His family members claim that he is too ill to stand up to the rigors of a genocide trial, and that he is not guilty of any crimes, including his alleged role in the worst atrocity in Europe since World War II, the massacre that left 8,000 Muslim men and boys in the Srebrenica enclave in Bosnia dead.
Serbia’s war crimes court ruled that the 69-year-old is fit to stand trial, and that conditions have been met for him to be handed over to the UN tribunal in The Hague. A defense lawyer said Mladic would appeal the decision Monday. The former fugitive could be extradited within hours if that appeal is rejected.
His defense is demanding that an “independent medical commission’’ — preferably one from Russia, a historical friend of the Serbs — examine Mladic. Instead the government dispatched the health minister, a former friend, who deemed him stable.
Serbian war crimes prosecutors argue that the defense was simply trying to delay the extradition, and the tribunal promises it is capable of dealing with any health problems.
Mladic was in command of the Bosnian Serb army during the country’s 1992-95 war, which left more than 100,000 people dead and drove another 1.8 million from their homes. Thousands of Muslims and Croats were slain, tortured, or expelled in a campaign to purge the region of non-Serbs.
Mladic’s ruthlessness was legendary: “Burn their brains!’’ he once bellowed as his men pounded Sarajevo with artillery fire. So was his opinion of himself: He nicknamed himself “God,’’ and kept goats which he was said to have named after Western leaders he despised.
He eluded the net of war crimes investigators for years after his 1995 indictment by the UN war crimes court on charges of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity — until going out into his garden for a predawn walk this week.
New details of the raid emerged, revealing it was more of a shot in the dark than a pinpoint operation. Police had been conducting similar operations throughout Serbia for years.
Two dozen masked, black-clad members of a team of special police, had no specific intelligence that Mladic was inside a relative’s yellow brick house in Lazarevo, a village they were visiting for the first time.
Speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information, Serbian police officials told said that Mladic identified himself immediately after his arrest, handing over two pistols that he was carrying without a fight.
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