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ICDSM Québec/ICDSM Canada in Solidarity with the Workers of Serbia
The fight for people's sovereignty:
in The Hague Star Chamber and on the streets of Belgrade, it is one struggle!
SLOBODAN MILOSEVIC
IS DEFENDING JUSTICE AND EQUALITY FOR ALL PEOPLE
President Milosevic warned of the loss of economic sovereignty, privatization,
and their consequences
In his address to the Yugoslav
people on October 2nd, 2000, President Slobodan Milosevic implored the
citizens of Yugoslavia protect their dignity and independence against
the assault of foreign domination. He said:
.All countries finding themselves
with limited sovereignty and with governments controlled by foreign powers,
speedily become impoverished in a way that destroys all hope for more
just and humane social relations.
A great division into a poor
majority and a rich minority, this has been the picture in Eastern Europe
for some years now that we can all see.
That picture would also include
us. Under the control of the new owners of our country we too would quickly
have a tremendous majority of the very poor, whose prospects of coming
out of their poverty would be very uncertain, very distant.
The rich minority would be
made up of the black marketeering elite, which would be allowed to stay
rich only on condition that it was fully loyal to the outside, controlling
powers.
Public and social property
would quickly be transformed into private property, but its owners, as
demonstrated by the experience of our neighbors, would be foreigners.
Among the few exceptions would be those who would buy their right to own
property by their loyalty and submission, which would lead to the elimination
of elementary national and human dignity.
The greatest national assets
in such circumstances become the property of foreigners, and the people
who used to manage them continue to do so, but as employees of foreign
companies in their own country.
National humiliation, state
fragmentation and social misery would necessarily lead to many forms of
social pathology, of which crime would be the first. This is not just
a supposition, this is the experience of all countries which have taken
the path that we are trying to avoid at any cost.
The capitals of European crime
are no longer in the west, they were moved to Eastern Europe a decade
ago.
As the NATO powers pointed
a gun to the heads of Yugoslavia's electorate, and drenched them with
propaganda via their local hirelings, President Milosevic appreciated
that not everybody would heed his warnings. He expressed the following
hope: "Citizens, you must make up your own minds whether to believe
me or not. My only wish is that they do not realize I am telling the truth
when it is too late, that they do not realize after it has become so much
more difficult to correct mistakes that some people have made, naively,
superficially or erroneously."
It is not too late
For five consecutive days,
Belgrade has been at the heart of an extraordinary upheaval. Workers have
descended upon the Parliament, by tens of thousands, demanding an end
to privatization, and the dissolution of the so-called "pro-democracy"
government which, while committing constitutional breaches and making
a repressive mockery of democratic norms, has created unimaginably desperate
living conditions for the people of Serbia. With an unemployment rate
of at least 30%, it is galling to read the smug, condescending rebukes
of the mainstream press, who claim workers are unhappy or "impatient"
with the "painful process" of privatization, and would prefer
a "radical" improvement of their quality of life. The indignities
suffered by the people of Yugoslavia are too many to mention.
Since 1990, every attempt has been made by the US and Western powers to
defeat Yugoslavia's sovereignty: from IMF blackmail to cluster bombs and
depleted uranium, and along the way the fomenting of civil war, unrest,
poverty, the financing and encouragement of terrorism, the sowing and
exacerbation of hatred, fear, and hopelessness.
Today, Serbian steel workers,
now employed by the giant multinational US Steel, who purchased the Smederevo
steel company - which used to belong to the workers - for a measly $23
million as part of the DOS's "pro-democracy" fire-sale, are
striking for the right to make a bit less than one dollar an hour. Workers
all over the country now reject the humiliation of foreign domination
and the immiseration of their compatriots in this looting spree brought
by NATO bayonets and the IMF and bearing the cynical euphemism of "reforms."
They are demanding respect for their dignity and a return of their sovereign
rights. How poignantly this principled struggle points up the prescience
and wisdom of President Milosevic's warnings.
