Video recordings of Hotel Fontana meetings in Bratunac on July 11 and 12 1995 is key ignored evidence expunged not only from the official Srebrenica narrative, but largely missing as well in court proceedings at the Hague. It obviously suits the prosecution to side-line this evidence, but surprisingly the defense also has been none too…
ICTY modus operandi: doctored evidence
The BBC4 Storyville documentary on the trial of Slobodan Milosevic, broadcast in two parts on 7 & 8 February 2007, was on the face of it a study of a war crimes trial carried out in a painstaking manner which was ultimately unable to proceed to the foregone conclusion by the untimely death of the…
The Sham of the Hague Tribunal: The ICTY and Nataša Kandić
The Balkan Conflicts Research Team is continuously producing superb, hard-hitting and intellectually provocative Twitters about Srebrenica and the Hague Tribunal. We highly recommend them to our readers who may follow them by visiting their Twitter account at: Balkan Conflicts Research Team@ResearchTeam You may view this Tweet at: https://twitter.com/ResearchTeam/status/1256136697072451586?s=20 Who is Nataša Kandić? A Serbian woman who, in 1992, created…
The Sham of the Hague Tribunal: ICTY bias
The Balkan Conflicts Research Team is continuously producing superb, hard-hitting and intellectually provocative Twitters about Srebrenica and the Hague Tribunal. We highly recommend them to our readers who may follow them by visiting their Twitter account at: Balkan Conflicts Research Team@ResearchTeam You may view this Tweet at: https://twitter.com/ResearchTeam/status/1251059302338527232?s=20 What are the clearest examples of the ICTY’s bias? The ICTY…
John Laughland on the Milosevic trial and ICTY
“The case against Slobodan Milosevic would never have held up in a proper court of law,” argues Dr. John Laughland in this comment published on March 14, 2006 in The Guardian. We leave it up to our readers to assess the cogency of his arguments. But to the extent that he is correct, not just the…
REPORT OF THE SECRETARY-GENERAL PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH 2 OF SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION 808 (1993)
The International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia was established under UN auspices in 1993 in most extraordinary circumstances. There is no provision in the UN Charter which would make the founding of such a court possible. That makes ICTY illegal ab initio. But since political exigencies rather than legal considerations dictated that such a Tribunal…
The Sham of the Hague Tribunal: The ICTY and ‘The New World Order”
The Balkan Conflicts Research Team is continuously producing superb, hard-hitting and intellectually provocative Twitters about Srebrenica and the Hague Tribunal. We highly recommend them to our readers who may follow them by visiting their Twitter account at: Balkan Conflicts Research Team@ResearchTeam You may view this Tweet at: https://twitter.com/ResearchTeam/status/1251059302338527232?s=20 What was the ‘New World Order”? The theme of a speech…
John Laughland: Let Slobbo speak for himself
This text by John Laughland, published in the “Spectator” in 2003, has nothing to do directly with Srebrenica, but it is a hard-hitting discussion of the performance of the Hague Tribunal in the Milosevic case up to that point. The Hague Tribunal, however, has everything to do with Srebrenica because it is the illegal, quasi-judicial…
The Sham of the Hague Tribunal: The ICTY & ‘international conflict’
The Balkan Conflicts Research Team is continuously producing superb, hard-hitting and intellectually provocative Twitters about Srebrenica and the Hague Tribunal. We highly recommend them to our readers who may follow them by visiting their Twitter account at: Balkan Conflicts Research Team@ResearchTeam You may view this Tweet at: https://twitter.com/ResearchTeam/status/1248526762813927424?s=20 Why did the concept of ‘international conflict’ matter so much to…
How false witness Momir Nikolić’s bogus evidence was spun to buttress ICTY Prosecution’s reburial case
Momir Nikolić, assistant security officer in the Bratunac Brigade during the war in Bosnia, was indicted by ICTY for complicity in Srebrenica genocide and brought to the Hague in 2002 to face trial. He was one of several accused who chose to make a plea bargain with the Prosecution. Invariably, those who took that path…