INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
CASE CONCERNING APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE
PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE
(CROATIA v. SERBIA)
REJOINDER
SUBMITTED BY THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA
Volume I
November 2011 TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Annexes to the Rejoinder ............................................................11...........
...............
List of acronyms ........................................................................
......................................... 17
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY OBSERVATIONS
1. The procedural reference .................................................................21...
..........................
2. The issues that still divide the Parties .................................................21.....................
....
3. Overview of the Applicant’s case .........................................................22..............
.........
A. The Applicant consistently avoids producing evidence
for its most serious allegation ........................................................................
.......... 22
B. The Applicant acknowledges that evidentiary materials annexed
to the Memorial are invalid ........................................................................
............. 24
C. The Applicant fails to prove the existence of the dolus specialis of
the crime of genocide ................................................................25.....
........................
D. The Applicant’s claim is artificial: no one in Croatia believes
that the Croats were the victims of genocide ..........................................26................
E. From “All Serbs in a single State” to genocide: the missing connection ............... 27
F. Mr. Ante Marković as a prime minister of a “non-existent State” .......................... 27
G. President Milošević as “a leader of successful insurrectional movement” ............. 28
H. The Applicant asks for a retroactive application of the Genocide Convention ...... 29
4. Overview of the Respondent’s Case ........................................................30...............
.....
5. Overview of the Applicant’s Reply to the counter-claim ...................................31.........
6. Some comments concerning the historical and political background .........................33.
7. Structure of the Rejoinder ...............................................................35........
.....................
3 PART I
THE APPLICANT’S CLAIM
CHAPTER II
RELEVANCE OF CONDUCT PRECEDING 27 APRIL 1992
AND 8 OCTOBER 1991
1. Introduction ........................................................................
............................................ 39
2. Preliminary remarks ..................................................................43....
...............................
A. Agreement on fundamental issues ..................................................43...................
.....
B. Relationship between treaty and customary rules against genocide .................44.....
C. The Relevance of the Judgment on Preliminary Objections
of 18 November 2008 ...............................................................46............
...................
3. Serbia cannot be held responsible for alleged violations of the
Genocide Convention prior to 27 April 1992 ............................................48...................
A. The Genocide Convention as such does not apply retroactively .....................49.......
B. Jurisdiction under Article IX of the Genocide Convention does not
cover conduct prior to 27 April 1992 .............................................54.......................
C. Responsibility for alleged breaches of the Genocide Convention
predating 27 April 1992 cannot be transferred to Serbia ...........................72...........
4. Concluding observations ..............................................................94........
........................
CHAPTER III
EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY THE APPLICANT
1. Introduction ........................................................................
............................................ 95
2. Documents submitted by the Applicant that are inadmissible and unreliable ............96.
A. Witness statementsi ........................................................................
.......................... 96
B. Materials prepared by the applicant State for this case .......................................... 102
C. Documents concerning Croatian genocide and war crime cases ........................... 105
3. Other evidence produced by the Applicant .................................................................... 106
44. Missing evidence to which the Applicant refers in the Reply ........................................ 107
5. Relevance of the ICTY prosecutorial decisions to exclude a charge
of genocide from the indictment against Slobodan Milošević ....................................... 107
6. The Applicant’s exit strategy: attempts to shift the burden of proof .............................. 113
CHAPTER IV
APPLICATION OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION
1. General legal comments ........................................................................
......................... 117
A. Genocide and ethnic cleansing ........................................................................
........ 117
B. Different national definitions of genocide do not affect
the application of the Genocide Convention ............................................................ 118
C. The nature of the “destruction” ........................................................................
...... 121
D. Who can perpetrate genocide and how to prove it .................................................. 126
E. Genocidal intent cannot be inferred from
“widespread and systematic attack” on civilian population ................................... 128
F. Conditions of life ........................................................................
.............................. 130
G. Significance of attacks on religious symbols ........................................................... 131
H. Preventing births within the group ........................................................................
.. 131
I. Other acts of genocide ........................................................................
...................... 132
2. Rebuttal to the alleged genocidal activities in Eastern Slavonia .................................... 135
A. Some general remarks ........................................................................
..................... 135
B. Response to the specific allegations with respect
to certain places in Eastern Slavonia ...................................................................... 137
C. Conclusions with respect to Eastern Slavonia ........................................................ 145
3. Rebuttal to alleged genocidal activities in the rest of Croatia ........................................ 146
A. Some general remarks ........................................................................
.................... 146
B. Western Slavonia ........................................................................
............................. 146
C. Banija ........................................................................
............................................... 149
D. Kordun and Lika ........................................................................
.............................. 150
E. Dalmatia ........................................................................
.......................................... 151
54. Relevance of the ICTY cases for the Applicant’s claim ................................................ 154
A. Brief review of the ICTY cases to which the Applicant refers ................................. 154
B. Erroneous reference to “eradication” as a factual finding of the ICTY ................. 156
C. Genocide and extermination in the light of the ICTY findings ................................ 157
D. Limitted effects of the ICTY findings of the joint
criminal enterprise in the Martić case .................................................................... 158
CHAPTER V
THE QUESTION OF ATTRIBUTION
1. Introduction ........................................................................
............................................ 163
2. Applicable law .........................................................................
....................................... 164
3. The alleged control of the Respondent over the JNA .................................................... 165
A. General remarks ........................................................................
.............................. 165
B. The SFRY Presidency ........................................................................
....................... 166
C. Alleged ”Serbianization” and restructuring of the JNA ........................................ 167
D. The role of the JNA in the conflict in Croatia ......................................................... 170
E. The role of General Kadijević ........................................................................
......... 172
F. The crimes allegedly committed by the JNA ............................................................ 176
G. Interim conclusions ........................................................................
......................... 186
4. The alleged control of the JNA over the forces of Croatian Serbs and paramilitaries ... 187
A. The alleged control of the JNA over the RSK Armed Forces .................................. 187
B. The alleged control of the JNA over the paramilitary units .................................... 193
C. The status of the Territorial Defence of Serbia ....................................................... 196
D. Interim conclusions ........................................................................
......................... 198
5. The alleged control of the Respondent over the forces of Croatian Serbs and paramilitaries 199
6. The alleged control of the Respondent over the RSK and
its Armed Forces after 27 April 1992 .........................................................................
... 204
7. The alleged violation of the obligations to prevent and punish the crime of genocide ..... 207
A. Obligation to prevent ........................................................................
....................... 207
B. Obligation to punish .......................................................................
......................... 209
8. Conclusion ........................................................................
.............................................. 210
Summary of Part I ........................................................................
.................................... 211
6 PART II
THE RESPONDENT’S COUNTER-CLAIM
CHAPTER VI
EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY THE RESPONDENT
1. Brief overview .........................................................................
....................................... 217
2. Objections to the counter-claim evidence ...............................................219....................
A. Objections to the CHC Report ........................................................................
......... 219
B. Objections to the “Veritas” Reports ........................................................................
221
C. Whereabouts of the RSK documents ........................................................................
223
3. The HV artillery documents from Operation Storm ....................................................... 224
4. The scope of the ICTY charges against the Croatian Generals and its significance ...... 225
CHAPTER VII
FACTUAL BACKGROUND OF OPERATION STORM:
MASSIVE CRIMES AGAINST SERBS IN CROATIA 1991-1995
1. Introductory remarks ........................................................................
.............................. 227
2. Massive crimes committed against the Croatian Serbs in 1991/92 ................................ 227
A. Evidence of the massive crimes committed against Serbs in Croatia in 1991/92 ... 228
B. Evidence that the massive crimes committed against
Serbs in 1991/92 have not been fully investigated and prosecuted ......................... 236
C. Evidence that massive crimes against Serbs in 1991/92
were committed by Croatian officials ...................................................................... 237
D. Evidence that the Croatian Government was aware that the Croatian armed
forces had committed massive crimes against the Serbs in 1991/92 ....................... 239
3. Context of national, ethnic and religious hatred ............................................................ 240
4. Massive crimes against Serbs after the deployment of UNPROFOR in 1992 ............... 242
A. Operation Maslenica ........................................................................
....................... 244
B. Medak Pocket ........................................................................
................................... 245
C. Operation Flash ........................................................................
............................... 248
75. Refusal of the peace plans by the RSK .........................................................................
. 253
A. Refusal of the RSK to fully demilitarize ................................................................... 253
B. There was progress between the parties .................................................................. 255
C. Refusal of the Z4 plan ........................................................................
...................... 256
6. It was Croatia that was not genuine in its alleged peaceful efforts ................................ 259
CHAPTER VIII
OPERATION STORM AS A VIOLATION
OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION
1. Relation between the claim and counter-claim .............................................................. 263
2. The protected group ........................................................................
............................... 264
3. Difference between “goal” and “intent” ..........................................................265............
4. Reading of the Brioni Minutes of 31 July 1995 ............................................................. 265
A. Who had to disappear from Croatia: Serb forces, Serb people, or all of them ....... 266
B. Criminal agreement directed against the Serb population was reached at Brio.n ..... 269
C. There was a plan to direct artillery against Serb civilians ..................................... 271
D. The decision to target fleeing civilians was directly provoked
by the wording and atmosphere at the Brioni meeting ............................................ 273
5. Evidence of dolus specialis for the crime of genocide ................................................... 273
6. The conduct of the Croatian Armed Forces confirms
the existence of the genocidal intent ........................................................................
...... 277
A. Croatia undertook deliberate indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina Serbs ........... 278
B. Croatia removed Serbs from the Krajina region by force ....................................... 280
C. Croatia targetted the fleeing Krajina Serbs ............................................................ 284
D. Croatia systematically killed the Krajina Serbs who stayed behind ....................... 291
E. Croatia imposed physical barriers to the return of the Serb refugees .................... 295
F. Croatia imposed legal barriers to the return of the Serb refugees .......................... 296
7. Motive for genocide ..................................................................
.........299.........................
8 A. Solution of the Serbian question in Croatia ............................................................. 299
B. Tuđman’s “scientific” justification of genocide ...................................................... 301
C. Revenge ........................................................................
............................................ 302
8. Specific acts of genocide .........................................................................
....................... 302
A. Killing members of the group ........................................................................
.......... 302
B. Causing serious bodily or mental harm ................................................................... 304
C. Conditions of life ........................................................................
............................. 305
9. Conspiracy to commit genocide ........................................................................
............. 306
10 Failure to punish ........................................................................
.................................... 306
11. Attribution of acts of genocide to Croatia .................................................................... 307
12. Disappearance of the RSK and other consequences of genocide ................................. 310
Summary of Part II ........................................................................
.................................. 317
Submissions ........................................................................
............................................... 321
9 LIST OF ANNEXES TO THE REJOINDER
VOLUME II
SECTION I: Documents relating to the Applicant’s claim
1. Exemplary list of the Serb victims whose names appear on the Applicant’s List of
missing persons submitted as Annex 41 to the Reply;
2. Exemplary list of the Serb victims whose names appear on the Applicant’s Lists of
exhumed bodies submitted as Annex 43 & 44 to the Reply;
3. Exemplary list of the Croat victims registered in Annex 41 to the Reply who went
missing on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina;
4. Exemplary list of the Croat victims registered in Annex 41 to the Reply who went
missing in the Croatian towns that were under the control of the Croatian Government;
5. Military Medical Centre, Novi Sad, Re port no. 2840-2 dated 31 December 2002:
“Medical treatment of persons arrested in the Republic of Croatia 1991-1992”;
6. Letter of the Federal Secretary for National Defence, Army General Veljko Kadijevi ć
to Lord Peter Carrington, dated 27 September 1991;
7. Letter of the Federal Secretary for National Defence, Army General Veljko Kadijevi ć
to Lord Peter Carrington, dated 21 October1991;
8. Letter of Colonel General Andrija Rašeta to the Personal Representative of the UN
Secretary General, Cyrus Vance, dated 9 April 1992;
9. Command of the 1st Military District, Strictly confidential no. 1614-162, 16
November 1991.
11 SECTION II: Documents relating to Chapter VII of the Rejoinder – Factual
background of genocide: massive crimes committed against
Serbs in Croatia 1991-1995
10. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Milan Crnković, dated 2 May 1997 (Situation in the town of Karlovac);
11. District Court in Zrenjanin, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Lazo Stoji ć,
dated 27 November 1996 (Situation in the town of Sisak);
12. OSCE Report: “Unaddressed-fo r war-time killings of civ ilians in Sisak in 1991-92,
April 2009;
13. Statement of Saša Mirkovi ć given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of
Crimes against Humanity and International Law, dated 25 April 1994 (Situation in the
camp in Slavonski Brod);
14. Statement of Witness SER 001 given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of
Crimes against Humanity and International Law, dated 3 March 1994 (Situation in the
camps in Slavonski Brod, Karlovac and Zagreb/Kerestinec);
15. Statement of Witness SER 002 given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of
Crimes against Humanity and International Law, dated 30 December 1993 (Situation
in the camps in Karlovac and Zagreb/Kerestinec);
16. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
Nenad Kanazir, dated 30 April 1997 (Situation in the town of Zadar and CL aorpa, Split);
17. Excerpt from Dušan Starević, “Abridged information about the sufferings of the Serbian
people in Croatia (in the area of Northern Dalmatia) from March 31 to May 10, 1991”, pp.
1-3, Published in Dabi ć, Luki ć, Perović & Šali ć, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic
Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp.46-47;
18. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Marko Dragaš, dated 29 June 1998 (Situation in the Town of Šibenik);
19. Excerpt from the Letter by Ante Karić, Chairman of the Emergency Headquarters for the
Municipality of Gospić, to Dr. Franjo Tu đman, President of the Republic of Croatia,
Published in Dabć i, Lukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic Cleansing in
Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp. 109-111;
20. District Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minut es of the witness hearing of Jovo Krajnovi ć,
dated 1 June 1998 (Situation in Western Slavonia);
1221. Threatening Letter Addressed to Radovan Radosavljevi ć from Daruvar, Published in
Dabić, Lukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic Cleansing in Croatia
1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, p. 25;
22. District Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minut es of the witness hearing of Milka Bun čić
Kukić dated 24 September 1996 (Situation in Western Slavonia);
23. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Đurđa Vujasin, dated 2 May 1997 (Situation in Western Slavonia, Maši ćka
Šagovina Village);
24. Centre for Peace, Non-Violence and Huma n Rights Osijek, Croatia, “Monitoring war
crimes trials: crime in Virovitica”;
25. Tracing request for Miloš Grmuša who went missing in the town of Petrinja on 19
July 1991;
26. List of non grata Serbs posted on several hundred places in Podravska Slatina on 15 January
1992, published in Dabić, Lukić, Perović & Šali ć, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic
Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp. 26-29;
27. Military Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Smilja Ivkovi ć,
dated 27 January 1993 (Situation in the village of Sotin);
28. Municipal Court in Vukovar, Croatia, Minutes of the petitioner hearing of Nada
Nikolić, dated 21 November 2006 (Situation in the town of Vukovar);
29. Excerpt from the letter by Helsinki Watch to Dr. Franjo Tu đman, President of the
Republic of Croatia, concerning crimes committed in Vukovar and Sisak, published in
Dabić, Lukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic Cleansing in Croatia
1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp. 91-93;
30. Statement of Vlatka Stepanovi ć from Borovo, received by the Federal Assembly of
the SFR Yugoslavia on 7 April 1992;
31. Letter of Bogdanka Radović from the Village of Sarvaš to the Federal Assembly of the
SFR Yugoslavia, dated 2 August 1991;
32. List of the Serb Victims killed on 2 August 1991 in Sarvaš, prepared by the Local
Community of Jelenovo, Municipality of Dalj;
33. Receipt for the explosives received by the HDZ of Vinkovci, Županja and Vukovar on
21 November 1990, published in Dabić, Lukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution of Serbs
and Ethnic Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade,
1998, p. 45, according to D. Topi ć & D. Špiši ć, “Slavonian Blood, Chronology of a
War”, Osijek, Croatia, p. 254;
1334. Examples of dismissals of Serbs from jobs in Croatian State Companies, Documents
published in Dabi ć, Luki ć, Perovi ć & Šali ć, “Persecution of Serbs and Ethnic
Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Document s and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp.
30-35;
35. District Court of Zagreb, Ademi & Norac case, excerpt from the Judgment of 29 May
2008 (Medak Pocket);
36. Documents about crimes committed by Cr oat Armed Forces during the military
seizure of the Medak Pocket, published in Dabić, Lukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution
of Serbs and Ethnic Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”,
Belgrade, 1998, pp. 201-215;
37. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Anđelko Đurić, dated 1 July 1998 (Operation Flash);
38. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and He rzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Milena Milivojević, dated 22 September 1995 (Operation Flash);
39. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Dušan Bošnjak, dated 22 September 1995 (Operation Flash);
40. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Dušan Kovač, dated 1 July 1998 (Operation Flash);
41. Basic Court in Gradiška, Bosnia and Herzeg ovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
Radojica Vuković, dated 20 September 1995 (Operation Flash);
42. Basic Court in Prijedor, Bosn ia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
Branko Mudrinić, dated 10 April 1997 (Operation Flash; Camp in Varaždin);
43. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Her zegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing
of Zoran Malinić, dated 27 June 1998 (Operation Flash; Camp Lora, Split).
VOLUME III
SECTION III: Documents relating to Chapter VIII of the Rejoinder –
Operation Storm as a violation of the Genocide Convention
44. ICTY, Gotovina et al ., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Witness John
Geoffrey William Hill, 27 & 28 May 2008, Transcripts, pp. 3736-3741, 3746-3752,
3756-3757, 3766-3768, 3771-3772, 3776, 3778-3779, 3786;
45. ICTY, Gotovina et al ., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the te stimony of Witness Joseph
Lorenzo Claude Bellerose, 7 July 2008, Transcript, pp. 5862-5867, 5870-5874;
1446. ICTY, Gotovina et al ., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Witness Andrew
Brook Leslie, 22 & 23 April 2008, Tr anscript, pp. 1937, 1939-1940, 1942-1943, 1966-
1968, 1972-1973, 1992-1993, 2015, 2046-2047, 2081-2082, 2119-2121;
47. ICTY, Gotovina et al ., IT-060-90, Excerpts from th e testimony of Witness Marija
Večerina, 17 July 2008, Transcript, pp. 6716-6722, 6741;
48. ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Witness Mile Đurić,
12 June 2008, Transcript, pp. 4839-4841, 4843-4844;
49. ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Protected Witness P-
136, 13 & 14 March 2008, Transcript, pp. 643-44, 646-47, 665-66, 668, 673-74, 676-77,
692-93, 747-48, 777-80, 790-91, 800, 803;
50. ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Protected Witness P-
054, 14 May 2008, Transcript, pp. 2813-14, 2819-21;
51. ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-060-90, Excerpts from the testimony of Protected Witness P-
056, 26 May 2008, Transcript, pp. 3532-33, 3546;
52. District Court in Požarevac, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Mirko Mrkobrad,
dated 13 March 1997;
53. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzeg ovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
Boris Martinović, dated 7 May 1997;
54. District Court in Požarevac, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dragomir Kotur,
dated 20 February 1997;
55. Municipal Court in Vršac, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Božo Ivanovi ć,
dated 17 April 1997;
56. District Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Ljubica Krasulja,
dated 13 December 1996;
57. Basic Court in Novi Grad, Bosnia and Herzeg ovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
MO, dated 2 April 1997;
58. District Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hear ing of Dara Valenti ć,
dated 30 August 1995;
59. Municipal Court in Svilajnac, Serbia, Minut es of the witness hearing of Mile Vra č ar,
dated 1 September 1998;
60. District Court in Sombor, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dušanka Mraovi ć,
dated 7 May 1997;
61. Basic Court in Prijedor, Bosnia and Herze govina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
Sava Utržen, dated 7 April 1997;
1562. District Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Petar Batak, dated
2 July 1997;
63. District Court in Leskovac, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Milan Berić, dated
23 September 1996;
64. Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzeg ovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of
JB, dated 20 June 1997;
65. Municipal Court in Apatin, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Jovica Piplica,
dated 30 October 1998;
66. Municipal Court in Vršac, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Željko Dubaji ć,
dated 15 January 1999;
67. Excerpts from the Minutes of the session of the Presidency of the Croatian Democratic
Union (HDZ), held on 11 August 1995 at the Presidential Palace in Zagreb;
68. Excerpts from the Record of a meeting be tween the President of the Republic of
Croatia, Dr. Franjo Tuđman, and Minister Dr. Jure Radić, held on 22 August 1995 at the
Presidential Palace in Zagreb;
69. Excerpts from the Record of a meeting be tween the President of the Republic of
Croatia, Dr. Franjo Tu đman, and the military officials of the Republic of Croatia, held
on 23 August 1995 at the Presidential Palace in Zagreb;
70. BBC, the Speech of President Tu đman in Knin on 26 August 1995, according to
Croatian Radio Zagreb;
71. Jutarnji list, Zagreb, 4 May 1998, “War turned me into a killing machine”.
72. Ivan Zvonimir Čičak, President of the Croatian He lsinki Committee for Human Rights:
“Krajina burning again”, author ized article published in Feral Tribune, Croatia, on 16
March 1998;
73. Amnesty International Briefing to the UN Committee against Torture“, 2010;
74. Youth Initiative for Human Rights Report, “Against Immunity of Power: prosecution of
war crimes in Croatia”, March 2011;
75. Conclusions of the Government of th e Republic of Croatia of 15 April 2011,
communicated to the diplomatic missions accredited in Croatia with the diplomatic note
No. 2081/11 of 19 April 2011;
76. Letter of the Commissariat for Refugees of the Republic of Serbia, No. 019-542/1 of 5
August 2011.
16 LIST OF ACRONYMS
Abbreviantmne Full Comments
ABiH Army of the Republic of Bosniak Army involved in Operation Storm in
Bosnia and Herzegovina August 1995
CHC Croatian Helsinki Committee Non-governmental organization
for Human Rights
ECMM Europ Ceanmunity
Monitoring Mission
FRY Federal Republic of Name of Serbia and Montenegro between 27
Yugoslavia April 1992 and 3 February 2003
HDZ Croatian Democratic Union Leading political party in Croatia from 1990 to
(Hrvatska demokratska 2000
zajednica)
HV Croatian Army (Hrvatska Army of the Republic of Croatia (established
vojska) on 3 November 1991)
HVO Cro Datiervatsko Army of the Herzeg-Bosna (Croatian entity in
vijeće obrane) Bosnia and Herzegovina) involved in Operation
Storm
ICC International Criminal Court
ICTR InternatiiTalrilnalu
for Rwanda
ICTY InternatirTainalnal
for the former Yugoslavia
ILC International Law Commission
JNA Yugoslav People’s Army Army of the SFRY (ceased to exist on 27 April
(Jugoslovenska narodna 1992)
armija)
MUP Ministry of Interior Police forces of the former Yugoslav Republics
(Ministarstvo unutrašnjih
poslova)
NDH Independent State of Croatia Nazi puppet State (existed from 1941 to 1945)
(Nezavisna Država Hrvatska)
RSK Republika Srpska Krajina Serb entity in Croatia (existed from 19
December 1991 to 5 August 1995)
17 SAOs Serbian Autonomous Regions The 1991 Serb entities in Croatia: SAO Krajina
(Srpske Autonomne Oblasti) (changed its name into RSK on 19 December
1991); SAO Western Slavonia and SAO
Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium
(both joined to RSK on 26 February 1992)
SDS Serbian Democratic Party Leading political party of the Serbs in Croatia
(Srpska demokratska stranka) from 1991 to 1995
SFRY Socialist Federal Republic of Federal State composed of six Republics:
Yugoslavia Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia (ceased to
exist on 27 April 1992)
SVK Serbian Army of Krajina Army of the Republika Srpska Krajina
(Srpska vojska Krajine)
TO TerrDitofnlce Armed forces organized on the territorial basis
(Teritorijalna odbrana)
UNHCR United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees
UNMO Un iteioiitary
Observers
UNPA United Nations Protected Area Safe heaven in Croatia under the protection of
UNPROFOR
UNCRO United Nations Confidence United Nations administration (replaced
Restoration Operation UNPROFOR on 31 March 1995)
UNPROFOR United Nations Protection Peace-keeping force in Croatia and Bosnia and
Force Herzegovina from 1991 to 1995
VJ Yugoslav Army (Vojska Army of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Jugoslavije)
ZNG National Guard Corps (Zbor HDZ militia
narodne garde)
18 CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY OBSERVATIONS
1. The procedural reference
1. This Rejoinder is submitted in accordance with the Court’s Order of 20 January 2009.
It supplements the arguments and evidence submitted by the Respondent in the
Counter-Memorial of 4 January 2010, and re sponds to the issues raised by the
Applicant in its Reply of 20 December 2010.
2. The issues that still divide the Parties
2. The Rejoinder is structured in conformity w ith the rule that the Parties’ second round
written submissions shall not merely repeat their contentions, “but shall be directed to
bringing out the issues that still divide them”. 1The Respondent considers that the
issues that still divide Serbia and Croatia have to be reasonably limited to the subject-
matter of the case, with respect to which the Court’s jurisdiction is based exclusively
on Article IX of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (“the Genocide Convention”), and they should not extend to larger historical
and political disagreements between the Pa rties. For this reason, the Respondent
directs its evidence and arguments to the following factual and legal points:
a) The Republic of Serbia cannot be responsible for acts and omissions that allegedly
occurred prior to its existence as a State, i.e. prior to 27 April 1992;
b) The crimes committed against the Croats during the armed conflict in the territory of
the Republic of Croatia from 1991 to 1995 do not fulfil the legal elements of the crime
of genocide, nor of any other act punishable pursuant to Article III of the Genocide
Convention;
c) The crimes committed in the territory of the Republic of Croatia from 1991 to 1995
cannot be attributed to the Republic of Serbia in accordance with the rules of State
responsibility;
1
Article 49, para. 3, of the Rules of Court.
21 d) Croatian de jure organs committed genocide against the Krajina Serbs during and after
Operation Storm in 1995, which entails internationa l responsibility of the Republic of
Croatia.
3. Furthermore, the Respondent believes that , pursuant to the sound administration of
justice, the question of methods of proof th at still divide the Pa rties has particular
importance for the establishment of factual findings in this case.
4. In order to avoid any doubt, the Respondent preserves the factual claims and legal
arguments, as set out in the Counter-Memorial.
3. Overview of the Applicant’s case
5. The Applicant’s claim is entirely without f oundation in fact and in law. Following the
evidentiary approach previously adopted in the Memorial, the Applicant continues
with its unusual manner of presenting ev idence in the second round of the written
proceedings. In light of the very precise issues relevant to this case, the Reply of 20
December 2010 is an ambivalent, almost incomprehensible and often misleading
compilation of factual allegations and lega l arguments. These introductory comments
will briefly touch upon some of the most obvi ous contradictions of the Applicant’s
position, which will be explained in more detail in the following chapters of the
Rejoinder.
A. The Applicant consistently avoids producing evidence for its most serious allegation
6. Whereas the Memorial of 1 March 2001 a lleges that 10,572 persons were killed and
2
1,419 were missing during the five-year-conflict, the Reply claims that “[m]ore than
12,211 people were killed in the Serb military campaign and 1,030 persons are still
missing and unaccounted for”. The Applicant, however, does not offer any proof that
would confirm the alleged number of victims. Rather, the Reply simply refers to four
lists made by the Applicant’s State bodies themselves.
2
3Memorial, para. 1.09.
Reply, para. 9.7.
227. The first of these is the Updated List of Missing Persons , drawn up on 1 September
4
2010, which contains data on 1,024 individuals , and among which are many victims
5
of Serb ethnicity. Furthermore, this list contains the names of Croats who were
6
missing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as in some places that were under the full
and exclusive control of the Croatian Governmental forces and far away from military
7
operations. The list also contains the names of ethnic Croats who went missing during
the offensive criminal Operations Maslenica and Storm which were undertaken by the
Croatian Government (see infra).
8. The second is the Updated List of Persons Detained in Camps under Serbian Control ,
8
It contains the names of 7,708 individuals. It is unclear how the list of detained
persons, of whom the vast majority remain ed alive and were subsequently exchanged
for prisoners of Serbian ethnicity, can amount to proof in support of the allegation that
12,211 people were killed. The list is rather a ffirmative evidence that individuals who
controlled those detention facilities did not have any intent to kill the detainees, let
alone to destroy them as a substantial part of their national group.
9. Finally, the Applicant offers two Lists of Exhumed Bodies , which contain in total
3,661 names. Again, the lists also contain the names of some Serb victims killed by
Croatian units, 10 as well as many unknown persons whose ethnicity has not yet been
confirmed. This leads the Respondent to conclude that the Applicant avoids producing
a list of the alleged 12,211 victims for one or both of the following reasons: a) such a
list does not exist and the number of victims is significantly smaller that the Applicant
claims, b) the list includes a number of ethnic Serbs, citizens of the Republic of
Croatia, who were killed by Croatian armed forces. For these same reasons the
Applicant strongly contests the lists of killed and missing persons of Serb origin made
by the non-governmental organization “Veritas”, in spite of the fact that the
Respondent did not specifically rely upon that document in its counter-claim.
4Annex 41 to the Reply.
5See Annex 1.
6
7See Annex 3.
8See Annex 4.
9Annex 42 to the Reply.
10nnexes 43 & 44 to the Reply.
See Annex 2.
23 According to the “Veritas” updated lists, 6,279 Serbs were killed (out of whom 4,269
11
were identified and buried, and 2,010 are still registered as missing).
10. The Respondent reiterates its sincere regret for all victims of the war and of the crimes
committed during the armed conflict in Croatia, whatever legal characterisation of
those crimes is adopted, and whatever the national and ethnic origin of the victims.
Each victim deserves full respect and remembrance.
B. The Applicant acknowledges that evidentiary materials annexed to the Memorial are
invalid
11. The Counter-Memorial contains, inter alia , an objection to the witness statements
annexed to the Memorial which do not fulfil minimum evidentiary requirements and
are accordingly inadmissible. The Responde nt has pointed out that 332 out of 433
statements do not contain even the signat ure of the person who allegedly made the
statement. Additionally, the Respondent has found that in 154 out of 433 statements
the person or body that took the statement is not indicated. Another 209 statements are
actually the official records of police inte rrogations. These cannot even be used as
evidence in cases before either the Croatian or Serbian courts. 13The Applicant’s
casual approach to the question of testimony reflects its overall attitude to this case
involving charges of exceptional gravity against the respondent State.
12. In order to preserve the misleading impression that there is a large body of evidence
supporting its contentions, after filing the Me morial the Applicant then decided to
have its police collect the signatures that were missing on witness statements. Thus,
14
the Court can find 188 of these delayed signatures attached to the Reply, together
15
with a claim that 106 of “the original witnesses” are now deceased. This is
undoubtedly a very inventive approach to evidence law, not only in relation to the
practice of the International Court of Justi ce (the Court), but to judicial practice in
general. The Respondent concludes that the Applicant, through this subsequent action
11
12Available on www.veritas.org.rs.
Counter-Memorial, para. 155.
13Ibid, para. 156.
14Annex 30 to the Reply.
15Reply, para. 2.43.
24 of gathering signatures, has actually ackno wledged the invalidity of the large amount
of the documentary evidence submitted in s upport of its Application. Ultimately, it is
for the Court to decide upon the admissibility and probative weight of these materials.
Respondent will further explain its position in Chapter III below.
C. The Applicant fails to prove the existence of thd eolus specialisof the crime of genocide
13. The Applicant submitted its Memorial on 1 March 2001. Ten years later, reliable
evidence of the existence of the required specific intent (dolus specialis) for the crime
of genocide, described as the intent to de stroy the group of Croat people as such, in
whole or in part, is still absent. In Ch apter VIII of the Counter-Memorial, the
Respondent provided a detailed and convincing response to the 16 specific factors on
which the Applicant based its inferences. 16 Nonetheless, the Re ply has not touched
upon that analysis. Rather, it has merely listed the 16 factors again. 17 The Applicant’s
further legal analysis of the elements that should establish genocidal intent does not
have any link with the evidence of the present case. This ex cathedra presentation can
be used by any party in any case based on the Genocide Convention, including that of
the Respondent, but has absolutely no bearing on the present case.
14. One of the rare relevant and reliable do cuments called upon by the Applicant is the
Judgment of a Trial Chamber of the Inte rnational Criminal Tribunal for the former
18
Yugoslavia (hereinafter “the ICTY”) in the Martić case. The Applicant has devoted
considerable energy to offering an explanation as to why the ICTY Prosecutor did not
charge Milan Martić, “one of the most important and influential political figures in the
SAO Krajina and the RSK Government, [who] as Minister of Interior […] exercised
absolute authority over the MUP” 19 with the crime of genocide. 20 Yet, as a matter of
fact, it should be noted again that the Trial Chamber acquitted Marti ć of the crime of
extermination because it found that “[t]he element that the killings be committed on
large scale [had] not been met”. 21
16
17Counter-Memorial, paras. 947-984.
18Reply, para. 9.6.
19ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007.
Ibid, para. 498.
20See Reply, paras. 2.27 – 2.31.
21ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 204.
2515. The Applicant is fully aware of its weak cas e, and that awareness is the sole reason
why it repeatedly claims that the Responde nt has failed to adduce any affirmative
evidence in rebuttal to the Memorial (Reply, paras. 1.10 & 9.28), that the Respondent
has a duty to provide an “explanation” (paras. 2.81–2.84), and that the Respondent has
refused to disclose material evidence (paras. 1.13-1.14, 2.85-2.91), in spite of the fact
that the Respondent has so far disclosed 223 confidential documents requested by the
Applicant. The Respondent understands these claims merely as the Applicant’s quiet
attempt to deflect the burden of proof.
D. The Applicant’s claim is artificial: no one in Croatia believes that the Croats were
the victims of genocide
16. Another paradox of the Applicant’s position can be found in the recent statements of the
highest Croatian officials: no one seriously believes that the crime of genocide was really
committed against the Croatian people during the armed conflict in that country. No one
in Croatia today seriously expects that the Court will uphold the Applicant’s claim.
17. Thus, the President of Croatia , H.E. Professor Ivo Josipovi ć, who is also a law
professor and prominent expert in the field of international criminal law, believed to
be one of the authors of the Memorial, on 14 November 2010 stated that both States
are “hostages of their claims, which are the time-relics of the different relations
22
between Croatia and Serbia”. Similarly, Professor Mirjan Damaška, Agent of
Croatia, as a guest columnist of the Cr oatian weekly “Nacional” on 13 March 2007,
openly discussed the slim chances of the Croatian Application being upheld by the
Court, but still advocated for the continuation of the proceedings because this would
lead, according to him, to “a useful defeat” of the applicant State. 23
18. In addition, it should be noted that the Reply contains many references to books related to
the armed conflicts in the former Yugoslavia and its dissolution (B. Joć v,iCIA report, N.
Barić, L. Silber & A. Little, etc.). The Applicant, however, disregards the fact that these
books do not even remotely lead to any conclusion that the events in Croatia were
consequences of a genocidal campaign led against the Croat people as such.
22http://www.tportal.hr/vijesti/hrvatska/96247/Tadicem-razgovarati-o-povl…
23Mirjan Damaška, “Hrvatsku tužbu ne treba povu ći”, Nacional, No. 591, 13 March 2007, available on
http://www.nacional.hr/clanak/print/32333
26 E. From “All Serbs in a single State” to genocide: the missing connection
19. The Applicant widely exploits the political aim of the Serbian leadership in the
beginning of the 1990s that, in the situation of the dissolution of the former SFRY, the
only acceptable solution would be that all Serbs continue to live in a single State. Such
a programme cannot be seen as genocidal per se, if it was not connected with a plan to
destroy other national and ethnic groups. In the absence of any proof of such nature,
the Applicant unsuccessfully turns to the “Idea of Greater Serbia” of the Serbian
oppositional politician Vojislav Šešelj, without any proof that this idea was genocidal
or that it had been accepted by the Serbian leadership. The political doctrine of
Serbian expansionism, which has been presented in the Memorial as one of the factors
24
from which the genocidal intent can be inferred, is also discussed in the chapter
dealing with historical and political background, and again, as evidence of the
incitement to genocide. Serbian expansionism thus becomes the leading thesis of the
Croatian case, almost as a substitute for the crime of genocide.
20. Again, the Applicant cannot establish this thesis without new contradictions emerging. If
President Miloševć i and his supporters were really so eager to establish the Greater Serbia,
then why did the Republic of Serbia not accept the SAO Krajina decision of 1 April 1991 to
25
join Serbia, or why did Slobodan Milošević exert his political influence to prevent the
SAO Krajina uniting with Bosnian Krajina, another region with a majority Serb population,
in the summer of 1991, or why did Serbian leadership put pressure on the RSK in February
1992 to accept the Vance Plan for comprehensive settlement of the conflict. 26
F. Mr. Ante Marković as a prime minister of a “non-existent State”
21. In rebuttal to the Respondent assertion that the SFRY, in spite of the drawn out and
complicated process of its dissolution, con tinued to exist during late 1991 and early
1992 and, subsequently, that the Republic of Se rbia cannot be responsible for the acts
and omissions that allegedly occur prior to its existence as an independent State, the
Applicant devotes much attention to explaining how Serbia as one of the six Yugoslav
24Memorial, para. 8.16 (1).
25See Counter-Memorial, para. 492.
26See Reply, para. 3.121, ft. 272.
27 Federal Units took control over the SFRY Presidency and other Federal Institutions. 27
These two hypotheses are not necessarily in opposition: even if Serbia did take control
of the SFRY Presidency ( quod non), this does not mean that the SFRY as a State
ceased to exist. In other words, the fact ual findings of the ICTY Judgment in the
Martić case, according to which Serbian President Slobodan Miloševi ć participated in
a joint criminal enterprise (JCE) with the JNA General Veljko Kadijevi ć, does not
mean that the international responsibility for the acts and omissions that took place in
1991 can be transferred to the State which would came into existence in April 1992.