President Milosevic Defends the Ideals of Yugoslavia from a cell in The
Hague
For the past seventeen months,
President Slobodan Milosevic has defended the dignity of his fellow citizens
in an ever-increasingly secretive, unfair and illegal process. The International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), born of political
pressure from the US administration - which has institutionalized legal
impunity for its own crimes - does not intend to conduct a trial that
would meet international standards of justice. The show-trial of President
Milosevic provides "legal" cover for the US/NATO policy of regime
change in Yugoslavia.
President Milosevic has never wavered in his characterization of the ICTY
as an illegal, illegitimate tool of the US and NATO powers against the
sovereignty of a nation they destroyed. He has taken every opportunity
to defend the dignity of his nation, and reveal the perfidy that broke
up Yugoslavia.
An unfair process
As the process wears on, the
Trial Chamber's effort to stifle the defendant have gone from outrageous
to pathetic. First, the major media pulled out of The Hague, complicit
in the browning-out of President Milosevic's articulate and effective
defense. Then, without complaint, he has weathered successively more transparent
attempts to exhaust him and has maintained remarkable poise in life-threatening
conditions.
In November of last year, the
ICDSM requested standing before the Chamber to argue that Slobodan Milosevic's
medical condition required immediate specialized medical attention, and
that his state of health required he be released from custody, given adequate
time for his convalescence, and be allowed to prepare his defence in a
non-custodial setting. The ICTY has not granted this request, nor has
it denied it. The "Tribunal" has simply ignored it.
Gag order
In brazen complicity with the
ICTY, the Belgrade regime persecutes the family of President Milosevic,
preventing him even from receiving visits from his wife and son.
Slobodan Milosevic cannot meet
with his closest associates and friends, as the Registrar has banned him
from contact with members of his party, the SPS, (Socialist Party of Serbia)
and "associated entities". Sloboda, the leading association
in defence of President Milosevic has been listed as a banned group. The
Registrar applied this measure based on the suspicion that two SPS members
who had visited him had spoken to the press. "Associated entities"
could be anyone - it is left to the discretion of the Registrar. This
is an attempt to silence President Milosevic and interfere with the preparation
of his defence. Sloboda has challenged the ban on legal grounds. It has
yet to hear from the ICTY.
A public trial?
Article 11 of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirms the
presumption of innocence and the right of the accused to a public trial.
But the "trial" of Slobodan Milosevic is often not public, and
shielded from international public scrutiny. Security concerns are systematically
invoked to justify the numerous closed sessions, pseudonymous witnesses,
and ex parte motions filed by the Prosecutor, motions whose content Mr.
Milosevic is not entitled to review. In the past six months, the Chamber
has handed down several decisions following ex parte motions. Another
fundamental right is to be present for one's own trial. If Mr. Milosevic
cannot read Prosecution submissions to the judges, let alone respond to
them, can it be said that he is actually present at his trial?
Unintelligible
The ICTY has now authorized
the admission into evidence of written witness statements. It has become
impossible to follow the trial. Witnesses declare that their statements
are true, and President Milosevic is afforded a mere hour to cross-examine
them. The public can only try to speculate as to the content of the witness'
evidence. At least we can now say that this is no longer a "Show
Trial", but rather a strictly closed-circuit event.
Less time, fewer questions!
So effective has been Slobodan
Milosevic in hammering home the message of NATO's aggression against his
nation, and the conspiracy to dismember Yugoslavia, with consequences
now being felt - and courageously challenged - by the people of Serbia,
that the ICTY is determined to prevent him from continuing. Cross-examination
has been severely curtailed and he has been barred, with respect to certain
witnesses, from asking questions with respect to their credibility. This
is unheard of in any adversarial legal system, such as the ICTY purports
to be.
When President Milosevic attempted
to question the Deputy Prosecutor (who appeared as a witness!) about their
position - namely, supine - with respect to NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia,
whether the Prosecutor had acted "objectively" and "without
bias" in summarily dismissing a request to investigate a large number
of egregious violations of International Law, including the Geneva Conventions,
Mr. Milosevic was told by the President of the Chamber that it was "irrelevant".
He was told that if he did not ask questions "as ordered" he
would not have the right to ask questions at all. A question pointing
up the protection of Al Qaeda-supported terrorism in Kosovo by the ICTY
and its NATO sponsors met with a similar reaction. The "amicus curiae,"
friend of the court, appointed against President's Milosevic's will, attempted
to intervene but was browbeaten by a visibly angry President of the Chamber.
