ICDSM Conference
12 Nov 2005
[Declaration adopted at the conference can be found here.]
ICDSM- IRELAND OPEN STATEMENT ‑ PRESS RELEASE
Reference ‑ International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic Press Conference ‑Belgrade 13.11.2005
Those of us forming membership of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic in Ireland believe there to have been a grave injustice associated with the prosecution of President Slobodan Milosevic victimised and persecuted for having the temerity to stand up to the combined forces of the West and their imperialist bombardment of a sovereign state under the ludicrous guise of humanitarian intervention.
The manifest disregard for International Law and particularly the Geneva Convention inherent to the abduction arrest imprisonment and enforced trial of President Milosevic may well have created a precedent for a Super Power Might is Right policy giving no consideration to rights of any kind be they Civil, Human or Legal. This is to be greatly deplored.
Together with our friends and comrades in the UK Section of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic we wish to express our absolute support and solidarity with the people of SerbialMontenegro as indeed we do with all of the peoples of The Balkans and with our dear comrades of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic ‑
We salute you all.
June Kelly for International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic (Irish Section) Tel: 00353 (0)44 45787 Mobile: 00353 (0) 861963134 cdsrnireland(&,eircom.net www.lcdsmireland.org
ICDSM- UK OPEN STATEMENT
"The CDSM-UK sends its warmest greetings to this important conference of the ICDSM being held in Belgrade the 12th November and sincerely regrets not being able to send a representative on this occasion. However we have every confidence that our international comrades will formulate a strong Resolution that will guide our activities in the coming months.
We also pledge to send a delegation from the UK to participate in the proposed Hague demonstration on the 24th March 2006.
In solidarity
Ian Johnson for CDSM-UK." Tel: +44 (0)161 797 6017
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Belgrade meeting defends Milosevic
By Sara Flounders
Published Nov 28, 2005 9:39 PM
A team of three medical specialists from France, Russia and Serbia has released a grave warning: There is serious danger to former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic’s life if the U.S.-orchestrated show trial at The Hague continues without regard to his deteriorating health.
The team urged an immediate six-week break in the proceedings to allow time for medical treatment.
Despite the official medical report and the publicized warnings, the judges insisted on bringing President Milosevic to court. On Nov. 16 they were forced to suspend the proceedings for five days because Milosevic was too sick to continue. But the medical advice calling for an emergency six-week break was still ignored.
For over three years the case—originally described as the trial of the century—has ground on in media silence. By insisting on his inalienable and internationally recognized right to represent and defend himself, Milosevic has been able to successfully rebut the U.S. justifications for the bombing of Yugoslavia and the occupation of Bosnia and Kosovo. His continuing refusal to recognize the authority of a court established at the demand of the United States and in violation of the United Nations Charter is a challenge to the entire process.
But after four years, the enormous pressure and the near-total isolation forced by the court’s arbitrary rules are taking a toll on the imprisoned president’s health.
The staged proceeding called the International Criminal Tribunal on Yugoslavia was set up 12 years ago by U.S. Secretary of State Madeline Albright. There is no provision anywhere in the UN Charter for such a court. Yet its very creation, its arbitrary rulings and its power to charge, arrest and imprison any political and military figure in the Balkans immediately gave U.S. officials enormous authority in the region.
In the midst of the 78-day Pentagon bombing of Yugoslavia, President Milosevic was charged with war crimes in order to justify the U.S. war. In 2000, a U.S.-orchestrated coup overthrew Milosevic’s elected government. He was kidnapped and turned over to Hague on June 28, 2001.
International support
The medical report’s warnings of serious health consequences was a focus of an international gathering held in Belgrade on Nov. 12. The conference brought together representatives of the Inter national Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic and the Serbian organization Sloboda (Freedom) Association.
At the gathering, former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark, vice-chair of the Russian Duma Sergei Baburin and former member of Bulgarian Parliament Velka Vilknav issued a statement supporting the doctors’ recommendations for an immediate six-week postponement of the proceedings to allow medical treatment. They also warned against any attempt to use his deteriorating health as an excuse to try President Milosevic “in absentia.”
The conference, which drew delegates from 12 countries, also released a statement characterizing The Hague proceedings: “The ICTY has thus shown to the whole world that its main role is to legitimize and legalize the most flagrant violations of international law, as well as the most serious crimes committed during the breakup of the former Yugoslavia and the NATO aggression against the FR [former republic] of Yugoslavia. ...
“During the 78-day long criminal bombing of the FR of Yugoslavia, the aggressors killed and wounded thousands of civilians, destroyed the economic and transport infrastructure, tried to kill President Milosevic by bombing his residence, used cluster bombs and depleted uranium, and caused destruction amounting to more than $100 billion. ...
“However, the ICTY has not indicted any leader of the NATO member countries.”
The statement urged an immediate end to the proceedings and the protection of the health of President Milosevic, along with more immediate demands on the court procedures. A full statement is available at www.icdsm.org.
Those at the meeting also discussed how to mobilize increased support for President Milosevic now that the proceedings are the in the final stage. The urgent need for funds to continue the defense is part of the pressure on every defense committee. Given the scale and length of the trial and the great difficulty of this effort, it is a relentless problem.
The wider publication of President Milosevic’s opening defense statement rebutting two years of the prosecution charges was also discussed.
The English translation of President Milosevic’s defense statement—a 112-page book entitled “The Defense Speaks—for History and the Future,” published by the International Action Center—was just released, and it was presented to the gathering. The IAC publication includes an introduction by Ramsey Clark. President Milosevic’s opening defense statement has already been published as a book in Serbian, French and Russian. A German translation will be published within the month. Translations in Italian and Portuguese are complete.
The growing interest in translating and disseminating this statement by President Milosevic in several major languages is best summed up by Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter on the back cover of the IAC’s book: “The U.S./NATO court trying Slobodan Milosevic was always totally illegitimate. It could never be taken seriously as a court of justice. Milosevic’s defense is powerful, convincing, persuasive and impossible to dismiss.”
Sara Flounders is part of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic and was a U.S. delegate to the Belgrade Conference. She coordinated publication of “The Defense Speaks—for History and the Future.”
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