BBC BIGOTRY AND BIAS IN REPORTING MILOSEVIC
TRIAL
Dateline 11th September 2004
The BBC's coverage of the Milosevic Trial is as grossly biased as was
their coverage of the illegal war against Yugoslavia - biased towards
Catholic Croatia and Muslim Bosnia, despite both "States"
having had as their leaders two of the biggest clerical religious bigots
in Europe - Franjo Tujman and Alia Izetbegovic.
"Genocide is a natural phenomenon commanded by the Almighty
in defence of the only true faith" Franjo Tujman, Former
President of Croatia
"I must admit that I have been obsessed with the criminal character
of the Independent State of Croatia. Even the Germans were appalled
by the crimes committed in it." The Nazi Hunter, Simon Wiesenthal,
1990
"There can be no peace or co-existence between the Islamic
faith and non-Islamic institutions... The Islamic movement must and
can take power as soon as it is morally and numerically strong enough,
not only to destroy the non-Islamic power but to build up a new Islamic
one...Turkey, as an Islamic country, used to rule the world. Turkey
as an imitation of Europe, represents a third rate country."
Alia Izetbegovic
The trial in the Hague has been a disaster for the prosecution with
not one single piece of evidence linking Milosevic to any assumed "atrocity"
- and certainly no actual atrocity. When the prosecution's star witness
appeared he DENIED any link and said he had been tortured to admit such
a link. The greatest atrocity is the presence in (multi ethnic) Serbia
and Montenegro of 1 million refugees ethnically cleansed over the last
14 years by NATO's (and in particular Germany's) allies - Bosnia, Croatia
and Albanian Kosovo (all fascist allies in the second world war!).
We have quoted here two BBC reports of the trial and commented in
italics on their contents. The deliberate smearing of a decent and distinguished
academic - Professor Smilja Avramov, is one of the most despicable acts
of journalism of which the BBC has been guilty.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3633364.stm
Last Updated: Tuesday, 7 September, 2004, 09:28 GMT 10:28 UK
First Milosevic witness testifies
Milosevic is refusing to co-operate with his new lawyers. The first
defence witness has started testifying at the trial of the former Yugoslav
leader Slobodan Milosevic at The Hague's UN tribunal.
Smilja Avramov, a retired Serbian law professor and ultra-nationalist,
said
Western-trained "terrorists" had worked to break up the former
Yugoslavia.
(This is the kind of bigoted biased comment typical of the dramatic
fall in standards at the BBC. As the UN and NATO have recently had to
admit their allies in the Yugoslav wars, the Albanian KLA - whom Milosevic
was fighting much as the British Government was fighting the IRA but
with fewer deaths! - were and are a terrorist group. Professor Smilja
Avramov is not an "ultra nationalist". She is a distinguished
academic lawyer who, like most Serbs, believes in the democratic rights
under international law of her own nation state - a nation state illegally
destroyed by those very forces who illegally kidnapped Milosevic and
put him on trial, not at the international court in the Hague but in
a politically constructed tribunal)
Mr Milosevic said two British lawyers appointed to defend him represented
the court and he refused to meet them. Mr Milosevic, who has heart trouble,
tried again to defend himself. But the presiding judge, Patrick Robinson,
cut off Mr Milosevic's microphone when the former Yugoslav president
denounced his court-appointed defence as
"a legal fiction". "I don't want to hear the same tired
refrain," Judge Robinson said.
(This is not the kind of biased remark any civilised court would
accept from a judge. Mr Milosevic is rightly complaining here of the
gross illegality, something of which this kangaroo court - the kind
of "special court" specifically outlawed in international
law - should daily be reminded.)
Lawyers Steven Kay and Gillian Higgins are overseeing proceedings on
behalf
of Mr Milosevic, who has been deemed unfit to defend himself. The ex-leader
faces 66 charges of war crimes during the 1990s Balkan wars.
Ill health
Mr Milosevic had represented himself since the beginning of the trial
in February 2002. But his frequent bouts of ill health caused months
of delay to the trial, prompting prosecutors to accuse him of "manipulating
this tribunal" with his ailments.
(In that case why are they now saying he is really ill - so ill
that the law has to be broken to impose lawyers on him? As the former
Amicus Curiae at the Hague Tribunal) Branislav Tapuskovic, rejecting
his own imposition on Milosevic, said:
"I have respected the provision of Article 21, point 4/d of
the Statute of the ICTY, according to which every defendant has the
guaranteed right TO BE TRIED IN HIS PRESENCE AND TO DEFEND HIMSELF IN
PERSON."
Began February 2002
Milosevic faces more than 60 charges
Prosecutors' case rested February 2004
Court already heard from 295 witnesses
Timeline: Milosevic trial
Doctors said his heart condition could become life-threatening if he
continued to represent himself. (Note how it was a much less ill
General Pinochet who was excused trial altogether in Britain on the
grounds of ill health!) Mr Milosevic will be able to question witnesses,
but only after they have been examined by the defence.
Ms Avramov was an adviser to Mr Milosevic during the 1990s and took
part in
negotiations between Croatia and Serbia.
She said "terrorist groups" trained in Germany, the United
States, Canada
and Australia were active in the break-up of the former Yugoslavia.
(Note how often the BBC uses the term terrorist in other contexts
without using inverted comas or adding "so called"
before the word!)
Mr Milosevic wants to call more than 1,000 witnesses, but it is unlikely
they will all be able to appear during the 150 trial days allotted for
his defence, the BBC's Geraldine Coughlan reports from The Hague. This
month, the former Greek and Russian prime ministers are due to appear,
as well as prominent figures from the US, Canada, France and Serbia.