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Yugoslavia War Crimes Tribunal: Current Issues for Congress (CRS Report for Congress)

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Release Date May 23, 2002
Report Number RL30864
Report Type Report
Authors Julie Kim, Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Source Agency Congressional Research Service
Summary:

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, established by U.N. Security Council resolutions in 1993, was the first international war crimes court to be founded since the post-World War II period. It is charged with prosecuting persons responsible for war crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia since 1991. To date, the Yugoslavia Tribunal has publicly indicted over 100 persons for crimes relating to the conflicts in Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo. Over 40 persons are currently in proceedings at The Hague. Dozens more are under public or secret indictment, and the Tribunal's Chief Prosecutor continues to investigate charges against additional suspects. The Yugoslavia Tribunal is separate from and unaffiliated with the International Criminal Court established by the Rome Treaty of 1998, and launched by over 60 countries in April 2002. On June 28, 2001, former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic was transferred to The Hague. The trial for Milosevic, the only head of state to stand before an international court for war crimes, commenced in February 2002 and is expected to last a couple of years. Some of Yugoslavia's new democratic leaders had resisted his extradition but yielded to international pressure on the eve of an international conference on financial assistance to Yugoslavia. Pressure was again applied to Belgrade in April 2002, when the United States suspended bilateral financial assistance to Serbia because of its limited cooperation with the Tribunal beyond Milosevic's transfer. In response, Belgrade passed new legislation to allow the transfer of war crimes suspects to The Hague and has called on 23 named indicted suspects to surrender voluntarily or be subject to arrest. The lingering presence of persons indicted and suspected of war crimes has been detrimental to the peace process in Bosnia, by most assessments. The two top remaining indicted suspects, former Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, remain at large. NATO peacekeeping forces in Bosnia have seized over twenty alleged war criminals since 1997; however, NATO efforts to seize Karadzic in eastern Bosnia in early 2002 were unsuccessful. After Milosevic's fall from power in late 2000, the Clinton Administration removed economic sanctions against Serbia and began to provide economic assistance authorized by Congress to Serbia. However, Congress mandated a deadline of March 31, 2001, for Belgrade to comply with commitments to cooperate with the Tribunal, or face a funding cut-off. In April, the Bush Administration certified that Belgrade was meeting these commitments, but continued to pressure Belgrade to demonstrate further progress, especially the transfer of Milosevic (which took place in June). Facing a similar deadline the following year, the Administration held off certification of Serbian compliance with the Tribunal until May 21, when it cited recent measures of progress by Belgrade and released remaining unobligated U.S. assistance to Serbia for FY2002. While it has consistently supported the Yugoslavia Tribunal over the years, the United States is opposed to the establishment of the International Criminal Court and formally renounced the ICC treaty in May 2002.