May 21, 2013

U.S. warns Iran against closing Hormuz oil route

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) – The U.S. warned Iran Wednesday that it will not tolerate any disruption of naval traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, after Iran’s navy chief said the Islamic Republic is capable of closing the vital oil route if the West imposes new sanctions targeting Tehran’s oil exports.

Iran’s Adm. Habibollah Sayyari told state-run Press TV that closing the strait, which is the only sea outlet for the crucial oil fields in and around the Persian Gulf, “is very easy” for his country’s naval forces.

It was the second such warning by Iran in two days, reflecting Tehran’s concern that the West is about to impose new sanctions that could hit the country’s biggest source of revenue, its oil sector. On Tuesday, Vice President Mohamed Reza Rahimi threatened to close the strait if the West imposes such sanctions.

In response, the Bahrain-based U.S. 5th Fleet’s spokeswoman warned that any disruption at the strait “will not be tolerated.”

The spokeswoman, Lt. Rebecca Rebarich, said the U.S. Navy is “always ready to counter malevolent actions to ensure freedom of navigation.”

With concern growing over a possible drop-off in Iranian oil supplies if sanctions are imposed, a senior Saudi oil official said Gulf Arab nations are ready to offset any loss of Iranian crude.

That reassurance led to a drop in world oil prices. In New York, benchmark crude fell 77 cents to $100.57 a barrel in morning trading. Brent crude fell 82 cents to $108.45 a barrel in London.

Western nations are growing increasingly impatient with Iran over its nuclear program. The U.S. and its allies have accused Iran of using its civilian nuclear program as a cover to develop nuclear weapons. Iran has denied the charges, saying its program is geared toward generating electricity and producing medical radioisotopes to treat cancer patients.

The U.S. Congress has passed a bill banning dealings with the Iran Central Bank, and President Obama has said he will sign it despite his misgivings. Critics warn it could impose hardships on U.S. allies and drive up oil prices.

The bill could impose penalties on foreign firms that do business with Iran’s central bank. European and Asian nations import Iranian oil and use its central bank for the transactions.

Iran is the world’s fourth-largest oil producer, with an output of about 4 million barrels of oil a day. It relies on oil exports for about 80 percent of its public revenues.

Iran has adopted an aggressive military posture in recent months in response to increasing threats from the U.S. and Israel that they may take military action to stop Iran’s nuclear program.

The navy is in the midst of a 10-day drill in international waters near the strategic oil route. The exercises began Saturday and involve submarines, missile drills, torpedoes and drones. The war games cover a 1,250-mile (2,000-kilometer) stretch of sea off the Strait of Hormuz, northern parts of the Indian Ocean and into the Gulf of Aden near the entrance to the Red Sea as a show of strength and could bring Iranian ships into proximity with U.S. Navy vessels in the area.

Iranian media are describing how Iran could move to close the strait, saying the country would use a combination of warships, submarines, speed boats, anti-ship cruise missiles, torpedoes, surface-to-sea missiles and drones to stop ships from sailing through the narrow waterway.

Iran’s navy claims it has sonar-evading submarines designed for shallow waters of the Persian Gulf, enabling it to hit passing enemy vessels.

A closure of the strait could temporarily cut off some oil supplies and force shippers to take longer, more expensive routes that would drive oil prices higher. It also potentially opens the door for a military confrontation that would further rattle global oil markets.

Iran claimed a victory this month when it captured an American surveillance drone almost intact. It went public with its possession of the RQ-170 Sentinel to trumpet the downing as a feat of Iran’s military in a complicated technological and intelligence battle with the U.S.

American officials have said that U.S. intelligence assessments indicate the drone malfunctioned.

Gaddafi son surrender would pose challenges to ICC

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(Reuters) – Negotiating the surrender of Saif al-Islam, the son of Libya’s slain dictator , would present logistical and security challenges to the world’s top which is examining various possible scenarios to bring him to trial.