22. The Respondent has submitted extensive evidence on the functioning of the SFRY organs
during 1991 and early 1992, 29when most crimes described in the Memorial allegedly
were committed, but the Applicant has failed to respond to this evidence. For example, the
Yugoslav Government (the Federal Executive Council) was very active throughout
1991. Its Prime Minister was Mr. Ante Marković from Croatia. The Applicant has not
addressed this significant fact in its Reply. On the other hand, the Applicant argues the
relevance of the fact that Mr. Stjepan Mesć i, the Chairman of the SFRY Presidency as a
representative of Croatia, requested his salary from the Federal Institutions until 1 January
1992, because “no salary was in fact paid after October 1991”. 31 The Respondent
considers that the Applicant’s rebuttal here is actually irrelevant: Mr. Mesi ć is free to
claim any unpaid part of his salary before either the Croatian or Serbian courts, because
both States are the equal successors of the former SFR Yugoslavia. Something else is
relevant at this point: Mr. Mesi ć, the official representative of Croatia, was de jure
Chairman of the Federal Presidency till the end of 1991. 32
G. PresidentMiloševi ć as “a leader of successful insurrectional movement”
23. In the same manner in which the Applicant tries to portray the SFRY President Mesi ć
and the SFRY Prime Minister Markovi ć as officials of a “phantom state”, 33 Serbian
President Milošević is portrayed as a leader of a successful insurrectional movement. 34
27Reply, paras. 3.87-3.108.
29See Counter-Memorial, paras. 522-529.
30Ibid, paras. 519-537. See also Annexes 23-31 to the Counter-Memorial.
31Ibid, para. 530.
32Reply, p. 82, footnote 224; see also Annex 26 to the Counter-Memorial.
33As a matter of fact, it seems that he was also de facto chairman, since he requested to be paid for his work.
34Reply, para. 7.48.
Ibid, paras. 7.60-7.63.
28 This is, of course, entirely artificial but the only possible way of connecting the
Applicant’s claim with the legal principles of State responsibility, and more precisely
with Article 10(2) of the IL C Articles on State Responsibilit y. With total indifference
to all available historical sources dealing with the tragic dissolution of the former
Yugoslavia, the Court, according to the Applicant, should ignore how the Republic of
Croatia seceded from Yugoslavia, and how the Krajina Serbs claimed independence
from Croatia. On the contrary, the Applicant asks the Court to imagine that the
Republic of Serbia was in fact a secessionist movement within the Federal State. Yet,
the Applicant offers no reasonable explanation as to why the Serbian leadership,
accused by the Applicant of the political a im “All Serbs in one State”, would be in
favour of creating a new State. All Serbs alr eady lived in a single State. Its name was
Yugoslavia. 35
H. The Applicant asks for a retroactive application of the Genocide Convention
24. The final but not the least of the paradoxes of Applicant’s position in this case is an
analysis by which the Genocide Convention is not subject to any temporal
36
limitations, because it is universal in scope and contains obligations erga omnes.
The Court can surely appreciate how many new cases might be filed with its
Registry as a consequence of this attitude, if it were correct. One of them would be a
case concerning genocide committed by the Independent State of Croatia against the
Serb people during the WWII: “We have won twice”, Croatian President Mesi ć said.
“We won on 10 April [the date in 1941 wh en the Independent St ate of Croatia was
created] when the Axis Powers recognized the Croatian State and we won again
because, after the war, we were on the winning side sitting at the table with the
victorious powers.” 37
35Indeed, it seems that the Applicant does not draw any significant distinction between the idea of
Yugoslavianism and idea of Greater Se rbia, as it was suggested by Šime Đodan already in 1971, after the
Croatian Spring Movement: “[I]f [a child] is from a mixed marriage, it may be that it is nationally neutral and to
gradually evolve into a Yugoslav, to finally, due to a series of circumstances, become an object of political
manipulation in favour of the so-called Yugoslav nation, which never existed nor will it really exist, since
belonging to the ‘Yugoslav’ nation is essentially belonging to the Serbian nation, considering that, in the final
political analysis, Yugoslavianism, in the national sense, is ‘great Serbianism’.”article was published in
Studentski list, Zagreb, in October 1971. In 1990s Đodan became minister in the HDZ Government.
36Reply, paras. 7.3-7.31.
37See Counter-Memorial, para. 441, as well as Reply, para. 3.28.
294. Overview of the Respondent’s Case
25. From the very beginning of the inter-et hnic tensions and nati onalistic euphoria in
Croatia, the HDZ Government openly demonstrated its derogatory attitudes and
38
discriminatory policies towards the Serb people. The hate speech against Serbs as a
national and ethnic group was directed to wards their dehumanization. Serbs were
dismissed from their positions in the State administration and the police service, health
services, public education and the media. Under the new 1990 Croatian Constitution,
the Serb people lost its constitutive position in the Republic and were transformed into
a national minority. The discrimination and persecution of the Serbs increased at the
beginning of the armed conflict in 1991. Thousands of Serb houses were blown up
during 1991 and 1992, while an ethnically motivated killing campaign was carried out
in some Croatian cities.
26. This persecution of Serbs continued in 1992-93 through the offensive military actions
of the Croatian Government at Miljevci Plateau, Maslenica and the Medak Pocket, and
was always accompanied by serious viola tions of international humanitarian law. 39
Finally, in 1995, Operations Flash and Storm were carried out with the clear aim to
ethnically cleanse the territo ries under the control of the Krajina Serbs. As the
Croatian General Bobetko testifies in his memoirs: “…it was a part of the overall plan
of preparations for the final operation of th e Croatian Army that subsequently turned
40
into Storm with the cleansing of the whole territory”.
27. Mr. Stig Hansen, one of the monitors of the European Community Monitoring
Mission (ECMM) in the UN Sector South, gave the following statement in his
testimony at the ICTY trial against Croatian Commander Ante Gotovina and others:
“[T]he operation [Storm] had the objective to re-take the geography of the RSK [...]
with an empty population“. 41
38Counter-Memorial, paras. 430-433, 439-441, 450-466.
39Ibid, paras. 1119-1134.
40See J. Bobetko, Sve moje bitke [All My Battles], p. 407 (Annex 50 to the Counter-Memorial).
41ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Transcripts, 22 January 2009, p. 14905.
3028. The Respondent has produced sufficient evidentiary materials to support its claim that
Operation Storm, which was led by the Croatian de jure organs, fulfils the legal
elements of the crime of genocide, and consequently that Croatia violated its
obligations under the Genocide Conventi on. The statements of President Tu đman at
the Brioni meeting on 31 July 1995, when the operation was planned in detail, can
serve as direct evidence of the existence of an intent to destroy the part of the Serb
national and ethnical group living in the Krajina Region (UN Protected Areas North
42
and South). In addition, the existence of the genocidal intent ( dolus specialis) was
confirmed by many other indi cators and in particular by the subsequent magnitude of
the criminal activities against the Krajina Serbs during and after Operation Storm,
including: a) the deliberate indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina towns, b) expulsion
of the Serb civilian population, c) massive killings of those Serbs who decided to stay
in the UN Protected Areas, d) attacks against the helpless refugee columns, e)
embargo on the free movement of UN observers, f) massive destruction and looting of
Serb property, and finally, g) by imposin g administrative measures to prevent the
43
Krajina Serbs returning to their homes.
29. The consequences of the genocidal Operation Storm are still visible in the region.
More than 50,000 refugees from Croatia still live in Serbia today, while only 68,000
44
have decided to return to Croatia. Croatia has not convicted any person responsible
for the massive killings committed during and after Operation Storm. On the contrary,
45
the criminal acts committed are even celebrated in Croatia as a public holiday.
5. Overview of the Applicant’s Reply to the counter-claim
30. In support of the counter-claim, the Res pondent has produced relevant and reliable
documents (see Volume 4 of the Counter-Memorial). On the other side, the Applicant,
in its voluminous and repetitive response, offe rs a very general denial of all of the
charges. The Applicant’s position is based exclusively on its own political and
historical appreciation of the events, while the evidence presented in the Counter-
Memorial is completely ignored.
42See Counter-Memorial, paras. 1195-1204.
43See Chapter VIII below, paras. 727-786.
44See Annex 76.
45See para. 831 infra.
3131. When the Applicant disputes the reliability of some materials, this is done in a
sweeping manner that betrays a double standard. Thus, the Applicant inter alia points
out that the Respondent relies upon the report of expert R. Theunens who has been
“appointed by the [ICTY] Prosecutor”. 46 Yet, at the same time, the Applicant sets out
some of its arguments relying mainly on the report of R. de la Brosse, “compiled at the
Request of the OTP of the ICTY” 47 in the Milošević case. Furthermore, the Applicant
itself relies throughout the Reply on various re ports prepared by the same expert R.
Theunens. 48
32. Similarly, the Applicant contends that the testimony of UN official observers in
Gotovina et al. forms part of the material for th e Court to consider, “but it does not
49
enjoy any special status”. The Applicant forgets that the Respondent has never
acclaimed any special status for this testimony, but rather that it be acknowledged as
the first-hand experience of impartial persons who were in a direct position to get
knowledge about the key events during Operation Storm and who have been
subsequently cross-examined before the UN Criminal Tribunal. Nevertheless, the
Applicant claims that this testimony is of “no greater evidential value that any other
statement or testimony on which either party relies”. 50 Presumably, the Applicant here
pretends to secure the equal probative value for the unsigned statements produced by
its Police and other State and para-State bodies.
33. The Applicant does not admit that the Croatian forces, in executing the Brioni plan,
committed any crime during and after Operation Storm. It rather reluctantly states that
“it may well be that some of these deaths were attributable to the acts of individual
members of the HV and the Croatian MUP, and it may be that some of those
51
amounted to the war crime of murder”. No particular remorse has been shown for the
victims of the crimes committed by the Croatian forces. Even more, the Reply unfairly
suggests that the Serbs met their fate by accident; or that they died from natural
causes; or committed suicide; or were kille d by unknown persons in Bosnia; or, even
if they were found killed, that there is insufficient biographical data for their
46
47Reply, para. 11.71.
48Annex 106 to the Reply.
For example, see footnotes 129 and 130 on page 120 of the Reply or footnote 158 (page 124).
49Reply, para. 2.33.
50Ibid.
51Ibid, para. 12.50.
32 52
identification, that is to say, they cannot be treated as Serb victims . The Reply of the
Republic of Croatia submitted on 20 December 2010 thus can be read as a “defence
submission” written in the name of Franjo Tu đman, a member of the JCE, who has
post mortem found his rightful place in the ICTY Judgment of 15 April 2011 for
which Croatian Generals Gotovina and Markač were sentenced.
34. The Respondent notes with satisfaction that the Applicant has accepted most of the
legal analysis presented in Chapter II of the Counter-Memorial, which deals with the
interpretation of the Genocide Convention. Indeed, this dispute is not primarily about
different legal interpretations of the Genoc ide Convention, but rather about the facts
and their legal characterization. In the view of the Respondent, the documents annexed
to the counter-claim are convincing evid ence that the crime of genocide was
committed against the Krajina Serbs at least during and after Operation Storm in 1995.
With this Rejoinder, the Respondent s ubmits eye-witness statements as new
evidentiary material, fully in accordance with the rules of the SFRY criminal
proceedings. It means that these statemen ts were taken by the Criminal Court and
signed by the witness in question. 53 The Respondent also submits a number of
transcripts from the meetings of President Tu đman in August 1995 54 that took place
immediately after Operation Storm, which entirely confirm the counter-claim.
6. Some comments concerning the historical and political background
35. There is no doubt that the Parties have so far presented to the Court most of their
official views to the over all historical and political context of the 1990’s armed
conflict in Croatia. The Parties have done so in an atte mpt to convince the Court that
the views of their respective governments can assist in better understanding the
political events and the origins of that shameful war. However, each side has accused
the other’s account of being “one-sided, biased”, 55 “incomplete, inaccurate and in
numerous places misleading” . 56
52
53For examples, see Reply, paras. 11.87, 11.92, 11.100.
Annexes 52-66.
54Annexes 67-69.
55Counter-Memorial, para. 390.
56Reply, para. 3.4.
3336. Taking into account both perspectives, the Coutrcan at least better understand how deep
the historical discordance between the two sides lies. Finally, it is for the Court to decide
how helpful these two narratives are for the subject matter of this case. It bears repeating
that the case only concerns the crime of genocide. The Respondent will not further
discuss this issue, but in order to avoid any doubt, it expressly denies all the Applicant’s
claims from Chapter 2 of the Memorial and Chapter 3 of the Reply that are not
confirmed by the presentation of the facts contained in the Counter-Memorial.
37. Nevertheless, it is very interesting to note how passionately the Applicant invites the
Court to read the various admissions made by the Respondent (for instance, that
Serbian nationalists misused recollections of the past, that Serbian nationalism was the
leading political idea prior to October 2000, and so on). 57Yet, this should also be read
as a significant difference between the Gove rnment of Serbia and the Government of
Croatia today, because there has still been no serious admission of the nationalistic
policy pursued by the Tuđman’s HDZ regime in 1990s by Croatia.
38. It is also very interesting to note that the Respondent, in its presentation of the
historical facts, has tried to refer to Croatian and international sources as much as
58 59
possible, while the Applicant in the Reply frequently relies upon its own sources.
This may originate from a misunderstanding of the weight to be attributed to different
forms of evidence before the Court, or from a rigid political attitude that national
accounts are sufficient in understanding a nation’s role in history.
39. Finally, the Respondent obser ves with satisfaction that the Applicant has neither
contested nor denied the Respondent's presen tation of facts concerning the crime of
genocide committed against Serbs, Jews and Roma in the Independent State of Croatia
between 1941 and 1945. This is therefore not in dispute.
57Ibid, para. 3.5.
58Croatian authors cited by the Respondent in the Counter-Memorial are, for example: F. Jeli ć-Butić, A. Pavelić,
M. Peršen, I. Goldstein, F. Tuđman, V. Ivančić, O. Žunec, N. Barić, M. Špegelj, etc. International authors: E. G.
von Horstenau, I. Gutman, K. Pfeifer, E. Zurrof, L. Silber&A. Little, J. Lampe, CIA Report, etc. The Croatian
historical sources: Code of Legal Decres and Orders of the Independent State of Croatia, the 1946 Report of the
State Commission of Croatia for the Determination of the Crimes of the Occupation Forces and their
59llaborators.
For example, the Applicant frequently refers to the following Croatian authors: F. Tuđman, S. Mesić, Lj.
Boban, J. Lovrić, M. Čulić, J. Jurčević, S. Biserko, O. Žunec, N. Barić, D. Marijan, etc.
60Counter-Memorial, paras. 397–420.
347. Structure of the Rejoinder
40. Following these introductory remarks, the Rejo inder is divided into two parts. Part I
addresses the Applicant’s claim and contains a rebuttal to the factual allegations and
legal arguments presented in the Reply, and Part II is devoted to the counter-claim.
41. Part I comprises four chapters. Chapter II contains responses to arguments raised by
the Applicant in Chapter 7 of the Reply concerning the relevance of conduct preceding
27 April 1992 and 8 October 1991 respectively. The Respondent considers that this
issue, as a question of jurisdiction and admissibility, has a preliminary character.
42. Chapter III addresses the Applicant’s approach to the production of evidence, which is
strongly objected. Notwithstanding the question of admissibility and probative weight
of the evidence produced by the Applicant, Chapter IV responds to the Applicant’s
factual and legal arguments concerning th e application of the Genocide Convention,
with the conclusion that the conduct descri bed in the Reply does not fulfil the legal
elements of the crime of genocide, nor of any other act punishable pursuant to Article
III of the Genocide Convention. Chapter V responds to the Applicant’s position vis-à-
vis questions of the application of the rule s on State responsibility with respect to the
alleged conduct, concluding that the crimes committed in the territory of the Republic
of Croatia from 1991 to 1995, regardless of th eir legal characterisation, cannot be
attributed to the Republic of Serbia.
43. Part II comprises three chapters. Chapter VI reviews the evidence produced by the
Respondent in support to its counter-claim. Chapter VI I rebuts the Applicant’s
allegations concerning the events preceding Operation Storm, as an introduction to
genocide committed against the Krajina Serbs in 1995. Finally, Chapter VIII contains
factual and legal rebuttal to Chapters 11 a nd 12 of the Reply; it further proves that
Croatian de jure organs committed genocide against the Krajina Serbs during and after
Operation Storm, which entails international responsibility of the Republic of Croatia.
44. The annexes to the Rejoinder include 75 written documents divided into three
sections: documents relating to the Applicant’s claim (Section I); documents relating
to the factual background of genocide (S ection II), and documents relating to
Operation Storm as a violation of the Genocide Convention (Section III).
35 PART I
THE APPLICANT’S CLAIM CHAPTER II
RELEVANCE OF CONDUCT PRECEDING 27 APRIL 1992
AND 8 OCTOBER 1991
1. Introduction
45. In Chapter 7 of its Rejoinder the Applicant addresses the Court’s “Jurisdiction over
Acts Prior to 27 April”. Notwithstanding this title, the chapter addresses jurisdictional
aspects as well as questions of substantive law.
46. Croatia argues that Article IX of the Genocide Convention c onfers upon the Court
jurisdiction over acts and omissions preda ting 27 April 1992 (including even those
predating 8 October 1991). What is more, it claims that conduct predating these dates
(and allegedly violating provisions of the Ge nocide Convention) is attributable to
Serbia and with respect to which claims can be brought by Croatia. This, it further
argues, is true irrespective of the fact that Serbia only came into being as a State on 27
April 1992, and irrespective of the further fact that Croatia itself only gained
independence (and thus statehood) on 8 October 1991.
47. Before entering into further details, it is worth noting the unusual character of
Croatia’s claim. This may be worth underlining as Croatia pretends to ignore some of
the essential features of its reliance on conduct predating 27 April 1992 and 8 October
1991 respectively. In fact, from Croatia’s written pleadings, one gains the impression
that it is perfectly in order that facts nd materials predating Serbia’s and Croatia’s
existence as States should be introduced into these proceedings. It is not. Indeed, these
proceedings – if Croatia’s argument is to be accepted – might become the first
contentious case opposing (as far as conduct predating 27 April 1992 and 8 October
1991 is concerned) two non-States.
48. As far as the Respondent is concerned, conduct predating 27 April 1992 is based on and
relates to the conduct of the Respondent’s predecessor State, the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). Indeed, Croatia in reality claims that Serbia, as one
among several equal successor States of the SFRY, may be held responsible for acts
39 committed by organs of its predecessor State in a period during which Serbia still
constituted a mere constituent entity of the SFRY. It is clear that, by not being a State
prior to 27 April 1992, Serbia could not incur responsibility under the normal rules of
State responsibility. Public international law of course has a long history of addressing
questions relating to the transfer of statehood. Yet, it addresses them through the vehicle
of State succession. Serbia submits that this indeed would be the natural way of looking at
this case insofar as it involves conduct predating 27 April 1992 and 8 October 1991.
Croatia however has decided not to approach this case through the lens of State
succession. In the whole of Chapter 7 of its Rejoinder, it only once engages with questions
relating to Serbia’s potential succession to responsibility – and that is in a brief reply to a
statement made in Judge Tomka’s separate opinion appended to the Court’s Judgment on
Preliminary Objections. This statement indeed clarifies the reasons that prompted
Croatia to avoid the most natural way of dealing with conduct predating the coming into
existence of the two Parties, namely that the issue of succession to responsibility does not
62
come within the jurisdiction of the Court under Article IX of the Genocide Convention.
Chapter 7 of Croatia’s Reply is an attempt to circumvent that simple fact.
49. Another alternative would have been to approach the Par ties’ conduct predating their
existence as independent States from the perspective of the scope of application
ratione temporis of the Genocide Convention. If indeed Croatia was serious in
claiming violations of the Genocide Convention with regard to a time when either one,
or both, of the Parties had not achieved stat ehood, it would have been natural to assert
in a straightforward manner that the tr eaty allegedly violated, the Genocide
Convention, applied retroactively. Yet, again, Croatia does not make that argument, at
least not in a way that could be characterised as “straightforward”. In particular, its
Reply leaves unanswered the manifold arguments submitted by Serbia demonstrating
that the Genocide Convention does not apply retroactively. 63Instead, Croatia, as will
be shown in more detail below, seeks to introduce retroactivity through the backdoor,
by artificially stretching concepts such as the notion of obligations erga omnes or by
blending treaty and customary rules against genocide.
61Reply, paras. 7.70 and 7.71. Other uses of the term “succession” are in citations (e.g. para. 7.16), relate to
conduct of Croatia (e.g. para. 7.35) or describe what Serbia/the FRY has not done (e.g. in para. 7.50).
62Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, Sep. Op. Tomka, para. 13.
63Counter-Memorial, paras. 224 et seq.
4050. Croatia asserts that in addre ssing questions of jurisdiction ratione temporis, materiae
and personae in detail, Serbia is being “formalistic” so as to avoid responsibility. It is
not. Rather, Serbia’s positi on is based on fundamental notions of statehood, State
responsibility and the normal rules of treaty law, as codified in the Vienna Convention
on the Law of Treaties. In c ontrast, Croatia avoi ds approaching the early aspects of
this case in any principled manner, but instead amalgamates legal concepts that do not
fit the historical process of the dissolution of the SFRY. It does so since it is certainly
aware that, while none of the acts for which, allegedly, the Respondent is responsible,
amount to genocide, any acts that have taken place after 27April 1992 and which are
referred to in Croatia’s Memorial are even further removed from the possibility of
amounting to genocide.
51. As a matter of fact, out of approximately 2,500 and 3,000 alleged killings of Croats for
which the Applicant has attempted to offer some evidence in the Memorial and the
Reply, only around 100 are alleged to have taken place after 27 April 1992. 64
52. Finally, it is worth considering the conse quences flowing from Croatia’s approach to
questions of jurisdiction arising under Article IX of the Genocide Convention. Croatia
itself is quite open about these. It claims expressly that based on its approach to
jurisdiction, the Court would have jurisdic tion with regard to acts of genocide
committed during World War II, i.e. from 1939 - 1945 (and thus even predating the
entry into force of the Genocide Convention as such). 65If that retroactive extension of
the Court’s jurisdiction were to be accep ted however, where would one stop? On
Croatia’s argument, jurisdic tion based on Article IX of the Genocide Convention
would cover conduct that occurred during World War I as well – or indeed during the
process of colonization – provided it w ould fall under the terms of the Genocide
Convention as adopted in 1948. More particul arly, if Croatia’s argument is taken
seriously, this would not be restricted to acts amounting to genocide, but would also
cover the failure of States to prevent or punish genocide. Criticising Serbia’s allegedly
64
The cases of killings alleged by the Applicant to have taken place after 27 April 1992 are referred to in paras.
4.132, 5.25, 5.88, 5.139, 5.146, 5.202, 5.204, 5.205.210, 5.212 - 5.214, 5.219 and 5.221 – 5.225 of the
Memorial, while new allegations are also contained in paras. 6.78 and 6.89 of the Reply. The alleged killings
have mostly taken part in the region of Dalmatia. Only 3 of the killings claimed to have been committed after 27
April 1992 have taken place in Eastern Slavonia where, accord ing to the Applicant, the majority of the crimes
65ainst Croats have been committed.
Reply, para. 7.11.
41 “formalist” approach to juri sdiction, Croatia advances an argument that would thus
turn Article IX of the Genocide Conven tion into an open-ended, limitless catch-all
jurisdictional clause.
53. Moreover, if Croatia’s interpretation of Ar ticle IX of the Genocide Convention were
considered plausible by ot her States parties to the Convention, one would have
expected to see attempts by contracting parties, including those most concerned, to
limit their exposure to the Court’s ratione temporis jurisdiction by means of
reservations as to the temporal scope of its Article IX. Yet no such reservations aimed
at restricting the temporal consequences of Article IX were ever made.
*
54. While, as mentioned, largely avoiding the terminology of retroactivity and State
succession, Croatia does not dispute that fo r the Court to take account of conduct
predating 27 April 1992 (or indeed 8 Oc tober 1991), it will cumulatively have to
establish two propositions:
First, the Court’s jurisdiction under Article IX of the Genocide Convention would
have to be shown to cover the period pr e-dating the coming into existence of the
66
Respondent and Applicant (i.e. 27 April 1992 and 8 October 1991 respectively).
Second, Serbia would have to be able to incur State responsibility for alleged breaches
of international law that occurred at a time when it did not yet exist as an independent
State.67
Finally, and as a variation of the second aspect , as far as conduct predating 8 October
1991 is concerned, Croatia accepts that in addition to establishing Serbia’s
responsibility for acts preceding statehood, it must also show that Croatia is entitled to
invoke such responsibility even though it itself did not yet exist as an independent
68
State at the relevant time.
66Reply, paras. 7.2. and 7.17. et seq.
67See Reply, paras. 7.32 (where this is put as a question of the Convention’s “application ratione personae”) and
7.43.
68Reply, paras. 7.35 et seq.
4255. The subsequent sections address these propositions in turn, dealing with jurisdiction and
attribution of conduct predating 27 April 1992 (Section 3) and the special problems of
Croatia’s reliance on conduct predating 8 October 1991 (Section 4). Before proceeding
with these issues, a number of general remarks seem however to be in order (Section 2).
2. Preliminr aeyarks
56. The subsequent sections bring out very clearly many crucial differences between the Parties.
It may therefore be useful to recall at the outset that Croatia and Serbia are in agreement on
a number of fundamental issues. Further preliminary remarks relate to the sources of
international law that can form the subject of litigation in the present proceedings and to the
relevance of the Court’s Judgment on Preliminary Objections of 18 November 2008.
A. Agreement on fundamental issues
57. It is worth noting that Serbia and Croa tia are in agreement about a range of
fundamental issues, often clarified in the Court’s 2008 Judgment on Preliminary
Objections. By setting them out succinctly, Serbia seeks to clarify the scope of
contention between the Parties. Four seemingly obvious points are worth reiterating:
First, the Parties agree on fundamental asp ects of statehood: Croatia gained
independence on 8 October 1991, and the Fe deral Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY)
came into existence as a State on 27 April 1992. 69
Second , there is also agreement on the Parties’ status vis-à-vis the Genocide
Convention. Croatia succeeded to the Conve ntion on 12 October 1992; this is agreed
to have produced retroactive effect dating back to the independence of Croatia, i.e . 8
October 1991. As for the Respondent, it is by now clear that the FRY/Serbia
succeeded to the Genocide Convention and that its succession was effective from 27
April 1992. 70Finally, it is beyond dispute that the former SFRY had been a
contracting party to the Convention since 12 January 1951.
69See e.g. Reply, paras. 7.35 and 7.43.
70See Application of the Convention on the Preventiand Punishment of the Crime of Genocid(Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 117, where the Court held that
43 Third, the Parties agree on the relationship between Croatia and Serbia on the one hand,
and the former SFRY on the other. Notably, it is agreed that neither the FRY nor Serbia
71
are identical with the SFRY, and the Parties also agree that conduct of the SFRY does
not form the subject of litigation in these proceedings. The Parties, however, have
different views as to what should be considered as conduct of the SFRY.
Finally, at least in principle (although not in practice), the Parties agree on the scope
ratione materiae of the Court’s jurisdiction. This case is about breaches of the
Genocide Convention. It is not about breaches of other rules of in ternational law, or
about breaches of customary rules relating to genocide – which of course apply
between the Parties, but which are not the s ubject of these proceedings. This indeed
72
follows by necessary implication from the fact that – as the Court has noted – the
case at hand was exclusively instituted on the basis of Article IX of the Genocide
Convention, which envisages proceedings in cases involving
“[d]isputes between the Contracting Parties relating to the interpretation, application or
fulfilment of the present Convention”.73
Serbia submits that Croatia’s arguments have to be seen in light of these fundamental
considerations.
B. Relationship between treaty and customary rules against genocide
58. Despite accepting in principle that this case is about breaches of the Genocide
Convention only, the Croatian Reply seeks to avoid the just-mentioned implications
for the scope ratione materiae of the Court’s jurisdiction. Notably, in its arguments,
Croatia deliberately mixes concepts of Stat e responsibility arising from violations of
the Genocide Convention on the one hand (whi ch are the proper subject of litigation
“the 1992 Declaration and Note [of 27 April 1992] had the effect of a notification of succession by the FRY to
the SFRY in relation to the Genocide Convention”; as a consequence, “from that date [27 April 199onwards
the FRY would be bound by the obligations of a party in respect of all the multilateral conventions to which the
SFRY had been a party at the time of its dissolution”.
71See Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Report2008, p. 412, at paras. 43-51 for an account of the
72Y’s status.
Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
73eliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 94
Emphasis added.
44 before this Court), and State responsibility for violations of customary law amounting
to acts of genocide (which are outside the Court’s jurisdiction established under
74
Article IX of the Genocide Convention). Croatia seeks justification for its approach
in stressing the declaratory character of the Genocide Convention, which – it argues –
codifies an existing crime. 75
59. In response to these suggestions, Serbia i nvites the Court to apply the principles
governing its jurisdiction, not just as a matter of principle, but also as a matter of
practice. Serbia recognises that the substantive prohibitions imposed by the Genocide
Convention are binding upon pa rties and non-parties alike as a matter of customary
international law. Yet, it submits that Croatia’s approach fails to appreciate that even
where two sets of rules established by treaty and by customary law respectively, are
identical or similar in scope, they retain their separate existence – which in turn may
affect the applicable enforcement regimes and the jurisdiction of the Court.
60. This fundamental point is brought out clearly by the Court’s jurisprudence. Thus, already
in the Court’s 1986 Judgment in the Nicaraguacase, the Court unequivocally stated:
“There are a number of reasons for considerin g that, even if two norms belonging to two
sources of international law appear identical in content […] these norms retain a separate
existence. This is so from the standpoint of their applicability. […] Rules which are
identical in treaty law and in customary international law are also distinguishable by
reference to the methods of interpretation and application. A State may accept a rule
contained in a treaty not simply because it favours the application of the rule itself, but
also because the treaty establishes what that State regards as desirable institutions or
mechanisms to ensure impl ementation of the rule. Thus, if that rule parallels a rule of
customary international law, two rules of the same content are subject to separate
treatment as regards the organs compet ent to verify their implementation , depending on
whether they are customary rules or treaty rules. […]
It will therefore be clear that customary international law continues to exist and to apply,
separately from international treaty law, even where the two categories of law have an
76
identical content.”
74
Reply, para. 7.10
75Reply, para. 7.5.
76Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America), Merits,
ICJ Reports 1986, 14, at paras. 177 and 179 (emphasis added).
4561. More recently, the Court has confirmed the relevance of such a distinction for jurisdictional
purposes in the Case concerning Application of the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discriminationa–case requiring the Court to determine
the scope of its jurisdiction with respect to another set of equally fundamental rules of
contemporary international law, namely those against racial discrimination.
62. In its Judgment of 1 April 2011, the Court drew a clear distinction between disputes about
racial discrimination more generally, and the more specific circle of disputes about matters
governed by the 1965 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination (‘CERD’) with only the latter ones coming within the scope of the Court’s
jurisdiction in that case under Article 22 CERD. More particularly, the Court held that, prior
to Georgia’s accession to CERD, differences between Georgia and Russia might be
qualified as disputes about racial discrimination; however they could not have amounted to
a dispute with respect to the interpretation or application of CERD, and thus were not
78
covered by Article 22 CERD. This again implies that even where customary rules and
treaty law rules are identical in substance, they retain their separate existence, and ought to
be treated as separate rules for jurisdictional purposes.
63. Serbia submits that the Court should fo llow the same approach in the present
proceedings and reject Croatia’s attempts to blur the lines between customary and
treaty-based rules against genocide.
C. The Relevance of the Judgment on Preliminary Objections of 18 November 2008
64. A third preliminary remark relates to the relevance, at the present stage of the
proceedings, of the 2008 Judgment on Pre liminary Objections. As is well known, in
that Judgment, the Court was faced with a Serbian objection to the effect that
jurisdiction under Article IX of the Genoc ide Convention did not extend to acts
preceding 27 April 1992. In its Judgment of 18 November 2008, the Court held that
this objection ratione temporis “does not possess, in the circumstances of the case, an
7Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Georgia
v. Russian Federation), Judgment of 1 April 2011.
7Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Georgia
v. Russian Federation), Judgment of 1 April 2011, at para. 64 (emphasis added).
46 79
exclusively preliminary character.” As a consequence, the substantive issues raised
by Serbia objection remain to be addressed at the present stage of the proceedings.
65. Even though it did not authoritatively pr onounce on the substance of Serbia’s
objection, the Court, in its Judgment on Pr eliminary Objections, nevertheless made a
number of important findings which remain relevant at the present stage of
proceedings. In this respect, three points seem worth stressing:
66. First, the Court clarified that Croatia’s reliance on facts preceding 27 April 1992
raised two separate issues, namely one of jurisdiction and one of admissibility or
attribution. In the words of the Court:
“The first issue is that of the Court’s jurisdic tion to determine whether breaches of the
Genocide Convention were committed in the light ofthe facts that occurred prior to the date
on which the FRY came into existence as a separate State, capable of being a party in its own
right to the Convention; this may be regard ed as a question of the applicability of the
obligations under the Genocide Convention to the FRY before 27 April 1992. The second
issue, that of admissibility of the claim in relation to those facts, and involving questions of
attribution, concerns the consequences to be drawn with regard to the responsibility of the
FRY for those same facts under the general rules of State responsibility.”
67. Second, the Court, in the 2008 Judgment on Pr eliminary Objections, made clear that
its decision on the two issues identified in the quoted paragraph was not prejudged by
previous decisions relating to the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. Notably, the Court
rejected Croatia’s attempt to draw s upport from the 1996 Judgment in the case
concerning Application of the Convention on th e Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herze govina v. Serbia and Montenegro) (‘Bosnia
case’). In fact, it is worth noting that it did so in no unclear terms, expressly noting
that “the temporal questions to be resolved in the present case are not the same as
those dealt with by the Court in 1996”. 81 More specifically, it noted that its own 1996
79
Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at 130.
80Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 129.
81Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 123.
47 finding “was not addressed to the questi on whether these included facts occurring
82
prior to the coming into existence of the FRY”.
68. Against that background, it is surprising that Croatia, in its Reply, continues to refer to
para. 34 of the Court’s 1996 Judgment to support its claim that obligations imposed by
the Genocide Convention are not subject to any temporal restrictions. 83 For the
reasons set out in the Counter-Memorial, the issues addressed in para. 34 of the 1996
Judgment in the Bosnia case are indeed fundamentally different from the ones arising
in the present proceedings. More importantly, in light of the Court’s express
statements, Serbia submits that the Court’s 1996 Judgment cannot be relied on in order
to support Croatia’s position in the present proceedings.
69. Third, the Court merely considered the Ap ril 27, 1992 Declaration and the ensuing
Note as a “notification of succession by the FRY to the SFRY in relation to the
85
Genocide Convention” but did not attribute to this Declaration and the Note any
further legal consequences.
3. Serbia cannot be held responsible for alleged violations of the Genocide
Convention prior to 27 April 1992
70. Against that background, it can now be a ssessed whether Croatia can indeed invoke
alleged “facts that occurred prior to the date on which the FRY came into existence as
86
a separate State, capable of being a party in its own right to the Convention”.
71. The Respondent submits that it cannot. The fo llowing sections set out its argument,
already made in detail in the Counter-Mem orial (but only partia lly replied to by
Croatia, if at all). The argument proceeds in two main steps:
SeBction establishes that jurisdiction under Ar ticle IX of the Genocide Convention
does not cover conduct prior to 27 April 1992.
82
Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
83eliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 123.
84See Reply, para. 7.14.
Counter-Memorial, paras. 270-273.
85Cf. Application of the Convention on the Preventionand Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 117.
86Cf. Application of the Convention on the Preventionand Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 129.
48 SeCction demonstrates that, irrespective of the scope of the Court’s jurisdiction ratione
temporis, the Respondent cannot be held responsible for alleged breaches of the Genocide
Convention predating its coming into existence as an independent State, just as the
87
Applicant cannot bring claims based on events and facts prior to its own independence.
72. It is worth reiterating that for Croatia’s argument to succeed, it will have to rebut both
of these claims, as these establish cumulative conditions. Before demonstrating that
neither claim can be established, some re marks about the temporal scope of the
Genocide Convention as a whole seem in order.
A. The Genocide Convention as such does not apply retroactively
73. As will be discussed below, Croatia puts forward a number of arguments suggesting
that it could indeed, in the present proceedings, rely on “facts that occurred prior to the
date on which the FRY came into existence as a separate State, capable of being a
88
party in its own right to the Convention”.
74. Before addressing these in detail, it is worth noting what Croatia does not claim, or at
least does not claim expressly. At no point in its Reply does Croatia clearly argue that
the Genocide Convention as such applies retroactively. There are, no doubt, dispersed
through the text, many hints at some form of retroactivity. Notably, Croatia notes that
“there is no indication in the wording of th e Genocide Convention, nor any hint in the
travaux préparatoires , to suggest [the Genocide Convention] is subject to temporal
limitations of such a kind as relied on by the Respondent” 89
and instead invokes Articles I and XIV of the Convention which upon Croatia’s
reading “reflect the intention of the Parties to extend its temporal scope of
90
application”.
87
The subsequent sections do not distinguish between the position of the Applicant and that of the Respondent.
As has been shown in the Counter-Memorial, even if the Court should decide that it has jurisdiction over acts
predating 27 April 1992 and that Serbia could have incurred responsibility prior to 27 April 1992, facts and
events predating 8 October 1991 (the da te of Croatia’s independence) could still not form the subject of the
presentproceedings. For details see paras. 374 et seq. the Counter-Memorial. It is worth noting that Croatia
has not attempted to address the arguments set out there.
88Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia),
Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 129.
89Reply, para. 7.2.
4975. Croatia also argues that the Convention is declaratory; it was new only in that it provided
for “an authoritative definition” of the crime, as well as for “the effective prevention and
punishment of the prohibition of genocide” and “a framework for ‘international
cooperation’ in relation to the application and enforcement of an underlying customary
international law prohibition” (which in Croatia’s reading does not include enforcement
through inter-State proceedings). 91Croatia furthermore criticizes Serbia’s insistence –
justified above – on the need to distinguish between the Convention’s régime (including
its Article IX) and the customary rules against genocide; this distinction (states Croatia)
“confuse[s] substantive obligations and jurisdictional provisions, which the Court has
92
always been careful not to do”. Finally, Croatia seeks to introduce a distinction between
“retroactivity properly so-called” and some other form of retroactivity, which perhaps one
might call “retroactivity light”: the former (“retroactivity properly so-called”) only covers
instances in which “the Convention has never applied to a State“ at all; the latter
(allegedly at stake here) is said to be unproblematic and not governed by the regular
93
presumption against retroactivity of treaties.
76. Serbia submits that this attempt by the Applicant to introduce retroactivity in all but in
name is illustrative of the general approach of its Reply, which – as noted above –
attempts to blur legal concepts so as to provide for the Court’s treaty-based
jurisdiction even with regard to a period of time where neither of the Parties were or
could have been contracting parties to the respective treaty, and thus neither were
bound by the compromissory clause contained in the treaty.
77. To a large extent, Serbia has already dealt with the substantive legal issues at some
94
length in its Counter-Memorial, without however eliciting anything but the briefest
response from Croatia. In res ponse to Croatia’s attempts to assert retroactivity
“through the backdoor”, three comments seem in order.
78. First, Croatia’s attempt to distinguish between different versions of “retroactivity
properly so-called” and “retro activity light” is without foundation. Both versions of
90
91Cf. Reply, para. 7.14.
Reply, paras. 7.10 and 7.6. respectively.
92Reply, para. 7.13.
93Reply, para. 7.13.
94Counter-Memorial, paras. 224 et seq.
50 retroactivity are retroactivity proper, and both are covered by the general presumption
against retroactivity. The matter is clear from the most cursory reading of Article 28 of
the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) (which is widely taken to have
codified custom), pursuant to which
“[u]nless a different intention appears from the treaty or is otherwise established, its
provisions do not bind a party in relation to any act or fact which took place or any
situation which ceased to exist before the date of the entry into force of the treaty
with respect to that party.”95
79. As is clear from the text, no distinction is made between a State that subsequently acceded
to a treaty, and a State to which a treaty, in Croatia’s words, “has never applied“. If
anything, it is clear that questions of retroactivity in the sense of Article 28 VCLT only arise
if at some point, the State in question did become bound by the treaty: if indeed a
“Convention has never applied to a State“, then the matter is not one of retroactivity, but
governed by thepacta tertiisrule. Croatia’s distinction simply does not hold water.
80. Indeed, Article 28 VCLT was de vised precisely to govern instances like the present
one and accordingly the presumption it (as well as the customary international law
governing treaties) puts forward very much applies. Even though Croatia – in the
Reply as well as in its Memorial – avoids at all costs to speak of retroactivity, it does
in effect assert that the provisions of a treaty (to paraphrase Article 28 VCLT) “bind
[Serbia] in relation to [an] act or fact whic h took place … before the date of the entry
96
into force of the treaty with respect to [Serbia].”
81. Second, Croatia’s decision to avoid the terminology of retroactivity (which would have
been the regular way of denoting the effects Croatia asserts) is no doubt indicative.
Equally indicative is the fact that, apart from briefly referring to Arts. I and XIV of the
Genocide Convention, which will be addressedbelow, Croatia has not even attempted to
engage with Serbia’s arguments against the retroactive application of the Genocide
Convention (and its Article IX), which,inter alia,had drawn on its Preamble, as well as
97
its Arts. IV, V, VI and VIII, as well as Article XIII, paras. 2 and 3.
95Emphasis added.
96Emphasis added.
97See Counter-Memorial, paras. 235-262.
5182. Neither has Croatia attempted to rebut Serbia’s argument based on a comparison between
the Genocide Convention on the one hand (which does not mention retroactive effects), and
another treaty addressing mass atrocities (including genocide), which does. Thus, the
Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutes of Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes
98
Against Humanity, to which Croatia and Serbia are parties, in its Article I specifically
provides that no statutory limitation shall apply to the crimes listed in the Convention
“irrespective of the date of their commission” – accordingly suggesting that where State
parties do intend to imbue a treaty with retroactive validity, they do so expressly.
83. To the extent that Croatia engages with thetext of the Genocide Convention in order to
justify the claim of retroactivity, its arguments are unconvincing. More specifically,
Croatia claims that Arts. I and XIV of the Genocide Convention “reflect the intention of
99
the Parties to extend its temporal scope of application” so as to also cover acts that
occurred prior to the entry into force of the Genocide Convention as between the States
concerned. This claim, however, is not only unsubstantiated, but seems difficult to sustain.
84. In light of the fact that Article I of th e Genocide Convention imposes upon States an
obligation to prevent genocide, it is obviously future-oriented, aimed at averting or
precluding genocide from even taking pla ce. Indeed, the preamble of the Genocide
Convention expressly states that it was meant to “liberate mankind from such an
odious scourge” which confirms the overall aim of the Genocide Convention that no
more acts of genocide will take place in the future.
85. As for Croatia’s reliance on Article XIV of the Genocide Convention, Serbia fails to
see how a provision regulating the duration in force , for the future , of the Genocide
Convention and recognizing a liberal right of withdrawal from it, 100 could be
construed so to support the claim of retroactivity.
86. Lastly, in reply to Croatia’s repeated references to the special character of the
Convention, Serbia would draw the Court’ s attention to the impact of Croatia’s
98754 UNTS 73.
99See for such proposition Reply, para. 7.14.
100Cf. Article XIV, para.2, and further N. Robinson, The Genocide Convention (1960), at 114: “The parties are
given the right to denounce the Convention by notification to the Secretary General of the United Nations, at
least six months before the expiration date.”
52 reading on the quest for universal particip ation in the Genocide Convention. As early
as 1951, the Court has stressed that
“[t]he Genocide Convention was […] intended by the General Assembly and by the
101
contracting parties to be definitely universal in scope”
and that
“[t]he object and purpose of the Genocide Convention imply that it was the intention of
the General Assembly and of the States which adopted it that as many States as possible
should participate.”102
87. Yet, Croatia has not addressed the argument put forward by the Respondent 103 that any
retroactive application of the Genocide Convention, as proposed by Croatia, might
inhibit a newly formed democratic gove rnment, once having toppled a previous
regime responsible for acts of genocide, from adhering to the Genocide Convention
and specifically from accepting the Court’ s jurisdiction under Article IX of the
Genocide Convention. Indeed, it might not be excluded that any such approach would
prevent States having gone through the ex perience of genocide from ever becoming a
contracting party of the Genocide Convention for fear of its retroactive applicability.
Thus, instead of strengthening the treaty regime, Croatia’s approach, if accepted,
might lead to those States most concerned from not adhering to the Genocide
Convention in the first place.
88. In light of the above argument it is not surp rising that it was the German government
who, as late as 2010, expressly stated:
“The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 9
December 1948 has entered into force on 12 January 1951. For the Federal Republic of
Germany it has entered into force on 22 February 1955. It does not possess retroactive
effect.”04
101Reservations to the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide , Advisory
Opinion, ICJ Reports 1951, 15, at 23.
102Reservations to the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide , Advisory
103nion, ICJ Reports 1951, 15, at 24.
104Counter-Memorial, paras. 251-252.
See Deutscher Bundestag [German Federal Parliament] Doc. no 17/1956 (2010), at p. 5 (emphasis added).
The German original reads (emphasis added):
5389. On the basis of the preceding arguments Croatia is surely right not to assert, at least
expressly, that the Genocide Convention should apply retroactively. The arguments
against retroactivity are numerous and compelling, and it is telling that Croatia has
chosen to ignore them almost completely. The simple fact is that – as has been
observed by the Convention’s leading commentators:
“[…] it could hardly be contended that the Convention binds the signatories to punish
offenders for acts committed previous to its coming into force for the given country.”, 105
and that
“nothing in the Genocide Convention […} suggest[s] ‘a different intention’” [in the sense
of Article 28 VCLT] and consequently, “the Genocide Convention is not applicable to
acts committed before its effective date”.106
B. Jurisdiction under Article IX of the Genocide Convention does not cover conduct
prior to 27 April 1992
90. Serbia submits that what is true for the Convention as such is also true for its
compromissory clause, i.e. Article IX of the Genocide Convention. Just like other
similar compromissory clauses, Article IX establishes the Court’s jurisdiction over
disputes between States parties to the Genocide Convention, and thus presupposes that
both parties to a given dispute are bound by the Convention in question, including its
jurisdictional clause, at all material times.
91. As a consequence, the Court’s jurisdiction under Article IX would begin to take effect
on the date of the entry into force of the treaty between the parties to the dispute, i.e.
in the case at hand on 27 April 1992.
92. Croatia does not agree with this stra ightforward position. While not expressly
suggesting that the Convention as such should apply retroactively, it argues that
Article IX extends the Court’s jurisdiction ratione temporis to events predating 27
“Die Konvention über die Verhütung und Bestrafung des Völkermordes vom 9. Dezember 1948 ist am
12. Januar 1951 in Kraft getreten. Für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland ist sie seit dem 22. Februar 1955
in Kraft. Sie gilt nicht rückwirkend.“
105N. Robinson, The GenocideConvention (1960), p. 114.
106W. A. Schabas, Genocide in International Law (2 edn., 2008), p. 529.
54 April 1992. To support this claim, it advan ces a bundle of (seemingly contradictory)
arguments seeking to establish that
a) Compromissory clauses could be disentangled from the remainder of the treaty of
which they form part and generally applied retroactively; or that
b) Article IX of the Genocide Convention in any event did not impose further temporal
limitations on the Court’s jurisdiction and thus could be applied in “every dispute
concerning responsibility for or in relation to genocide to which the Convention itself
applies”; 107and that furthermore
c) The special character of obligations impos ed by the Genocide Convention justfies a
retroactive construction of Article IX of the Genocide Convention.
However, none of these arguments is convincing, and some of them indeed seem to be
far-fetched.
1) Compromissory clauses constitute an integral part of the respective treaty
93. The Applicant’s first argument rests on the presumption that compromissory clauses
gave rise to a special type of obligations since, as Croatia claims, they are “subject to
108
an autonomous interpretation due to their special status within treaties”.
94. As noted in the last paragraph, the Applicant itself does not seem entirely convinced
by this assertion; hence its alternative statement that Article IX of the Genocide
Convention only covered disputes “to which the Convention [that is, presumably, its
substantive obligations] applies”. 109
95. That being said, the Applicant seeks to draw support for its approach from the Court’s
Judgments in the Nicaragua and the Certain Property cases, as well as those of its
predecessor in Phosphates in Morocco and Mavrommatis. As will be shown below,
none of these decisions supports the position advanced by the Applicant.
107Reply, para. 7.19 (emphasis added).
108Reply, para. 7.21
109Reply, para. 7.19
5596. This, in turn, should not come as a surprise, as any such attempt to disentangle the
scope ratione temporis of compromissory clauses from the remainder of the respective
treaty provisions indeed seems extremely difficult to sustain conceptually. It
presupposes a clear distinction between subs tantive and compromissory clauses of a
treaty that is artificial and untenable.
97. For once, Article 28 VCLT, having codifi ed customary law on the matter, does not
even hint at any such distinction to be drawn between substantive provisions on the
one hand and compromissory clauses on the ot her. As it deals with treaty obligations
generally, one might have expected it to me ntion a distinction so fundamental as that
suggested by Croatia, rather than putting forward a general presumption against
retroactivity of treaties for all its provisions without distinction.
98. Moreover, dispute settlement provisions share the essential characteristics of
substantive treaty commitments: they are the result of treaty negotiations, they impose
binding obligations, they require to be interpreted in line with the rules laid down in
Arts. 31-33 VCLT (or their customary equivale nt), they must be performed in good
faith and notwithstanding any domestic law obstacles. Nothing suggests that from the
vantage point of the general law of treaties, they should be categorically different from
provisions prescribing substantive rights and obligations. Unless relegated to a special
(optional) protocol, they form an integral part of a given treaty – and hence dispute
settlement provisions such as Article IX of the Ge nocide Convention only apply
between the “Contracting Parties” to the Treaty. Yet, Croatia’s argument fails to
appreciate this integration of Article IX of the Genocide Convention into the treaty.
99. Serbia submits that Croatia’s interpretation is furthermore contradicted by the Court’s
recent Judgment in the Case concerning Application of the International Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. Within the context of that
case, the Court was faced with an essentially similar jurisdictional clause, Article 22
CERD, which envisages inter-State proceedings about
“[a]ny dispute between two or more States Parties with respect to the interpretation or
application of this Convention”.
56100. In its assessment of that provision, the Court very clearly treated compromissory clauses
as an integral part of the respective treaty and did not consider them to be governed by
special, autonomous rules on retroactivity. As has been mentioned already, the Court in
the Case concerning Application of the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discriminationclearly distinguished between
a) A broader circle of disputes between Ge orgia and Russia about questions of racial
discrimination generally; and
b) The narrower circle of disputes about matters governed by CERD.
101. In so doing, the Court implicitly accepted that for it to exercise jurisdiction over a
treaty-based claim (in that case, under CERD), both parties to the underlying dispute
would have to be a party to the treaty in question. Rejecting Georgia’s claim that ever
since the 1990es, Georgia and Russia had be en involved in disputes about racial
discrimination the Court noted:
“[…] Georgia has not, in the Court’s opinion, cited any document or statement made
before it became party to CERD in July 1999 which provides support for its contention
that “the dispute with Russia over ethnic cleansing is long-standing and legitimate and not
of recent invention” […]. The Court adds that even if this were the case, such dispute,
though about racial discrimination, could not have been a dispute with respect to the
interpretation or application of CERD, the only kind of dispute in respect of which the
Court is given jurisdiction by Article 22 of that Convention.”0
102. The Court thus clearly accepted that for a dispute under CERD to come within the scope
of Article 22 CERD, both parties would have to be parties to CERD during the relevant
time. It is implicit in this holding that jurisdictional clauses such as Article 22 CERD or
Article IX of the Genocide Convention do not, contrary to what Croatia argues in the
present case, produce retroactive effects and establish the Court’s jurisdiction over
disputes originating at a time when one, or both, of the parties were not bound by the
respective substantive treaty obligations. Even less so could this be the case where, like in
the case at hand, the entities concerned even lacked the status of States during the relevant
period and thus could not have become parties of the treaty, even if they had wanted to.
110
(Georgia v. Russian Federation), Judgment of 1 April 2011, at para. 64 (emphasis added). Discrimination
57103. The fundamental proposition to be taken from the – in many respects very similar, and very
recent – Judgment by the Court in the Case concerning Application of the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discriminatiisotn hat compromissory
clauses that refer to disputes under a given treaty (including those regulating matters of
international public policy and human rights) do not apply retroactively.
104. Against that background, it does not come as a surprise that none of the cases referred
to by the Applicant supports the alleged “autonomous” construction of compromissory
clauses favouring retroactivity.
105. Insofar as Croatia relies on the Nicaragua and Phosphates in Morocco cases, 111 there
indeed does not seem to be a basis for dr awing any conclusions about the temporal
scope of compromissory clauses. In Nicaragua, the Court indeed noted that
declarations accepting the Court’s compulsory jurisdiction could be made
“unconditionally and without limit of time […] or […] limit its effects to disputes arising
after a certain date”.2
106. Similarly, in Phosphates in Morocco, the Court’s predecessor analysed the temporal
113
scope of France’s optional clause declaration.
107. Yet, whatever the implications to be drawn from these passages, it is clear that they
were both made with respect to a very different form of accepting the Court’s
jurisdiction, namely unilateral declarations purs uant to Article 36, para. 2, of the Court’s
Statute. These, however, are crucially different from compromissory clauses within the
meaning of Article 36, para. 1 (such as Article IX of the Genocide Convention, or
indeed Article 22 CERD) in that they are self-standing and autonomous.
108. Unlike compromissory clauses, optional clause declarations are preciselynot integrated
into an overall treaty regime, and they do not apply between “Contracting Parties” to that
treaty. As a consequence, their retroactive application does not require the artificial
111Cf. Reply, paras. 7.22. (footnote 30) and 7.23.
112Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragu(Nicaragua v. United States of America) ,
Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Reports 1984, p. 392, at para. 59.
113Phosphates in Morocco, Ser A/B No 74 (1938), at 23-29.
58 separation between substantive treaty rules and dispute settlement provisions that
Croatia’s argument requires. If anything, the Court’s Nicaraguacase holding (and, if it is
considered relevant at all, the PCIJ’s analysis inPhosphates in Morocco) thus invites an
argumentum e contrarioand undermines, rather than supports, Croatia’s argument.
109. It is worth noting that the crucial distinction between compromissory clauses in the
sense of Article 36, para. 1, on the one ha nd, and optional clause declarations under
Article 36, para. 2 on the other, is accepte d by a commentator otherwise favourably
cited in the Croatian Reply. Precisely addressing the tem poral reach of instruments
conferring jurisdiction, that commentator noted:
“As far as compromissory clauses are conc erned, the general rule as to the non-
retroactivity of treaties enshrined in Articles 4 and 28 of the 1969 Vienna Convention on
the Law of Treaties, and specially recalled in certain conventions, may be held to limit the
temporal reach of jurisdiction without any necessity to invoke a specific reservation. Here
too, then, the optional clause system appears to impose a closer knit of obligations (the
presumption being against time limitation) than the compulsory clauses system (the
presumption being in favor of time limitation).” 114
110. It is precisely this latter presumption “in favor of time limitation” 115that Serbia has
invoked since the early stages of the present proceedings.
116
111. Croatia’s reliance on the Court’s Certain Property case is equally dubious. To be
sure, Croatia does not argue that in that case, the Court had recognised retroactive
effects of a compromissory clause – which indeed would have been far-fetched, as the
Court indeed declined jurisdiction because the dispute did not come within the Court’s
jurisdiction ratione temporis. Instead, in Croatia’s reading,
“[i]n Certain Property, the Court applied to the compromissory clause of a multilateral
convention its previous jurisprudence on temporal limitations of unilateral declarations
accepting its jurisdiction, finding no reason to interpret them differently.”17
114
Robert Kolb, ‘The Compromissory Clause of the Convention, in Gaeta (ed.), The UN Genocide Convention
1159), at p. 421 [Footnote omitted].
116Ibid.
117Cf. Reply, para. 7.23.
Reply, para. 7.23., referring to Certain Property (Liechtenstein v. Germany), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J.
Reports 2005, p. 6, 24, para. 43.
59112. However, a quick glance at the case shows that the Judgment in Certain Property does
not even come close to that. Rather than pronouncing (as Croatia suggests) on the
temporal scope of jurisdiction – conferring instruments in any comprehensive sense –
the Court addressed a very specific issue. It clarified the relevance of provisions
expresslyrestricting jurisdiction to facts or situations arising after a given critical date.
In the circumstances of the case, this was required as Article 27(a) of the European
Convention for the Peaceful Settlement of Ds iputes expressly limited the temporal scope
of the Court’s jurisdiction to facts or situations arising after the entry into force of the
Convention as between the parties. In determining the meaning of that clause (and for
that purpose only), the Court drew on its earlier jurisprudence in which it had to assess
118
the effects of similar, express limitations on optional clause declarations – and it was
precisely with respect to this discrete point that the Court (noting that the parties were in
119
agreement on the matter anyhow ) saw no reason to distinguish between optional
clause declarations and treaty-based compromissory clauses.
113. Serbia submits that this context must not be lost sight of when interpreting the Certain
Propertyholding. Serbia fails to see how that holding could inform the interpretation of a
compromissory clause that – like Article IX of the Genocide Convention – does not
expressly regulate questions of temporal application, that doe nsotdepend on the meaning
of terms such as “facts and situations arising”, and that is applied in proceedings in which
the parties (while disagreeing on many issues) have so far not engaged in debates about
120
the facts triggering the “source or real cause of the dispute” before the Court.
114. Perhaps as importantly, Serbia submits that Croatia’s blanket reference to Certain
Property not only takes a discrete holding out of context, but also fails to appreciate
that, in the same paragraph relied upon by Croatia, the Court made it abundantly clear
that it would not
“pronounc[e] in any more general sense upon the extent to which such instruments [ i.e.
optional clause declarations on the one hand, and compromissory clauses on the other] are
121
to be treated comparably”.
118Certain Property (Liechtenstein v. Germany), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Repo0.,, 24, paras. 40-46.
119Certain Property (Liechtenstein v. Germany), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Repo0.,, 24, para. 43 [in fine].
120Contrast Certain Property (Liechtenstein v. Germany), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Reports 2005, p. 6, 24,
paras. 47.
121Certain Property (Liechtenstein v. Germany), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Reports 2005, p. 6, 24, para. 43.
60115. Serbia submits that this statement directly contradicts Croatia’s blanket reference to
Certain Property, which further confirms that Croatia takes the Court’s very limited
holding out of context.
116. Of the various precedents invoked by Croa tia allegedly suppor ting the retroactive
application of compromissory clauses, this leaves Mavrommatis. 122In that case, the
PCIJ indeed observed that
“in case of doubt, jurisdiction based on an international agreement embraces all disputes
referred to it after its establishment […] The reservations made in many arbitration treaties
regarding disputes arising out of events previous to the conclusion of the treaty seems to
prove the necessity for an explicit limitation and, consequently the correctness of the rule
123
of interpretation enunciated above.”
117. At first sight, this statement – at least as quoted by Croatia – could indeed be taken to
provide support for the view that compro missory clauses applied retroactively.
However, a more careful analysis reveals that in selectively quoting from the
Mavrommatis case , Croatia takes the pronouncement out of context and fails to
appreciate that it depended on specific features of the dispute then before the Court –
none of which is present in the current pro ceedings. In this respect, three points need
to be made.
118. First, in a part of the Mavrommatis Judgment not quoted by Croatia, the PCIJ was
careful to note that the broad interpretati on of the temporal scope of the Mandate’s
compromissory clause was necessitated by the specific wording of that provision,
which – unlike Article IX of the Genocide Convention – referred to “any dispute
whatsoever […] which may arise”. 124
119. The importance attached to this specific feature appears from the following table
opposing the PCIJ’s holding and the passages quoted in the Croatian Reply:
122
Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2, p. 6.
12Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2,at 35 (as quote in para. 7.22. of Croatia’s
Reply).
124
Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2at 35. Emphqasis added. For details see the
Table in the text.
61 Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, as quoted
Series A, No. 2, at 35. in the Reply, para. 7.22
“in case s of doubt, jurisdiction based on an “in case of doubt, jurisdiction based on an
international agreement embraces all disputes international agreement embraces all disputes
referred to it after its establishment. referred to it after its establishment …
In the present case, this interpretation
appears to be indicated by the terms of
Article 26 itself where it is laid down that
[125]
“any dispute whatsoever […] which may
arise” shall be submitted to the Court […]
The reservation made in many arbitration The reservation s made in many arbitration
treaties regarding disputes arising out of events treaties regarding disputes arising out of events
previous to the conclusion of the treaty seems to previous to the conclusion of the treaty seems to
prove the necessity for an explicit limitation and, prove the necessity for an explicit limitation and,
consequently the correctness of the rule of consequently the correctness of the rule of
interpretation enunciated above.” interpretation enunciated above.”
120. As appears from this comparison, the retroa ctive effect of Artic le 26 of the Mandate
thus flowed from the specific wording. In the terminology of Article 28 VCLT, this
constituted “a different intention [which] appear[ed] from the treaty”, and it was on
this “different intention” that the PCIJ ’s pronouncement – accepting, exceptionally,
the retroactive effect of a compromissory clause – at least partly depended.
121. Second, Croatia’s reliance on Mavrommatis seems to overlook that in that case, the
Court eventually found that questions of retr oactivity were irrelevant to the case at
hand. Having considered issues relating to its jurisdiction ratione temporis, the PCIJ
immediately went on to note that in the instance, the Mandate governed the disputed
conduct (i.e. the granting of the concessions), as this conduct was on-going:
“Nevertheless, even supposing that it were admitted as essential that the act alleged by the
Applicant to be contrary to the provisions of the Mandate should have taken place at a
period when the mandate was in force, the Court believes that this condition is fulfilled in
the present case.”126
125Omission in the original of the Judgment of the PCIJ.
126Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2, at 35 (emphasis added).
62122. Accordingly, the PCIJ in Mavrommatis saw no need to decide whether or not the
Mandate and its compromissory clause applied retroactively – and again, it said so
expressly:
“For these reasons the Court does not feel called to consider whether the provisions of the
Mandate, once they are in force, apply retrospectively […].”
123. Finally, the Mavrommatis holding also depended on a third specific feature of the
dispute then before the PCIJ. As may be inferred from the last substantive paragraph
of the Judgment, the Court seemed to be influenced by the fact that the mandate
system as a whole (of which the Palestine Mandate formed part) dated back to Article
22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations and that it had been operative since
128
1920. This, the Court seemed to take as ye t another indication why the question of
retroactivity seemed to be less problematic.
124. To summarise on this point, Croatia’s reference to the Mavrommatis case fails to
appreciate the very dispute-specific reasons which motivated the PCIJ’s statement
about the temporal scope of compromissory clauses. Serbia submits that these specific
features must be taken into account. If they are, then indeed the Mavrommatis
pronouncement loses its pertinence. It does so because none of the specific features
upon which it depended is present in the current proceedings.
125. For one, the Court’s jurisdiction under Artic le IX of the Genocide Convention is
limited to disputes specifically arising under the Genocide Convention, but does not
cover “any dispute whatsoever”.
126. Moreover, insofar as Croatia relies on facts that occurred prior to 27 April 1992, it is
clear and agreed between the Parties that they were not governed by the Genocide
Convention (whereas the British conduct in Palestine was governed by the Mandate).
Serbia submits that this severely weakens Croatia’s reliance on the Mavrommatis
pronouncement.
127Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2, at 36.
128Mavromatis Palestine Concessions, PCIJ 1924, Series A, No. 2, at 36.
63127. More generally, the above analysis of ju risprudence undermines Croatia’s statement
that
“[i]n its previous jurisprudence relating to interpretation of compromissory clauses, this
Court and its predecessor have consistently taken the position that they encompass
disputes and situations arising prior to their ratification, unless explicitly stated otherwise
in the instrument or by the State when giving its consent to the clause e.g. through
entering a reservation to that effect.”
128. Serbia submits that the exact opposite is tr ue. The jurisprudence of the PCIJ and of
this Court do not reveal any pattern of retroactivity – neither for substantive provisions
nor for compromissory clauses. There is no support whatsoever for Croatia’s attempt
to introduce an artificial distinction be tween substantive provisions and dispute
settlement clauses. In cons truing a “consistent jurisp rudence” allegedly supporting
retroactive effects, Croatia fails to appreciate the essential distinction between
compromissory clauses and optional clause declarations. Finally, Croatia’s approach is
contradicted by the Court’s most author itative pronouncement on the matter, namely
its recent holding in the Case concerning Application of the International Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination – a case bearing essential
and indeed striking similarities to the present dispute.
2) Article IX of the Genocide Convention does not entail retroactive effects
129. Croatia pursues a second strategy aimed at avoiding the straightforward application of
the principle of non-retroactivity. Having ar gued for the retroactive application of
compromissory clauses as a general matter, it goes on to suggest that, in any event,
the specific compromissory clause applicable to the present dispute, Article IX of the
Genocide Convention, were to apply re troactively because of its alleged special
features. Three such special features are referred to in Croatia’s Reply namely (i) the
absence, in Article IX and other provisions of the Genocide Convention, of express
temporal limitations; (ii) the reference, in Article IX, to the “fulfilment” of the
Convention, “including those relating to th e responsibility of a State for genocide”;
and (iii) the erga omnes character of obligations covered by Article IX.
129
Reply, para. 7.22.
64130. Of these three arguments, the first is of little relevance here. It depends on the general
rules on retroactivity: only if as a general matter , compromissory clauses applied
retroactively, one could draw inferences from the absence of any restriction. As has
been shown, there is no general rule, let alone presumption, in favour of retroactivity.
Rather, retroactivity will have to be established positively, not inferred from a treaty’s
silence. As a consequence, the absence of express restrictions is not decisive. By
contrast, the second and third arguments require to be addressed.
a) Alleged special features of Article IX of the Genocide Convention
131. As for the alleged special features of Ar ticle IX of the Genoc ide Convention, Croatia
relies heavily on the wording of Article IX . It notably draws support for its broad
(retroactive) interpretation from the fact that the provision refers not only to the
interpretation and application of the Convention, but also to its “fulfilment”. Croatia
130
argues (referring to thetravaux ) that the “fulfilment”
“implies a non-synallagmatic obligation of result, referred to the Court for a determination
of responsibility by any State entitled to invoke that responsibility. In this context it must
be stressed again that the purpose of the Convention is to prevent and punish the crime of
genocide, not to regulate the relations of States as such.”31
132. As a variation on this theme, Croatia also refers to the last clause of Article IX,
pursuant to which the Court’s jurisdiction comprises disputes “relating to the
responsibility of a State for genocide”. This is said to be “clear and must be taken to
132
have been deliberate”.
133. However, both arguments are unconvincing. As far as the inclusion, in Article IX of
the Genocide Convention, of the term “fulf ilment” is concerned, Se rbia fails to see
how this should affect the temporal scope of the provision. No argument to that effect
is put forward by Croatia. If an ything, Croatia’s summary of the travaux suggests the
opposite.
130Reply, paras. 7.29-7.30.
131Reply, para. 7.28.
132Reply, para.7.71.
65134. The key piece of evidence referred to by Croatia is the statement by the Indian
delegation, which expressed concern that the addition of the term “fulfilment” (which
was not to be found in the Secretariat’ s and Ad Hoc Committee’s drafts of the
Convention) would give Article IX of the draft convention a “wider meaning”. 133 Yet
the “widening” of Article IX that India was concerned about related to the substantive
scope of the provision, not its temporal scope , as is clear from the very Indian
statement quoted by Croatia:
“the word ‘application’ included the study of circumstances in which the convention
should or should not apply, while the word ‘fulfillment’ referred to the compliance or non-
compliance of a party with the provisions of the convention.” 134
135. One may add that the concerns of the Indian delegation were based on an
understanding of the traditiona l ‘“interpretation and appli cation” formula which has
been overtaken by subsequent cases. As is well known, the Court has regularly
interpreted that formula so to encompa ss disputes about “the compliance or non-
compliance of a party with the provisions of the convention”. In this sense, the
addition of the word “fulfilment” adds little to the content of Article IX even ratione
materiae and nothing as to its scope ratione temporis.
136. In the light of these factors, Croatia’s insistence on the term “fulfillment” seems not to
be borne out by the travaux. What is more, it is equally difficult to bring it in line with
other methods of interpretation. As for th e literal meaning, dictionaries define
135
‘fulfilment’ as “accomplishment, performance, completion”. As has rightly been
noted, it is therefore “largely a form of application”, and “adds little to the term
‘application’, as the latter already contains it”. 136 What is more, both terms “largely
overlap” with the third, namely “interpretation”. To draw precise differences between
the three would thus be artificial, and the Court’s jurisprudence dealing with the
various versions of compromissory clau ses has not so far provided clear-cut
distinctions. All this suggests that not much, if something at all, should be read into
133Reply, para. 7.29 (referring to UN Doc. A/C.6, SR.103, Sixth Committee, Summary Records of the 103rd
Meeting on 12 November 1948).
134UN Doc. A/C.6, SR.103, Sixth Committee, Summary Records of the 103rd Meeting on 12 November 1948.
135See e.g. Oxford English Dictionary, Online Edition (‘fulfilment, n.’).
136Robert Kolb, ‘The Scope RationeMateriaeof the Compulsory Jurisdiction of the ICJ’, in Gaeta (ed.), The UN
Genocide Convention 2009), at p. 452.
66 the drafters’ decision to add the term “fulfilment” to Article IX of the Genocide
Convention. Moreover there is no indication wh atsoever to be found in the drafting
history to indicate that the drafters had wanted to enlarge the scope ratione temporis of
the Genocide Convention or its Article IX by adding the term “fulfilment”.
137. To conclude, Serbia accepts that disputes about the “compliance or non-compliance of
a party with the provisions of the conven tion” are covered by Article IX of the
Genocide Convention. Whether this required the addition of the term “fulfilment” may
be a matter for speculation. In any event, neither the drafting history nor other
arguments suggest that the addition of the term “fulfilment” should have had (or was
intended to have) any effect on the temporal scope of the provision. In this respect, it
is simply not a relevant “specific circumstance” that could explain why, exceptionally,
Article IX of the Genocide Convention should be able to produce retroactive effects.
138. As regards Croatia’s second piece of alle ged “evidence”, matte rs are essentially
similar. To be sure, Article IX of the Genocide Convention goes beyond other
compromissory clauses in expressly mentioning a special class of disputes covered by
the clause, namely those ”relating to the responsibility of a State for genocide”.
Perhaps, the addition of that phrase can ind eed be “taken to have been deliberate”. 137
However, it was clearly not intended to affect the temporal scope of the Convention –
and Croatia provides not a single argument supporting that interpretation. Quite to the
contrary, a natural reading of the overall phrase
“[d]isputes between the Contracting Parties relating to the interpretation, application or
fulfilment of the present Convention, - including those relating to the responsibility of a
State for genocide […]” 138
confirms that the “responsibility of a State for genocide” must be the responsibility of
a Contracting Party to which the former part of the phrase refers.
139. As a matter of fact, the usage of the term “including” (“ y compris” in the equally
authentic French text) confirms that the “S tate” referred in the second half of the
phrase is identical with the Contracting Party to which the first part refers, and that
137Reply, para.7.71.
138Emphasis added.
67 disputes about a State’s responsibility are a mere sub-category of disputes covered by
Article IX of the Genocide Convention. The a ddition of the last clause thus was not
intended to broaden the scope of Article IX of the Genoc ide Convention, let alone its
temporal scope, but merely served to clarif y its substantive scope by, as the Court put
it as early as 1996, “not exclud[ing] any form of State responsibility”. 139
140. Finally, for a State to incur “responsibility […] for genocide” in the sense of Article IX, it
will have to be bound by the Convention. Hence the very phrase that Croatia relies on again
presupposes the application – including the temporal application – of the Genocide
Convention rather than extending it. All this suggests that the express mentioning, in Article
IX of the Genocide Convention, of the special category of disputes “relating to the
responsibility of a State for genocide” does not bear on the temporal scope of the provision.
b) The alleged implications of the erga omnes concept
141. Seeking to overcome the temporal limitations of jurisdiction under Article IX of the
Genocide Convention, Croatia, in its Reply, invokes the erga omnes character of
obligations flowing from the Genocide Convention. It makes the point in para. 7.37 of
its Reply, which asserts in no uncertain terms:
“There is no need for both Parties to the dispute to have been Parties to the Convention
when the facts giving rise to it took place. Neither the Court’s jurisdiction, nor the
Respondent’s responsibility under the Genocide Convention, are conditioned upon the
date of Croatia’s independence as the obligations under the Genocide Convention are
owed to the international community as a whole ( erga omnes), and any State may invoke
responsibility for their breach.”40
142. As appears from the above quotation, in Croatia’s submission, theerga omnes character
of obligations is said to affect the two issues addressed in the present chapter, namely
questions of jurisdictionand Serbia’s responsibility under the Genocide Convention. It is
the first of these issues that is addressed in the following, while the alleged erga omnes
effects on the rules of responsibility will be dealt with below.
13Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Preliminary Objections, ICJ Reports 1996, 595, at para. 32 (emphasis
added).
140Reply, para. 7.37.
68143. Serbia agrees with Croatia that certain obligations imposed by the Genocide
Convention – especially the duty not to commit genocide – give rise to obligations
erga omnes. This indeed seems clear from the Court’s jurisprudence, which has
consistently recognised the prohibition ag ainst genocide as a fundamental obligation
141
owed to the international community as a whole.
144. Serbia however disagrees with Croatia’s a ssertion of consequences allegedly flowing
from the erga omnes status of the prohibition. It sub mits that Croatia’s interpretation
infers from the erga omnes concept effects which are completely unrelated to its
rationale. In this respect, Croatia’s argume nt bears out Judge Higgins’ observation in
the WallAdvisory Opinion, pursuant to which
“The Court's celebrated dictum in Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company,
Limited, Second Phase (Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1970, p. 32, para. 33) is frequently
invoked for more than it can bear.”142
145. As Judge Higgins made clear “[t]hat dictum was directed to a very specific issue of
143
jurisdictionallocus standi”, namely the idea that States not considered injured under
the traditional rules governing international claims would have standing to invoke the
responsibility of other States for breaches of certain fundamental obligations.
146. Since recognizing the erga omnes concept in the Barcelona Traction case, the Court –
while yet to be seized with a proper erga omnes case – and its members have had
144
ample opportunity to affirm this erga omnes effect, which is also reflected in Article
145
48, para. 1, lit. b) of the ILC’s Articles on State Responsibility.
147. While details remain controversial, the Court’s jurisprudence, as well as the ILC’s
work, makes clear that the erga omnes concept is designed to facilitate the invocation
of existing obligations, not to create new obligations or extend existing ones. It
141
See notably Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company, Limited (Belgium v. Spain) (New Application:
1422), ICJ Reports 1970, 3, at 32-33; East Timor (Portugal v. Australia), ICJ Reports 1995, p. 90, at 102.
Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian TerritorAdvisory Opinion,
143 Reports 2003, p. 136, Sep. Op. Higgins, at para. 37.
Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian TerritorAdvisory Opinion,
144 Reports 2003, p. 136, Sep. Op. Higgins, at para. 37.
See e.g.East Timor,ICJ Reports 1995, 90, Diss. Op. Weeramantry, at 213-A;rmed Activities on the Territory of
the Congo(Democratic Republic of the Congvo. Uganda), ICJ Reports 2005, p. 168, Sep. Op. Simma, at paras. 32-41.
145Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts (2001), UN Doc. A/56/10, et seq.31
69 concerns, in the language of State respons ibility, the implementation of responsibility
arising from particular internationally wr ongful acts, but does not create new primary
obligations for the State to whom the (a llegedly wrongful) conduct is attributed. 146
Nor less does it affect the regime governing the jurisdiction of this Court – a matter
which the ILC’s work on State responsibility consciously did not address. 147
148. In fact, this latter aspect is brought out ve ry clearly by the Court’s jurisprudence, and
notably its Judgments in the East Timor case and the Armed Activities case. In the
former of these, the Court noted the erga omnes nature of the right to self-
determination, but observed in clear terms that
“the erga omnes character of a norm and the rule of consent to jurisdiction are two
148
different things”.
149. Accordingly, the Court applied an important principle governing the jurisdiction and
admissibility of proceedings, namely the indispensable third party rule, to proceedings
concerning the right to self-determination, its erga omnes character notwithstanding.
150. In the Armed Activities case, the Court, affirming the above-cited East Timor
statement, made a similar point in even greater clarity when it noted that
“the mere fact that rights and obligations erga omnes may be at issue in a dispute would
not give the Court jurisdiction to entertain that dispute”.49
151. As a consequence, the erga omnes character of the rights and obligations in question
did not affect the regular operation of the rules governing the Court’s jurisdiction. 150
152. Against the background of the Court’s unequivocal jurisprudence on the matter, Serbia
submits that Croatia’s reliance on the erga omnes concept in the present case is
146Cf. the ILC’s commentary to Article 48 of the Articles on State Responsibility, at para. 2: “Article 48 is based
on the idea that in case of breaches of specific obligations protecting the collective interests of a group of States
or the interests of the international community as a whole, responsibility may be invoked by States which are not
themselves injured in the sense of article 42.”
147Cf. notably the ILC’s decision against the inclusion, in the eventual text on State responsibility, of a special
part on dispute settlement.
148East Timor (Portugal v. Australia), ICJ Reports 1995, 90, at 102 (para. 29).
149
Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo v. Rwanda) (New
150lication), ICJ Reports 2006, 6, at para. 64.
Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo v. Rwanda) (New
Application), ICJ Reports 2006, 6, at paras. 65-70.
70 misplaced. Insofar as Croatia accuses Serb ia of having violated the Genocide
Convention, the “very specific issue of jurisdictional locus standi” 151 addressed in the
Barcelona Traction case simply does not present itself: the case at hand is not a case
of “public interest enforcement” by a State that – were it not for the erga omnes
character of the obligations at stake – coul d not be considered injured. Rather, it is a
case that, insofar as facts preeceding 27 April 1992 are concerned, would require the
recognition of retroactive effects of a jurisdictional clause. Even upon the most
benevolent interpretation, howev er, it is hard to see how the temporal scope of the
Court’s jurisdiction should be affected by the erga omnes concept.
153. If indeed, for the Court to exercise jurisdiction over acts prior to 27 April 1992,
because of the erga omnes character of the obligations involved
“[t]here [was] no need for both Parties to the dispute to have been Parties to the
Convention when the facts giving rise to it took place”. 152
How could it then be maintained that, as the Court has stressed
“the erga omnes character of a norm and the rule of consent to jurisdiction are two
different things”? 153
And how indeed can Croatia’s astonishing assertion that
“[n]either the Court’s jurisdiction, nor the Respondent’s responsibility under the Genocide
Convention, are conditioned upon the date of Croatia’s independence as the obligations
under the Genocide Convention are owed to the international community as a whole (erga
154
omnes), and any State may invoke responsibility for their breach”
be reconciled with the Court’s authoritative holding that
“the mere fact that right and obligations erga omnes may be at issue in a dispute would
155
not give the Court jurisdiction to entertain that dispute”?
151Ibid.
152Reply, para. 7.37.
153Cf. East Timor (Portugal v. Australia), ICJ Reports 1995, 90, at 102 (para. 29).
154Reply, para. 7.37.
155
Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo v. Rwanda) (New
Application), ICJ Reports 2006, 6, at para. 64.
71154. From the preceding quotations, it is clear that Croatia invokes the erga omnes concept
to justify effects which it precisely was not intended to produce – namely to create
jurisdictional links that otherwise do not ex ist. Serbia invites the Court to uphold its
previous jurisprudence on obligations erga omnes and to affirm the distinction
between the erga omnes character of an obligation, and the regime of jurisdiction.
155. Accordingly, the attempt by Croatia to rely on the concept of obligations erga omnes
in order to extent Court’s jurisdiction ratione temporis seems to be misplaced, while
the compromissory clause contained in Artic le IX of the Genocide Convention, just
like the Convention at large, does not possess any retroactive effect.
C. Responsibility for alleged breaches of the Genocide Convention predating 27 April
1992 cannot be transferred to Serbia
156. As was just demonstrated above, the Court’s lacks jurisdiction ratione temporis and is
thus, for that reason alone, not in a position to entertain Croatia’s claim. Even if it
were otherwise, quod non, and if one were to th us assume, be it only arguendo, that
the Court’s jurisdiction ratione temporis would cover events predating 27 April 1992 ,
Croatia’s claim would still not be successful for the reasons that will now be outlined.
157. Croatia is attempting to argue that Serbia may be held responsible for alleged acts of
genocide, despite the fact that the Genocid e Convention did not apply to those acts
(provided they have taken place at all,quod non):
i. By virtue of the principle underlying Artic le 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility which is said not only to apply to the facts underlying the dissolution of
the SFRY, but which, Croatia argues, is also able to stretch the scope of application
ratione temporis of the Genocide Convention a nd State responsibility arising
thereunder to a period where the Genocide Convention was not applicable;
ii. By virtue of the constitutional situation in Serbia (since 1990) respectively in the
FRY; or finally
iii. By virtue of the Declaration adopted by representatives of the parliaments of the SFRY,
as well as those of Serbia and Montenegro, on 27 April 1992 and the ensuing Note.
72158. Before proceeding with the analysis, it is worth noting that in its attempt to attribute
responsibility to Serbia, Croatia ’s Reply not only refers to conduct of organs of the
former SFRY, but even includes conduct of th e RSK within Croatia, arguing that this
could be attributed to Serb ia by virtue of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsbility. In Serbia’s view, it is tellin g that in order to “construct” Serbian
responsibility, Croatia needs to cumulativ ely rely on two of the truly exceptional
principles of attribution, namely Article 10, para. 2 and Article 8 of the ILC Articles
on State Responsibility. The necessity to combine these two rules of attribution is yet
a further illustration of Croatia’s need to blur legal categories in order to make its case.
159. Serbia will comment on the role of the RSK in detail in Chapter V below. For present
purposes, it suffices to deal with the legal issues raised by Article 10, para. 2, as well
as Serbian constitutional law and the Declaration of 27 April 1992. Serbia will counter
these arguments in the following sections and will then briefly discuss the alleged
impact of the erga omnes concepts on Serbia’s responsibility (and Croatia’s ability to
invoke it), as well as Croa tia’s claim that alleged breaches of the Genocide
Convention were continuous violations.
1) Serbia cannot be held responsible for acts predating 27 April 1992 on the basis
of the principle underlying Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility
160. As previously noted and argued in detail 156Serbia cannot be held responsible for acts
predating 27 April 1992 on the basis of Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility for six independent reasons which will now be further addressed taking
into account the Reply by the Applicant, namely since
a) The content of Article 10, para. 2 ILC Artic les on State Responsibility did not, as of
1992, represent customary international law;
b) There was no “movement” aiming at the establishment of the FRY;
c) There did not exist any required movement outside the established State structures;
d) There was a lack of success of any such alleged movement;
156
Counter-Memorial, paras. 276-364.
73 e) Article 10, para. 2, of the IL C Articles on State Responsibilit y constitutes a mere rule
of attribution which may not extent the scope of application ratione temporis of treaty
obligations otherwise not applicable during the relevant time; and finally
f) Since Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility does not apply in
cases where the predecessor State can be held responsible.
It should be noted that all of the above six arguments must be rebutted by Croatia if its
claim based on Article 10, para. 2 of the ILC’s Articles on State Responsibility were
to succeed.
a) The content of Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility did
not, as of 1992, represent customary international law
161. It is first worth reiterating that with regard to the case at hand the critical date for
establishing a rule of customary law identical to the one now contained in Article 10,
para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility is April 27, 1992. Thus, the relevant
question is not as to whether, as of today, such a rule does exist,quod non, to which the
Applicant has attempted to provide a positive answer, 157but rather whether, by the time
the alleged violations of international law are claimed to have taken place, i.e. in 1991/
1992, it did already exist as a rule of positive customary law. Accordingly, any post-
1992 State practice or opinio juris, if ever there was such, is irrelevant unless it can be
proven that it specifically relates back to the pre-1992 period.
162. Yet, even the very few examples Croatia a ttempts to rely on and refers to, including
statements made within the ILC, which are said to prove the existence of the aforesaid
rule on attribution, exclusively date from the post-1992 period, while any pre-1992
practice confirming the existence of the alleged rule of customary law contained in the
Article 10, para. 2, of the 2001 ILC Articles on State Responsibility is lacking.
163. Moreover, the burden is on the Applicant to prove that, indeed, by the critical date the
alleged rule of customary international law had already come into existence rather
158
than for the Respondent to do the contrary.
157
158Cf. Counter-Memorial, para. 293.
74164. As a matter of fact, the then Special Rappor teur of the ILC himself seems to have
argued in favour of the rule now containe d in Article 10, para. 2, for reasons of
expediency and equity only since the rule was said to “strike a fair balance at the level
159
of attribution” rather than for constituting a rule of the lex lata.
165. Indeed, when commenting on what was to become Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC
Articles on State Responsibility, States in turn, contrary to what Croatia claims, 160 did
not take a positive stance on the proposed rule and, in particular, did not express any
opinio juris on the matter. Moreover, the practice of the Eritrean-Ethiopian Claims
Commission, on which Croatia also relies, 161 not only again dates from the post-1992
period, but also deals with a different issu e namely the issue of the nationality of
natural persons rather than matters of State responsibility as such.
166. In sum, Croatia has still not been able to prove that, at the relevant date, the rule
underlying Article 10, para. 2, did indeed form part of customary law, quod non.
b) Lack of a movement aiming at the establishment of the FRY
167. Similarly, Croatia has still neither been able to identify the claimed “movement” the
actions of which are said to be attributable to Serbia by virtue of the alleged rule
underlying Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
162
168. Rather, Croatia refers to “those responsible for the conduct of Serbia’s affairs”, to
“they”, 163 or “the perpetrators in question”. 164 Yet, even if one were to agree that the
term “movement” ought to be broadly construed it must, at the very least, possess some
contours and structures since otherwise (assumingarguendothat Article 10, para. 2, of
the ILC Articles on State Responsibility did, as of 1992, represent customary
international law) any action by a group of private individuals could be attributable
under Article 10, para. 2, to the State to be created which certainly is not the case. In
159
Cf. Reply, para. 7.54 (emphasis in the original) (refe rring to Crawford, First Report on State Responsibility,
160LC 1998, vol. II/1, para. 279).
161Reply, para. 7.57.
162Reply, para. 7.57. and fn. 67.
Reply, para. 7.62.
163Ibid.
164Reply, para. 7.63.
75 particular, any interpretation of Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles of State
Responsibility must respect, just like other rule s on attribution, as the Court has stressed,
“the fundamental principle governing the law of international responsibility: a State is
responsible only for its own conduct, that is to say the conduct of persons acting, on
165
whatever basis, on its behalf.”
169. Moreover, and as an additional requirement, Croatia itself acknowledges that in order
for a movement to qualify as one covere d by Article 10, para. 2, (and the alleged
parallel norm of customary law) it must have been “aim[ing] at separation or the
dissolution of the State”. 166
170. In the case at hand this means that th e alleged “Serbian movement” must have aimed
at either the separation of the FRY from the SFRY or at the dissolution of the SFRY.
Yet, as the Respondent has already demonstrated, if ever there was such a movement,
quod non, its political aim was not to provide for the dissolution of the SFRY or to
create a rump State consisting of Serbia and Montenegro only, but rather to preserve
the overall predecessor State, i.e . the SFRY in which, obviously, all Serbs could
continue to live together in one single State.
171. Contrary to all plausibility and publicly available facts, Croatia indeed claims that it was
not Slovenia, Croatia (and later Bosnia and Herzegovina and finally Macedonia) that
seceded from the SFRY aiming at the dissolution of the SFRY leaving the rump territory
(consisting of Serbia and Montenegro) with no other choice but to create the FRY, but
rather that it was the aim of the alleged “Serbian movement” to expel the other constituent
republics of the SFRY so as to be able to create the FRY (and later Serbia proper).
172. In that context it should also be noted that if indeed (as claimed) there had been a
movement to establish a unified Serbian State beyond the borders of the FRY and
167
including parts of Croatia, the Applicant simply cannot explain why, in 1991, the
168
Republic of Serbia did not accept the SAO Krajina’s decision to join Serbia.
165Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of th e Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, p. 43, at para. 406.
166Reply, para. 7.59.
167Reply, para. 7.62.
168Cf. already Counter-Memorial, para. 492.
76173. Moreover, even after its coming into existence, the FRY
a) exercised pressure on both, the RSK and th e Republica Srspka to accept relevant
peace plans (providing for them forming pa rt of Croatia respectively Bosnia and
Herzegovina), a fact accepted by the Respondent itself; 169
b) did not intervene when the RSK was attacked by Croat forces during Operations Flash
and Storm,
which are facts that once again contradict the existence of an alleged plan to unite all
Serbs within one single State.
c) Lack of any “movement” outside the established State structures
174. As to the further requirement that the alleged “movement” acted outside the
framework of the predecessor State, 170which requirement the Applicant by now seems
to have accepted, 171Croatia claims that it was “obviously” meant only to “exclude
from the scope of Article 10 instances of constitutional advocacy for change”. 172
175. Yet, the Commentary to Ar ticle 10, para. 2, on which ot herwise Croatia frequently
relies, only requires that the actions of th e “movement” were not “carried out within
the framework of the predecessor State” 173 without otherwise, contrary to what Croatia
assumes, limiting the object and purpose of this clause. This is confirmed, as Serbia
has already previously shown in more detail, by the ILC’s Commentary on Article 10
of its Articles on State Respons ibility. Notably, the ILC’s refers to the notion of a
“revolutionary” 174 movement respectively to movements that are in a “continuing
struggle with the constituted structure”. 175
176. In contrast thereto, the JNA, the acti ons of which constitute, according to the
176
Applicant, in large parts the alleged genocidal activities clearly did not constitute
169
Reply, para.3.121.
170Cf. already Counter-Memorial, paras. 303-307.
171Reply, para. 7.60.
172Reply, para. 7.60.
173See para. 10 of the ILC’s Commentary to Art.10 (also quoted in Croatia’s Reply, para. 7.59).
174
175Para. 10 of the ILC’s Commentary to Art.10 (and cf. already Counter-Memorial, para. 304).
176Para. 2 of the ILC’s Commentary to Art.10 (and cf. already Counter-Memorial, para. 304).
See notably Chapter 2 of the Memorial and Chapter 3 of the Reply.
77 such a “revolutionary force”. Rather, the JNA acted as a federal organ of the then
SFRY and was trying to subdue insurgents fo rces that were attempting to bring about
the secession of Croatia from the SFRY while the JNA was trying to uphold the
continued existence of the SFRY 177rather than, as the Applicant claims, aiming at the
creation of the FRY consisting of Serbia and Montenegro only.
177. Accordingly, the account of facts given by Croatia, which tries to bring the
developments leading to the dissolution of the SFRY within the scenario contemplated
by Article 10, para. 2 ILC Ar ticles on State Responsibility, is misrepresenting the
political reality as it unfolded on the ground in 1991/1992.
d) Lack of success of the alleged “movement”
178. For obvious reasons Croatia, in its Reply, does not devote any space to the further
requirement clearly contained in the text of Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on
State Responsibility, namely that the movement, in order for its acts to be attributable
178
to the newly created State, must “ succeed in establishing a new State” , i.e. must be
successful in reaching its political goals. Contrary to what it still had claimed in its
179
Written Observations, namely that the goal of the Serbian movement had been to
create the FRY (which indeed could not seriously be considered a “success”), Croatia
now seems to claim that the objective of the alleged movement had been “to unite
Serb areas in Croatia and in Bosnia and Herzegovina with Serbia in order to establish
a unified Serb State”. 180
179. Yet, a simple look at the map suffices to confirm that both, formerly dominantly
ethnically Serb-populated areas of Croatia , as well as the Republika Srpska, do not
form part of the FRY or now Serbia, but have rather remained integral parts of Croatia
and Bosnia-Herzegovina respectively. It thus does not correspond to reality, to say the
least, to claim that the alleged movement succeeded in its goal of creating a new State
consisting of a “larger Serbia”.
177See Counter-Memorial.paras. 504 – 506, as well as Annexes 6, 7 and 8 of this Rejoinder.
178Emphasis added.
179Cf. Croatia’s Written Observations, at para. 3.33.
180Reply, para. 7.62.
78 e) Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibilty as a rule of attribution
180. As to the function of Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility as
a mere rule of attribution Serbia can be brief since Croatia has thought it appropriate to
181
not counter the detailed arguments brought forward by Serbia in that regard.
181. It should be noted, however, that Croatia itself now acknowledges this character of
Article 10, para. 2, of the IL C Articles on State Responsibility when stating that “the
only question is whether their conduct [ i.e. that of Serb officials] is attributable to
182
Serbia. This, under 10 (2), it is.”
182. It must also be taken note of the fact th at, in particular, Croa tia has not put forward
any counter-argument as to the incompatibility of its interpretation of Article 10, para.
2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsib ility with the system of unilateral
declarations to be made by national liberation movements under Article 1, para. 4 and
96, of the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Convention. 183
183. Finally, with regard to the relevance of the distinction between the treaty-based
prohibition of genocide and the parallel prohibition existing under customary law with
regard to Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Ar ticles on State Responsibility, it suffices to
refer to the above considerations on the matter. 184 It should be noted, however, at this
juncture that Croatia thought it appropriate to simply state “that the conduct of Serbian
officials [prior to 27 April 1992] was already governed by international law (as
declared in the Convention)”. 185
184. Yet, this statement begs the relevant question, since, as shown in detail above, 186the
Court’s jurisdiction under Article IX of th e Genocide Convention does not extent to
violations of customary law regardless of the Genocide Conve ntion’s so-called
187
“customary law moorings”.
181Reply, at paras. 7.64.-7.65.
182Reply, para. 7.65.
183
184Counter-Memorial, paras. 347-349.
185See supra, section 2.B.
186Reply, para. 7.65.
187Supra, section 2.B.
Reply, para. 7.65.
79 f) Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility does not apply in cases
where the predecessor State can be held responsible
185. Serbia has already dealt with the interrelationship between the law of State succession
and the rule underlying Article 10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State
responsibility.188 It therefore suffices to recall th e exceptional character of Article 10,
para. 2 – as stressed by the ILC in its Commentary 189 – which was meant to close a
“responsibility gap” solely in those case s where the relevant acts could not be
attributed to the predecessor State.
186. Yet, in the case at hand where the SFRY still existed until its dissolution in April 1992
and where the relevant acts (such as the alle ged acts of genocide Croatia claims have
been committed by JNA units) are attributable to the predecessor State, such required
responsibility gap does not exist.
*
187. On the whole, it follows that, for a whole set of reasons, both factual and legal, Article
10, para. 2, of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility does not provide, neither
generally and indeed even less in the case at hand, a basis for providing for Serbia’s
responsibility with regard to a lleged genocidal acts that Cr oatia claims have occurred
prior to 27 April 1992.
188. As will be shown in the following, Croatia ’s second and third arguments allegedly
justifying a transfer of responsibility equa lly fail. Croatia notably cannot rely on
provisions of Serbian constitutional law to support its claims.
188Counter-Memorial, paras. 351-361; and already supra.
189See para. 6 of the ILC’s commentary to Art. 10.
80 2) Serbia’s responsibility for acts committed prior to 27 April 1992 cannot be based
on the Constitution of Serbia respectively that of the FRY
a) The 1990 Constitution of the Republic of Serbia
189. Croatia claims that the 1990 Serbian constitution “located [Serbia] as an independent
State”, 190that it constituted “an independence constitution” 191 and that accordingly
Serbia should be treated concerning acts that took place prior to 27 April 1992 “as an
independent State – separate and distinct from the SFRY”. 192
190. Yet, this assumption is contradicted not onl y by the uniform practice of third States
which never treated Serbia as a sovereign State prior to 27 April 1992, but also by both
the very text of the Serbian Constitution towhich, indeed Croatia itself makes reference,
as well as by the practice of organs of the SFRY until the very day the SFRY dissolved.
191. For one, Article 135, para. 1, of the 1990 Serb ian Constitution expressly stated that
193
Serbia continued to “[be] part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia”.
This unequivocal provision in fact prevented Serbia from being an independent State,
which meant that it could not incur respons ibility under the relevant rules of State
responsibility.
192. Moreover, Article 135, para. 1, of the 1990 Serbian constitution also explicitly
acknowledged that any rights and duties the Re public of Serbia might have, are to be
exclusively “realised in the Federation according to Federal Constitution” and will
also “be realised in accordance with Federal Constitution.” 194
194. It is thus, to say the least, misleading, to state, as Croatia does, 195 that Article 135,
para. 1, of the 1990 Serbian Constitution wa s meant to subordinate the Federal
Constitution of the SFRY to the Constitution of Serbia. Rather the contrary is the case.
190
191Reply, para. 7.45.
192Reply, para. 7.46.
193Reply, para. 7.45.
The 1990 Serbian Constitution, as translated and quoted by the Applicant in para. 7.47 of the Reply.
194Reply, para. 7.47.
195Reply, para. 7.47.
81195. This is confirmed by the very practice of the organs of the SFRY. Indeed, as was
196
already shown in both Serbia’s Preliminary Objections as well as in its Counter-
197
Memorial in more detail, the Constitutional Court of Yugoslavia (SFRY), in 1991
alone, rendered 24 decisions by which Serbia n legislative acts (as indeed those of
other republics including that of Croatia as well) were declared unconstitutional as
being incompatible with the Federal Constitution. This contradicts the Applicant’s
claim that “it was entirely a matter for Serbia to decide whether to continue to perform
its obligations under the Constitution of the SFRY”. 198Rather, to the contrary, it was
for the organs of the SFRY, including its highest judicial body, to determine the
compatibility of Serbian acts and actions with the federal legal system.
b) The 1992 Constitution of the FRY
196. Neither can it be argued that the FRY assumed State responsibility for acts committed
by the SFRY prior to 27 April 1992 by virtue of Article 16 of the FRY’s constitution,
which, according to Croatia, represented ”Serbia’s self-proclaimed continuity with
199
regard to the SFRY”.
197. Before entering into details, it is worth noting that in its own Memorial the Applicant
was adamant to stress that
“Neither Croatia nor any of the other Republics of SFRY which became independent
accept that FRY was the ‘continuation’ in a legal sense of the SFRY.” 200
198. Moreover, the sole and only aim of Article 16 of the 1992 constitution of the FRY was
to secure that all treaties the SFRY had entered into, would continue to be in force vis-
à-vis the FRY. This becomes evident when reading Article 16, para. 1 of the FRY
Constitution in conjunction with para. 2 thereof. Para. 2 governs the effects of treaties
within the domestic law of the then FRY, while para. 1 circumscribes, as a logical first
step, which treaties the FRY is bound by.
196
197Preliminary Objections of Serbia, at para. 4.24.
198Counter-Memorial, para. 535.
Reply, para. 7.47.
199Reply, heading preceding para. 7.45. and para.7.48.
200Memorial, para. 2.138 (with footnote 220).
82199. Put otherwise, both provisions are future-oriented as to the fulfilment ad futurum of
those international obligations by wh ich the FRY is bound, but do not govern
international obligations the SFRY might have incurred for having in the past
allegedly violated international law.
200. What is more, Article 16 of the 1992 FRY Constitution addressed matters of domestic
constitutional law only and thus could not provide a basis for any international
obligation of Serbia. As the International Law Commission had opportunity to state in
its 2006 Guiding Principles applicable to unila teral declarations of States capable of
201
creating legal obligations it is only due to “their unilateral behaviour on the
202
international plan” that States may find themselves bound by unilateral acts.
3) Serbiaresponsibility for acts committed prior to 27 April 1992 cannot be based
on the 1992 Declaration
201. In its Reply of 20 December 2010 the Applicant – for the first time ever since it had
started proceedings against the Respondent in 1999, i.e. after more than eleven years –
now not only claims that the declaration adopted on 27 April 1992 amounts to “a
203
unilateral declaration binding it internationally” but that the FRY /Serbia also
thereby assumed responsibility for violati ons of the Genocide Convention for which,
otherwise, it could not be held responsible.
202. In this far-reaching reading, the Declaration of 27 April 1992 assumes the role of a
deus ex machina that suddenly solves all problems Croatia might have faced. Yet it is
no such thing, and for three alternative reasons, Croatia’s attempt to present it as such
must fail:
a) The Declaration did not emanate from authorities that could bind a State by way of a
unilateral declaration;
b) It did not assume State responsibility for acts prior to 27 April 1992; and finally,
c) Croatia completely disregards its own behaviour on the matter.
201UN Doc/61/10, paras. 177 et seq.
202Ibid., first preambular paragraph of the ILC Guiding Principles.
203Reply, para. 7.73
83 a) The Declaration did not emanate from authorities that could bind a State by way
of a unilateral declaration.
203. In its 2008 Judgment in the case at hand, the Court found that the declaration of 27
April 1992 and the ensuing Note did, in the special circumstances of the case, amount
to a notification of succession. The Court stressed, however, that this was only the
case since the act of the State related to a pre-existing set of circumstances and was
essentially confirmatory rather than constitutive in nature and could, for this very
reason, be subject to less rigid requirements of form. 204
204. Conversely, a binding unilateral declarati on generally, and one with the content
Croatia alleges in particular, creates new obligations for the State concerned. It is for
this very reason that the Court has consiste ntly held that a unilateral declaration, in
order to bind the State in questions, needs to be made by an authority vested with the
power to do so, and, in particular, by a head of State, a head of Government or a
205
minister for foreign affairs or, at least, by other members of government with a
206
technical portfolio within the purview of their respective ministry.
205. The declaration of 27 April 1992 was adopted by an ad hoc meeting of
parliamentarians of the SFRY and those of two of its constituent entities, namely
Serbia and Montenegro, none of whom had a mandate, either under international or
domestic law, to represent the entities concerned internationally.
b) The Declaration did not assume State responsibility for acts predating
27 April 1992
206. In its 2008 Judgment on Preliminary Obje ctions the Court already had ample
opportunity to consider the legal effects of the 1992 declaration and the ensuing Note
204
Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
205bia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 109.
Nuclear Tests (Australia v. France), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1974, 253, at paras. 4Application of the
Convention on the Prevention and Puni shment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v.
Yugoslavia), Preliminary Objections, I.C.J. Reports 1996 (II), 595, at para. 44; Arrest Warrant of 11 April 2000
(Democratic Republic of the Congo v. Belgium), I.C.J. Reports 2002, 3, at para. 53; see aLegal Status of
Eastern Greenland (Denmark v. Norway), P.C.I.J., Series A/B, No. 53 (1933), at 71.
206Case concerning Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (New Application: 2002) (Democratic
Republic of the Congo v. Rwanda), Jurisdiction of the Court and Admissibility of the Application, ICJ Reports
2006, 6, at para. 46.
84 and it is worth recalling the essential arguments the Court has developed in that regard
which shed significant light on the scope, both ratione materiae and ratione temporis,
of the aforesaid declaration.
207. The Court stressed that “the 1992 declaration must be considered as having had the
207
effects of a notification of succession to treaties” . Yet, as the Court also stated on
the same occasion, a notifica tion of succession merely entails the consent to be
208
considered bound by the respective treaty ad futurum but not as, by the same token,
also assuming State responsibility for alleged treaty violations of its predecessor State
that have occurred in the past.
208. Indeed, the Court was very careful in limiting the effects of the declaration and the
Note, scrupulously analysing its very terms. It stated:
“In sum, in the present case the Court, taking into account both the text of the declaration
and Note of 27 April 1992, and the consistent conduct of the FRY at the time of its
making and throughout the years 1992-2001, considers that it should attribute to those
documents precisely the effect that they were, in the view of the Court, intended to have on
the face of their terms : namely, that from that date onwards the FRY would be bound by
the obligations of a party in respect of all the multilateral conventions to which the SFRY
had been a party at the time of its dissolution […].”09
209. This warrants two remarks. On the one hand, had the Court really wanted to provide
the declaration and the Note with the content Croatia now claims it has, it would have
210
not referred to the FRY to be bound “by the obligations of a party” as it did. Rather,
the Judgment would have necessarily st ated that the FRY would be bound by the
obligations of the SFRY. Yet, this is clearly not what the Judgment says.
210. This limited understanding of the declaration and the ensuing Note, as brought out by
the Court’s jurisprudence in this very case, is confirmed by the fact that the FRY was
207Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 111.
208
Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
209bia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 109.
Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
210bia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 117 (emphasis added).
Emphasis added.
85 considered to have entailed treaty obliga tions arising under the Genocide Convention
from 27 April 1992 onwards only, thus for this additional reason also excluding treaty
obligations that had come into existence prior to that very date.
211. On the other hand, it should be also noted that in its 2008 Judgment on Serbia’s
Preliminary Objections, the Court devoted almost ten pages to the legal effect of the
211
declaration dated 27 April 1992 and the ensuing Note. At the same time, the Court
soon thereafter found that, in order to d ecide upon Serbia’s preliminary objection
212
ratione temporis, it would need to have more elements before it. Given the extent of
the written and oral pleadings by the Par ties as to the legal effects of the 1992
declaration and the character of any determination of possible further effects of the
declaration (including those Croatia now claims) not requiring any further factual
findings, it would have been logical, if not mandatory, to already in 2008 decide upon
Serbia’s preliminary objection ratione temporis provided Croatia’s reading of the
1992 declaration was correct, quod non.
212. Moreover, Croatia’s overbroad reading of the 1992 declaration also conflicts with the
2006 ILC Guiding Principles applicable to unila teral declarations of States capable of
creating legal obligations, which instrument provides that
“[i]n the case of doubt as to the scope of the obligations resulting from such a declaration,
213
such obligations must be interpreted in a restrictive manner.”
213. The ILC’s Commentary accompanying Principle 7, referring back to the Court’s
jurisprudence on the matter, 214 further underlines this in particular with regard to, as in
the case at hand, declarations made erga omnes when stating that
“[t]he interpreter must therefore proceed with great caution in determining the legal
effects of unilateral declarations, in particular when the unilateral declaration has no
215
specific addressee.”
211Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at paras. 98-117.
212Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
213bia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 129.
214Principle 7 of the ILC Guiding Principles (UN Doc/61/10).
215Frontier Dispute (Burkina Faso v. Republic of Mali), ICJ Reports 1986, p. 554, para. 39.
See para. 2 of the ILC’s commentary to Principle 7 of the its Guiding Principles (in UN Doc. A/61/10).
86214. In addition, according to the Court’s constant jurisprudence, in order
“to assess the intentions of the author of a unilateral act, account must be taken of all the
circumstances in which the act occurred”. 216
215. Given the very timing of the declaration, na mely while the various armed conflicts
surrounding the process of dissolution of the SFRY were ongoing and during a time
when allegations of wrongful conduct had already been put forward by various parties
involved in the conflict, it seems hard to a ssume, to say the least, that (as Croatia now
claims) the authors of the declaration wanted to formally acknowledge State
responsibility for all acts that had occurred prior to the adoption of the declaration and
otherwise attributable to the SFRY. Rather, in the light of the Court’s findings in
2008, it seems that their sole intention was to safeguard the status of the emerging
FRY as a contracting party to all treaties the SFRY had entered into.
c) Croatia disregards its own behaviour vis-à-vis the Declaration of 27 April 1992
216. As the Court has made clear from the very beginning of its jurisprudence on the matter,
and confirmed by the ILC’s work, the binding character of unilateral declarations is
based on the principle of good faith. As the Court put it as early as in 1974:
“One of the basic principles governing the creation and performance of legal obligations,
whatever their source, is the principle of good faith. […] Thus interested States may take
cognizance of unilateral declarations and place confidence in them, and are entitled to
218
require that the obligation thus created be respected.”
217. As becomes clear from the Court’s dictum, it is the unilateral statement and the trust placed
into it by the recipient State that creates the binding effect between the States concerned.
218. This is further confirmed by Principle 3 of the ILC Guiding Principles applicable to
unilateral declarations of States capable of creating legal obligations which provides
216
Frontier Dispute (Burkina Faso v. Republic of Mali), I.C.J. Reports 1986, p. 554, at para. 40; sArmedso
Activities on the Territory of the Congo (New Application: 2002) (Democratic Republic of the Congo v.
Rwanda), Jurisdiction and Admissibility, ICJ Reports 2006, 6, at para. 53; and Nuclear Tests (Australia v.
France; New Zealand v. France), I.C.J. Reports 1974, 253, at para. 51, and 457, at para. 53.
217See Principle 1 of the ILC Guiding Principles (in UN Doc. A/61/10).
218Nuclear Tests (Australia v. France), ICJ Reports 1974, p. 253, at para.46 (emphasis added).
87 that, in order to determine any legal effect s of a unilateral declar ation, it is necessary
to take “account of the reactions to which they gave rise” 219and, in particular, whether
third States “take cognizance of commitments undertaken”. 220
219. Yet, as has been previously been shown by the Respondent, 221the Applicant, from the
very time the declaration of 27 April 1992 had been adopted, continuously and uniformly
took the position that it did not entail legal consequences and that it could not even make
the FRY a contracting party to the treaties the SFRY had entered into, and that the FRY
could thus even less incur State responsibility for violations of such treaties.
220. Moreover, as mentioned, the first time Croatia claimed that the declaration dated 27
April 1992 could amount to a binding unilate ral declaration allegedly acknowledging
the responsibility of the Applicant for acts that had occurred prior to 27 April 1992
was in its 2010 Reply, i.e. 11 years after bringing the case before the Court and 18(!)
years after the declaration had been adopte d. This stands in sharp contrast to the
instances where the Court had found a unilate ral declaration to have amounted to a
legally binding commitment, where short periods of time between the relevant
declarations on the one hand, and the reliance on them on the other had passed. To use
the words of the ILC, Croatia had thus never “take[n] cognizance of commitments
222
undertaken” until it now – for obvious reasons – suddenly has begun to argue that
the declaration dated 27 April 1992 coul d amount not only to a legally binding
unilateral declaration, but also one posse ssing a far-reaching and almost unlimited
extent.
4) Serbia’s cannot be held responsibl e for acts committed prior to 27 April 1992
nor can Croatia invoke Serbia’s responsi bility for acts prior to 8 October 1991
on the basis of the concept of obligations erga omnes
221. Croatia advances yet another argument aimed at explaining why Serbia should have
incurred responsibility for conduct predating its coming into existence as an
independent State. In a short passage of its Reply, it stresses the erga omnes character
219Para. 3 of the ILC’s Commentary to Principle 3 of the its Guiding Principles (in UN Doc. A/61/10).
220Cf. Principle 3 of the ILC Guiding Principles (in UN Doc. A/61/10).
221Preliminary Objections, paras. 3.35.–3.38.
222Cf. para. 3 of the ILC’s Commentary to Principle 3 of the its Guiding Principles (in UN Doc. A/61/10).
88 of obligations imposed by the Genocide C onvention. This – Croa tia asserts – means
that regular rules of treaty application can simply be dispensed with:
“There is no need for both Parties to the dispute to have been Parties to the Convention
when the facts giving rise to it took place. Neither the Court’s jurisdiction, nor the
Respondent’s responsibility under the Genocide Convention, are conditioned upon the
date of Croatia’s independence as the obligations under the Genocide Convention are
owed to the international community as a whole ( erga omnes), and any State may invoke
responsibility for their breach.”23
222. Insofar as this passage draws on the erga omnes concept to explain effects on the
temporal scope of the C ourt’s jurisdiction under Article IX of the Genocide
Convention, it has been addressed already. 224 For present purposes, it is interesting to
note the astonishing breadth of Croatia assertion. In addition to extending the temporal
scope of jurisdictional rules, erga omnes – according to Croatia – also makes treaties
binding upon entities which, at the relevant time, did not even exist as States. And
finally – as may be noted in passing – it even allows entities that would subsequently
become States (such as Croatia) to invoke responsibility incurred by other non-States
(such as Serbia at the relevant time prior to 27 April 1992).
223. A moment’s consideration is sufficient to appreciate the extremes to which Croatia has
to go in order to be able to draw support from the erga omnes concept. If indeed in
treaty-based disputes involving obligations erga omnes,
“[t]here [was] no need for both Parties to the dispute to have been Parties to the
Convention when the facts giving rise to it took place”, 225
the erga omnes concept would really be a cure-all. However, as has been noted
already, it is not. It derives its crucial relevance precisely from the fact that the Court
has recognized it in a specific procedural setting, with respect to “a very specific issue
226
of jurisdictional locus standi”.
