Search Directories - North America | Europe | UK | Australia | Asia | Get a Free Email | Trading Board | Free Classified Ads
 Submit Articles
 Author Login


Community News & Articles 
 
 World News
 Africa
 Asia
 Australia
 Central America
 Europe
 Middle East
 New Zealand
 North America
 South America
 United Kingdom
 India
 Caribbean
 
 Sports News
 Basketball
 Football
 Soccer
 Others
 Golfing
 Hunting
 
 Entertainment
 Movies
 Music
 Television
 Games
 
 Internet Articles
 Internet Design Articles
 Internet Marketing Tips
 Search Engine Help
 
 Fashion Articles and News
 
 Health Articles and News
 Health and Beauty
 Diseases
 
 Social and Cultural Issues
 Wedding
 Dating
 
 Women Issues and Articles
 
 Business and Industry
 Real Estate Properties
 Travel and Holidays
 Insurance
 Loans
 Stock and Trading
 
 Weight Loss / Management
 
 Science & Technology
 Telephony and Voip
 MP3 and iPod
 Conferencing Calling
 
 Environment
 
 Finance and Business
 
 Home & Family
 Food and Cooking
 Crafts
 Decorations
 
 United Nation
Search

World News : United Kingdom Last Updated: Jul 22nd, 2008 - 13:31:38


Karadzic snared by spy tip and political will
By Mark Trevelyan, Security Correspondent
Jul 22, 2008, 13:30

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
LONDON (Reuters) - NATO forces sought him for years, swooping on potential hideouts in helicopters and armoured vehicles, but Radovan Karadzic turned up under the very nose of the Serbian authorities in a bland Belgrade suburb.

Serbian government sources said the indicted war crimes suspect, arrested on Monday evening, had been under surveillance in Serbia for several weeks after a tip-off from a foreign intelligence service.

But the timing of his arrest, just two weeks after a new, pro-Western Serbian government took office, suggests the decisive factor behind his capture was political resolve.

"At the end of the day this was going to be a problem that the Serbs solved themselves," said Nigel Inkster, a former senior official with Britain's MI6 foreign intelligence service who now works for the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.

"Ultimately it did boil down to political will."

How close did Western intelligence come over the years to pinpointing the whereabouts of Karadzic?

"At intervals they might have had a good idea but clearly he kept on the move," Inkster said.

SEWAGE TANK SEARCHED

For well over a decade, the hunt for the fugitive wartime Bosnian Serb leader, wanted for genocide and war crimes, was marked by short bursts of military activity followed by long lulls.

NATO and European Union soldiers conducted dozens of raids -- the last as recently as March -- on the homes of Karadzic's wife and children in Pale, his wartime stronghold southeast of Sarajevo. They even searched the sewage tank, his wife Ljiljana said, perhaps expecting to find him hiding in the ground like former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

In April 2004, dozens of U.S., British, German and Slovenian troops in helicopters and vehicles descended on Pale at night and raided a Serbian Orthodox church and the home of a priest, wounding him and his son. But there was no trace of Karadzic.

A 1999 book said the U.S. and French presidents, Bill Clinton and Jacques Chirac, had planned a joint commando raid to snatch Karadzic and were prepared to run the risk he would be killed in the operation. It never took place.

Karadzic was living in Belgrade when he was eventually arrested, heavily disguised with long white hair and a beard, and posing as a practitioner of alternative medicine.

"He happily, freely walked around the city," Serbia's war crimes prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic told reporters.

Inkster said that if Serbia's government could track down and arrest Karadzic, it should be able to find his army commander Ratko Mladic, the other chief suspect sought by the war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia in The Hague.

The capture of both men is a prerequisite for closer ties with the EU and eventual membership for Serbia.

"This was a man who until relatively recently was receiving his army pension. I think if the Serbs want to find Mladic, they can find Mladic," Inkster said.

Top of Page

 

Post an instant comment or a suggestion to the above article or news

Note: You can use the above link to form a new discussion forum, place your opinion and discuss events, politics, articles, environment, fashion, health, internet, search engines, marketing, movies, music, religion and any other topic.

United Kingdom
Latest Headlines
» UK's Brown tries to stamp out revolt
» Three men found guilty in liquid bomb plot
» Brown defiant at Birmingham cabinet meeting
» Factory gate prices post record fall
» Hurricane Ike weakens
» Shannon's stepfather begins child porn trial
» Flood fears ease after six die in storms
» Vintage jewels gain popularity as investments
» Britney Spears sweeps VMAs
» Suspending NATO-Russia ties cautioned