: he would run the war while Karadzic dominated the Bosnian Serb politicians in Pale and in the Bosnian Serb towns. There was a clear undertone that Karadžić would be well-advised to stay out of Mladić's way. Wild rumors of a Belgrade-supported coup against Karadžić and his allies in Pale likely cemented the arrangement.

File:Mladic.95.jpg
Ratko Mladić in Srebrenica

In July 1995, troops commanded by Mladić, harried by NATO air strikes intended to force compliance with a UN ultimatum to remove heavy weapons from the Sarajevo area, overran and occupied the UN "safe areas" of Srebrenica and Žepa. At Srebrenica over 40,000 Bosniaks who had sought safety there were expelled. An estimated 8,300 were executed, allegedly on Mladić's order[4].

On Friday, August 4, 1995, with a massive Croatian military force poised attack the Serb-held Krajina region in central Croatia, Karadžić announced that he was removing Mladić from his commandant post and assuming personal command of the VRS himself. Karadžić blamed Mladić for the loss of two key Serb towns in western Bosnia that had recently fallen to the Croats, and he used the loss of the towns as the excuse to announce his surprise command structure changes. General Mladić was demoted to an "adviser." Mladić refused to go quietly, claiming the support of both the Bosnian Serb military as well as the people. Karadžić countered by attempting to pull political rank as well as denouncing Mladić as a "madman," but Mladić's obvious popular support forced Karadžić to rescind his order on August 11.

On November 8, 1996, the President of the Bosnian Serb Republic Biljana Plavšić dismissed Mladić from his post. He continued to receive a pension until November 2005.[citation needed]

Indictment by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia

Mladić (centre of the screen) is a fugitive from the ICTY and faces charges from prosecutor Carla del Ponte (giving the talk).

On July 24, 1995, Mladić was indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and accused of genocide, crimes against humanity, and numerous war crimes (including crimes relating to the alleged sniping campaign against civilians in Sarajevo). On November 16, 1995, the charges were expanded to include charges of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes for the attack on the United Nations-declared safe area of Srebrenica in July 1995. Mladić is also responsible for the taking of hostages amongst UN peace-keeping personnel.

A fugitive from the ICTY, he is suspected to be hiding either in Serbia or in Bosnia’s Republika Srpska. Mladić was reportedly seen attending a football match between China and Yugoslavia in Belgrade in March 2000. He entered through a VIP entrance and sat in a private box surrounded by eight armed bodyguards. Some claim that he has been seen in a suburb of Moscow, and that he is "regularly" in Thessalonica and Athens, which has raised suspicions that numerous fake reports are sent to cover his trail. Some reports say he took refuge in his wartime bunker in Han Pijesak, not far from Sarajevo, or in Montenegro[5]. In early February of 2006 portions of a Serbian military intelligence report were leaked to the Serbian Newspaper Politika which stated that Mladić had been hidden in Army of Republika Srpska and Yugoslav People's Army facilities up until June 1 2002, when the National Assembly of Serbia passed a law mandating cooperation with The ICTY in The Hague. The then- Chief General of the Yugoslav Army Nebojša Pavković requested that Mladić vacate the facility where he was staying on the mountain Povlen, near Valjevo, after which the Serb military agencies claim to have lost all trace of the fugitive.

His security is undoubtedly well assured[6]. In November 2004 British defence officials conceded that military action was unlikely to be successful in bringing Mladić and other suspects to trial. Putting political pressure on Balkan governments would be more likely to succeed.

In June 2005 The Times newspaper alleged that Mladić had demanded $5m (£2.75m) "compensation" to be given to his family and bodyguards if he gave himself up to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in the Hague.

The Serbian government continues to tread carefully when it comes to rounding up domestically popular fugitives-on-the-run. On the one hand, the government wishes to maintain support of right-leaning voters. However, Serbia also wish to comply with The Hague with a view to future accession to the European Union.

On February 21 2006, Mladić was supposedly arrested in the Serbian capital Belgrade and was being transferred via the northeast Bosnian city of Tuzla to the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague[7]. The arrest was denied by the Serbian government. The government did not deny rumours of a planned negotiated surrender between Mladić and Serbian Special Forces.

On February 22, 2006, Chief U.N. Prosecutor Carla del Ponte denied the rumours that Mladić had been arrested, claiming the rumours had "absolutely no basis whatsoever". She urged the Serbian government to find him without further delay, saying that Mladić was in reach of the Serbian authorities and had been in Serbia since 1998. She said that failure to capture him would harm Serbia's bid to join the European Union.

Romanian government[8] and Serbian[9] sources claimed on 22 February 2006 that Mladić was arrested in Romania, near Drobeta-Turnu Severin, close to the Serbian border by a joint Romanian-British special operation carried out by troops of those respective countries. The failure to arrest Mladić is proving to be a major factor in both Serbia's, and Montenegro's efforts to become EU member states.

The May 1 2006 deadline established by Carla del Ponte for Serbia to hand over Mladić passed, resulting in suspended talks between Serbia and the EU. Mladić is presently believed to be in Belgrade and shuttled between different apartments by a single bodyguard.[citation needed] He reportedly has gained weight, and passes time by playing chess and reading news reports about himself.

Their have also been reports that Mladic is hiding in Russia. In June 2006 there were reports that Mladić recently suffered a third stroke and that he had low chances to survive. At the same time PR of Democratic Party of Serbia, Andrija Mladenović, raised the question of who would be responsible for the halt in EU negotiation if Mladić were to die. Some sources say that Mladić changed his appearance due to age and bad health[10].

Family

Mladić is married to Bosa Mladić, who has borne him two children; son Darko and daughter Ana Mladić. Darko Mladić married Aida, who gave birth on March 2, 2006 to a boy, the first grandchild of Mladić. The child has been named after the saint St. Stefan, the protector of Republika Srpska.

In March 1994, Mladić's 23-year-old daughter Ana committed suicide by shooting herself in the head with her father's favorite pistol during her senior year studying medicine at the University of Belgrade. It has been speculated that the reason for her suicide lay in intense criticism of Mladić in the Serbian media at the time. She is buried in Topčider; it is believed that for some time Mladić came regularly to see the grave.

References

External links

Media

  • [1], Mladic and Fikret Abdic
  • [2], Sarajevo bombing, 28. maj 1992