223
224Reply, para. 7.37.
225See supra, paras. 141-155.
Reply, para. 7.37.
226Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian TerritoryAdvisory Opinion,
ICJ Reports 2003, p. 136, Sep. Op. Higgins, at para. 37.
89224. As noted above, the Court’s jurisprudence since Barcelona Traction clearly shows that
the concept modifies the implementation of State responsibility, but does not create
responsibility out of the blue by justifying the retroactive extension of treaties. In fact,
the matter is brought out clearly by the celebrated dictum which is widely seen to mark
the beginning of the erga omnes era. As is well known, in Barcelona Traction, the
Court distinguished obligations erga omnes from obligations in the field of diplomatic
protection by describing the circle of States that could be seen to have an interest in
their protection: hence the former are “the concern of all States”, the latter the concern
of a particular State (the State of nationality).227 Yet, nothing in the celebrated passage
even remotely hints at the possibility that obligations erga omnes should follow a
different, special rule of retroactivity.
225. For an obligation erga omnes to be “the concern of all States”, it must be an obligation
in the first place; for the erga omnes concept to facilitate the implementation of
responsibility, there must be responsibility to begin with. However, as the ILC noted
in its work on State responsibility,
“for responsibility to exist, the breach must occur at a time when the State is bound by the
228
obligation”.
226. Nothing in the Court’s jurisprudence nor indeed in the ILC’s work on State
responsibility (i.e. the two main catalysts having recognized and operationalized the
concept of erga omnes obligations), suggests that this “basic principle” 229could be
modified if the obligations in question were owed erga omnes.
227. Indeed, if it were any different, one might ask why the parties, and the Court, spent
significant time considering the temporal application of obligations in cases such as
Georgia-Russiaand Nauru, or indeed why the Court in its Judgment on Preliminary
Objections in the present proceedings carefully established the date from which onwards
Serbia could be considered a party to the Genocide Convention. Upon Croatia’s extreme
understanding of the erga omnes concept, all this would have been completely
227Barcelona Traction, Light and Power Company, Limited (Belgium v. Spain) (New Application: 1962), ICJ
Reports 1970, p. 3, at para. 33.
228Para. 1 of the ILC’s Commentary to Article 13.
229Para. 1 of the ILC’s Commentary to Article 13.
90 unnecessary, as “[t]here would” – to adapt Croatia’s argument – have been “no need for
both Parties to the dispute to have been Parties to the Convention when the facts giving
rise to it took place.”230The very fact that the Court and the parties felt the need to spend
significant time on this suggests how divorced from reality Croatia’s erga omnes
construction is.
228. Read properly, the concept of obligations erga omnes does not entail any modification
of the rules governing the temporal applic ation of treaties and it provides no basis for
attempts to transfer upon Serbia any res ponsibility that may have been incurred by
breaches predating 27 April 1992.
229. Finally, it is worth noting that prior to 8 October 1991, Croatia, not being a State, was
not in a position to invoke the responsibility of other States for acts having occurred
prior to that very date. As the point has b een addressed in more detail in the Counter-
Memorial (to which Croatia has not replied), it may suffice to note that the general
issue of claims raised by entities that were yet to achieve stat ehood was addressed in
Judge Fitzmaurice’s separate opinion in the Northern Cameroons case. In it, Judge
Fitzmaurice held that cla ims relating to events pred ating Cameroon’s independence
could not form the basis of claims brought by it, holding that as
“The Applicant State did not exist as such at the date of these acts or events, these could not
have constituted, in relation to it,an international wrong, nor have caused it an international
injury. An act which did not, in relation to the party complaining of it, constitute a wrong at
the time it took place, obviously cannot ex post facto become one.“31
Serbia submits that this statement has lost none of its relevance.
5) Serbia cannot be held responsible for acts predating 27 April 1992 on the basis
of the concept of “continuous violations”
230. Finally, in a short paragraph Croatia also asserts that irrespective of arguments about
retroactivity, conduct predating 27 April 1992 could trigger Serbia’s responsibility in
232
the present proceedings as its alleged violations were of a “continuing character”.
230
231Northern Cameroons, Sep. Op. Fitzmaurice, ICJ Reports 1963, 15, at 130.
232Reply ,para. 7.78.
91 This, Croatia argues, applies to the duty to prevent genocide, to prosecute and punish
perpetrators and to the duty to cooperate with international tr ibunals. These claims
warrant several remarks.
231. First, as the Court had already occasion to remark and confirm, and as will be
addressed further below, 233 under Article VI of the Genocide Convention
“[p]ersons charged with genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in Article III shall
be tried by a competent tribunal of the State in the territory of which the act was
committed […].”
232. Accordingly, the obligation of Serbia to pr osecute, put to trial and eventually punish,
persons having committed genocide only encompasses acts of genocide committed in
234
Serbia itself.
233. Second, as to the obligation to cooperate with the international tribunal referred to in
Article VI of the Genocide Convention, in casu the ICTY, it is obvious that States
under Article VI of the Genocide Convention only have to co-operate with the tribunal
to the extent the person concerned is accused of genocide, or as the Court put it in
Bosnia case:
“For it is certain that once such a court has been established, Article VI obliges the
Contracting Parties ‘which shall have accepted its jurisdiction’ to co-operate with it, which
implies that they will arrest persons accused of genocide who are in their territory — even
if the crime of which they are accused was committed outside it — and, failing
prosecution of them in the parties’ own courts, that they will hand them over for trial by
235
the competent international tribunal.”
234. Moreover, Goran Hadžić, which in any event has been indicted by the ICTY solely for
crimes against humanity under Article 5 of the ICTY Statute and for violations of the
laws or customs of war under Artic le 3 of the ICTY Statute, but not for acts of
genocide under Article 4 of the ICTY Statute, has been transferred to the ICTY by
233See below, Chapter V, para. 571.
234See Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, p. 43, para. 442.
235Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, p. 43, at para. 443 (emphasis added).
92 Serbia on 22 July 2011. Thus, and in any case, the issue of any alleged lack of co-
operation by Serbia with the ICTY under Article VI of the Genocide Convention, even
if it had arisen, quod non, has become moot, which, by the same token, also renders
the issue of any continuing character of such obligation obsolete.
235. Finally, third, the obligation to prevent genoc ide neither possesses a continuing
character since the obligation underlying Article I of the Genocide Convention aims at
preventing acts of genocide from occurring as opposed to preventing their
prolongation. This is true ev en if one were to assume arguendo that the (alleged)
violation of the obligation to prevent genocid e occurring prior to the critical date (i.e .
27 April 1992) allegedly had effects thereaf ter since, as the ILC has put it, the
respective individualized violation of international law itself must have continued:
“An act does not have a continuing character merely because its effects or consequences
extend in time. It must be the wrongful act as such which continues.” 236
236. As a matter of fact, the Court itself has confirmed in its jurisprudence that the
obligation to prevent genocide under Artic le I of the Genocide Convention does not
amount to an obligation of a continuous char acter within the meaning of Article 14,
para. 2 of the ILC Articles on State Responsib ility, but instead is governed by Article
14, para. 3, of the ILC Articles.
237. As the Court put it in the Bosnia case:
“Thirdly, a State can be held responsible for breaching the obligation to prevent genocide
only if genocide was actually committed. It is at the time when commission of the
prohibited act (genocide or any of the other acts listed in Article III of the Convention)
begins that the breach of an obligation of pr evention occurs. In this respect, the Court
refers to a general rule of the law of State responsibility, stated by the ILC in Article 14,
paragraph 3, of its Articles on State Responsibility:
[...]
The breach of an international obligation requiring a State to prevent a given event occurs
when the event occurs and extends over the entire period during which the event continues
237
and remains not in conformity with that obligation.’”
236See para. 6 of the ILC’s Commentary to Article 10.
93238. This approach is also reflected in and confirmed by the ILC’s commentary on Article
14, para. 3, of its Articles on State Responsibility where the Commission stated
expressis verbis that
“[i]f the obligation in question was only concer ned to prevent the happening of the event
in the first place (as distinct from its continuation), there will be no continuing wrongful
238
act.”
239. Accordingly, Croatia’s reliance on the concept of “continuous violations”, with regard
to the obligations to prevent genocide , to prosecute and punish perpetrators
respectively is unfounded.
4. Concludo ingervations
240. In summary, Croatia cannot base its allegations on “facts that occurred prior to the
date on which the FRY came into existence as a separate State, capable of being a
party in its own right to the (Genocide) Convention”. 239 For the reasons set out in the
preceding sections, these facts are out with the Court’s jurisdiction ratione temporis
and can have neither entailed the responsibility of Serbia. More specifically, as has
been shown, neither the Genocide Conventi on as such, nor its Article IX, produce
retroactive effects. Moreover, responsibility that may have been incurred by the SFRY
cannot be transferred to Serbia.
241. As a consequence, conduct predating 27 April 1992 and 8 October 1991 cannot form
the basis for a judgment in the present proceedings.
237Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, para. 431.
238See para. 14 of the ILC’s Commentary to Article 14 (footnote omitted).
239Cf. Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v.
Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 412, at para. 129.
94 CHAPTER III
EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY THE APPLICANT
1. Introduction
242. Recent contentious cases before the Court ( Democratic Republic of the Congo v.
Uganda and Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro ) have highlighted
how the questions of fact-finding and the proper use of evidence are important for a
thorough deliberation of disputes involving charges of exceptional gravity against a
State. Whereas the Memorial devotes no attention to this issue, the Counter-Memorial
makes a careful examination of the matter, which is fully in accordance with the
previous practice of the Court. 240 Such an approach has compelled the Applicant to
reply to the Respondent’s observations in detail. 241
243. It appears that the Applicant agrees in pr inciple with the Respondent concerning the
general approach to adopt with respect to the burden and standard of proof.
Nevertheless, the Respondent cannot accept the broad propositions that the Applicant
submits to the Court without any real connection with its previously expressed general
242
views. A disagreement between the Parties is particularly evident concerning the
method of proof: again, the Applicant quotes the same references to the Court’s case
law that were previously cited by the Respondent, but the Applicant always attaches to
243
them certain conflicting conclusions.
244. In order to rebut the Applicant’s assertions and, where necessary, clarify its position, the
Respondent will, in accordance with the purpose of this Rejoinder, briefly examine the
documentary materials submitted by the Applicant. In addition, the Applicant’s proposition
that the Court should depart from its previous practice in the Bosniacase concerning the
decisions of the Prosecutor of the ICTY not to include the charge of genocide in an
indictment 244deserves special attention. Finally, the Respondent will consider some of the
Applicant’s suggestions which implicitly try to shift the burden of proof.
240Counter-Memorial, Chapter III, Questions of Proof.
241Reply, Chapter II.
243See, for example, unfounded conclusions of paras. 2.5 and 2.14 of the Reply.
See, para. 2.24 of the Reply.
244ICJ,Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and MonteneJ)dgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91, para. 217.
952. Documents submitted by the Applicant that are inadmissible and unreliable
A. Witnessstatements
245. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent obs erves that the statements submitted as
evidence in support of the Memorial do not fulfill minimum evidentiary requirements,
as they are either not signed, or it appears th at they were not taken by an authorized
domestic organ or in accordance with a procedure that would fulfill minimum
procedural safeguards. Furthermore, the Respondent observes that these statements
(433 in total) were allegedly given by persons with strong interests in this case and
consequently, their probative value is in doubt. Also, most of the submitted statements
do not contain evidence on which the legal elements of the crime of genocide can be
established, that is to say, the documents are irrelevant to the subject matter of this case.
246. The Applicant objects to this claim, and states that “the Court is asked to dismiss the
245
evidence of several hundred individuals who were present during the conflict.”
Such a view is not very helpful for the purpose of the good administration of justice.
247. In concreto, the Respondent observes that 332 out of 433 statements annexed to the
Memorial do not contain even the signatur e of the person who allegedly made the
statement in his or her original language. In 154 statements it is not indicated who the
person or the entity which took the statement was, while 161 statements do not contain
the signature of the person who allegedly took them. Additionally, 209 statements
annexed to the Memorial are actually the official records of police interrogations,
which are inadmissible as evidence in casesbefore domestic courts both in Croatia and
in Serbia. Indeed, the inadmissibility of the notes taken by police during interrogations
would seem to be a wise rule of evidence found in most modern judicial systems, for
obvious reasons. The Respondent has provided the Court with the exact numbers of
the annexes that it considers inadmissible. 246
248. In its rebuttal, the Applicant tries to justif y the admissibility of these materials on the
basis of three very defensive arguments. First, the Applicant states that “72 of the
245Reply, para. 2.34.
246Counter-Memorial, paras. 154-158.
96 original witness statements were taken in the court proceedings, during the course of
which the witness was warned”. 247If this is true, then how is it possible that the
signatures cannot be seen on the copies of the court’s original records submitted with
the Memorial?
249. Second, the Applicant invokes the ICTY Decision on Guidelines for the Admission of
Evidence Through Witnesses in the Karadžić case which reads that “the fact that a
document has neither a signature nor a stamp is not in itself a reason to find that the
document is not authentic”. 248 But, the question here is not about the admissibility of
any document in a general sense, to which the comment in the Karadžić case relates.
The document in question is a witness statement submitted to the Court without a
witness testimony in viva voce, i.e. without any opportunity for the Chamber and the
opposing Party to check the authenticity and veracity of that statement through cross-
examination. The Applicant is completely confusing a rule intended to apply to
“documents” and one that concerns eviden tiary statements by individuals who may
have been witnesses to certain events. Th e ICTY quite correctly decided upon a rule
that did not hinge upon legal formalism. Th is is not at all the same thing as the
admission of an unsigned statement by a “w itness” that otherwise has no independent
existence as a “document”. Alleged witness statements are not “documents” at all;
rather, they are purported records of testimony.
250. That the Applicant’s reference is quite mis leading and drawn out of context becomes
clear from another guiding rule set out by the same ICTY decision. Namely, the Trial
Chamber in Karadžić also stated as follows:
“As a general rule, the party tendering a piece of evidence shall do so through a witness
who is either the author of that piece of evidence, or who can speak to its origins and/or
content. The tendering party shall demonstrate some nexus between the witness and the
document before offering the document into evidence.” 249
251. Just following the above quoted rules, th e ICTY Trial Chamber continues and says
that “there will be no blanket prohibition on the admission of evidence simply on the
247Reply, para. 2.42.
248Ibid.
249ICTY, Prosecutor v. Karadzic, (T-95-5,), Decision on Guidelines for the Admission of Evidence Through
Witnesses, 19 May 2010, para. 25.
97 grounds that the purported author of that evidence has not been called to testify”
(because someone else must be called to testify to the origins and/or content of the
document in question). Only under these conditions, is a lack of signature not in and
of itself a reason to find that a document is not authentic (because a witness – the
author of the document or someone else – can confirm its authenticity). The Applicant
has failed to inform the Court as to who will confirm the authenticity and veracity of
332 unsigned statements annexed to the Memorial.
252. The third rebuttal argument raised by the Applicant is that its police later collected
250
188 signatures missing from the statem ents allegedly given a decade ago. This
extraordinary approach to the production of evidence demonstrates that the Applicant
is aware of the invalidity of the witness statements annexed to the Memorial.
However, this supplementary action cannot imp rove the deficiency of the previously
submitted materials for three reasons. Firstly, the signatures were collected by the
Police of the applicant State which, with due respect, cannot be treated as impartial.
Secondly, each signature was given in the same textual form prepared in advance by
251
the police solely for the purpose of the Applicant’s case. Thirdly, the statements
taken by the police cannot be used as evidence even before the Croatian domestic
courts. All of these observations undoubtedly lead to the conclusion that the process of
collecting missing signatures did not fulfill minimum procedural safeguards. The
Respondent submits that even if such statements are deemed admissible by the Court –
a position that the Respondent does not accept – the circumstances of their
“authentication” by the police years after they were actually prepared means that they
252
lack any reliability and should be disregarded by the Court.
253. Indeed, the Applicant has neither denied nor responded to the claim that the 209
official records of the Croatian police inte rrogations annexed to the Memorial cannot
be used as evidence. Nevertheless, the Applicant continues with the same practice in
the Reply which is supplied with 29 new statements out of which 23 are again the
official police records, while the provena nce of another five is unknown. Many of
250See Annex 30 to the Reply.
251Ibid.
252In that sense, the ICTY Trial Chamber stated: “Reliability is relevant to the admissibility of evidence,
particularly if the evidence in question is an out-of-court written statement”. (ICTY, Milutinovic et al,IT-05-87-T,
Decision, 1 September 2006, para.9).
98 them have not been originally signed and, again, some of those unsigned statements
have been supplied with additional statem ents given in the a bove mentioned police
253
procedure of collecting signatures.
254. This is how the Supreme Court of Croatia , in its Decision no. I Kž 585/09-11 of 23
March 2010, observed one similar situation in criminal proceedings concerning war
crimes against the Serb civilians:
“However, since the statements of Milka Bun čić, Jovo Krajnovi ć and Mijo Krajnovi ć
recorded by the investigators of the International Criminal Tribunal are essentially notes
taken by the investigators of the Office of the Prosecutor which represents prosecution
before the ICTY [sic], these actions of theirs, if they do not concern the cases of a transfer
of the ICTY indictment to the domestic jurisdiction, should be equated with the interviews
254
conducted by the domestic prosecutor as a party.”
255. In consequence, the Supreme Court of Croatia found that the Trial Chamber had made a
procedural error not to exclude these statements from the case folder, which contravened
the Code of Criminal Procedure. The Trial Chamber Judgment was reversed.
Nevertheless, the fact that a Croatian domestic court may not use as evidence a statement
taken by the ICTY investigators because they are not impartial does not seem to have
prevented the Government of the same State in a case before the principal judicial organ
of the United Nations from referring to the interrogation records made by its own police.
256. Furthermore, the Counter-Mem orial stressed that only a small number of statements
submitted by the Applicant contain direct knowledge about the offences that could
255
constitute the actus reus of genocide. The Applicant correctly notes that “the
Respondent frequently asserts that evidence relied upon by the Applicant is hearsay
and is accordingly not capable of supporting the Applicant’s case”. According to the
Reply, “the jurisprudence of the principal international criminal courts and tribunals
makes it clear that hearsay evidence is relevant and admissible, and should be assessed
in the light of its content and circ umstances in which it was obtained”. 256 The
Respondent will briefly comment on this proposition.
253See Annexes 1-29 to the Reply.
254Supreme Court of Croatia, Decision no. I Kž 585/09-11 of 23 March 2010, p. 5.
255Counter-Memorial, para. 145.
256Reply, para. 2.44.
99257. In the common law tradition, hearsay evidence is generally excluded from criminal trials
because of its inherent unreliability. The rule is often attributed to the need to protect lay
jury members from evidence whose lack of authority may only be apparent to
professional jurists. But the rule is also applied in criminal trials under the common law
involving judges without juries. In other legal traditions, the same rule of inadmissibility
may not apply, but nevertheless judges will treat such indirect evidence with extreme
caution. In civil law countries, according to the principle ofliberté de la preuve, hearsay
is admissible in general, but it is unlikely that the judge, who is free to assess all
evidence, would give significant weight if any to hearsay. At the level of international
criminal tribunals, there is no prohibition on hearsay as a matter of admissibility, but an
overview of the practice of these institutions shows that judges will not convict on the
basis of hearsay evidence in the absence of corroboration through other forms of
257
evidence. It is very interesting that the Applicant here invokes the jurisprudence of
“the principal international criminal cour ts and tribunals”, although without any
reference to their practice, and conveniently forgets the practice of the Court which
258
rejects reliance on hearsay “as allegations falling short of conclusive evidence”.
258. The circumstances in which the Applicant obtained hearsay evidence have already been
described supra, and it is difficult to say that such a procedure of collecting unsigned
statements by the police of the applicant State can overcome the general shortcomings
of hearsay. Yet, the Applicant’s claim that hearsay evidence “should be assessed in the
light of its content” is particularly interesting in the context of the content in which the
hearsay evidence appears. The problem here is not that the Applicant attempts to use
statements which to a certain extent contain hearsay, but in the Applicant’s persistent
efforts to rely upon the statements which: a) do not fulfill minimum evidentiary
requirements, b) contain a great deal of hearsay, and, c) are largely irrelevant to the
subject matter of a genocide claim. Underthese circumstances, the Respondent does not
need to analyze each part of the statements produced by the Applicant, which prima
259
faciedo not surpass theKovačić shortcomings, on a case-by-case basis.
257ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 43.
258ICJ, Corfu Chanel case (UK v. Albania), Judgment of 9 April 1949, p. 17.
259 Ibid, pp. 16 & 17: “Without deciding as to the persona1 sincerity of the witness Kovacic, or the truth of
what he said, the Court finds that the facts stated by the witness from his persona1 knowledge are not sufficient
to prove what the United Kingdom Government considered them to prove. His allegations that he saw mines
being loaded upon two Yugoslav minesweepers at Sibeni k and that these two vessels departed from Sibenik
about October 18th and returned a few days after the occurrence of the explosions do not suffice to constitute
100259. The relevance of the statements produced by the Applicant should be assessed in the
light of the fact that the Respondent doe s not dispute that serious crimes were
committed against Croat civilians, particularly during the first stage of the armed
conflict in 1991. These crimes were character ized by the ICTY as crimes against
humanity, and the Respondent does not dispute that finding. For some of these crimes,
cases before the Serbian War Crimes Pane l are under way. These are the crimes for
which the Serbian President on several occa sions addressed apologies to the Croatian
260
citizens.
260. Under these circumstances, the Respondent co nsiders that a major issue that still
divides the Parties in this case is the question of the existence of dolus specialis, i.e.
the specific intent to destroy a group in whole or in part. This is a matter to be proven
by the Applicant in this case. As the Court stated in the Bosnia case: “[dolus specialis]
has to be convincingly shown by refe rence to particular circumstances”. 261 The
Respondent cannot see how the statements produced by the Applicant have anything
to do with the above-quoted requirement, since they are useless for proving the factors
on which State responsibility can be established. This is why the contested statements
are irrelevant for the purpose of the Applicant’s case.
261. The Applicant does not accept this characterization and asserts that, in any event, the
objection to the relevance more properly “goe s to the probative weight to be attached
to that individual’s evidence and not to the admissibility of the witness statements
taken as a whole.” 262 But, in a case before the Court, a distinction between the
admissibility and the probative weight of evidence is without practical sense. It is clear
that the Court does not have any special rule concerning the inadmissibility of
evidence in the written proceedings, and it is not the Respondent’s expectation that the
Court will in limine dismiss the unsigned statements by excluding them from the case
file. The Respondent’s objection is rather directed to the process of deliberation, when
decisive legal proof that the mines were laid by these two vessels in Albanian waters off Saranda. The statements
attributed by the witness Kovacic to third parties, of which the Court has received no persona1 and direct
confirmation, can be regarded only as allegations falling short of conclusive evidence. Acharge of such
exceptional gravity against a State would require a degree of certainty that has not been reached here.”
260See Counter-Memorial, para. 16.
261ICJ, Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91,
para. 373.
262Reply, para. 2.36.
101 the Court will examine all evidence submitted during the written and oral proceedings.
Nevertheless, the statements produced by th e Applicant, by their very nature, cannot
be seen as other than inadmissible. In orde r for evidence to be admissible, it must be
relevant. For evidence to be relevant, it must tend to prove or disprove some fact that
is at issue in the proceedings. It is obvious that the statements in question cannot fulfill
these criteria.
262. In conclusion, the Respondent reiterates that the statements submitted by the Applicant
do not fulfill minimum evidentiary requirements, and would not even be admissible in
evidence before Croatian domestic courts. They were not gathered in accordance with
the Croatian rules of criminal procedure.Indeed, the Applicant has offered no response
to this argument. Moreoever, the reliability of these materials cannot be checked or, at
least, it would take too long, compared to th eir possible value, to be verified properly
263
before the Court. These statements are full of hearsay, as well as allegations which
are not relevant to the matter properly provable in these proceedings.
263. Additionally, in the Respondent’s view, even the proper presentation of several
hundred witness statements, including an opportunity for the Respondent to comment
on the relevance and reliability of each of th em, and/or to cross-examine each witness
in viva voce, would create an unreasonable bias and undue delay in the proceedings.
The Applicant’s intention is problematic per se, and the Respondent considers that the
production of such a large amount of documents has been directed solely to confuse
the Court in its evaluation. Such an approa ch to the Court’s proceedings has been
subsequently dismissed by Practice Direc tion no. III, which in part addresses the
tendency towards the proliferation of annexes to written pleadings.
B. Materials prepared by the applicant State for this case
264. The Counter-Memorial points out that the provenance of maps, photos, lists and
graphics presented in the Memorial is largely unknown. 264In some cases graphics and
lists were prepared by the Croatian official bodies (in particular, the graphics called
263The requirements of fair proceedings demand that the Respondent be given the right to cross-examine the
witnesses in order to fully test the Applicant’s case.
264Counter-Memorial, paras. 163-166.
102 “Mass graves”, “Lists of detained and missing persons” and list of “Damage to
Cultural Monuments on Croatian Territory”). The Respondent contends that the above
mentioned bodies cannot be treated as imp artial and, consequent ly, their materials
should be considered with great reserve. 265
265. In its Reply the Applicant admits that “these materials have been prepared by official
Croatian agencies to assist in the comprehension of material presented by the
266
Applicant”. From this statement, as well as from the statement given in para. 2.58 of
the Reply, one can conclude that the Applicant itself does not perceive these materials
as evidence, but rather as statements that bear upon the issue, which the Court “may
take into account” and “may accord them such legal effect as may be appropriate”.
The Respondent may agree with such a view in general, but states that these materials
should, in any event, be dismissed as inaccurate, unreliable and useless for the purpose
of the present case.
266. In this vein, the Respondent will further give a brief exemplary analysis of three
updated lists annexed to the Reply (Annexes 41, 43 and 44), the first of which is the
list of missing persons updated on 1 Septem ber 2010 (Annex 41) that contains names
and personal data on 1,024 indivi duals. It is notworthy that among the listed persons
are some Serbs whose names and other personal data are also listed in the “Veritas”
Report (Annex 66 to the Counter-Memorial). An exemplary list of these persons who,
according to the Report of the NGO “Ver itas”, were killed by the Croatian
governmental and paramilitary forces is annexed now to the Rejoinder. 267
267. For instance, the names of eight persons from the Croatian list submitted as Annex 41
to the Reply can be found in the Judgment of the Croatian County Court in Rijeka, no.
K-11/01, in which Croatian military officers Oreškovi ć, Grandi ć and Norac were
convicted for the murder of at least 50 individuals, mostly Serbs but also some
268
Croats. The name of Branko Lovrić, a Serb from Osijek (listed at no. 519 in Annex
265
Ibid, para. 167.
266Reply, para. 2.52.
267Annex 1.
268These eight persons are: Čubelić Mile, listed at no. 148 in Annex 41 to the Reply (ethnic Croat); Hini ć Gojko,
no. 302 (ethnic Serb); Lazi ć Petar, no. 490 (ethnic Serb); Mari ć Borislav, no. 555 (ethnic Serb); Radi ć Pantelija,
no. 762 (ethnic Serb); Stojanovi ć Nikola, no. 837 (ethnic Serb); Tomi čić Božidar, no. 918 (ethnic Croat); and
Trešnjić Nebojša, no. 927 (ethnic Serb).
103 41 to the Reply) can also be found in the Judgment of the Zagreb County Court,
among the victims of Branimir Glavaš a nd other accused who were members of the
Croatian armed forces.
268. Furthermore, the Applicant’s Updated List of Missing Persons contains at least 59
269
names of Croats who allegedly went missing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as
at least 48 names of persons went missing in some parts of Croatia that were under the
270
full control of the Croatian forces. For example, the Croatian daily “Jutarnji list” of
15 July 2006 records that Nuić-Zoričić Ina, an ethnic Croat, listed at no. 646 in Annex
271
41 to the Reply, was killed by Croatian forces. Also, Grgi ć Bogdan, a Serb from
Zagreb, who was abducted by two armed men in HV uniforms on 23 November
272
1993, was registered in the Croatian list of missing persons at no. 280. The list also
contains the names of Croat persons who went missing during the offensive criminal
273 274
Operations Maslenica and Storm led by the Croatian Government.
269. All of these examples should lead any careful observer of the Croatian list of missing
persons to the inevitable conclusion that the list can only be perceived as an attempt to
confuse the Court, and that it is unhelpful in clarifying the issues in the dispute.
270. The same conclusion can be inferred fr om the Croatian lists of exhumed bodies
(Annexes 43 and 44 to the Reply). For the Respondent, there is no doubt that a great
many bodies have been exhumed at differe nt locations in Croatia. In total, 3,661
bodies have been registered in these two lis ts. Yet, there are at least 144 Serbs among
275
the exhumed, out of which 140 were killed by Croatian forces. In addition, 553
exhumed bodies, according to the Croatian lists , have not yet been identified and the
national identity of those victims remains unknown.
269
270See Annex 3.
See Annex 4.
271Jutarnji list, Zagreb, 15 July 2006: „Sin Marine Nuić: Tužim državu jer su mi merčepovci ubili majku“ (The
son of Marina Nuić: I am suing the State because Merčep's people killed my mother).
272Amnesty International Report, October 1995, “An Unknown Destination – disappeared in former
Yugoslavia”.
273For example, Jergan Mile, listed at no. 349 in Annex 41 to the Reply; Periša Borislav, no. 709; Troskot Boris,
274 932.
Kiseljak Tihomir, registered at no. 393 in Annex 41 to the Reply; Majki ć Rade, no. 537; Smokrović Marijan,
275 819; Zebić Ivan, no. 999.
See Annex no. 2.
104271. The unreliablity and inaccuracy of these two lists is evident from the following data:
276
a) A significant number of exhumed individuals have been registered several times.
b) At the location “Golubnja ča III”, 25 unidentified bodies have been exhumed.
However, this was a notorious execution site of the Ustasha forces during World War
II. There is no indication how old the remains discovered at “Golubnjača” are.
c) Among the identified persons, 21 were born before the year 1901. They would have
been at least 90-year-olds at the beginning of the armed conflict in Croatia. There is no
evidence when and how these persons died.
C. Documents concerning Croatian genocide and war crime cases
272. The Applicant submitted some documents 277 in support of the rebuttal of the
Respondent’s claim that the factual finding s of Croatian domestic judgments are not
admissible in the present case because, firstly, Croatian law applies a definition of the
crime of genocide which is broader than the definition found in the 1948 Genocide
Convention, and, secondly, these trials before Croatia n courts have been widely
criticized for their lack of impartiality and fairness. 278
273. Having in mind that the Applicant has not used any of those domestic judgments as
evidence in the present case, any further discussion about this issue and documents
submitted by the Applicant in annexes nos. 83 – 91 to the Reply has become moot.
However, some documents annexed to this submission assist in illustrating that the
Respondent’s claim is well founded in fact. 279
276For instance, Abramovi ć Ive is registered at nos. 844, 858 & 869; Bartoli ć Slavka is registered at nos. 842,
856 & 867; Belčić Mara is registered at nos. 838 & 852; Bori ć-Rovišan Milka at nos. 843, 857 & 868; Ferderbar
Jana is registered at nos. 845, 859 & 870; Ferderbar Vid is registered at nos. 860, 871 & 846; Gć Kata is
registered at nos. 839 & 853; Kauri ć Ivan is registered at nos. 840 & 854; Marekovi ć Ivan is registered at nos.
849, 863 & 874; Osoni čki Milka is registered at nos. 841, 855 & 866; Pezerovi ć Šefik is registered at nos. 851,
865 & 876; Špruk Vje česlav is registered at nos. 848, 862 & 873, and so on. All of these names appears at the
277t submitted as Annex 44 to the Reply.
278See Reply, „Domestic Criminal Prosecutions Documents“, Annexes nos. 83-91.
279Counter-Memorial, paras. 184-199.
See Amnesty International Briefing to the UN Committee against Torture, Annex no. 73; also, YIHR Report,
Annex no. 74.
1053. Other evidence produced by the Applicant
274. The Respondent does not put into question e ither the authenticity or the reliability of
some exhumation reports annexed to the Applicant’s written pleadings. The
respondent State equally doe s not deny that serious crimes were unfortunately
committed in Croatia including the murder of numerous civilians. However, it has not
been demonstrated yet how those documents, technical in their nature, can usefully
contribute to proving the dolus specialis of the crime of genocide.
275. The same conclusion can be drawn from the public statements of Yugoslav and RSK
officials, as well as from the military documents produced by the Applicant as annexes
to its Memorial. They contain neither direct nor indirect evidence about the existence
of an intent to destroy the national and et hnical group of the Croat people as such, in
whole or in part. Bearing in mind their c ontents, the produced public statements and
military documents are in reality affirmative evidence that the required genocidal
intent has never existed on the Yugoslav or Serbian side.
276. The Applicant mentions that the Respondent has not objected to these materials on the
basis of any supposed lack of authenticity. This must be the reason why the Applicant
produced documents, as annexes to the Reply, of highly dubious authenticity. Indeed,
some of the documents, attached to the Reply, are merely pieces of paper, without any
signature, seal, available data about a s ource, or any other information capable of
confirming the authenticity of the alleged documents. These shortcomings appear in
annexes 123, 131, 146, 150, 153, 157 and 178 to the Reply.
277. In the Reply, the Applicant also refers to four ICTY judgments which can be of
considerable assistance in the present case, namely the judgments in the Martić,
280
Mrkšić et al, Joki ć and Strugar cases. In the Respondent’s view, these judgments
strongly tend to confirm that the acts for which the accused were convicted cannot be
legally characterized as genocide.
280
For more details, see Counter-Memorial, para. 175.
1064. Missing evidence to which the Applicant refers in the Reply
278. In the Reply, the Applicant frequently refers to many documents which have not been
produced in the record before the Court. Most of them have been referred to in
Chapter 4 of the Reply: “The JNA and the Paramilitary Groups”. For example, in
footnote 110 on page 116 of the Reply, six documents of the Croatian National Guard,
dated 7 July, 11 July, 24 July, 5 August, 30 August and 3 September 1991, have been
referred to by the Applicant, none of whic h have been submitted to the Court. The
same approach can be registered in footnotes nos. 162 and 164 (page 125), 222 (page
136), 225 and 228 (page 137), 232 – 234 (page 1 38) and 236 (page 139). None of the
referred documents constitutes part of a pub lication readily available, nor is in
possession of the Respondent State’s archives . The Respondent deni es all allegations
based on the documents listed above.
5. Relevance of the ICTY prosecutorial deci sions to exclude a charge of genocide
from the indictment against Slobodan Milošević
279. The Applicant objects to the conclusion of the Court in the Bosnia case that decisions
by the ICTY Office of the Prosecutor not to charge genocide are of some relevance
(paras. 2.26-2.33). In the Bosnia case, the Court stated:
“Accordingly, as a general proposition the inclusion of charges in an indictment cannot be
given weight. What may however be significant is the decision of the Prosecutor, either
initially or in an amendment to an indictment, not to include or to exclude a charge of
genocide.”281
280. The issue is obviously of relevance to the Applicant’s position because the ICTY
Prosecutor has never charged an accused with genocide with respect to any of the
crimes perpetrated in Croatia. Moreover, after some initial attempts to prosecute the
crime of genocide with respect to the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
Prosecutor has since failed to prove genocide with the exception of cases concerning
the Srebrenica massacre of July 1995.
281ICJ, Case concerning the Application of the Conventon the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91,
para. 217.
107281. The Applicant argues that the failure of the ICTY Prosecutor to seek indictments for
the crime of genocide with respect to crimes perpetrated in Croatia is not of
significance. The Applicant’s position is that the Prosecutor pursues the crimes for
which he or she has reasonable chances of success, and that this depends upon the
accused persons over whom the Prosecutor can obtain custody. The Applicant has
since qualified its total dismissal of the relevance of a decision of the Office of the
Prosecutor not to proceed on a charge of geno cide by saying that if the decision is
taken after “considered evaluation”, th en the decision’s importance would be
“minimal at best”. Thus, according to the Applicant, it is not totally irrelevant. It is of
some weight. In the Applicant’s view, th is depends upon whether the Prosecutor has
made a “considered evaluation”, although the Applicant fails to explain how the Court
could eventually determine this; indeed, the Applicant concedes that it is impossible to
282
know, given that the Prosecutor does not explain how these decisions are made. In
contrast, the Respondent submits that, following the Court’s position in the Bosnia
case, it seems logical to presume that deci sions by the Prosecutor are not capricious,
and that therefore there would always be a “considered evaluation”.
282. The Applicant suggests that the Prosecutor may decide not to proceed on a charge for
a range of reasons, including “the cost, length and manageability of proceedings, the
difficulties of proving genocide when other serious charges are available carrying
adequate penalties, the difficulties of identifying and apprehending individual
perpetrators or those bearing command responsibility, and the availability of
283
witnesses”. The main reason why the Prosecutor will exercise discretion not to
charge a specific offence is not menti oned by the Applicant: as a responsible
international official the Prosecutor will seek indictments and attempt to prove charges
that realistically correspond to the acts that were perpetrated. The Prosecutor of the
ICTY has a duty to act strategically and pur sue not only the most serious crimes that
can be proven, but also the most serious cases. The fact that there have been no
charges of genocide with respect to any of the crimes committed against the Croatian
282Here, too, the Applicant’s assertions are rather too absolute. The Prosecutor provided a public explanation of
a decision not to proceed with an investigation into NATO bombing relating to the conflict in Kosovo in 1999:
“Committee Established to Review the NATO Bombing Campaign Against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
Final Report to the Prosecutor”, The Hague, 13 June 2000, PR/P.I.S./510-e. Moreover, some of the Prosecutors
have published memoires or articles commenting on these matters, including Richard Goldstone, whose
reflections are cited in the Reply.