The International Criminal Court had charged Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and Libya’s chief Abdullah al-Senussi with for the bombing and shooting of civilian protesters in February.

A source with Libya’s National Transitional Council said on Thursday Saif al-Islam wants an aircraft, possibly arranged by a neighboring country, to take him out of Libya’s so he can turn himself in to the ICC.

If arranged, Saif al-Islam would be transported to The where the ICC shares a detention unit with the U.N. Yugoslavia war crimes tribunal and the Special Court for Sierra Leone, where is on trial.

The court is trying to confirm with the NTC whether Saif al-Islam wants to surrender and is considering various scenarios for his transfer, ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah said.

“It depends on where the suspect is and how we can get into contact with him and what would be necessary to bring him to The Hague. There are different scenarios,” El Abdallah said.

With no police force of its own, the ICC has relied in the past on state co-operation to have its suspects arrested and many of them have remained fugitives such as Sudan President Omar al-Bashir whose government has snubbed the court.

Still, the ICC assisted in transporting several Sudanese rebels to The Hague in recent years to face charges over the killing of 12 African Union peacekeepers in Darfur in 2007.

The Dutch authorities provide assistance to the Hague-based courts in the transfer of suspects to the detention center, such as when former Bosnian Serb was flown to Rotterdam on a Serbian government plane.

Mladic was then transferred by the Dutch authorities by helicopter or car to the detention center in The Hague.

“The ICC itself is responsible for transfers to the Netherlands. Upon arrival of a suspect in the Netherlands, we give logistical support,” a spokesman at the Dutch foreign ministry said.

Transporting Saif al-Islam to The Hague will pose additional logistical problems, however, given the remote area where he is believed to be hiding.

One alternative could involve the United Nations, which has in the past transported an ICC suspect by helicopter within Sudan to peace talks, but this did not lead to an arrest.

If Saif al-Islam were to slip into Niger, an ICC member state, the Niger government has an obligation to arrest him, while Tunisia is also a member state. Algeria is not.

However, Sudan’s Bashir has travelled to ICC member states such as Malawi, Chad, Kenya and Djibouti and has not been arrested by authorities in those countries.

Defense

Once in The Hague, Saif al-Islam would be held at the ICC detention center, located near the beach in a leafy residential neighborhood in The Hague.

The detention center is built next to an old prison where Dutch resistance fighters were imprisoned by the Nazis and inmates have single-occupant cells about 10 square meters in size, where they can watch TV, read or work on their cases.

Each cell in the ICC wing contains a bed, desk, bookshelves, a cupboard, toilet, hand basin and a telephone, although calls are placed by the centre’s staff. Detainees can work on their cases using computers but cannot access email or the internet.

They can engage in sports activities and other hobbies.

But if he arrives in The Hague, Saif al-Islam would be also required to appear in court for an ‘initial appearance’, where he would be formally charged and informed of his rights.

ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo accuse Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and al-Senussi of drawing up a “predetermined plan” to kill protesters and said that Gaddafi gave the orders, while Saif al-Islam organized the recruitment of mercenaries.

Peter Robinson, a legal adviser to former Bosnian Serb president Radovan Karadzic who is on trial at the Yugoslavia tribunal, also said Saif al-Islam should not try to defend himself by arguing he was just obeying orders.

“A person is required under international law not to obey an illegal order. It would not be useful for Saif al-Islam to defend himself on the grounds that he was just obeying orders from his father,” Robinson said.

He said a more useful defense would be to argue that crimes were committed upon orders from lower-level commanders.

Geert-Jan Knoops, a Dutch-based international criminal law attorney, said Saif al-Islam could challenge the ICC case on two main fronts, arguing an “abuse of process” or by proving there is no evidence of a “political plan” to kill protesters.

He said Saif al-Islam could argue that the ICC prosecution was politically influenced and forced by the United Nations to achieve a regime change instead of protection of human rights in Libya. “It can be argued that the ICC prosecution and procedures are abused; in other words: abuse of process,” Knoops said.

