News in English     | 07.03.2019. 15:57 |

Belgrade Appellate Court - 21 years of prison in total for war crimes in Zvornik

FENA Press release

BELGRADE/SARAJEVO, March 7 (FENA) - After three ex-members of the ‘Sima’s Chetniks’ paramilitary group had their sentences cut by a Belgrade court, Bosnian war victims’ associations said they welcomed the convictions but wanted the convicted men to reveal the whereabouts of missing persons.

Head of the Association of Families of Detained and Missing Persons from Zvornik Municipality, Ahmet Grahić, expressed dissatisfaction with the reduced sentences given to the three Serb ex-paramilitaries, but said that finding the victims who are still missing should be the main priority.

“Punishment cannot be evaded. I can say I would not mind seeing their sentences being reduced by two or three years in return for them revealing the locations of graves, so we could find the remaining 450 people from the Zvornik municipality who are still being searched for,” Grahić told BIRN.

“Our first priority is to find the missing. It is up to the institutions and prosecution to do the rest,” he added.

Belgrade Appeals Court announced on Tuesday that it had reduced the sentences of three Bosnian Serb fighters for crimes committed in 1992 in the village of Malešić in the Bosnian municipality of Zvornik.

Two members of the ‘Sima’s Chetniks’ paramilitary group, Tomislav Gavrić and Zoran Đurđević, had their sentences reduced from 10 to eight years in prison, while a third member, Zoran Alić, was given five instead of six years.

They were convicted of keeping three women captive in the village of Malešić in 1992, where they repeatedly raped and abused them and forced them to make food and clean for them.

The appeals court meanwhile upheld the not-guilty verdicts handed down to three others, Dragana Đekić, Damir Bogdanović and Đorđe Šević. Đekić is also currently being tried for the abduction and killings of 20 non-Serb civilians from a train in the Bosnian town of Štrpci in 1993.

The first instance verdict in 2015 found all of the defendants not guilty of the crimes in Malešić, but an Appeals Court partially overturned the verdict in 2018, convicting Gavrić, Đurđević and Alić.

Since the second-instance court overturned the verdict at the expense of the defendants, they had the right to one more appeal.

The verdict announced on Tuesday, which was rendered on February 13 but not made public until this week, is final.

Murat Tahirović, Head of the Association of Victims and Witnesses of Genocide, said he was satisfied because the case had ended with convictions, considering the three men were initially acquitted.

“Considering the length of the sentences and bearing in mind some other cases, even some conducted in Bosnia and Herzegovina, they have at least been sentenced for war crimes as perpetrators of that act,” Tahirović told BIRN.

(FENA) S. R.

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