283Reply, para. 2.27(3).
108 people indicates that the entity responsible for the most thorough international
investigations into the conflict in Croatia during the 1990s has failed to find evidence
of the crime of genocide.
283. It is implausible that the Prosecutor decided not to charge genocide in Milošević,
Babić and Martić because of the cost or length or manageability of proceedings. In
fact, there can be little doubt that the Prosecu tor produced the best evidence available,
and that this would have been suitable for charges of either crimes against humanity or
genocide. No cost, length or manageability issues manifest themselves. The same
applies to the other grounds listed.
284. Most of the reasons for the failure of the Prosecutor to pursue genocide charges that
are discussed by the Applicant in the Reply are not really germane to the issue in this
case. There are no plea agreements by which genocide charges were withdrawn in
exchange for a guilty plea with respect to Croatia. In the ICTY cases related to the
conflict in Croatia, ge nocide has never been charged. This points to a policy of the
Office of the Prosecutor that is independent of individual factors, especially given that
many of the Croatia-related indictments involved senior leaders, including Milošević
himself.
285. The remarks by Richard Goldstone, 284former Prosecutor of the ICTY (from 1994 to
1996), written as a critique of th e Court’s Judgment in the Bosnia case, suggest that
decisions by the Office of the Prosecutor were only based upon case-specific criteria
whereas in fact they were the product of much reflection and analysis about the legal
qualification of the events in Croatia by a sophisticated team of specialists. Judge
Goldstone was being a bit cavalier to speak of a “relative handful of individuals” that
included Miloševi ć, etc. The decision of the Office of the Prosecutor to charge
Milošević with genocide with respect to Bosn ia and Herzegovina but not Croatia
speaks volumes. It cannot be dismissed as being the result of efforts to save time or
streamline an indictment. It is of some interest that Goldstone’s remarks do not date
from the time when he was Prosecutor, or even shortly afterwards, and they were not
made in the context of a general reflec tion on prosecutorial policy or strategy.
284
See the Reply, at paras. 2.28-2.31.
109 Goldstone’s remarks followed the Court’s ruling in the Bosnia case and were intended
to challenge the reasoning of the Court because Goldstone was manifestly unhappy
with its conclusions. Goldstone’s remarks would have had more credibility if they had
been made prior to the Judgment, rather than in response to it.
286. In any event, Judge Goldstone was Prosecutor at a very early stage in the work of the
Tribunal, when it focussed on low-level accu sed simply because they were the only
defendants over whom it could obtain custody. Over the years of its activity, the ICTY
has become increasingly selective, both as a matter of its own evolving internal policy
and because it was instructed by the United Nations Security Council to do so. In
Security Council resolution 1503, adopted on 28 August 2003, the Council insisted
that the Tribunal should be “concentrating on the prosecution and trial of the most
senior leaders suspected of being most responsible for crimes within the ICTY’s
jurisdiction”. Middle and lower-ranking suspects were to be transferred to the national
courts. This is known as the “completion strategy”. In order to comply with the
completion strategy, the Judges of the Tr ibunal amended the Rule s of Procedure and
Evidence, adopted Rule 28(A) in 2004:
“On receipt of an indictment for review from the Prosecutor, the Registrar shall consult
with the President. The President shall refer the matter to the Bureau which shall
determine whether the indictment, prima facie, concentrates on one or more of the most
senior leaders suspected of being most responsible for crimes within the jurisdiction of the
Tribunal.”285
287. The Tribunal is to reject indictments that do not meet the standard. The Applicant
actually invokes the completion strategy of the ICTY as an explanation for the absence
of genocide charges with respect to Croatia . No further explanation is provided. It is
hard to grasp the point. Perhaps the implication is that this would expedite matters.
But that has never been the sense of the co mpletion strategy, whose purpose is not to
shorten trials by reducing charges. The Martić trial, involving a senior Serb leader,
began on 13 December 2005, long after the completion strategy had been imposed.
The trial of Ratko Mladić, who is charged with genocide, promises to prolong the life
of the Tribunal for several years. In th e context of the completion strategy, the
285
ICTY, The Rules of Procedure and Evidence, 14 April 2004, available on
http://www.icty.org/x/file/Legal%20Library/Rules_procedure_evidence/IT0…
110 Tribunal has refused to authorize the transf er of accused persons to domestic courts
where it considers that the crimes are of great seriousness. 286 It is required, by the
Rules of Procedure and Evidence as amended in light of the completion strategy, to
decline to transfer cases after assessing “the gravity of the crimes charged and the
level of responsibility of the accused”. 287
288. The Applicant further notes that “there is no obligation on the OTP to charge the most
288
serious crimes available on the totality of the evidence”. It is accurate to say that the
Prosecutor has entire discretion here. But in contrast with domestic legal orders, there
is no evidence in the practice of the Office of the Prosecutor to suggest that he or she
“undercharges” crimes. Prosecutorial discretion does not mean that the Prosecutor acts
in an arbitrary manner. The Prosecutor will, as a general rule, charge the most serious
crime that can be sustained with regard to the acts in question. That is why, in some of
the Bosnian cases, the Prosecutor did in fact attempt very strenuously to secure
convictions for genocide. For example, in Prosecutor v. Jelisi ć, which was tried in
1999, the Prosecutor insisted in proceeding with genocide charges even after the
289
accused had agreed to plead guilty to charges of crimes against humanity. For the
Prosecutor, it was important to attempt to establish the most serious qualification of
the crimes that was possible. If it was not important for the Prosecutor to establish the
crime of genocide, she would readily have accepted the guilty plea for crimes against
humanity, which in any event would have resulted in a stiff sentence. And this was the
same Prosecutor which, according to the Applicant, did not charge Miloševi ć for
genocide in Croatia for the sake of saving time.
289. Furthermore, even if the Prosecutor declines to file charges of genocide, there is no
reason why a Trial Chamber could not suggest to the Prosecutor that charges be
amended, to the extent that evidence reveals facts that might suggest the commission
of genocide. Only the Prosecutor of the Tribunal has the authority to amend an
indictment, subject to authorization by th e Chamber. But nothing prevents a Chamber
286
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Dragomir Milošević (IT-98-29/1-PT), Decision on Referral of the Case Pursuant to Rule
11 bis, 8 July 2005; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Lukić et al. (IT-98-32/1-AR11bis), Decision on Milan Luki ć’s Appeal
Regarding Referral, 11 July 2007; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Delić (IT-04-83-PT), Decision on Referral of the Case
Pursuant to Rule 11 bis, 9 July 2007.
287Ibid., Rule 11 bis (A).
288Reply, para. 2.27.
289ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jelisić ( IT-95-10-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 14 December 1999, para. 11.
111 from recommending that this be done. There is in fact at least one example of this in
the case law of the ICTY. In the Dragan Nikolić case, a Trial Chamber proposed that
the Prosecutor consider an amendment to charge genocide after it had heard evidence
in the context of an ex parte hearing pursuant to Rule 61 of the Rules of Procedure and
Evidence. 290The Prosecutor did not act on the suggestion of the Trial Chamber but
that merely reflects the Prosecutor’s cautious approach to genocide charges and
uncertainty within the Office of the Prosecutor, in 1995, that it would be possible to
prove genocide in so-called “ethnic cleansing” cases. This proved to be correct, of
course, as the case law of the Tribunal demonstrates.
290. The Applicant cautions against attaching im portance to decisions in individual cases,
given that the matter before the Court concerns State responsibility. That critique
could extend to the other rationale s provided by the Court in the Bosnia case for the
use of ICTY materials, of course. In the early years of the ICTY, minor figures far
from the seats of power were prosecuted, and it is indeed difficult to extrapolate
relevant points with respect to State responsibility from these rather isolated
defendants. But that can hardly be said of President Slobodan Milošević. Although he
was prosecuted as ab individual , in reality the case against him was virtually
indistinguishable from that of the State w ith which he was affiliated. The Respondent
291
refers to the dissenting opinion of Judge Al Khawsawneh. But even if the point that
the learned judge makes is accepted, the alle ged shortcoming of cr iminal trials, with
their limited focus upon individuals, diminishes considerably when those being
prosecuted are at the State’s leadership.
291. The Respondent notes the comment by the Court in the Judgment in the Bosnia case
292
that the ICTY agreed statements of fact have “a certain weight” only when
compared, for example, with findings of f act following a contested trial, which the
293
Court considered to be “highly persuasive”. In the case of Croatia, that means that
the findings of fact in Martić, established after a full trial, are considerably more
authoritative than those in Babić, based on his plea agreement with the Prosecutor.
290ICTY,Prosecutor v. Nikolić (IT-95-2-R61), Review of Indictment Pursuant to Rule 61, 20 October 1995, para. 34.
291Reply, para. 2.27(7), ft. 38.
292ICJ,Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and MontenegJ)dgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91, para. 224.
293Ibid, para. 223.
1126. The Applicant’s exit strategy: attempts to shift the burden of proof
292. In conclusion, the Applicant relies upon a limited amount of admissible and reliable
documentary evidence. It is still very far from the standard of proof required for the
crime of genocide. While a conclusion like this has been described in the Reply as “a
characteristically sweeping approach”, it cannot be denied that the Applicant has
significantly contributed to such an approach by its casual treatment of the question of
proof from the very beginning of this case.
293. The Applicant’s awareness of the evidentiary deficiencies is visible to a careful reader
of the Reply. Although the Applicant now tries to conduct itself in accordance with the
Court’s well-known practice and cl aims to accept the principle actori incumbit onus
probandi, it also tries to shift the burden of proof to the Respondent as inconspicuously
as possible. This has been attempted by three claims: a) that the Respondent has a duty
294
to provide “an explanation”; b) that the Respondent has failed to advance any positive
295
case in relation to the Applicant’s claim; c) that the Respondent has refused to
disclose material evidence. 296Each of these claims deserves a brief answer.
294. It is difficult to understand what the Applicant really means when using the term
297
“explanation”. The reasoning from the Corfu Channel case cannot be applied here,
because the situation is quite different. After all, the Applicant admits this in para. 2.83 of
the Reply, leaving a reader without an explanation as to why theCorfu Channelcase has
been quoted in the first place. Nevertheless, the Respondent has given its explanations
throughout the Counter-Memorial and continues to do so faithfully in this written
pleading. A respondent State cannot be forced to give an explanation which would satisfy
a claim of an applicant State or relieve the adversary from the burden of proof.
295. The same objective of the Applicant may be discerned from the observation that the
Respondent has failed to a dvance any positive case in relation to the Applicant’s
claim. But, this is not a border disput e where two States would compete for the
preponderance of evidence. This case is only about genocide, the crime of crimes,
294Reply, paras. 2.81 – 2.84.
295Ibid, para. 5.3 & 5.4.
296Ibid, paras. 1.13 – 1.14 & 2.85 – 2.91.
297ICJ, Corfu Channel, pp. 17 - 18.
113 where the element of dolus specialis must be established beyond reasonable doubt. It
is often said that it is very difficult to prove the dolus specialis of genocide. Actually,
when genocide does take place, there is gene rally little difficulty in establishing the
mental element of the crime, which is clear from the statements and behaviour of the
perpetrators, as is demonstrated in Chapter VIII of the Rejoinder vis-à-vis the counter-
claim. Genocide is only difficult to prove when it does not actually take place.
However, it is the Applicant’s burden to establish its case. The idea that the
Respondent at the same time should have a duty to prove that perpetrators did not
posses the required intent is entirely out of question.
296. On the other hand, all reliable evidence produced by the Applicant clearly
demonstrates, as noted supra, that a genocidal intent against the Croatian people never
existed. One example is particularly illustrative. The Applicant has produced a list of
persons of Croatian nationality who, accord ing to the data of the Commission for
Missing Persons of the Government of the Republic of Serbia (Annex 47 to the Reply,
to which the Applicant refers in para. 2.54) we re detained on the territory of Serbia in
1991/92. In total, 2,786 Croats were detained on the terr itory of Serbia in JNA
detention facilities. One can reasonably conclude that, if indeed the JNA or the
Serbian leadership, who allegedly had control over the Federal Army, had really had
the intent to destroy the Cr oatian national or ethnic group as such, they would have
had every opportunity to do so, either by committing mass killings against this group
of detainees, or by inflicting on the group the conditions of life calculated to bring
about its physical destruction in whole or in part. There is no doubt that opportunities
forsuchactswereample.Yet,ifonetake s a look at another annex to the Reply, the
List of Missing Persons contained in Annex 41, one will hardly find persons who went
298
missing on the territory of Serbia: merely six of them. In addition, the Respondent
now supplies a list of persons arrest ed in Croatia in 1991-92 who received
professional medical treatment from the Military Medical Centre in Novi Sad,
Serbia. 299This is not how an army which possesses an intent to commit genocide
usually conducts itself. On the contrary, this is affirmative evidence that such intent
had never existed on the side of the JNA or the Serbian leadership.
298According to the data shown in Annex 41 to the Reply, the persons went missing on the territory of Serbia are
Abjanović Ivica, registered at no. 2; Abjanović Mato, no. 3; Kiš Adam, no. 396; Križevac Zoran, no. 454; Lovri ć
Marin, no. 515, and Sunara Marko, no. 840.
299Annex 5.
114297. Finally, the Applicant claims that the Respondent has exclusive access to “evidence
(potentially) relevant to the determination of a key issue in the case” and, due to its
refusal to produce it, should “face the prosp ect of adverse inferences being drawn by
the Court.” 300 The mentioned “refusal” has been explained as follows: “The
Respondent has since provided the Appli cant with a number of [the requested]
301
documents but has withheld many others”.
298. The Respondent has not refused to produce the documents requested by the Applicant. In
total, 223 available documents have so far been transferred to the Applicant’s legal team,
due to the agreed minutes from the meeting between representatives of the Parties held in
Belgrade on 3 September 2010. In other words, the Respondent has provided the Applicant
with all requested documents that existed in its State archives, and the Court was duly
302
informed of this cooperation. The Respondent cannot provide the Applicant with the
minutes of the so-called “Meetings of the Six”, which was neither an official body of the
former SFRY nor of the Republic of Serbia. There are simply no written minutes available
in the archive of the Respondent concerning the meetings of “the Six”. Nor does the
Applicant have any verifiable information that any verbatim or stenographic record was
made during the meetings of the notorious “Six”. As a matter of fact, the ICTY Prosecutor
has never requested any such documents from Serbia nor introduced them in any case.
299. Moreover, during the above-mentioned meeting of the parties held in Belgrade, the
Respondent invited the Applicant to use freely the Yugoslav Archives which, as a part of
the legacy of the former Yugoslavia, belongs to all SFRY successors, not only to Serbia.
300. In addition, the Respondent notes that the Applicant relies upon the Agreement on
Cooperation between the Chief State Attorney of the Republic of Croatia and the War
303
Crime Prosecutor of the Republic of Serbia of 13 October 2006 through which the direct
cooperation and exchange of evidence was established between the Parties. Thus, it is
difficult to conclude that the Applicant does not have access to documentary evidence.
Rather it has simply not succeeded in finding evidence of genocide in all available
documentation, including the ICTY archive of hundreds of thousands of documents relating
to the armed conflict and the crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia.
300Reply, para. 1.14.
301Ibid, para. 1.13.
302See the Respondent’s submissions dated 7 September 2010, 28 September 2010, 15 November 2010, 17
December 2010, and 18 May 2011 respectively.
303Annex 81 to the Reply.
115 CHAPTER IV
APPLICATION OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION
301. In the previous Chapter, the Respondent explained why the large amount of evidence
produced by the Applicant cannot be taken as credible and reliable. The Respondent,
however, does not disagree that serious crimes were committed during the armed conflict
in the territory of the Republic of Croatia from 1991 to 1995. This Chapter responds to the
Applicant’s factual allegations and the legal arguments as they are presented in the Reply.
The Respondent will clearly demonstrate that the crimes described in the Memorial and
Reply do not fulfil the legal elements of the crime of genocide, nor of any other act
punishable pursuant to Article III of the Genocide Convention.
1. General legal comments
A. Genocide and ethnic cleansing
302. Since the Application Instituting Proceedin gs was filed and the Memorial produced,
the scope of Articles II and III of the Conve ntion has been clarified in judgments of
the trial chambers and the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia and in the seminal ruling of this Court in the Bosnia case.
There can be no doubt that the international case law has become consolidated around
a relatively restrictive constr uction of Articles II and III of the Convention. That the
definition of genocide should be applied more liberally is an argument that has been
expressed only in dissenting opinions. 304In particular, the case law has insisted upon a
distinction between genocide as the term is understood in the Genocide Convention
and the concept of “ethnic cleansing”, which involves “rendering an area ethnically
homogeneous by using force or intimidation to remove persons of given groups from
305
the area”. As the Court explained in the Bosnia case:
“Neither the intent, as a matter of policy, to render an area ‘ethnically homogeneous’, nor
the operations that may be carried out to implement such policy, can as such be
304See, e.g., ICTY, Prosecutor v. Krstić (Case No: IT-98-33-A), Partial Dissenting Opinion of Judge
Shahabuddeen, 19 April 2004.
305ICJ, Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of th e Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 20, para. 190, citing Interim Report by the
Commission of Experts, UN Doc. S/35374 (1993), para. 55.
117 designated as genocide: the intent that characterizes genocide is ‘to destroy, in whole or in
part’ a particular group, and deportation or displacement of the members of a group, even
if effected by force, is not necessarily equivalent to destruction of that group, nor is such
destruction an automatic consequence of the displacement.”306
303. Stubbornly, the Applicant has retained the in terpretation of the crime of genocide that
inspired its original Application, insisting that acts perpetrated on its own territory,
whose intent and whose consequence appears to have been to drive ethnically Croat
populations from certain regions, amounted to genocide, despite the lack of any
serious evidence indicating that such acts were meant “to destroy, in whole or in part,
a national, ethnic, racial or religious group as such”. This is not the interpretation that
the Respondent prefers. The Respondent considers that the interpretation of Articles II
and III of the Convention adopted by the Court in the Bosnia case is a correct
statement of the law and one that is generally consistent with the rulings of trial
chambers and the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY.
B. Different national defin itions of genocide do not a ffect the application of the
Genocide Convention
304. The Applicant’s original submissions, in 1999 and 2001, were premised on an approach
to the interpretation of Article II of the Genocide Convention that has been rather
systematically rejected in judicial determinations since that time, including, in
particular, the Judgment of the Court in the Bosnia case. The Applicant had staked its
claim on the prospect of a large and liberal approach being taken to the definition of the
crime of genocide, something that at the time of its first filings might have seemed
plausible. Refusing to abandon its application in light of the clarification that has been
provided by rulings of both this Court and the ICTY, the Applicant invokes examples
drawn from national practice. The suggestion seems to be that when national legislators
incorporate the crime of genocide in their domestic criminal provisions, they contribute
in some way to the interpretation of the provisions of the 1948 Genocide Convention.
Innovations in national legislation and in its interpretation may be relevant to an
understanding of the customary law of genocide, which exists alongside and in parallel
to the Convention. But as the Applicant has done with respect to issues of attribution
306
Ibid.
118 and the Court’s jurisdiction ratione temporis (see Chapter II, above), the Applicant
likewise blurs the distinction between the customary international law governing the
crime of genocide and the provisions of the treaty itself. Even if one were to accept that
the initiatives of a limited number of national lawmakers might provide insight into the
content of the crime of genocide under custom ary international law, their relevance to
the interpretation of the Genocide Conventi on as a matter of treaty law is far more
doubtful. Indeed, it seems likely that some national legislators intend quite deliberately
to enlarge the definition of genocide beyond the bounds of what is found in the
Genocide Convention itself out of dissatisfaction with what they perceive to be an
overly narrow definition. This may be of relevance in some contexts, but it has no
bearing upon proceedings involving the application of the Genocide Convention itself.
Even if it did, however, the limited evidence ofnational innovation in defining the crime
of genocide should not be exaggerated.
305. In arguing for an expanded definition of genocide, the Applicant uses authorities from
national law in support. In order to bolster its contention that the definition of genocide is
enlarged to cover forms of “ethnic cleansing”, the Applicant notes that “forcible population
displacement” is listed as an act of genocide in Croatian law. The definition of genocide is
307
derived from the law of the SFRY. The Applicant goes on to provide other examples of
the same phenomenon:“Bolivia, Estonia, Ethiopia, Italy, Costa Rica, Lithuania, Nicaragua,
Ivory Coast, Paraguay, Russia, Salvador, Slovenia, Spain and, to a certain extent, Armenia,
which treat forcible repopulation as a genocidal act.” The Applicant is however distorting
somewhat the extent of the redefinition by national legislators of the crime of genocide. For
example, Armenia’s legislation speaks of “violent re-settlement directed at the physical
elimination of the members of this group” which is arguably much closer to the text of
Article II of the Genocide Convention than “forcible population displacement”. The same is
true of the Russian Federation: “forced resettlement or the creation of other living conditions
intended to physically exterminate the members of this group”.
306. The Bolivian legislation does not seem to involve ethnic cleansing per se. Rather, it is
a reformulation of para. (e ) of Article II of the Ge nocide Convention (“Forcibly
transferring children of the group to another group”) so as to include adults.
307
Reply para. 2.71, esp. fn 210.
119307. Côte d’Ivoire’s Code pénal says: “Le déplacement ou la dispersion forcée de
populations ou d'enfants ou leur placement da ns des conditions de vie telles qu'elles
doivent aboutir à leur mort ou à leur dispar ition [...].” Again, this is not an example
that supports Applicant’s hypothesis.
308. Ethiopia’s legislation is as follows: “The compulsory movement or dispersion of
peoples or children, or placing them under living conditions calculated to result in
their death or disappearance.” This is, once again, really a somewhat amended version
of para. (c) of Article II of the Genocid e Convention, rather than authority for the
introduction of “ethnic cleansing” into the definition. No source is given by the
Applicant for the legislation being cited. A thorough study published recently by
Oxford University Press, authored by David L. Nersessian, catalogues and analyses
national legislation concerning genocide. There is nothing in that study to indicate that
Costa Rica, Italy, Lithuania and Spain have incorporated “forced displacement” into
their genocide legislation. 308 Some States have done th is as part of a broader
enlargement of the definition in very extravagant directions.
309. It is a fact that the definition of genocidethat is found in the 1948 Genocide Convention
has been subjected to modification by some national legislators. There have been several
attempts to enlarge the definition, some of which amount to a total revision of the
concept rather than an incremental expansion. For example, Paraguay includes “forced
displacement”, but it also adds such acts as “prevents the exercise of their religion or
customary practices” and “forcibly disperses the community”, and includes “social
group” within the scope of the definition. 309Nevertheless, the vast majority of national
statutes adhere faithfully to the definition in the Genocide Convention. The definitions
that differ stand out as idiosyncratic rather than as representative of some trend that
would be relevant to assessing the scope of the term. In any case, even if the definition
of genocide under customary international law were deemed to be different from that of
the Genocide Convention, this cannot have any consequence in terms of the exercise of
the jurisdiction of the Court pursuant to Article IX of the Convention, which must
necessarily have as its basis the definition in the Convention.
308
David L. Nersessian, Genocide of Political Groups, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010, at pp. 294-295,
309-305, 308, 309.
Ibid., p. 312.
120 C. The nature of the “destruction”
310. In para. 8.9. of the Reply, the Applicant writes:
“In relation to the establishment of an intent ‘to destroy’, Croatia has argued that Article II
is to be read as a whole. Subparagraphs (b) to (e) make it clear that the requirements of the
destruction of a group cannot be equated simply with the physical destruction of members
of the group, but rather the group as an entity. This interpretation has not been contested
by the Respondent.”
311. In the Memorial, the Applicant stated as follows:
“On the other hand, it is not necessary that the conduct in question should have as its
object the physical destruction of the members of the group. This can be seen from the
inclusion in Article II of such elements as paragraphs (d) and (e). For example, the
systematic practice of forcibly transferring the children of a protected group so that
others will bring them up would result, within a generation, in the disappearance of the
group and would amount to its destruction in the sense of Article II. The group, as
such, would no longer exist, and those who deliberately engaged in that practice,
intending that result, would be guilty of genocide. Yet that practice would involve
neither the physical destruction of the parents nor of the children. Article I has to be
interpreted as a whole, and the concept of the destruction of a group need not be
interpreted as requiring the actual killing of many or most of them: it is not to be
interpreted as if genocide were confined to the acts referred to in paragraph (a). In
other words, ‘intent to destroy’ includes cas es where a State seeks to destroy a group as
an entity, even if it does not seek the physical destruction of many or most of the
310
individual members of the group.”
312. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent stated: “’Destruction’ means physical
311
destruction of a group.” So that there is no ambiguity, the Respondent most
definitely contests such an interpretation proposed by the Applicant. As a subsidiary
argument, should the Court accept the Applicant’s contention that “the destruction of a
group cannot be equated simply with the physical destruction of members of the
group”, the Respondent maintains that this approach confirms the validity of the
counter-claim. The Applicant’s formulation is not without some equivocation and for
310Memorial, para. 7.44.
311Counter-Memorial, para. 61.
121 this reason the Respondent considers it necessa ry to review some principles about the
construction of Article 2 of the Genocide Conventi on and the scope of the
“destruction” that is envisaged.
313. Article 2 of the Genocide Convention uses the verb “to destroy”. In the early drafts of
the Convention, the concept of “destruction” was used more broadly than in the final
version. The drafting began within the Secret ariat, which had retained three experts,
Raphael Lemkin, Vespasian Pella and Henr i Donnedieu de Vabres, to prepare an
initial version of the draft Convention. Th eir work was intended to provide the
Economic and Social Council, which was responsible for the project at the time, with
a range of options that might then be incorporated into a final negotiated agreement.
Article I of the draft spoke of the “purpose” of the Convention being “to prevent the
destruction of racial, national, linguistic , religious or political groups of human
312
beings”. It was followed by a list of “Acts qualified as Genocide” that was prefaced
by an introductory paragraph or chapeau:
“In this Convention, the word ‘genocide’ means a criminal act directed against any one of
the aforesaid groups of human beings, with the purpose of destroying it in whole or in
part, or of preventing its preservation or development […].”
314. This was followed by three subparagraphs:
“Such acts consist of:
1) Causing the death of members of a group orjiunring their health or physical integrity by:
a) group massacres or individual executions; or
b) subjection to conditions of life which, by lack of proper housing, clothing, food,
hygiene and medical care, or excessive work or physical exertion are likely to result in the
debilitation or death of the individuals; or
c) mutilations and biological experiments imposed for other than curative purposes; or
d) deprivation of all mean of livelihood, by confiscation of property, looting, curtailment
of work, denial of housing and of supplies otherwise available to the other inhabitants of
the territory concerned.
2) Restricting births by:
a) sterilization and/or compulsory abortion; or
b) segregation of the sexes; or
312UN Doc. E/447, p. 17.
122 c) obstacles to marriage.
3) Destroying the specific characteristics of the group by:
a) forcible transfer of children to another human group; or
b) forced and systematic exile of individuals representing the culture of a group; or
c) prohibition of the use of the national language even in private intercourse; or
d) systematic destruction of books printed in the national language or of religious works
or prohibition of new publications; or
e) systematic destruction of historical or religious monuments or their diversion to alien
uses, destruction or dispersion of documents and objects of historical, artistic, or religious
313
value and of objects used in religious worship.”
315. The Secretariat draft formed the basis of negotiations in the Ad Hoc Committee
established by the Economic and Social Council. The Committee reworked the
definition of the crime, presenting it in two distinct provisions. Article II was entitled
“Physical and biological genocide”. Article III was entitled “Cultural genocide”. 314
With some drafting changes that are not relevant to the issue of “destruction”, Article
II of the Ad Hoc Committee version was adopted by the General Assembly and makes
up the first four paragraphs of Article 2 of the 1948 Convention. Article III of the Ad
Hoc Committee’s draft was eliminated by the General Assembly in a very deliberate
effort to ensure that the concept of geno cide as contemplated by the Convention is
restricted to “physical and biological genocide” although the proposed heading or
margin note stating this explicitly was not retained in the Convention. There is a
certain ambiguity about Article II caused by the addition of Article II(e) of the
Genocide Convention, which refers to the forcible transfer of children from one group
to another. The act of forcible transfer had been present in the Secretariat draft, in the
paragraph dealing with acts that might be labelled “cultural genocide”, but it was
dropped in the cultural genocide provision of the Ad Hoc Committee draft. Late in
debates of the third session of the General Assembly, this alternative was revived on a
proposal from Greece, which noted that, while cultural genocide in principle had been
excluded, there was one act of cultural geno cide about which there had been no real
315
controversy. It is for this reason that Article II(e) refers to an act of genocide that
does not refer to physical or biological destruction.
313Ibid.
314UN Doc. E/800.
315UN Doc. A/C.6/242; UN Doc. A/C.6/SR.82 (Vallindas, Greece).
123316. As the Court said, in the Bosnia case:
“[A] proposal during the drafting of the Convention to include in the definition ‘measures
intended to oblige members of a group to abandon their homes in order to escape the
threat of subsequent ill-treatment’ was not accepted (A/C.6/234). It can only be a form of
genocide within the meaning of the Convention, if it corresponds to or falls within one of
the categories of acts prohibited by Article II of the Convention. Neither the intent, as a
matter of policy, to render an area ‘ethnically homogeneous’, nor the operations that may
be carried out to implement such policy, can as such be designated as genocide: the intent
that characterizes genocide is ‘to destroy, in whole or in part’ a particular group, and
deportation or displacement of the members of a group, even if effected by force, is not
necessarily equivalent to destruction of that group, nor is such destruction an automatic
consequence of the displacement.” 316
317. In the Krstić case, the ICTY Appeals Chamber wrote:
“The Genocide Convention, and customary international law in general, prohibit only the
physical or biological destruction of a human group. The Trial Chamber expressly
acknowledged this limitation, and eschewed any broader definition. The Chamber stated:
“[C]ustomary international law limits the definition of genocide to those acts seeking the
physical or biological destruction of all or part of the group. [A]n enterprise attacking only
the cultural or sociological characteristics of a human group in order to annihilate these
elements which give to that group its own identity distinct from the rest of the community
317
would not fall under the definition of genocide.”
318. A difficulty is created by the fact that certain punishable acts listed in the paragraphs
of Article II of the Convention do not seem likely to lead to the physical destruction of
the group. In particular, “causing serious … mental harm” in para. (b) and “forcibly
transferring children” in para. (e) would seem good examples.
319. With respect to para. (e), it is clear from the drafting history that the forcible transfer
of children was indeed viewed as a form of cultural genocide. It did not, obviously,
involve physical extermination but ra ther the assimilation of a group by the
elimination of elements of its cultural identity. As a result, there is somewhat of a
316Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of th e Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007, para. 190.
317ICTY, Prosecutor v. Krstić (Case No: IT-98-33-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment, of 19 April 2004, para. 25.
124 paradox in Article II, as it has been interpreted by this Court and by the Appeals
Chamber of the ICTY, in that the words “intent to destroy” in the chapeau have been
held to mean only physical or biological de struction despite the fact that one of the
five punishable acts does not properly fit within this description.
320. The other example of an act of genocide that would not seem consistent with physical
destruction is that of “causing serious … mental harm to members of the group”. It
does not appear plausible that such acts, taken alone, could effect the physical
destruction of a protected group. Therefore, such acts could be punishable under the
Genocide Convention only to the extent that they are perpetrated with the mental or
psychological element of the intent to dest roy the group in a physical sense. Although
not essential, it would seem very unlikely that such acts be the only punishable acts of
genocide in a given situation where genocide actually takes place. They would
necessarily be accompanied by killing. In the absence of killing, it will be extremely
difficult to conclude that there is intent to destroy the group physically. The more
evidence there is of massive and systematic killing, the more plausible is the
conclusion that this was conducted with the intent to destroy the group in whole or in
part. Where evidence of massive and systematic killing is lacking, and where the main
elements of the attack on the protected gr oup consist of physical and mental violence
falling short of actual homicide, the more unreasonable will be the conclusion that the
perpetrators intended to destroy the group in whole or in part.
321. Thus, while a literal reading of Article II of the Convention may bolster the contention
that various forms of destruction falling short of physical destruction are
contemplated, relying in par ticular upon the specific acts of genocide enumerated in
the subparagraphs, the prevailing interpreta tion, including the interpretation adopted
by this Court in the Bosnia case, is that the words “to destroy” in the chapeau of
Article II mean physical destruction. In othe r words, the intent must be to destroy the
group in a physical sense, even if the sp ecific acts themselves may sometimes appear
to fall short of this. It must be borne in mind that the definition applies in the contexts
of both individual and State responsibility. The drafting history indicates that the main
concern was with a provision that would be applicable to the trials of individuals,
although these individuals woul d be participating in a fo rm of criminality involving
structure and organization on a large scale. It is conceivable, for example, that an
125 individual might commit an assault causing serious bodily or mental harm on a
member of the targeted group (Article II(b)). The individual offender might not,
strictly speaking, contribute to the phys ical extermination of the group in committing
such a crime. To the extent that the individual did so with the intent to destroy the
group in a physical sense, then that individual would be guilty of genocide. In the case
of an assault by one indivi dual on another that caused se rious bodily or mental harm,
however, the intent to destroy the group might not be an easy inference or deduction.
D. Who can perpetrate genocide and how to prove it
322. This is one of the inevitable conundrums that results from treating the Genocide
Convention and its definition of the crime as being applicable to both individual and
State responsibility. One construction, though it is an approach that the Respondent
considers to be implausible, is to treat the definition of genocide as one that is
applicable essentially to i ndividual criminal responsibility, like ordinary crimes such
as murder and assault. As long as the individual perpetrates such a crime with the
intent to destroy the group in whole or in part, then genocide has been committed,
according to this theory. Presumably, then, State responsibility would be incurred as a
result of this individual to the extent that the individual’s conduct can be attributable
to the State. One corollary of this thesis is that an individual, even a marginal and
insignificant one, without any role in the activities of the State, acting alone, can
perpetrate genocide.
323. The better view, the Respondent submits, is th at liability for genocide starts with the
State or its organs, and then is perpetrated by individuals who act in order to further a
policy of the State. The words “with intent to destroy” that appear in the chapeau of
Article II turn the interpreter towards the State itself. Only if the State seeks the
physical extermination of the group, as opposed to its relocation, or its disappearance
in a cultural sense, can we say that liability under the Genocide Convention is
engaged.
324. Support for this view can be found in the El ements of Crimes of the Rome Statute of
the International Criminal Court. The Elements of Crimes are intended to “assist the
Court in the interpretation and application” of the definitions of crimes, including the
126 definition of genocide set out in Article 6 of the Rome Statute. 318The Elements of
Crimes were adopted by consensus by the Preparatory Commission of the
International Criminal Court, a body whose participants included many States that are
not yet parties to the Rome Statute, such as the United States, China and the Russian
Federation. They were subsequently incorporated into the applicable law of the Court
by consensus at the first meeting of the Assembly of States Parties, in September
319
2002. The Elements of Crimes require that, in order for an individual to be found
guilty of genocide, the following must be established:
“The conduct took place in the context of a manifest pattern of similar conduct directed
against that group or was conduct that could itself effect such destruction.”
325. Clearly, this provision eliminates the possibility that conduct of individuals who act in
isolation could be deemed to be genocide and a violation of the Convention, because
such individuals are incapable of responsibility for a “manifest pattern” and are unable
of effecting the destruction of a group. The Elements of Crimes thus make an
especially helpful contribution to the interpretation of Article II of the Genocide
Convention by providing a link between individual behaviour and the acts of the State.
320
It is the State that is capable of effecting the destruction of the group.
326. For these reasons, the words “with intent to destroy” that appear in the chapeau of
Article II should not be overly coloured by the specific acts found in the
subparagraphs. These acts, in the context of individual responsibility, may appear to
fall short of physical destruction. In add ition to the clear exception created by the
Genocide Convention with regard to the cas e of forcibly transferring children from
one group to another, atten tion might also be directed to the notion of “causing
serious… mental harm”. Many violent crimes will cause serious mental harm to
individual victims, but it is inconceivable that such acts, even when perpetrated by
more than one individual, could ever attain the level capable of effecting the
destruction of the group.
318Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, (2002) 2187 UNTS 90, Art. 9.
319Elements of Crimes, ASP/1/3, pp. 108-55.
320Indeed, with respect to genocide, there are isolated pronouncements by the ICTY holding that an individual,
acting alone, may perpetrate genocide, providing that he or she kills a member of the targeted group with the
genocidal intent: ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jelisić (IT-95-10-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 14 December 1999,
para. 100; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jelisić (IT-95-10-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment of 5 July 2001, para. 48.
127327. When making proof of general intent, it is quite normal to rely upon inferences.
Persons are deemed to intend the consequences of their acts. Absent evidence to the
contrary, it is presumed that acts were perp etrated intentionally. But the same cannot
be the case with offences of specific intent, like the crime of genocide.
328. Something additional is required precisely because there will often be more than one
inference that can be drawn from the facts. For example, upon proof that a member of
a national, ethnic, racial or religious gr oup has been killed, various forms of criminal
intent may be inferred, including negligence, general intent, the intent to commit
crimes against humanity and the intent to commit genocide. . In its recent rulings on
the application for an arrest warrant in the Bashir case, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the
International Criminal Court refused to confirm charges of genocide because it said
that this was not the only inference that could be drawn from the facts. 321
329. The Appeals Chamber ordered the Pre-Trial Chamber to reconsider the application because
it held that at the stage of issuance of an arrest warrant it was sufficient that genocide be one
322
of the possible inferences, but it was not necessary for it to be the only inference.