What comes next?
President Milosevic has been
afforded a mere three months to prepare his defence, while the Prosecution
has been accumulating evidence since the ICTY was established in 1993.
The Prosecution has stalled throughout this case, and is still adding
witnesses to its list, as well as changing, at the last minute, the order
in which they are to appear. But the ICTY has ordered President Milosevic
to provide a witness list only six weeks after the close of the seemingly
endless Prosecution case. All the while, the Prosecution blames President
Milosevic for the delays. They blame his ill health - for which they are
responsible - and they blame him for "wasting the court's time"
by asking embarrassing questions.
He has received millions of
pages of documents, as well as thousands of tapes, exhibits and photos.
Isolated from his closest associates, his preparation of the defence phase
- and the crucial matter of defence witnesses - is severely impaired.
After twenty-one months of
this process, nothing has been proven against President Milosevic, and
thanks to his unerring determination, much has been proven about the ICTY's
purely political nature. He could very well invite the Chamber to take
notice of the Prosecution's failure to establish a single count of the
Prosecution's fantastic indictments. Only one indictment, the so-called
"Kosovo" indictment, has shown itself to be of any use - it
served to isolate the leadership and people of Serbia, to demonize them,
and to justify a gruesome 78-day bombing campaign that barely lifted an
eyebrow in the West, even among so many who claim to be progressive.
What is more, it is not clear
that this institution has the power to compel witnesses to testify. The
ICTY has claimed it is bound by respect for the sovereignty of states
- perhaps not that of Yugoslavia - in that they respect the idea that
states may decide whether or not they choose to cooperate. In contrast,
consequences are severe for non-cooperation when requests are made to
surrender those indicted.
It is true that sovereignty
is the cornerstone of international law. How can one explain the scores
of decisions rendered by the International Court of Justice - a truly
legitimate UN body - against the US that have never been complied with?
Including the judgments having found that US death sentences had been
pronounced against foreign nationals in violation of international law.
The President of the ICTY, Theodor Meron, represented the US in one such
case, brought by Germany, who won its suit before the world court. But
the German prisoners were executed nonetheless.
It is not clear that Slobodan
Milosevic could call Bill Clinton as a witness. The ICTY has left open
the question as to whether there are certain categories of State officials
for whom immunity would apply.
Perhaps former Presidents will be protected by immunity from testifying,
to prevent other former Presidents from defending themselves and their
people. And this in contrast to the United States itself, where Bill Clinton
was compelled to provide a deposition when accused of sexual harassment.
This concept of sovereignty,
now threatening to prevent President Milosevic from questioning those
who destroyed Yugoslavia, is key. Loss of sovereignty created the ICTY,
as well as the miserable conditions against which Serbia's people are
now rising, thus recalling President Milosevic's words: "All countries
finding themselves with limited sovereignty and with governments controlled
by foreign powers, speedily become impoverished in a way that destroys
all hope for more just and humane social relations."
This is the same struggle!
The large-scale protests in
Belgrade demonstrate that the will of the people to fight for their dignity
will not be defeated. This has been President Milosevic's struggle as
well. A Committee of the Serbian Diaspora, ICDSM, Sloboda and other progressive
forces and individuals are calling upon all honest and principled people
to participate in the international demonstration at The Hague on November
8th.
United for freedom in the same
struggle, we shall all rise for freedom, life and for the fundamental
rights of the Serbian people and of their defender, President Slobodan
Milosevic. This kind of battle a united people always wins. This fight
against tyranny is a fight for the dignity and prosperity of all peoples.
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AGGRESSORS SHALL NOT WRITE OUR HISTORY!
FREEDOM FOR PRESIDENT MILOSEVIC!
INTERNATIONAL DEMOS OF SERBIAN DIASPORA AND ALL PROGRESSIVE PEOPLE
THE HAGUE, 8 NOVEMBER 2003
14:00 - 15:00 Protest Rally at The Plein (City Center)
15:00 - 16:00 Protest March
from The Plein to the Scheveningen Prison
16:00 - 17:00 Protest Rally
in front of the Scheveningen Prison
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