serbianna
Nov 29, 2010
Serbia’s Appeals Court has overturned the acquittal of two former policemen accused of involvement in the 1999 execution-style slaying of three Albanian-American brothers and ordered a retrial, the war crimes prosecutor said Monday.
The court earlier this month accepted the prosecution appeal and ruled that “the state of facts had not been fully determined,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
It was not immediately clear when the new trial of Sreten Popovic and Milos Stojanovic would start.
The former policemen were charged with “war crimes against prisoners of war” for handing over the three brothers, Illy, Mehmet and Agron Bytyqi, to members of a special Serbian police unit that subsequently shot and killed them in a training camp in eastern Serbia.
The two were acquitted in 2009 after the war crimes court concluded there had not been sufficient evidence for a conviction. The prosecutors at the time claimed that witnesses had concealed the truth about the killings in their trial testimonies.
The Bytyqis came to Kosovo from New York in 1999 to join the Atlantic Brigade of about 400 Albanian-Americans fighting with the ethnic Albanian rebels against Serbia’s rule.
After NATO bombed Serbia to stop its crackdown on the rebels, the brothers strayed outside Kosovo’s unmarked boundary. On June 26, 1999, they were arrested in southern Serbia and spent 15 days in a Serb jail for illegally crossing the border.
Upon their release, they were taken by the two Serb policemen to eastern Serbia and were summarily executed. Their bodies, bound and blindfolded, were discovered in a trash-filled mass grave in 2001.
Several such mass graves containing hundreds of bodies were discovered in Serbia following the forcible removal of nationalist President Slobodan Milosevic in 2000.
Authorities in post-Milosevic Serbia have said that the late leader and his security troops removed bodies of the war victims from Kosovo to central Serbia to conceal evidence of atrocities.
Milosevic was indicted with genocide by the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, for his role in the atrocities. He died in 2006 before the trial ended.
Witnesses at the trial for the Bytyqi brothers’ slaying have described how bodies of Kosovo victims were brought and dumped in a mass grave in Petrovo Selo.
No one has been charged with the actual shooting of the Bytyqi brothers. Members of the former special police unit allegedly involved have refused to reveal any details or names of possible culprits.
The United States had expressed concern that no one has been punished for the crime.
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but Belgrade has refused to recognize the status.
JOVANA GECNovember 29, 2010Associated Press
Serbia’s Appeals Court has overturned the acquittal of two former policemen accused of involvement in the 1999 execution-style slaying of three Albanian-American brothers and ordered a retrial, the war crimes prosecutor said Monday.
The court earlier this month accepted the prosecution appeal and ruled that “the state of facts had not been fully determined,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
It was not immediately clear when the new trial of Sreten Popovic and Milos Stojanovic would start.
The former policemen were charged with “war crimes against prisoners of war” for handing over the three brothers, Illy, Mehmet and Agron Bytyqi, to members of a special Serbian police unit that subsequently shot and killed them in a training camp in eastern Serbia.
The two were acquitted in 2009 after the war crimes court concluded there had not been sufficient evidence for a conviction. The prosecutors at the time claimed that witnesses had concealed the truth about the killings in their trial testimonies.
The Bytyqis came to Kosovo from New York in 1999 to join the Atlantic Brigade of about 400 Albanian-Americans fighting with the ethnic Albanian rebels against Serbia’s rule.
After NATO bombed Serbia to stop its crackdown on the rebels, the brothers strayed outside Kosovo’s unmarked boundary. On June 26, 1999, they were arrested in southern Serbia and spent 15 days in a Serb jail for illegally crossing the border.
Upon their release, they were taken by the two Serb policemen to eastern Serbia and were summarily executed. Their bodies, bound and blindfolded, were discovered in a trash-filled mass grave in 2001.
Several such mass graves containing hundreds of bodies were discovered in Serbia following the forcible removal of nationalist President Slobodan Milosevic in 2000.
Authorities in post-Milosevic Serbia have said that the late leader and his security troops removed bodies of the war victims from Kosovo to central Serbia to conceal evidence of atrocities.
Milosevic was indicted with genocide by the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, for his role in the atrocities. He died in 2006 before the trial ended.
Witnesses at the trial for the Bytyqi brothers’ slaying have described how bodies of Kosovo victims were brought and dumped in a mass grave in Petrovo Selo.
No one has been charged with the actual shooting of the Bytyqi brothers. Members of the former special police unit allegedly involved have refused to reveal any details or names of possible culprits.
The United States had expressed concern that no one has been punished for the crime.
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but Belgrade has refused to recognize the status.
JOVANA GECNovember 29, 2010Associated Press
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