Nevertheless, it is clear that, at the trial stage, where the Court must determine guilt or
innocence, genocidal intent must be the only inference for a conviction to result. The
situation is the same before this Court, where the question is not whether genocide may be
one of the inferences to be drawn from the facts: it must be the only possible inference.
E. Genocidal intent cannot be inferred from “widespread and systematic attack” on
civilian population
330. In the Reply, the Applicant introduces its theoretical discussion of the issue of
genocidal intent with the observation that
“Applicant’s case on genocidal intent depends in large part upon the inferences of intent
which it invites the Court to draw from the widespread and systematic pattern of attacks
that were perpetrated on the Croat civilian population of the identified regions”.23
321ICC, Prosecutor v. Bashir (ICC-02/05-01/09), Decision on the Prosecution’s Application for a Warrant of
Arrest against Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir, 4 March 2009.
322ICC, Prosecutorv. Bashir(ICC-02/05-01/09-OA), Judgment on the appeal of the Prosecutor against the Decision
on the Prosecution's Application for a Warrant of Arrest against Omar Hassan Ahmad Al Bashir, 3 February 2010.
323Reply, para. 9.48.
128331. It is an interesting observation because th e concept of “widespread and systematic
attack” is taken from the law concerning crimes against humanity rather than that of
the crime of genocide. 324But care should be taken in transposing the language of
crimes against humanity to the applicati on of the Genocide Convention lest the
distinct concepts become muddled. In pa rticular, proof of a widespread and/or
systematic attack on a civilian population committed with a discriminatory intent is
not sufficient to prove the crime of genocide. Moreover, to the extent that proof of
intent depends upon inference, as the Appli cant suggests, it is attempting to infer
genocidal intent from what would amount to proof of crimes against humanity,
thereby failing to distinguish between these two distinct, albeit related categories of
international crimes. The Respondent notes that while the United Nations was able to
adopt a convention dealing with the crime of genocide in the years following its
establishment, the adoption of a convention on crimes against humanity has eluded the
organization for more than six decades. States are clearly prepared to assume
obligations with respect to the crime of genocide that they will not undertake for the
broader and often more nebulous concept of crimes against humanity.
332. The Respondent submits that proof of acts causing serious bodily or mental harm to
members of a group, in this case the Croats, is not sufficient to establish the actus reus
of the crime of genocide. Nor is it sufficient to establish that members of the group were
killed, or that inhumane conditions oflife were inflicted. The overarchingactus reus of
the crime of genocide is in fact the destructin of the group, in whole or in part. Such an
actus reus involves a multitude of individual acts th at contribute to this destruction.
Proof that the physical or material element of genocide has been committed requires
evidence not only of one of the enumerated acts in article II of the Convention but also
that the group was in fact destroyed, in whole or in part. Otherwise, it becomes virtually
impossible to distinguish genocide from other punishable international crimes deemed
by international legislators to be less serious and to attract consequences that are less
grave, such as “ethnic cleansing” and the crime against humanity of persecution. It is for
this reason that the debate about genocide has never been engaged by the ICTY in the
Croatian cases. There simply is an insuffient factual underpinning to require that the
question about genocidal intent be posed.
324
See, e.g., Rome Statute, Art. 7(1).
129 F. Conditions of life
333. The Applicant focuses particular attention on the third act of genocide: “Deliberately
inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in
whole or in part.” 325 The Applicant insists that “the actual physical destruction of the group
does not need to have occurred” and claims that “Respondent has acknowledged that
‘systematic expulsion from homes’ can, according to the Court in its 2007 Judgment, also
326
fall under Article II(c)”. Lest there be any misunderstanding here, the Respondent insists
that the intention involve the physical destruction of the group. Systematic expulsion from
homes may be a punishable act perpetrated within the context of a genocide, but it must be
part of a “manifest pattern” that is capable of effecting the physical destruction of the group,
and not merely its displacement elsewhere. The Applicant oversimplifies the Respondent’s
position and thereby distorts it. The above-cited paragraph in the Applicant’s Reply contains
a footnote to the Counter-Memorial. For the record, here is what that paragraph says:
“Consequently, in order for deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part to constitute genocide,
the prohibited acts must be accompanied with the intent to destroy the group. This is
particularly relevant for the present case, since a large number of crimes committed
against both Croats and Serbs could be qualified as ‘ethnic cleansing’, the practice which
is usually equated to ‘systematic expulsion from homes’, and which can, according to the
Court, constitute genocide, provided such action is carried out with the necessary specific
intent. The Applicant, however, failed to prove that the expulsion of Croats, where it has
occurred, was accompanied by the intent to destroy that population, while the Respondent
327
will prove that the expulsion of Serbs was carried out with the required specific intent.”
The Applicant conveniently omitted the words “provided such action is carried out
with the necessary specific intent”.
334. The Applicant then goes on to make an astounding assertion: “The Respondent has not
disputed the fact that it deliberately inflicted conditions of life designed to bring about
the physical destruction of Croats as a group in whole or in part within the meaning of
Article II(c).” 328 This is obviously false. It shows the danger of trying to dissociate the
individual paragraphs in Article II from the chapeau.
325Reply, para. 8.22.
326Reply, para. 8.22. Also, para. 947(3).
327Counter-Memorial, para. 84.
328Reply, para. 8.24.
130 G. Significance of attacks on religious symbols
335. In the Reply, the Applicant returns to its argument based upon the intentional
329
destruction of objects of cultural and religious importance. The Applicant refers to an
admission made by the Respondent with respect to such acts, but insists on describing
the Respondent’s discussion of the matter “inadequate”. But all that the Respondent did
was to rely upon a paragraph in the Judgment in the Bosnia case that confirmed the
exclusion of attacks on cultural and religious objects from the scope of the Convention.
Within the context of litigation whose framework is established by the definition of the
crime of genocide set out in the Genocide Convention, the relevance of the intentional
destruction of objects of cultural and religious importance is that they may contribute to
the evidence of genocidal intent. But absent evidence of the intent to destroy physically
a protected group, proof that cultural and religious objects were targeted cannot fill the
holes in a flimsy allegation. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent noted that the
destruction of objects of cultural and religious importance is not a punishable act of
genocide listed in Article II of the Convention. To the extent that debate on this point
persists, the Respondent points to the early draft of the Convention, cited above, where
explicit provision was made for attacks on cultu ral and religious objects under the rubric
of what was called cultural genocide. Such acts were explicitly rejected as the drafting
of the Convention progressed.
H. Preventing births within the group
336. In the Reply, the Applicant merely confirms the existence of a dispute between the
parties on the applica tion of this provision. 330The Applicant’s position seems to be
that because there is some evidence of rapes being committed by Serb combatants
during the conflict, that this establishes that such measures were intended to prevent
births within the group with the intent to destroy the group. The Respondent notes that
the Prosecutor of the ICTY has never ma de such a preposterous allegation in
indictments for genocide with respect to the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
whether they concerned Srebrenica or othe r acts and locations. It would have been
more helpful if the Applicant had simply withdrawn this far-fetched aspect of its
329
330Reply, para. 8.23.
Reply, para. 8.25.
131 claim. 331Indeed, in the more general discussion on the physical or material element of
genocide, in para. 8.47 of the Reply, the A pplicant appears to abandon the gratuitous
charge relating to preventing births within the group.
I. Other acts of genocide
337. Article III of the 1948 Genocide Convention lists what are sometimes called the “other
acts” of genocide. Of course, genocide itself is contemplated by para. (a) of Article III.
The Convention goes on to list four additional acts: conspiracy, direct and public
incitement, attempt and complicity. In the Reply, at para. 8.27, the Applicant states:
“However, if the Court rules – as Croatia says its must – that the Respondent is
responsible for acts of genocide under Article III(a), then it follows that the Respondent
may also be responsible for acts of indi viduals under its command or control who
committed one or more of the offences enumerated in Article III (b) to (e).” Careful
scrutiny of Article III of the Convention shouldbe sufficient to demonstrate that such an
allegation is not very constructive. Three of the four acts listed in article III are what are
called “inchoate crimes” in the literature. They are punishable even if genocide is not
committed. They are preparatory acts. If genocide itself is established, as the Applicant
insists will be the case, then findings on the inchoate crimes become superfluous. This
seems to be the position taken by the Applicant elsewhere in the Reply. 332
338. Perhaps this can be seen most clearly with respect to “attempt”, which is one of the
paragraphs in Article III. If the Court rules that the Respondent is responsible for acts
of genocide under Article III(a), what w ould possibly be the sense of ruling that
“individuals under its comma nd or control” also attempted to commit genocide. In
criminal prosecutions, a charge of attempt may sometimes be sustained where the
prosecution fails to prove that the crime its elf was perpetrated by the accused person.
But where the crime itself is established, any charge of attempt is dropped.
339. The same observation can be made with respect to conspiracy, which is listed in Article
III(b) of the Genocide Convention. Understandings of the concept of conspiracy vary
depending upon the legal system in question. It is well accepted that the drafters of the
331
332Reply, para. 8.26.
Reply, paras. 8.30 and 8.31.
132 Convention intended to cover so-called inchoate conspiracy, which is a concept known
in the common law. Accordingly, where two or more people agree to perpetrate a crime
they may be found guilty of conspiracy even if the crime that is the subject of their
agreement is not actually committed. At the level of individual criminal responsibility, it
may make sense to proceed with prosecutions for both genocide as such and conspiracy,
and to convict on one or both counts depend ing upon the evidence. In particular, if
evidence of genocide is lacking, proof that the accused participated in a conspiracy to
commit the crime may be necessary in order to address impunity. But this makes little
sense at the level of State responsibility, where the starting point is the involvement of
the State, as the Applicant itself makes clear in its Reply.
340. The third inchoate act of genocide is direct and public incitement. The Applicant made
333
some rather summary allegations in the Memorial identifying acts of “incitement”
and “hate speech”, although it generally stopped short of claiming that these amounted
to “direct and public incitement” pursuant to Article III(c) of the Genocide
Convention. These allegations were addressed in the Counter-Memorial. 334 In the
Reply, the Applicant returns to the point and refers to evidence produced by the Office
of the Prosecutor in the Milošević trial 335, but the report by Professor de la Brosse adds
nothing to the Applicant's case, since it concerns only hate speech and does not
contain a single reference to incitement to genocide. 336It is relevant to note that while
there has been occasional evidence of “hate speech” in the case law of the ICTY, there
have been no indictments for “direct and public incitement to commit genocide”, even
in the Srebrenica cases.
341. In the Reply, the Applicant also refers to the Babić case, noting that the Plea
Agreement included an acknowledgement th at the Accused had participated in
“making ethnically inflammatory speeches aimed at fomenting an atmosphere of fear
and hatred amongst the Serb population of the region”. 337 The reference usefully
highlights the fact that there is a distinction between words that incite hatred and
333Memorial, paras. 7.79-7.82, 8.23-8.26.
334Counter-Memorial, paras. 991-993.
335Reply, para. 9.52.
336It is worth noting how the Applicant misrepresents the findings of the report, by putting a reference to it
behind its own words and thereby creating an illusion th at the expert of the ICTY made conclusions which are
actually only allegations made by the Applicant. This is typical for the Applicant's presentation of the case and
further demonstrates its inherent weakness.
337Reply, para. 9.52.
133 “direct and public incitement to commit genocide”. Proof of incitement to hatred is not
sufficient to bring the conduct within th e frame of Article III of the Genocide
Convention. The ICTR Appeals Chamber has c onsidered this distinction, notably in
the so-called Media case:
“The Appeals Chamber considers that there is a difference between hate speech in general
(or inciting discrimination or violence) and direct and public incitement to commit
genocide. Direct incitement to commit genocide assumes that the speech is a direct appeal
to commit an act referred to in Article 2(2) of the Statute; it has to be more than a mere
vague or indirect suggestion. In most cases, direct and public incitement to commit
genocide can be preceded or accompanied by hate speech, but only direct and public
incitement to commit genocide is prohibited under Article 2(3)(c) of the Statute. This
338
conclusion is corroborated by the travaux préparatoires to the Genocide Convention.”
342. The Appeals Chamber cautioned about confounding hate speech and direct and public
incitement to commit genocide:
“The Appeals Chamber therefore concludes that when a defendant is indicted pursuant to
Article 2(3)(c) of Statute [i.e. for incitement to comit genocide], he cannot be held
accountable for hate speech that does not directly call for the commission of genocide.
The Appeals Chamber is also of the opinion that, to the extent that not all hate speeches
constitute direct incitement to commit genocide, the jurisprudence on incitement to hatred,
discrimination and violence is not directly applicable in determining what constitutes
direct incitement to commit genocide.” 339
343. For these reasons, the Applicant’s claim in the Reply that the admissions in the Babić
Plea Agreement should be taken as “further evidence of direct and public incitement”
is plainly incorrect.
344. Finally, Article III(e) of the 1948 Convention makes “complicity” a punishable act of
genocide. In the Reply, the Applicant devotes four paragraphs to this issue. 340However,
these paragraphs offer nothing new in supportof the Applicant's allegations and actually
demonstrate that the Applicant's intention to accuse the Respondent of every possible
338
ICTR, Nahimana et al. v. Prosecutor (ICTR-99-52-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment of 28 November 2007,
para. 692; footnote omitted.
339Ibid., para. 693.
340Reply, 9.54-9.57. Also : Memorial, 7.85-7.95; Reply, 8.33.-8.37.
134 violation of the Convention can lead to very illogical consequences, such as accusing
the same person of being a principal perpetrator and an accomplice, at the same time
341
and based on absolutely the same finding of the ICTY. The Respondent's position
concerning this is fairly relaxed – since genocide has not been committed the
Respondent cannot be held responsible either for commission or for complicity.
2. Rebuttal to the alleged genocidal activities in Eastern Slavonia
345. Chapter 5 of the Reply deals with events in Eastern Slavonia. It reviews material
concerning various localities in this area, mainly in the period of 1991 and early 1992,
drawing upon the Applicant’s submissions, th e Counter-Memorial and other sources,
including the case law of the ICTY.
A. Some general remarks
346. In paras. 5.3 and 5.4 of the Reply, the A pplicant accuses the Respondent of failing to
342
produce “evidence” which it says “it must have in its possession”. The conclusion
that the Applicant draws from this argument is that the Court should accept certain
unspecified aspects of the evidence produced as being “unchallenged”. This
proposition is incorrect in law. Evidence must be weighed by the Court in accordance
with principles of evidence that are well known and well-established. The fact that one
party does not produce evidence in response does not mean either that the evidence of
the other party is “unchallenged” or that the evidence should be accepted. The adverse
party may challenge the credibility, the reliability and the relevance of such
“unchallenged” evidence. This approach is especially important because “claims
against a State involving charges of excepti onal gravity must be proved by evidence
that is fully conclusive” 343 and the Court requires “proof at a high level of certainty
appropriate to the seriousness of the allegation”. 344
341
342Reply, 9.56-9.57.
343See also supra, Chapter III, paras. 297-300.
Corfu Channel (United Kingdom v. Albania), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1949, p. 17; Application of the
Convention on the Prevention and Punish ment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and
Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, para. 209.
344Application of the Convention on the Preventon and Punishment of th e Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), ICJ Reports 2007, para. 210.
135347. The Applicant points to criminal prosecutions involving Croatian Serb elements with
respect to the conflict in Eastern Slavonia (paras. 5.7-5.8 of the Reply). That various
crimes may have been committed by forces associated with the Croatian Serbs during
the period of the conflict in Croatia is not, of course, in question. That the Respondent
condemns such activity is established by the existence of prosecutions before the courts
345
of Serbia, of which the Applicant takes due note. However, none of the prosecutions,
be they by the ICTY or by the courts of Serbia, were for genocide. Thus, the existence
of such prosecutions is of marginal relevance to these proceedings and most certainly
cannot be taken to advance the Applicant’s case. On the other hand, Croatian courts did
in fact register some convictions against Serbs for the crime of genocide. But these
prosecutions were flagrantly politicized and relied upon extravagant definitions of the
346
crime. The Respondent notes that the Applicant has wisely resisted invoking these
precedents which, had they been credible, might have been helpful to its case.
348. In paras. 5.9 to 5.11 of the Reply, the Applicant refers to new documents emanating
from the JNA, claiming that these provide evidence of genocidal intent. The language in
these documents is actually quite consistent with purely military objectives and
activities. Like most language used in military operations, where there is talk of
“mopping up” and “destruction” of “the en emy”, it is possible to adopt extravagant
interpretations, and that is what the Applicant has done. It is also worth noting that the
Applicant interprets clear references to “Ustasha forces” as proof of a genocidal intent,
claiming that they referred to the entire Croat population, while elsewhere in the Reply
the Applicant devotes a lot of effort to interpret the words of its President, directed at the
347
disappearance of Serbs (without specifica tion), as relating to “Serbian forces”. Thus,
according to the Applicant, when the JNA uses the word “forces” it means “population”,
while when President Tuđman uses the words “Serbs”, he means “forces”.
349. In paras. 5.12 and 5.13 of the Reply, the Applicant considers exhumation data. The
validity of this material, which demonstrates that people died violently in Eastern
Slavonia in 1991 and early 1992 – a matter that is not really in dispute – is discussed
in this Rejoinder in Chapter III . This material amounts to nothing more than evidence
345Reply, para. 5.8.
346See Counter-Memorial, paras. 184 – 199.
347Reply, paras. 11.40-11.45.
136 of irregular burials, presumably of individuals killed during the period of the conflict.
This evidence is therefore of little worth, if any, and most certainly cannot contribute
significantly to any finding that the crime of genocide may have been committed. It is
interesting that the exhumation reports do not provide evidence of genuinely mass
graves of the sort found in Srebrenica, Rw anda and Eastern Europe following World
War II. Rather, the burials seem to be of re latively small clusters of deceased persons,
dispersed throughout the various regions an d municipalities of Slavonia. This is not
decisive, of course, but it is a relevant observation in making an assessment of whether
the crime of genocide took place. The existe nce (or lack of it) of mass graves is a
useful indicator pointing to an intent (or lack of it) to destroy a protected group.
B. Response to the specific allegations with respect to certain places in Eastern Slavonia
1) Tenja
348
350. Applicant considers events in Tenja in paras. 5.14-5.19 of the Reply. Even if the facts
alleged in the Memorial, as complemented by those of the Reply, are accepted, they paint a
picture of an oppressive situao tin described by the ICTY Prosecutro , in one of the very rare
references to Tenja in the proceedings of that Tribunal, as being “to chase the Croatian
civilians out of thevillageofTenja”. 349This is obviously inconsistent with a claim of
genocide, which necessitates prooo ff the intent to destroy physically the targeted group.
351. The Memorial contains an entirely gratuitous and unsupported suggestion to the effect
350
that “Croatian women were routinely raped”. This was challenged in the Counter-
351
Memorial. There is no explanation in the Reply, and therefore it should be
presumed to have been abandoned by the Applicant.
352. The main component of the Reply is th e description of new evidence which, the
Applicant claims, corroborates the accounts of the witnesses. A careful reading of
para. 5.17 of the Reply, which consumes one and a half pages, indicates that the
Assistant Pathologist had examined eight bodies that he could identify and determined
348See also: Memorial 4.20-4.30, Counter-Memorial 659-664.
349ICTY, Prosecutor v. Šešelj (IT-03-67-T), Transcript, 6 July 2010, page 16234, lines 23-24 (cross-examination
of defence witness Nenad Jović by Prosecutor Mathias Marcussen).
350Memorial, para. 425.
351Counter-Memorial, para. 662.
137 they had died of gunshot wounds. That is a ll. This corroborates the obvious fact that
there was an armed conflict underway at the time (July to December 1991) but it
corroborates little else and is of no assistance in addressing the issue of genocide. In
its reply to the counter-claim, the Applicant itself stated this clearly enough:
“The mere finding of mortal remains, even if there is forensic evidence that the cause of
death is suggestive of murder, does not provide sufficient information to enable reliable
conclusions to be drawn as to the circumstances in which the death occurred or the
352
identity of the perpetrator.”
2) Dalj
353. The Applicant considers events in Dalj in paras. 5.20-5.26 of the Reply. 353The
lengthy, detailed description of various ep isodes in an armed conflict, including
consequences for civilians, cer tainly supports charges of violations of the laws of
armed conflict but there is nothing to strengthen the Applicant’s allegation that
genocide was committed. Evidence of orders that a population be “displaced” and
“banished” points to the possibility of for ced displacement, but in no way indicates
genocidal intent.
354. The Reply further takes issue with the obser vation in the Counter-Memorial that “it is
obvious that an armed conflict took place in this village, with the Croatian forces
354
constituting one side in that conflict”. The Reply says the acts alleged to have been
committed “are not actions explicable by a legitimate armed conflict, but are evidence
355
of the targeting of a civilian population […].” But the Respondent has never
contended that all loss of life in Dalj or for that matter elsewhere in the territory
concerned by the Application, was the result oflawful acts of war. Nor does it have any
difficulty with the admission, noted with satisfaction by the Applicant, that “the JNA
356
was involved in the attack on Dalj”. Modern warfare often involves violations of the
rules of international humanitarian law protecting civilians, by one or several parties to
the conflict, and it would be preposterous to suggest that the military conflicts in the
352
353Reply, para. 12.47.
354See also: Memorial 4.31-4.37, Counter-Memorial 665-671.
Counter-Memorial, para. 667.
355Reply, para. 5.22.
356Reply, para. 5.25.
138 former Yugoslavia were an exception. In any case, convictions of Serb combatants for
war crimes are common enough at the ICTY and it is unrealistic to deny that they
occurred. That is not the point here. The issue is whether evidence of the armed conflict
and killings in Dalj, as described in the Memorial, the Reply and the evidence
submitted, leads inexorably to the conclusion that acts of genocide were perpetrated.
Even a summary review of this material indicates that there are many explanations for
the killings other than the single one that the Applicant seeks to establish.
355. For example, at para. 5.24 of the Reply, the Applicant cites a witness who observed
Zoran Čalošević giving orders that “the remaining non-Serb population of Dalj would
be displaced and banished”. As the Court ha s already held, the definition of genocide
is not met when groups are defined negatively (the “non-Serb population”). Moreover,
displacement and banishment is not synonym ous with physical destruction and, while
reprehensible, does not meet the definition of genocide set out in the Convention.
356. There is a lengthy citation from the Indictment in the Miloševi ć case, but the
Applicant concedes that this is only a discussion for ”context” rather than for the
357
substance of the charges, and therefore the Respondent sees no use in pursuing the
debate. As the Court has already held, charges in an indictment are unproven
allegations and cannot be helpful in the creation of a factual record of the events.
3) Berak
357. The Applicant considers events in Berak in paras. 5.27-5.31 of the Reply. 358The
Applicant notes that since the memorial was prepared, it has obtained updated data
359
indicating that forty-six bodies were exhumed from various sites in the area. But what
does this prove? As with the other locations examined above, the Applicant seems to
consider that it is sufficient to establish that war crimes were committed to make its case
under the Genocide Convention. For example, the Applicant charges that the
Respondent “has not advanced any positive evidence of there being an armed conflict or
combat activities in Berak at the relevant time”, explaining the Applicant’s claim that
there were “no Croatian armed forces in the village when it was attacked and, despite
357Reply, para. 5.26.
358See also: Memorial, paras. 4.38-4.46; Counter-Memorial, paras. 6.72-6.76.
359Reply, para. 527.
139 360
JNA attempts to provoke an armed conflict, there was in fact no resistance”. While
such allegations might be relevant in a pr osecution for war crimes or crimes against
humanity, they bring the Court no closer toassessing whether genocide was perpetrated.
4) Bogdanovci
361
358. The Applicant considers events in Bo gdanovci in paras. 5.32-5.34 of the Reply. As
it has done with other localities in Eastern Slavonia, the Applicant argues that this was
not a military engagement. This claim is hard to square with references, in the
Memorial, to “relentless attacks using heavy artillery and infantry”. 362But if it were
not a military engagement, what did these attacks consist of and who was being
attacked? In any event, there is nothing substantially new in the Reply with respect to
Bogdanovci, aside from the Applicant’s cla im that a failure by the Respondent to
produce contrary evidence to an allegation should imply that it is established as a fact,
a position that the Respondent considers to be co ntrary to all principles of evidence as
discussed elsewhere in this Rejoinder.
359. The Respondent further draws the attention ofthe Court to a sentence in the Memorial:
“The occupation was designed to make continued Croatian life in Bogdanovci
impossible.” 363 Possibly in 2001 when the Applicant prepared its Memorial it believed
that "acts designed to make continued life of an ethnic group within a specific location
impossible" met the definition of genocide. Subsequent case law confirms that this is not
the legal test. The Applicant’s allegation may meet the test for some forms of crimes
against humanity but it cannot fulfil the criteria for the definition of genocide.
5) Šarengrad
360. The Applicant considers events in Šarengrad in paras. 5.35-5.38 of the Reply. 364 The
discussion here is similar to that of the other locations in Eastern Slavonia. Details about
alleged attacks upon civilians appear to be disputed, but these disputes do not really bear
in a meaningful way upon the central issue in this litigation. That there was an armed
360
361Reply, para. 530.
See also: Memorial 4.47-4.55, Counter-Memorial 6.77-6,82.
362Memorial, para. 4.53.
363Memorial, para. 4.55.
364See also: Memorial 4.56-4.61, Counter-Memorial 6.83-6.88.
140 conflict in Eastern Slavonia during the relevant period is hardly in dispute. That it
involved acts directed against civilians is not really in dispute either. Yet, nothing in the
Reply contributes to a better understanding of whether these acts and other acts in Eastern
Slavonia did amount to violations of the Genc oide Convention. All that the material in the
Reply highlights is that the Application and the Memorial reflect a conception of the
crime of genocide that may have appeared plausible in 1999 and 2001, at a time when the
case law had not yet become consolidated, but that is no longer consistent with the view
consistently taken by both, the Court and the ICTY in more recent Judgments.
361. To return to the Memorial, it says that “out of 904 villagers of Croatian nationality
who lived in Šarengrad in 1991, 798 were ex iled and during the occupation 4 persons
disappeared and their destiny is still unknown. After these events 80% of the
365
population was Serb.” This may describe forcible displacement of population but it,
once gain, does not correspond to the defin ition of genocide as contained in the
Genocide Convention.
362. In the Reply, the Applicant attempts to take the Respondent to task for its description
of the Miloševi ć indictment, asserting that the Re spondent incorrectly states that
Milošević was charged with the destruction of homes and property: “the actual charge
was the crime against humanity of persecutions”. 366 Of course, both descriptions are
accurate. The facts involved “destruction of homes and property” while the legal
characterization of these acts was “crimes against humanity”. But if the Applicant
wants to fault the Respondent for omitting a pparently inconvenient legal details, it,
too, is guilty of this, for it ought to have sa id “the actual charge was the crime against
humanity of persecution, and not the crime of genocide”.
6) Ilok
363. The Applicant considers events in Ilok in paras. 5.39-5.42 of the Reply 367and offers
comments that are very similar to those with respect to Šarengrad. They consist of
allegations of bodies that were exhumed, areport of abusive remarks to a woman, and a
reference to the Miloševi ć indictment that attaches significance to the fact that it
365Memorial, para. 4.56.
366Reply, para. 5.37.
367See also: Memorial 4.62-4.72, Counter-Memorial 6.89-6.94.
141 involves a charge of crimes against humanity wh ile not addressing the fact that it did not
involve any charge of genocide. The only reference in the Milošević indictment to Ilok
is an allegation of “the deportation to Serbia of at least5,000inhabitants from Ilok”. 368
7) Tompojevci
364. The Applicant considers events in Tom pojevci in paras. 5.43-5.45 of the Reply. 369
The allegations are similar in nature to those in the preceding portions of the Reply, in
that they paint a picture of expulsion of Croats that may be compatible with a charge
of forcible displacement but that do not in any way correspond to genocide. The
claims in the Memorial were obviously prepared in light of certain assumptions about
the definition of genocide that case law has shown to be unfounded.
8) Bapska
370
365. The Applicant considers events in Bapska in paras. 5.46-5.49 of the Reply. Once
again, the Applicant suggests that th e Respondent misrepresented the Miloševi ć
indictment by failing to mention that the charge was crimes against humanity. One
good explanation for the Respondent's failure to indicate this is that this is a case
concerning genocide and not one concerning crimes against humanity.
9) Tovarnik
366. The Applicant considers events in T ovarnik in paras. 5.50-5.53 of the Reply. 371In
para. 5.53, the Applicant states: “It is also highly significant that the Respondent does
not directly challenge either the specific evidence of genocidal intent referred to by the
Applicant (see for example, para. 4.95, in which it is noted that Milošević had told his
soldiers that their task was to ‘kill and destroy everything Croatian’, and paras. 4.97-
98)”. Why is this “highly significant”? There has been no finding of fact by any
tribunal about this allegati on with respect to Miloševi ć. There is no serious evidence
that “Milošević had told his soldiers that their task was to ‘kill and destroy everything
368ICTY, Prosecutor v. Slobodan Milošević (IT-02-54-T), Second Amended Indictment, 27 July 2004, para.
36(k) (emphasis in the original).
369See also: Memorial 4.73-4.80, Counter-Memorial 6.95-6.99.
370See also: Memorial 4.81-4.93, Counter-Memorial 700-704.
371See also: Memorial 4.94-4.106, Counter-Memorial 705-711.
142 Croatian’”. Miloševć i was not charged with making such a statement and nowhere in
the record of his own trial is there any evidence to suggest that he ever made such a
statement. The “authority” in the Memorial for this statement is a witness statement by
JV; assuming that a Serb soldier actually told her such a thing, this is hardly evidence
that Miloševi ć made such a remark. It is a textbook example of uncorroborated
hearsay, and the Court should disregard it entirely.
10) Sotin
367. The Applicant considers events in Sotin in paras. 5.53-5.56 of the Reply. 372 The
Applicant says that the Respondent has failed to respond to evidence of “genocidal
intent”, giving as an example para. 4.111 of the Memorial. Actually, para. 4.111
describes very brutal abuse and torture of a father and son by unnamed soldiers in an
unnamed location, where they were subjected to sexual violence. However, this example
of an isolated derogatory crime against two individuals in no way supports or assists in a
claim of genocide.
11) Lovas
368. The Applicant considers events in L ovas in paras. 5.5 7-5.62 of the Reply. 373 The
allegations with respect to Lovas consist largel y of a lengthy reference to a trial held in
Belgrade. There is a harrowing description of what probably amount to war crimes and
might also be deemed crimes against humanity, but there is nothing here to assist a claim
that genocide was perpetrated. As with previous localities, the Applicant presents evidence
of a body count fo r exhumations, demonstrating that individuals died in the locality, but
without any further informationto indicate the cause of death, the circumstances of death
and the identity of victims that might assist theCourt in assessing the validity of a genocide
charge.
12) Tordinci
369. The Applicant considers events in Tordinci in paras. 5.63-5.64 of the Reply. 374 The brief
remarks in the reply dealing with Tordinci ar e similar in nature to those for the other
localities and there is no need to add further comments here.
372See also: Memorial 4.107-4.115, Counter-Memorial 712-716.
373See also: Memorial 4.116-4.113, Counter-Memorial 717-721.
374See also: Memorial 4.133-4.138, Counter-Memorial 722-726.
143 13) Vukovar
375
370. The Applicant considers events in Vukovar in paras. 5.65-5.82 of the Reply. The
most significant episodes in the conflict in Eastern Slavonia took place in Vukovar, and
these attract the bulk of the discussion in theReply, as they did in the Memorial and the
Counter-Memorial. The Applicant refers to the decisions of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia concerning the Vukovar region, asserting that they
“represent an illustration of the extent and gravity of the atrocities visited upon the
Croat”. 376The Respondent observes, once again, that the crime of genocide has never
been charged by the ICTY with respect to the events in Vukovar in 1991, nor have the
judges ever suggested this to be the way to characterize the nature of such events.
371. In the Reply, at para. 5.71, the Applicant states: “The suggestion at paragraph 731 [of the
Counter-Memorial] that many of the victims were killed in shelling is no answer to the
Applicant’s case: shelling is equally capable of being a method of committing genocidal
acts…” Perhaps the comment in the Counter-Memorial needs some explanation. Shelling
is a method of “killing” so it is certainly capable of being a genocidal act. But in the
absence of further evidence it also suggests an engagement that is essentially military in
nature and not an approach to killing that would suggest intent to destroy a national group.
For one thing, it is not a particularly good way to distinguish between Croats (allegedly
targeted with the requireddolus specialis) and other groups not targeted for genocide. In
that respect it is particularly relevant to note that a significant number of Serbs continued
to live in Vukovar during the shelling of the town.
372. As a matter of fact, the convictions before the ICTY concerning Vukovar have not even
involved crimes against humanity. JNA General Mile Mrkši ć and Major Veselin
Šljivančanin were convicted of the war crime of torture with respect to prisoners of war,
while Mrkši ć was also convicted of the war crimes of killing and cruel treatment. They were
acquitted of charges of crimes against humanity at trial, and the Prosecutor’s appeal was
dismissed. 378The third co-defendant, Miroslav Rać ,iwas acquitted of all charges.79
375See also: Memorial, 4.139-4.192, Counter-Memorial, 727-748.
376Reply, para. 5.65.
377ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, 711-714.
378ICTY, Prosecutor v. Šljivančanin et al. (IT-95-13/1-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment of 5 May 2009, para. 44.
379ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, para. 714.
144373. Thus, with respect to the events at the Vukovar Hospital and Oč vara Farm, it is incorrect to
380
state that “findings are, in essence, the same as the case asserted by the Applicant”.The
Applicant is clearly uncomfortable with the judgments of the ICTY in the Vukovarcase
(Mrkšić et al.), and goes to some pains to insist that, by their own admission, the judges of
the ICTY “made it clear” that they were considering “only a limited part of the atrocities
381
committed in Vukovar”. As the Applicant explains in the Reply, the judges of the Trial
Chamber did not hesitate in underscoring examples of atrocities of which they heard
evidence but that were not included in the indictment. The Applicant’s objective here is to
mitigate the damage done to its case by the judgments of the TribunaM l nkšić et al.
374. But the Applicant’s approach is not as helpful to its case as it may think. By demonstrating
that judges of the ICTY are willing to comment upon crimes and situations that are not
actually included in the indictment, the Applicant enhances the significance of the absence
of references to genocide in the judgments of the Tribunals with respect to the Croatia cases.
If the Trial Chamber inMrkšić et al.was comfortable indicating that other crimes than those
charged in the indictment may have been committed, why would it hesitate to use the term
“genocide” if this seemed appropriate under the circumstances?
C. Conclusions with respect to Eastern Slavonia
375. With respect to the charges concerning alleged genocide committed in Eastern
Slavonia, the Reply contains rather lengthy recitals of alleged atrocities that were
committed in the course of an armed conflict. As is we ll known, the conflict had an
important ethnic dimension. Ethnic hatred no doubt figured in much of the behaviour
of those responsible for the crimes that were committed. But there is nothing new in
this material referred to in the Reply to strengthen the Applicant’s case.
376. In its Memorial, the Applicant relied upon a large and expansive interpretation of the
crime of genocide that had been defended by some writers and human rights activists. At
the time it filed its Applicatn and submitted the Memorial, there was a virtual absence of
recent judicial decisions on the subject and perhaps, therefore, an unclear situation in
terms of the scope of the crime. That has all changed, with the ruling of this Court in the
Bosniacase and several important decisions of the Trial and Appeals Chambers of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. In the Reply, the Applicant
tries to reformat its claims and its evidence in order to correspond to the prevailing
interpretation of the crime of genocide. The case law and other relevant materials of the
ICTY in the cases concerning Croatia are of no assistance to the Applicant in this respect.
The Applicant is arguing a case that has become plainly overtaken and outdated by the
clarification of the law to the extent that it might every have been arguable.
380
381Reply, 5.80.
Reply, para. 5.74.
1453. Rebuttal to alleged genocidal activities in the rest of Croatia
A. Some general remarks
377. The discussion in Chapter 6 of the Reply of the events elsewhere in Croatia is similar
to that of Eastern Slavonia, which has always been the focus of the Applicant’s case.
The weaknesses in the Applicant’s discussion of Eastern Slavonia are repeated in its
review of the facts concerning the rest of Croatia. As the Applicant contended in the
Memorial, the “same genocidal pattern analysed in detail in the case of Eastern
Slavonia, was repeated elsewhere in these other occupied areas”. 382Thus, the frailties
of the case concerning Eastern Slavonia also pervade this portion of the Applicant’s
submissions and in particular Chapter 6 of the Reply.
378. The Applicant attempts to smother the Court with details of various apparent
violations of the laws or customs of war committed during an ethnic conflict in the
hope that this may all add up to the crime of genocide. In fact, the Applicant hews to
the erroneous interpretation of the crime th at it adopted at the time that it filed its
Application and its Memorial. Since then, clarification of the law by this Court and by
the ICTY has confirmed the mistaken perspective taken by the Applicant. In the Reply
– its first substantive submission in this case since the important judgments of this
Court and of the Appeals Chamber of the IC TY concerning the scope of the crime of
genocide – the Applicant has struggled to repackage its evidence to fit it in the
interpretation of the Genoci de Convention adopted by the Court and the ICTY. But
this attempt was bound to fail.
B. WesternSlavonia
379. The Serbian Autonomous Region (Srpska autonomna oblast – SAO) of Western
Slavonia was established in August 1991. It was later integrated into the Republic of
Serbian Krajina (RSK). As a result of Operation Flash in May 1995, the region fell
again under the control of the Croatian gove rnment. The judgments of the ICTY have
not addressed the situation in Western Slavonia in any significant way.
382
Memorial, para. 1.30.
146 383
380. The Applicant considers events in Pakrac in paras. 6.2-6.7 of the Reply. The
discussion concerns responsibility for individual killings and offers no assistance in
assessing the validity of charges of genocide.