(Reporting By Aaron Gray-Block)

Mladic shuns ‘monstrous’ charges

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(Phatforums Blog/ ) - Ex- head Ratko Mladic has made his first appearance at The Hague war crimes tribunal, saying he will not enter a plea to the “monstrous” and “obnoxious” charges.

He is charged with atrocities during the 1992-95 Bosnian war, including the massacre of nearly 8,000 and boys in Srebrenica in 1995.

Gen Mladic, who said he was “gravely ill”, told the court he had been “defending my people and my country”.

He was arrested last week in Serbia.

The tribunal indictment charges him with genocide, persecution, extermination, murder, , inhumane acts, terror, and hostage-taking.

Prosecutors say this was his part in a plot to achieve the “elimination or permanent removal” of Muslims from large parts of Bosnia in pursuit of a Greater Serbia.

As well as Srebrenica, Europe’s worst atrocity since , Gen Mladic is also charged over the 44-month siege of the capital Sarajevo from May 1992 in which 10,000 people died.

His lawyer and his family say he is too ill to stand trial but doctors have so far declared him fit to be in court.
‘Be patient’

In his first hearing before the International Tribunal for the , Gen Mladic, 69, was asked if he could understand the proceedings and he confirmed that he could.

At the scene
Chris Morris BBC News, The Hague

There he was – older, balding but instantly recognisable. He saluted as he walked slowly into court wearing a light khaki cap and a grey jacket.

“I am General Ratko Mladic,” he said. “I am a gravely ill man and I need time to organise my defence”.

He showed only flashes of emotion but occasionally spoke with contempt. He described the charges against him as “obnoxious and monstrous” and entered no plea.

But the ’s summary of the indictment was a of brutality. In the judge’s own words: “Genocide, persecution, murder, extermination, deportation, forcible transfer, torture, rape and plunder.”

He gave his name and date of birth, although the date was different from the court records.

Court-appointed Serbian lawyer Aleksandar Aleksic represented Gen Mladic at the hearing. Gen Mladic may choose a permanent counsel for the trial later, or opt to conduct his own defence.

Judge Alphons Orie said the purpose of the hearing was to list the charges against Gen Mladic and ask him for a plea.

Gen Mladic’s rights were read out in court, but he said: “I am a gravely ill man and need more time to understand what was read out, so please be patient.”

The judge then asked if Gen Mladic had read and understood the indictment against him.

Gen Mladic said he needed at least two months to read the three binders of documents that had been brought to him.

However, Mr Aleksic said he believed his client had understood the indictment.

Gen Mladic then told the judge: “I do not want a single letter or sentence of that indictment to be read out to me.”

However, the judge proceeded to read out an annotated version of the charges.

At some points, Gen Mladic shook his head.

John Simpson said the man in the dock was a ”shrunken” and ”milder” character

When asked to enter a plea, he said the charges were “monstrous” and he needed more than a month to respond.

If Gen Mladic does not enter a plea within 30 days, the judges will enter pleas of not guilty on his behalf.

After a brief recess, the hearing moved into private session so Gen Mladic could express concerns about his health.

Then as the hearing ended, Gen Mladic said: “I defended my people, my country… now I am defending myself. I just have to say that I want to live to see that I am a free man.”

He added: “I don’t want to be helped to walk as if I were some blind cripple. If I want help, I’ll ask for it.”

BBC world affairs editor John Simpson, in the courtroom, said Gen Mladic had looked over at him and given a mocking salute.

At one point, one of the Srebrenica widows had caught Gen Mladic’s eye and made a throat-cutting gesture, to which he smiled, adds our correspondent.

A new hearing was set for 4 July.

‘Still searching’

Relatives of some of the victims of the war gathered outside the courtroom awaiting Gen Mladic’s arrival.

