| Del Ponte to meet with Solana and Rehn
The Hague, February 01 (Source: B92) - Chief Hague Tribunal Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte to meet with EU Officials
Javier Solana and Olli Rehn later today.
Talks
between the EU High Representative for the Common Foreign
and Security Policy Javier Solana and the Chief Prosecutor
will be held at her request, as reported by sources from Brussels.
Del Ponte said yesterday that she has been trying to convince
EU countries not to resume Stabilization and Association Agreement
negotiations with Serbia, as Belgrade
has failed to co-operate with The
Hague. She also said that she intends
to persuade Solana an Rehn to deny
Serbia any such concessions.
The
chief prosecutor of the U.N. war crimes tribunal confirmed
Tuesday she will retire in September, frustrated that two
of the three men most responsible for the mayhem in the Balkans
during Yugoslavia's
demise could end up going free.
Carla Del Ponte, the tribunal's third and longest serving
chief prosecutor, will be remembered primarily for overseeing
former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosević's genocide
trial, which ended before a verdict could be reached after
he died of a heart attack in his cell in March.
"After eight years, I have done my work. It's time for
me to go back to a normal life," she told reporters.
In a wide-ranging question-and-answer session, Del Ponte said
that in the dozens of trials she has supervised — including
20 in which the defendants pleaded guilty — "I never
saw one who had real remorse." Del Ponte said she was
leaving satisfied, though Milosević's inconclusive trial
was a disappointment.
"What we have done is a historical achievement,"
she said, pointing to 61 indictments drawn up by her team.
She said since 1999 she has brought almost all the most senior
political and military leaders to The Hague to face justice.
She warned that the tribunal's two leading fugitives, Bosnian
Serb leader Radovan Karadžić and his top general Ratko
Mladić, could go free unless they are caught before the
tribunal is closed in 2010 and the U.N. Security Council takes
no further action.
The U.N. Security Council has instructed the tribunal to finish
its last trials by 2008 and conclude the appeals process within
another two years, before closing down. If the court no longer
exists, its arrest warrants against Karadžić and Mladić
will become invalid, she said.
"If the tribunal must close the door by 2010, they (the
Council) must find another solution" for the remaining
fugitives, Del Ponte told reporters.
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