Karadzic's identity 'convincing'

Published Wednesday July 23rd, 2008
A7

BELGRADE, Serbia - Radovan Karadzic grew a long, white beard to conceal his identity and even managed to openly practise alternative medicine while in hiding, officials said Tuesday in revealing details of the war crimes fugitive's capture after more than a decade on the run.

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AP
on the run for more than a decade: This video image taken from Kikinda Television shows former Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic attending a conference sponsored by Healthy Life magazine under the false identity of Dragan Dabic on Jan. 28 in Kikinda, Serbia. Karadzic was arrested Monday night in a Belgrade suburb, officials said. A judge has ordered his transfer to the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, to face genocide charges.

Karadzic, the wartime leader of Bosnian Serbs, was arrested Monday night in a Belgrade suburb, officials said. A judge has ordered his transfer to the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, to face genocide charges, war crimes prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic said.

Karadzic has three days to appeal the ruling. His lawyer, Sveta Vujacic, said he will launch the process to fight extradition on the last day, Friday, to thwart authorities' wishes for his immediate transfer.

Karadzic - a psychiatrist accused of masterminding the deadly wartime siege of Sarajevo and the executions of up to 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica during Bosnia's 1992-95 war, Europe's worst massacre since the Second World War - had topped the tribunal's most-wanted list for years.

Government official Rasim Ljajic said Karadzic, once known for his distinctively coifed hairdo, was unrecognizable.

"His false identity was very convincing," Vukcevic said. "Even his landlords were unaware of his identity."

Karadzic used a false name, Dragan Dabic, Ljajic said.

The editor in chief of Belgrade's Healthy Life magazine, Goran Kojic, said he was shocked when he saw the photo of Karadzic on TV, recognizing him as a regular contributor to the publication.

"It never even occurred to me that this man with a long white beard and hair was Karadzic," Kojic said.

Karadzic's whereabouts had been a mystery since he went on the run in 1998, with his hideouts reportedly including monasteries and mountain caves in remote eastern Bosnia.

Serbian security services found Karadzic, 63, on Monday while looking for another top war crimes suspect facing genocide charges, Bosnian Serb wartime commander, general Ratko Mladic, Ljajic said.

Karadzic "was arrested Monday evening near Belgrade while changing locations," he said. "International pressure was to arrest Mladic and a few had expected that Karadzic would be captured."

His family in Bosnia, banned from leaving the country over suspicions that they helped him elude capture, asked Tuesday to have the restrictions lifted, his daughter told The Associated Press.

Sonja Karadzic said family members want to spend at least a few hours with Karadzic before his transfer to UN custody.

"We even suggested travelling under police escort to see him for at least for a few hours," she said. "For years we have not seen our father, husband and grandfather; my mother's health is not very good, and we do not have the financial means necessary to travel to Netherlands."

A judge finished interrogating Karadzic on Tuesday and issued the order for his extradition.

The complexity of a case that encompasses most of the worst atrocities of the 1992-95 Bosnian war, likely legal wrangling and a packed docket at the court in The Hague all stand in the way of a speedy trial.

"Karadzic is the second most important defendant that we have had. It will not be a quick trial, but I believe it can be held as soon as possible - possibly within a few years," tribunal judge Frederik Harhoff of Denmark told Danish TV2 News.

Ljajic refused to reveal more details about his arrest, saying Karadzic's movements are being analyzed and will be kept secret until Mladic's capture. "We are absolutely determined to finish this job," he said.

Karadzic - disguised by the bushy beard and glasses - managed to move freely while living in a new part of Belgrade and working at a private clinic, Ljajic said, holding up a photo of a much thinner-looking Karadzic.

Governments worldwide hailed the arrest of the man described by the tribunal as the mastermind of "scenes from hell, written on the darkest pages of human history."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel called it a "historic moment."

"The victims need to know: Massive human rights violations do not go unpunished," she said in Berlin.

European Union foreign ministers meeting in Brussels said the arrest sets Serbia firmly on the path toward EU membership.

"We have waited for this for 13 years. Finally. Finally," said French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said in Brussels.

"This is a very good thing for the rapprochement of Serbia with the European Union."

Retired Canadian major-general Lewis MacKenzie, who commanded Sector Sarajevo as part of a UN peacekeeping force in 1992, said he's pleased for the people of Serbia that Karadzic has been arrested.

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