The Charges

Counts 1/2: Genocide of Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats in Bosnia-Hercegovina and Srebrenica
Count 3: Persecutions
Counts 4/5/6: Extermination and murder
Counts 7/8: Deportation and inhumane acts
Counts 9/10: Terror and unlawful attacks
Count 11: Taking of UN hostages

Ratko Mladic: The charges

Munira Subasic, whose son and husband died in Srebrenica, told : “In 1995 I begged him to let my son go. He listened to me and promised to let him go. I trusted him at that moment.

“Sixteen years later, I am still searching for my son’s bones.”

Gen Mladic had earlier been examined by doctors in the medical facility of the detention unit at The Hague after arriving on Tuesday night.

On Thursday, Mr Aleksic said of his client: “He has not had proper healthcare for years and his condition is not good.”

Also on Thursday, Mr Saljic said Gen Mladic had been treated for cancer two years ago at a Belgrade hospital.

Mr Saljic has previously been quoted as saying by Serbian media that his client had suffered three strokes and two heart attacks, was too ill to be sent to The Hague and would not live to the end of a trial.

One lawyer representing victims, Axel Hageldoorn, told Associated Press there was concern that “he is too sick to follow the trial to its end and there will be no verdict”.

Former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic died of a heart attack at The Hague in 2006, four years into his own genocide trial.

War crimes suspect Mladic to be charged on Friday

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(A helicopter believed to be carrying wanted war crime suspect Ratko Mladic to the prison in Scheveningen is seen at Rotterdam Airport May 31, 2011. Former Bosnian Serb Ratko Mladic was extradited to the Netherlands on Tuesday to face at the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The after 16 years on the run.
REUTERS/Toussaint Kluiters/United Photos)

(Reuters) – Former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic, extradited to the Netherlands from Serbia after 16 years on the run, will be formally charged with genocide at the U.N. war crimes tribunal on Friday.

Judges at the for the former Yugoslavia scheduled Mladic’s initial court appearance for Friday at 0800 GMT, when he will be charged and asked to enter a plea, according to a statement on the court’s website.

Serge Brammertz, prosecutor for the tribunal, said in an interview with Austrian radio ORF on Wednesday that everything possible would be done to avoid a lengthy trial. Several war crimes trials in The Hague have dragged on for years.

Asked how long the whole process could take, he said that depended on several things, including Mladic’s health and whether he appointed a legal team or handled his own defense.

“It is very difficult to say how long it will last. The problem will not be the prosecution, we have our updated charge sheet ready, it will be a question of how long the defense needs to prepare their case.”

Mladic was indicted by the tribunal 16 years ago over the 43-month siege of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo and the massacre of 8,000 and boys in the town of Srebrenica, close to the border with Serbia, during the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

He was taken to a detention center outside The Hague from Rotterdam airport on Tuesday evening after being flown from on a Serbian .

The 69-year-old former general was arrested on Thursday at a farmhouse in northern Serbia belonging to a cousin, triggering protests by Serb nationalists in Serbia and Bosnia.

His swift will smooth Serbia’s progress toward candidacy for European Union membership while serving as an important warning to others indicted on similar charges, such as Libya’s and Sudanese President .

ONE MAN STILL ON THE RUN

Brammertz welcomed Serbia’s decision to extradite Mladic, even though he said it took a “very long time.”

“We would be very interested to know where he was between 2006 and 2011…we are waiting for the relevant reports so that we know who sheltered him, when and where,” the prosecutor said.

Serbia must still do more, Brammertz said, urging the authorities to track down Goran Hadzic, an ethnic Serb also wanted by the U.N. tribunal.

“We hope of course that the arrest of Goran Hadzic also comes very soon … We think it is very important that the last person on the run is arrested. But there are also important steps needed at a political level,” Brammertz said in the radio interview.

Mladic’s arrest has highlighted continued deep ethnic divisions in Bosnia, where he fought to create a separate Serb entity with the crucial backing of then-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, who died in his U.N. tribunal cell in 2006.

As a result of the war, Bosnia is made up of a Serb Republic and a Muslim-Croat Federation under a weak central Bosnian government.

According to an opinion poll published on May 15, before he was caught, 51 percent of Serbian citizens said they were against extraditing Mladic, while 34 percent said they were in favor of his arrest.

In the same poll, 78 percent of Serbs said they would not reveal Mladic’s whereabouts in return for the 10 million euro reward offered by the government.

After his arrest, Mladic’s lawyer and family argued that he was mentally unstable and too sick to be extradited to the tribunal — a tactic that has been used by others facing war crimes courts and tribunals.

But on Tuesday, Serbia’s rejected an appeal from Mladic’s lawyer that poor health should stop the extradition to The Hague and within hours, Mladic was on a plane to the Netherlands, where Bosnian Serb wartime political leader Radovan Karadzic is already on trial.

Bosnia’s ambassador in the Netherlands said she had met Mladic and he was in good health.

“He looked quite good, in a good health condition, focused and rational, he definitely understood everything that was said to him,” Ambassador Miranda Sidran-Kamisalic told the television station of Bosnia’s Muslim-Croat federation.

(Additional reporting by Ivana Sekularac in Amsterdam and Sylvia Westall in Vienna; editing by Sara Webb and Tim Pearce)

Ratko Mladic denies Srebrenica massacre role – son

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( Blog/ ) - Former chief has said he did not order the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, according to his son.

Darko Mladic made the statement a day before his father is due to lodge an appeal against being trasferred to the war crimes tribunal in The .

Some 7,500 Bosnian and boys were killed at Srebrenica.

The massacre is one of the key charges against Gen Mladic, 69. He was arrested on Thursday after 16 years on the run.

Darko Mladic spoke out after visiting his father in detention at Serbia’s .

“He said that whatever was done in Srebrenica, he had nothing to do with it.

“He saved so many women, children and fighters… His order was first to evacuate the wounded, women and children and then fighters. Whoever did what behind his back, he had nothing to do with it.”

‘Regime of traitors’

To some Serbs Gen Mladic remains a , and his son’s statement came as supporters of the general were due to hold protests in to voice their opposition to his arrest and likely extradition.

Sunday’s rally is due to take place outside parliament in Belgrade.

Far-right group 1389 urged its supporters to “show to this regime of traitors that we are not afraid of their threats and repression and that we are ready to defend Serbian heroes”.

An association of former Bosnian Serb soldiers held a separate protest against Gen Mladic’s arrest in the Bosnian village of Kalinovik, where he was born.

The BBC’s Nick Thorpe, in Kalinovik, said several thousand people had gathered and were protesting peacefully.

Gen Mladic’s lawyer Milos Saljic has said his client knew he would be transferred to a in The Hague.

Mr Saljic is to appeal against the transfer on Monday, after a court said Gen Mladic was fit to be extradited.

Speaking on Sunday he maintained that Gen Mladic’s health had deteriorated since the court’s decision.

“I can tell you that his health condition today is much worse then yesterday. It is worse psychologically,” the told the Associated Press.
Reconciliation hopes

Gen Mladic was seized in the village of Lazarevo, about 80km (50 miles) north of Belgrade, in the early hours of Thursday.

Serbian officials have vowed to pursue those who helped him avoid detection.

Serbian war crimes prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic told AFP: “By hiding Mladic they have caused serious damage to this country. Hiding fugitives from The Hague tribunal is a serious crime.”

Following the arrest of Radovan Karadzic in 2008, Gen Mladic became the most prominent Bosnian war crimes suspect still at large.

He was indicted by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague in 1995 for genocide over the killings that July at Srebrenica – the worst single atrocity in Europe since – and other alleged crimes.

Having lived freely in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, he disappeared after the arrest of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic in 2001.

Serbian President Boris Tadic has said the arrest brought the country and the region closer to reconciliation, and opened the doors to European Union membership for Serbia.

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