381. There is an isolated account of an alleged rape associated with mutilation of the body
384
and murder in the Memorial. Another allegation concerns the alleged torture and
385
mutilation of captured prisoners of war by other soldiers. The Reply faults the
Respondent for not addressing these alle gations. In addition to the inherent
386
unreliability of these allegations, the Respondent submits that nothing in these
alleged facts contributes to an assessmen t of whether or not genocide took place.
Theoretically, of course, such acts might correspond to the actus reus of genocide.
However, in the absence of any compelling evidence that they were committed with
specific genocidal intent, they may be described using a variety of criminal law
qualifications.
382. The Applicant considers events in Podravska Slatina in paras. 6.8-6.13 of the
Reply. 387As with Pakrac, it affirms that the Respondent has not answered specific
charges. The Respondent is not sure what to make of the Applicant’s reference to the
Respondent’s “comments on the alle gations which it does address”. 388After all, if it
did not address the allegations, then how can it be explained that it made “comments”?
The affirmation that the Respondent did not answer charges of rape 389 sounds quite
damning, but on closer examination, the act ual allegation consists of a report from a
witness who “heard a woman being raped”. 390The woman is not identified in the
Memorial. The Respondent has no way of replying to such a charge. This is one
among many examples where the Court cannot reasonably expect an answer from the
Respondent to a rather gratuitous allega tion, not properly identified, described or
substantiated. Under general principles of law, there is no shift of a burden of proof
with respect to vague allegations of this nature.
383See also: Memorial, paras. 5.15-5.27; Counter-Memorial, paras. 749-755.
384Memorial, para. 5.17.
385Memorial, para. 5.27.
386
387See Chapter III, section 2.A.
388See also: Memorial, paras. 5.28-5.49; Counter-Memorial, paras. 756-766.
389Reply, para. 6.9.
390Reply, para. 6.8.
Memorial, para. 5.30.
147383. Another case of this sort appears in para . 5.33 of the Memorial. Allegedly, an
unidentified Croat who was tied to a tree had his legs slashed with a chain saw and
then was cut in half “by Serb soldiers”. The source is a newspaper or journal article
from 1998, seven years after the events, a nd a report entitled “Anatomy of Deceit”
signed by someone named “Dr. Jerry Blaskovich” in something called “Modern
Times”. But “Anatomy of Deceit” appears to be a book, and the reference is not to the
book itself, which was published in 1998, but to a book review. Nothing suggests that
Blaskovich himself was a witness to this event. The Respondent does not consider that
any burden has shifted on it to rebut such enormous and extravagant allegations, no
matter how horrible they may sound, given the lack of any reliable authority or source.
Yet the Reply faults the Respondent for not providing a direct answer to this story, 391
which is in fact answered in para. 971 of the Counter-Memorial.
384. It is not the Respondent’s contention that war crimes and other atrocities were not
perpetrated during the conflict in 1991 in Podravska Slatina. But the Respondent
cannot be expected to answer each and every allegation, no matter how gratuitous and
inadequately explained or substantiated. In any event, these accusations refer to
relatively isolated acts and occurrences, and even if proved, would do little or nothing
to assist the Court in evaluating the central issue in these proceedings, namely whether
the mental element of the crime of genocid e existed with the Respondent or anyone
else for whose actions the Applicant claims the Respondent is responsible.
392
385. The Applicant considers events in Daruvar in paras. 6.14-6.19 of the Reply. Once
again, the Applicant comments on the fact that the Respondent “fails” to comment on
the certain allegations. The first of these is an allegation of “physical and
psychological violence” in para. 5.52 of the Memorial. The paragraph has no reference
and there is no indication of the source of the accusations. It claims that five civilians
were captured by “rebel Serbs” and “physically and psychologically maltreated”. No
details are provided as to the nature of such maltreatment. The Respondent takes the
view that the burden of proof does not shift when an allegation is set forth in such a
vague and unsubstantiated manner. The Cour t should simply disregard para. 5.52 of
the Memorial.
391
392Reply, para. 6.8.
See also: Memorial, paras. 5.50-5.; Counter-Memorial, paras. 756-766.
148386. Again, the Respondent is not denying that war crimes and similar atrocities were
perpetrated during the armed conflict. Such allegations, in the absence of further
evidence indicating that they were perpetra ted with the specific intent to destroy a
national, ethnic, racial or religious group, do not, howe ver, assist the Court in
determining the central legal question in these proceedings.
C. Banija
387. The Applicant considers events in the Municipality of Glina in paras. 6.20-6.24 of the
393
Reply. As it did in the various sections concerning Western Slavonia, the Applicant
faults the Respondent for failing to refer to certain atrocities mentioned in its Memorial.
Here it cites “the physical and psychological violence (Memorial, para. 5.52) and torture
(paras. 5.53-54) including mutilation (para. 5.55) that was visited upon the Croat
population of Glina Municipality”. Paras. 5.52-5.55 of the Memorial refer to Dulovac in
the Municipality of Daruvar and have nothi ng to do with the Municipality of Glina.
Obviously, the Applicant has made a mistake, but what it intended is not apparent to the
Respondent and this makes it impossible to reply.
388. In para. 6.21, the Applicant reports a statement by M Č who claims to have heard Dr
Dušan Jović call upon Serbs to “kill and slay ever y living creature of Croatian origin”.
This is a serious allegation, but one that the Respondent is incap able of denying or
confirming. Dušan Jovi ć allegedly disappeared from sight in 1992. The Respondent
knows of no witnesses who can assist in either denying or confirming the statement. No
evidence is provided to indi cate when and where the stat ement was made, or to whom
aside from the general words “Serbs’.
389. Other paragraphs in the Repl y concerning the Municipality of Glina rehearse material
that has already been pres ented exhaustively before th e Court. These may provide
evidence of war crimes and other atrocities committed during an armed conflict, but
they do not provide any elements to indicate that the perpet rators intended the physical
destruction of a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.
393
See also: Memorial, paras. 5.78-5.93; Counter-Memorial, paras. 777-787.
149390. The Applicant considers events in the Municipality of Petrinja (paras. 6.25-6.28 of the
Reply), Dvor na Uni (paras. 6.29-6.31) and Hrvatska Kostajnica (paras. 6.32-6.39). 394
The allegations are similar in nature to those for the Municipalities of Glina and for
Eastern Slavonia, in particular the cla im that Respondent has not answered every
single allegation in the Memorial. As the Respondent has explained repeatedly, such
allegations are vague and general in nature, and often not substantiated with adequate
references. The Respondent does not believe that it is under a burden to offer any
answer.
391. The Applicant refers at great length to various findings of the ICTY in Martić. Of
course, Martić was not even charged with genocide. Moreoever, the Trial Chamber
never even suggested that the facts in ev idence might have justified a conviction for
the crime of genocide (see infra, Section 4).
D. Kordun and Lika
392. The situation in Kordun and Lika during th e conflict is described in considerable
detail in the decision of the ICTY in Martić case. The Applicant interprets this
decision as indicating a finding of fact by the Trial Chamber that “killings were a
methodical and cruel attack on an unarmed civilian population, driven by ethnicity of
the victims”. 395A careful reading of the Count er-Memorial indicates that the
Respondent is not denying that killings took place, that they were methodical, directed
at civilians, and driven by ethnicity. These were condemned in the Judgment as crimes
against humanity. However, the Respondent is critical of the methodology of the
Applicant, which makes no distinction between persons killed as a result of warfare
and those who were intentionally targeted on the basis of ethnicity.
393. The Applicant considers events in the Municipality of Vrginmost (paras. 6.42-6.44 of
the Reply), Slunj (paras. 6.45-6.52), Ogu lin (paras. 6.53-6.57), Karlovac (paras. 6.58-
6.60), Otočac (paras. 6.61-6.63), Gospi ć (paras. 6.64-6.65), Titova Korenica (paras.
396
6.66-6.70) and Gra čac (paras. 6.71-6.72). The allegations are similar in nature to
394See also: Memorial, paras. 5.94-5.122; Counter-Memorial, paras. 788-821.
395Reply, para. 6.56.
396See also: Memorial, paras. 5.138-5.186; Counter-Memorial, paras. 822-873.
150 those for Western Slavonia and Eastern Slavonia, as is the reaction from the
Respondent. It appears that much of the disagreement is about the interpretation of the
scope of the decision of the ICTY in Martić. It is expected that the Court will make its
own assessment of the significance of the Judgment in Martić, including the fact that
the Tribunal made no finding of genocide.
E. Dalmatia
394. The Applicant considers events in the Municipalities of Šibenik (paras. 6.73-6.74 of
the Reply), Drniš (paras. 6.75-6.79), Knin (6.80-6.85), 397 Obrovac (paras. 6.88-6.89 of
the Reply), Benkovac (paras. 6.90-6.92) and Zadar (paras. 6.93-6.94). The allegations
are similar in nature to those for other areas, as is the reaction from the Respondent.
395. The Applicant concedes that there have been no prosecutions by the ICTY with regard
to the Municipalities of Šibenik and Drniš, but notes that there is reference to the
Municipality of Drniš in two paragraphs of the Judgment of the Trial Chamber in
Martić. This observation is useful for two reasons.
396. First, it demonstrates that the Trial Chambers of the ICTY are not averse to
pronouncing themselves ultra petita, so to speak. And this makes their silence on
certain matters quite significant. In its attempts to “package” the judicial
determinations of the ICTY, the Applicant has contended that the failure of the
Tribunal to speak to certain issues of fact and law is not significant and, in effect,
neutral, but this is obviously not the case.
397. Second, the reference to the Municipality of Drniš in the Judgment in Martić case
provides its own explanation as to why th ere have been no prosecutions by the
Tribunal. In that Judgment, the Trial Ch amber observed that there was “harassment
and intimidation” of the Croa t population. Probably, the Pros ecutor did not consider
“harassment and intimidation” to fall within the subject-matter jurisdiction of the
Tribunal, which can only prosecute grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions,
violations of the laws or customs of war, crimes against humanity and genocide.
397
See also: Memorial, paras. 5.202-5.231; Counter-Memorial, paras. 874-911.
151398. As it did with respect to the Municipality of Drniš, the Applicant attempts to extract
implications from the Judgment of the Trial Chamber in Martić vis-à-vis Municipality
of Knin in order to make it show more than it actually does, but thereby no doubt
unintentionally but very effectively bolst ers the Respondent’s contention that the
silence of the Tribunal on certain matters speaks volumes.
399. It is uncontested that Milan Martći, the leader of the Croatian Serb regime at the time, was
neither charged nor convicted of killings in Knin. Thus, the Applicant places “reliance upon
the fact that the killings had occurred, and that they formed part of the overall pattern of
persecution of the Croat population”, as well as to “the fact that Mćartias not charged with
these crimes, but that they were nonetheless found by the ICTY to have been committed as
part of the persecutory plan evidences the necessarily limited nature of the ICTY
398
Prosecutor’s Indictments”. But the Prosecutor did not charge Mać rtwith genocide either.
If the Trial Chamber was willing enough to go beyond the indictment and make general
observations about crimes that were not charged, why did it not accuse Ma ćrtif the crime
of genocide, which is also within the subject-matter jurisdiction of the Tribunal?
400. Concerning the Municipalities of Obrovac, Benkovac and Zadar, the allegations are
similar in nature to those for the other municipalities, as is the reaction from the
Respondent. It appears that much of the disagreement is about the interpretation of the
scope of the decision of the ICTY in Martić. It is expected that the Court will make its
own assessment of the significance of the Judgment in Martić case, including the fact
that the Tribunal made no finding of genocide.
401. The Applicant considers events in the Munici pality of Sinj in paras. 6.95-6.96 of the
Reply. 399The Applicant submits new material, produced within the United Nations, to
demonstrate that Serb combatants placed explosives in an unsuccessful attempt to
destroy a hydro-electric dam. There were no victims of this “crime”. There is much
speculation in the Memorial about the purpos e behind the efforts to destroy the dam.
However, there is no actual evidence other than pure surmise as to the purported
intent. The new material produced by the Applicant cites one team of United Nations
experts warning that destruction of the dam might create “a major environmental
398
399Reply, para. 6.80.
See also: Memorial, paras. 5.232-5.234; Counter-Memorial, paras. 912-916.
152 disaster”. Apparently the United Nations experts did not view the placing of
explosives as anything other than an act of war and they did not suggest any genocidal
motive. A second memorandum produced by th e Applicant says that Serb negotiators
admitted to placing explosives but said “they were ready to demine” the dam,
suggesting that one reason for doing this was to strengthen a military position for the
purposes of negotiations rather than the inte ntional destruction of a national or ethnic
group. The third and final memorandum does not impute any motive whatsoever to
those who placed explosives on the dam. Ra ther it reports on the need to remove the
mines so as to enable work to be done to open a channel and relieve pressure upon the
dam, failing which there might be a major disaster. There is no suggestion that those
who placed the explosives were, at the time, threatening to destroy the dam.
402. The new materials produced by the Applicant tend to confirm that any placing of
explosives in the Peru ča hydro-electric dam cannot have been done “in order to
exterminate a large part of the local Croat population”, which is the extravagant,
speculative and unfounded accusation of the Applicant.
403. Finally, the Applicant considers events in Dubrovnik in paras. 6.97-6.105 of the
Reply. 400Most of the materials in the Reply concern the two relevant decisions of the
ICTY. In one, Admiral Miodrag Joki ć pleaded guilty to charges of violations of the
401
laws or customs of war and was sent enced to seven years’ imprisonment. In the
second, General Pavle Strugar was convicted of violations of the laws and customs of
402
war, and received a sentence of seven years. They were not charged with crimes
against humanity, much less with genocide, and there was no suggestion in the
Judgment that evidence suggested such charges might be sustainable. The Applicant’s
insistence in these proceedings on the events in Dubrovnik is simply a distraction from
the real issue, and is certainly not helpful to the Court.
404. Applicant speaks to the point, made in the Counter-Memorial, that the Jokić and
Strugar cases deal with military engagements in December 1991, but claims that there
400See also: Memorial, paras. 5.235-5.241; Counter-Memorial, paras. 918-925.
401ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jokić (IT-01-42/1-S), Sentencing Judgment of18 March 2004; ICTY, Prosecutor v.
Jokić (IT-01-42/1-A), Judgment on Sentencing Appeal, 30 August 2005.
402ICTY, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 31 January 2005; ICTProsecutor
v. Strugar (IT-01-42-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment of 17 July 2008.
153 were other relevant events that took place earlier in the year and that are not addressed
in the Judgment. This is typical of th e Applicant’s confused and contradictory
approach to the case law of the Intern ational Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia. When the Trial Chamber in Martić or in Mrkšić went beyond the
indictment to speak of other events, the Applicant notes this with satisfaction and
deems this to strengthen its case; when the Trial Chamber is silent, the Applicant
treats this as a neutral development, rather than drawing the logical conclusion that the
silence of the Tribunal on factual and legal issues considerably weakens its case.
4. Relevance of the ICTY cases for the Applicant’s claim
A. Brief review of the ICTY cases to which the Applicant refers
405. The Applicant notes that since filing the Memorial “the ICTY has rendered a number of
judgments that are relevant to these proceedings” (Reply, para. 3.112). The Applicant
does not accurately describe the four cases to which it refers or their significance.
406. The first case, that of Milan Babić, President of the Republic of Srpska Krajina, was a
conviction that resulted from a plea agreement by which the accused accepted certain facts
in exchange for a reduction in the charges; many factors may explain the reasons for such
an admission. Milan Babić was convicted by the ICTY on only one count, namely the
crime against humanity of persecution. The indictment covered the period from about 1
August 1991 to 15 February 1992, which in any case does not, as demonstrated, fall
within the Court’s jurisdictionratione temporis. Needless to say, he was not charged with
genocide. The word “genocide” does not appear in the Indictment 403 or the Plea
Agreement, 404 or in any of the decisions of the Trial and Appeals Chambers. 405
407. The second case, that of Milan Marti ć, again involves a conviction for crimes against
humanity and not for genocide. Milan Marć tiheld various leadership positions in the SAO
Krajina and the Republic of Serbian Krajina over the period from 4 January 1991 until
403ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić (IT-03-72, “RSK”), Initial Indictment of 6 November 2003.
404ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić (IT-03-72), Plea Agreement and Factual Statement of 22 January 2004, available
on http://www.icty.org/x/cases/babic/custom4/en/040122a.pdf
405ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić (IT-03-72-S), Sentencing Judgment of 29 June 2004; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić
(IT-03-72-A), Judgment on Sentencing Appeal of 18 July 2005.
154 August 1995, including President, Minister of Defence and Minister of Internal Affairs.
He was convicted by the ICTY Trial Chamber for a range of war crimes and crimes
against humanity and was sentenced to thirty-five years’ imprisonment. The word
genocide did not appear in the Indictment or in the Judgments of the Trial and Appeals
Chambers, aside from a few isolated references to the term with respect to allegations
directed at Croats rather than Serbs. The Trial Chamber concluded that Marti ć was
responsible for various atrocities committed in association with military operations and
raids directed at predominantly Croat villages in the SAO Krajina during 1991.
Furthermore, he was found guilty as a result of acts of violence and intimidation against
Croat and other non-Serb populations in the Krajina region during the 1992-1995 period
that included killings, beatings, robbery, theft, harassment and destruction of houses and
Catholic churches. The Applicant relies upon various findings of fact made by the Trial
Chamber with respect to Hrvatska Dubica, Cerovljani, Ba ćin and the surroundings,
Lipovača and neighbouring hamlets, Vukovi ći and Poljanak, Saborsko, Vaganac,
Škabrnja, Bruska, ill-treatment in various detention facilities and the shelling of Zagreb on
406
2 and 3 May 1995. With respect to the shelling of Zagreb, Marć tiwas convicted of war
crimes but acquitted on the count of persecution as a crime against humanity because of
the lack of sufficient evidence of discriminatory intent based upon ethnicity.7
408. Finally, there are the two Dubrovnik cases of Miodrag Joki ć and Pavle Strugar. The
former pleaded guilty to charges of violations of the laws or customs of war, while the
latter was convicted following trial. Both accused were convicted on the basis of superior
or command responsibility (that is, in the absence of proof that they ordered the attacks,
they are held responsible for failing to prevent those persons under their command from
committing the crimes in question and for failing to punish or discipline them
subsequently). Each of them received a sentence of seven years’ imprisonment. The
Prosecutor did not charge crimes against humanity or genocide in these cases, and the
judges never suggested that the charges had not been correctly formulated. In the case of a
guilty plea following negotiation between the Prosecutor and Accused Joć ,ithe Tribunal
has a special responsibility to ensure that the charges are appropriate, and that the conduct
of the accused has not been inadequately characterized, as this would be a perversion of
406ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 4.40-4.45.
407ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, ICTProsecutor v.
Martić (IT-95-11-A), Appeals Chamber Judgment of 8 October 2008.
155 justice. The fact that the Tribunal concurred with the guilty plea of Jokić for charges of
violations of the laws or customs of war confirms that it assessed the facts of the attack on
408
Dubrovnik in the same manner as the Prosecutor.
B. Erroneous reference to “eradication” as a factual finding of the ICTY
409. Para. 1.6 of the Reply asserts: “The ICTY case law puts it beyond doubt that there was
a joint criminal enterprise (JCE) orchestrated by the Serbian government to eradicate
the Croat population from significant parts of Croatia […].” This is a rather sly
misrepresentation of the findings of the IC TY judgments. The conclusion was indeed
reached that there was a JCE in which Serb leaders, including Miloševi ć, participated.
Nowhere in the decisions, however, is the word “eradicate” employed. In Babić, the
Trial Chamber described the purpose of the JCE as being “intended to permanently
and forcibly remove the majority of th e Croat and other non-Serb populations from
approximately one-third of Croatia in order to transform that territory into a Serb-
dominated state.” 409In Martić, the Trial Chamber conclude d that the purpose of the
JCE was “the establishment of an ethnically Serb territory through the displacement of
the Croat and other non-Serb population”. 410
410. There is little detail in the Babić decision, because it resulted from a guilty plea and a
statement of facts agreed by the defence and the Prosecutor. In fact, Babi ć testified in
the Martić trial, where the Trial Chamber e xpressed some hes itation about the
411
reliability of Babi ć’s testimony in a general sense. Babi ć never completed his
testimony and committed suicide in his cell after testifying for the Prosecutor but prior
to being questioned by the defence.
411. The Martić decision provides a more complete understanding of the nature of the attack
upon the Croat population in Krajina. The Judgment refers to evidence of “displacement of
412
the Croat population as a result of harassment and intimidation”,to “the displacement of
408ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jokić (IT-01-42/1-S), Sentencing Judgment, 18 March 2004; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jokić
(IT-01-42/1-A), Judgment on Sentencing Appeal, 30 August 2005; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-T),
Trial Chamber Judgment of 31 January 2005; ICTY, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-A), Appeals Chamber
Judgment of 17 July 2008.
409ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić (IT-03-72-S), Sentencing Judgment, of 29 June 2004, para. 16.
410ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 445.
411ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, paras. 32-34.
412ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 299.
156 413
the non-Serb population” and of “such a coercive atmosphere that the Croat and other
414
non-Serb inhabitants of the RSK were left with no option but to flee”. It also says that:
“Acts of violence and intimidation against the Croat and other non-Serb population,
including killings, beatings, robbery, theft, harassment and destruction of houses and
Catholic churches, were prevalent in the RSK during the period between 1992 and 1995,
and resulted in an exodus of the Croat and other non-Serb population from the territory of
the RSK.” 415 For this reason, the exaggerated nuance placed on those decisions in the Reply
by use of the word “eradicate”, with its genocidal connotation, is not helpful to the Court.
C. Genocide and extermination in the light of the ICTY findings
412. In the final paragraph of the section of the Reply dealing with Banija, 416the Applicant
distorts statements made in the Count er-Memorial. In paras. 817 and 818, the
Respondent did not assert that genocidal acts cannot take place if there is no
extermination, but was actually speaking to another point. The Respondent was noting
the rejection of the charge of the crime against humanity of extermination by the
ICTY Trial Chamber in the Martić case. It did so because it found that the killings
lacked the element of scale necessary for perpetration of the crime against humanity of
extermination. According to the Trial Chamber:
“Having considered these factors, as well as the totality of the evidence surrounding the
killing incidents charged as extermination, the Trial Chamber finds that the evidence is
insufficient to establish that the crime of extermination was committed on an accumulated
basis. Thus, the element that the killings be committed on large scale has not been met.” 417
The Prosecutor did not appeal the acquittal on the extermination count.
413. Extermination is the crime against humanity that comes closest to genocide, although
obviously extermination as a crime against hum anity may also involve groups other than
those listed in the definition of genocide. As explained above, it is theoretically possible
that acts of genocide may be perpetrated, and therefore genocide committed, even in the
absence of evidence of extermination. Nevertheless, it must be proven that these acts
413
414ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 300.
415ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 444.
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 351.
416Reply, para. 6.41.
417ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 404.
157 were carried out with the intent to destroy the group physically, that is, to exterminate it.
That acts falling short of extermination are punishable under the Genocide Convention
is hardly a radical proposition. One need only look to Article III, and the inchoate
crimes of attempt, conspiracy and direct and public incitement. But in the absence of
other evidence that the perpetrator intended the physical destruction of the group, it will
be difficult to make the case to the requisite level of proof.
414. In criminal law, the mental element of the crime is usually a logical deduction from
the physical act. Individuals are deemed to intend the consequences of their acts. But
this cannot be the case with genocide, pr ecisely because of the requirement of a
specific intent to destroy the group physically . As a result, evidence of physical or
psychological attacks on a group is unlikely to contribute to the conclusion that the
perpetrator intended the destruction of the group where evidence of extermination is
absent. Where there is evidence of exter mination, the deduction that the perpetrator
intended the physical destruction of the targeted group will be much more plausible.
Where there is no evidence of exterminati on, this will be implaus ible, absent other
compelling evidence of the perpetrator’s genocidal intent.
415. For these reasons, the analysis in the Reply is erroneous. At para. 6.41, the Applicant states:
“It has always been the Applicant’s case that the genocidal plan executed against the Croat
population was not confined only to killings, but extended to numerous physical and
psychological methods which have been largely ignored by the Respondent.”
416. The Applicant’s problem is that it cannot pr ove genocide to the extent that it relies
upon “physical and psychological methods” falling short of extermination. It is in this
context that the acquittal of Milan Marti ć on charges of extermination by the Trial
Chamber of the International Criminal Tribuna l for the former Yugoslavia is relevant
to the present proceedings.
D. Limitted effects of the ICTY findings of the joint criminal enterprise in the Marti ć
case
417. The many weaknesses of its case, in terms of the relevant facts and the applicable law,
the Applicant seeks to compensate by refe rring to the finding on the existence of a
JCE in the ICTY Judgment in the Martić case, as a kind of a wild card which is
158 supposed to confirm all of the Applicant's allegations. Therefore, the Martić Judgment
418
is invoked as an alleged proof that genocide has been committed, that it can be
419
attributed to the Respondent, and even as a basis for the application of Article 10 (2)
of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility. 420In reality, however, the Marti ć
Judgment proves much less than the Applicant wants to read into it and, with some of
its main findings, actually supports the Respondent's position in this case.
418. Firstly, while the Martić Judgment did find that JCE, whose common purpose “was the
establishment of an ethnically Serb territory through the displacement of the Croat and other
421
non-Serb population” , existed, and that this JCE, apart from Milan Martć i, included “at
least Blagoje Adži ć, Milan Babi ć, Radmilo Bogdanović, Veljko Kadijević, Radovan
Karadžić, Slobodan Miloševć i, Ratko Mladić, Vojislav Šešelj, Franko “Frenki” Simatovć i,
Jovica Stanišć i, and Captain Dragan Vasiljkov ći, the Trial Chamber only explained the role
of the accused Martć i in that JCE, while the other alleged members, who were not on trial in
that case, are only briefly mentioned, if mentioned at all. This stands in sharp contrast to the
practice of other trial chambers of the ICTY, such as, for example, the Trial Chamber in
Gotovina et al.case. In that case, although the formerPresident of Croatia Franjo Tudjman
was not on trial, the Trial Chamber found that he was a key member of the JCE directed
against the Serbian population in Krajina. But, in order to reach this conclusion, the Trial
Chamber devoted almost two hundred pages to the analysis of Tudjman's participation in
and contribution to the JCE. 423
419. Secondly, the limited effect of the finding on the JCE in Martić is further illustrated by
the fact that out of 11 individuals na med as members of the same JCE with Martić,
four (Blagoje Adži ć, Radmilo Bogdanovi ć, Veljko Kadijevi ć and Captain Dragan
Vasiljković) were never indicted before the ICTY for any crime, while three (Radovan
Karadžić, Ratko Mladi ć and Vojislav Šešelj) were never indicted for any crime
established by the Martić Judgment.
420. Thirdly, although the members of the JCE, as found by the Trial Chamber, included all of
the most important people in the leadership of Serbia, Republika Srpska Krajina, Republika
418
419See ex. Reply, paras. 9.34 – 9.35.
420See ex. Reply, paras. 9.67, 9.71, 9.75 etc.
Reply, para. 7.62
421ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić, Judgment, 12 June 2007, paras. 445-446.
422ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al., Judgment, 15 April 2011, paras. 2314-2316.
423Ibid, paras. 1966 – 2321.
159 Srpska and the JNA, the crime of genocide was never charged by the Prosecutor, while the
Trial Chamber never requested the Prosecutor to amend the charges to include genocide.
421. Furthermore, the goal of the JCE as found by the Trial Chamber was “the
establishment of an ethnically Serb territory through the displacement of the Croat and
424
other non-Serb population” and not genocide or, as the Applicant claims,
425
eradication of the Croatian civilian population. As a matter of fact, according to the
Trial Chamber in Martić, only crimes of deportation and forcible transfer were found
to be within the common purpose of the JCE, while the other crimes for which was
Martić found guilty (such as murder, torture or imprisonment) were found to be
outside of that common purpose. 426Although Martić was found guilty for the crimes
outside the common purpose, that was done on the basis of Marti ć's individual
relationship to and knowledge of the crimes, namely be cause he “willingly took the
risk that the crimes which have been f ound to be outside the common purpose might
427
be perpetrated against the non-Serb population”. Accordingly, the Martić Judgment
does not contain any finding, not even a sp arse or an unsubstantiated one, that any
crime committed in SAO Krajina, other than deportation and forcible transfer, can be
attributed to any of the alleged members of the JCE (apart from Martić himself) on the
basis of their participation in that criminal enterprise.
422. Finally, in the light of such a heavy reliance of the Applicant on the findings of the
ICTY on JCE in the Martić case, one has to note that the official position of the
Applicant's Government vis-à-vis the institution of a JCE is quite different. Namely,
after the ICTY had issued its Judgment in the Gotovina et al. case, the Government of
Croatia, obviously not very satisfied with that Judgment, adopted a conclusion by which
it declared that “the allegations of a joint criminal enterprise presented in regard of the
Storm military and police action, that to the Republic of Croatia is a legitimate defence
action to liberate its state territory, are unacceptable”. 428 The second paragraph of the
Government's conclusion accepts, as the offica il position of Croatia, “the conclusions of
the Study of the Croatian Academy of Legal Sciences: The Theory of Joint Criminal
424ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić, Judgment, 12 June 2007, paras. 445-446.
425See Reply, para. 9.34.
426ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić, Judgment, 12 June 2007, para. 454.
427Ibid.
428Conclusions of the Government of the Republic of Croatia of 15 April 2011, communicated to the diplomatic
missions accredited in Croatia with the diplomatic note No. 2081/11 of 19 April 2011(Annex 75).
160 429
Enterprise and International Criminal Law – Challenges and Controversies.” These
conclusions, annexed to the Conclusions of the Government of Croatia, read as follows:
“1) Joint criminal enterprise was not part of international customary law at the time the
offences with which the accused are charged were committed.
2) Joint criminal enterprise is contrary to the principle of guilt, which is one of the
fundamental principles of contemporary criminal law.
3) Through the dangerous expansion of the elements of guilt ( mens rea expansion), joint
criminal enterprise has come very close to guilt by association which the Statute does not
regulate.
4) Drawing a conclusion on the existence of the accused's intention from objective
circumstances (inference) in the second and third category of JCE is questionable from the
aspect of the principle of presumption of innocence which, inter alia, is regulated by
Article 21/3 of the Statute.
5) The ICTY's jurisprudence in relation to JCE theory and the provision of the Statute in
which this theory is allegedly contained “by implication” is not in unison and is not
consistent with the principles of legal certainty and justice.
6) The extensive application of JCE theory to the entire political and military structures of
a state and to other “known and unknown” persons does not fulfil the requirement of
precise charges and may produce wrong impression of “political influence” on
international criminal justice system.
7) Indictments conceived broadly, following JCE theory, which contain a “collective”
accusation of not only the person against whom the proceedings are conducted, but of the
entire state and military structures, as well as “persons known and unknown”, mean that
the very purpose of the foundation and operation of ICTY is threatened.
8) Giving credibility to JCE theory in intern ational criminal adjudication involves the risk
that national criminal prosecution bodies will apply it even more extensively and to the
greater detriment of protected human rights. Its application undermines the contemporary
criminal law building founded on traditional pillars of legal dogmatics.
9) The extensive application of JCE theory will have negative consequences in the process
of the affirmation of international criminal law and adjudication.
10) In jurisprudence of international criminal tribunals JCE theory should be replaced by
other firmly established concepts of individual criminal responsibility, such as co-
perpetration and perpetration by means.” 430
429
430Ibid.
Ibid. The full study is available on the web page of the Croatian Academy of Legal Sciences, at:
http://www.pravo.hr/_download/repository/Studija_o_zajednickom_zlocinac…
last visited on 4 August 2011
161423. The Respondent leaves it to the Court to appreciate the importance of these
conclusions, which obviously represent th e official position of the Applicant’s
Government as of, at least, 15 April 2011. Perhaps the Applicant can offer some
clarification on that in the later stages of this case.
162 CHAPTER V
THE QUESTION OF ATTRIBUTION
1. Introduction
424. The Respondent has addressed the legal aspe cts of the question of attribution in
Chapter IX of the Counter-Memorial, while some factual elements have been dealt
with in Chapter VI of the Counter-Memor ial, entitled “Participants in the Armed
Conflict in Croatia 1991 – 1995” . In its Reply, the Applic ant has addressed the legal
aspects of attribution in Section III of Ch apter 9, while factual elements have been
addressed in Chapter 4. In this Chapter the Respondent will a ddress both legal and
factual aspects of the question of attribu tion, taking into consideration that the
Applicant has offered very little new evidence in support of its claims.
425. The main position of the Applicant, which it seeks to draw from the ICTY judgments,
is that:
“The ICTY has found as a fact that the participation of the TO (volunteer groups), the
Milicija Krajine, the MUP, and paramilitary groups in the commission of the crimes in
Croatia invariably occurred under the direction and control of the JNA. The ICTY has also
found that the JNA, in its turn, was operating under the direction and control of Miloševi ć
and the other members of the Serb political a nd military leadership who were party to the
431
joint criminal enterprise.”
426. Therefore, in order to prove that the crimes allegedly committed against Croats can be
attributed to the Respondent, the Applicant would have to prove: first, that the JNA
was operating in Croatia under the direc tion and control of the Respondent; and
second, that the crimes alle gedly committed by volunteer groups, paramilitaries and
various armed forces of Republika Srpska Krajina (such as TO and Milicija Krajine)
occurred under the direction and control of the JNA over those groups. Further in this
Chapter, the Respondent will demonstrate th at neither of these two requirements has
been met.
431
Reply, para. 9.62.
163427. Before doing that, the Respondent wishes to reiterate its principal position that it
cannot, even theoretically, be held responsib le for any event that had occurred before
27 April 1992, that is before the FRY came to existence. This question has been
addressed in Chapter II of this Rejoinder and the Respondent will here only remind the
Court that most of the events that are claimed to constitute “genocidal activities” by
the Applicant relate to the period of time before the FRY was created and only very
few of them are alleged to have taken pl ace after April 1992, while a vast majority of
the incidents described in the Memorial took place in 1991. 432
2. Applica lbwle
428. As the Respondent already noted in the Counter-Memorial, the Applicant and the
Respondent are in agreement that Article s 4, 8 and 11 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility are relevant and may be applied in the present case. 433 According to
these provisions, conduct is attributable to a State if (a) it is the conduct of any State
organ (Article 4), or (b) it is the conduct of the person or group of persons acting on
the instructions of, or under the direction or control of, the State in question (Article
8), or (c) conduct, which is otherwise not attributable to the State, is acknowledged
and adopted by the State as its own (A rticle 11). Following the Respondent's
convincing arguments as to why Article 11 does not apply in the circumstances of this
434
case, the Applicant seems to have decided not to pursue any more this line of
reasoning in the Reply. Therefore, the present analysis will be limited to the
application of Articles 4 and 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
429. As also noted in the Counter-Memorial, the Applicant and the Respondent disagree on
the applicability of the principle underlying Article 10, para. 2 of the ILC Articles on
State Responsibility, both as a matter of principle, as well as with regard to the case at
435 436
hand. This issue has been addressed earlier in this Rejoinder.
432Out of between 2.500 and 3.000 alleged killings of Croats for which the Applicant has oferred some evidence in
the Memorial and the Reply, only around 100 are alleged to have taken place after 27 April 1992. The cases of
killings alleged by the Applicant to have taken place after 27 April 1992 are referred to in paras. 4.132, 5.25, 5.88,
5.139, 5.146, 5.202, 5.204, 5.207, 5.210, 5.212 - 5.214, 5.219 and 5.221 – 5.225 of the Memorial, while new
allegations are also contained in paras. 6.78 and 6.89 of the Reply. The killings have mostly taken part in the region
of Dalmatia. Only 3 of the killings claimed to have been committed after 27 April 1992 have taken place in Eastern
Slavonia where, according to the Applicant, the majority of the crimes against Croats have been committed.
433Ibid, paras. 1001-1002.
434Ibid, paras. 1034-1043.
435Ibid, para. 1003.
1643. The alleged control of the Respondent over the JNA
A. Generalremarks
430. The Applicant alleges that some of the crimes against Croats were committed by the
JNA itself, while in other cases it claims that the JNA had effective control over the
TO, paramilitaries or other forces who committed the crimes. In any case, however, in
order for these crimes to be attributed to the Respondent, the Applicant would have to
prove that either Article 4 or Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility
apply.
431. While the Applicant reluctantly acknowledges that the JNA was not a de jure organ of
the Respondent, it claims that “it is to be regarded as a de facto organ of the FRY, or
at the very least as having operated at all times, and in respect of all military
operations, under the direction and control of the Serbian leadership under Miloševi ć,
for whose acts the FRY is internationally responsible.” 437 Therefore, the Applicant's
main position seems to be that Article 4 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility, as
438
interpreted by the Court in the Judgment in the the Bosnia case, is to be applied in
the present case, while the application of Article 8 is alleged to be subsidiary.
However, the Applicant's claims concerning the application of Articles 4 and 8 are
often interwoven and presen ted together, while the alleged facts on which the
Applicant bases its claims on the application of either of the two articles are often the
same. Most of these claims have already been addressed in the Counter-Memorial and
will be further addressed in this Chapter.
432. Nevertheless, the Respondent needs to stress once again that, as a matter of fact and a
matter of law, its responsibility for the ac tions of the JNA cannot even arise for the
reason that the Respondent did not exist before 27 April 1992 and thus did not coexist
with the JNA and at the time when the vast majority of the alleged crimes have taken
place. For that reason, the follo wing analysis is given only ex abundanti cautela and
by way of a subsidiary argument
436See supra, Chapter II, section C.1.
437Reply, para. 9.67.
438See ibid, paras. 9.59-9.60.
165 B. The SFRY Presidency
433. The starting point of the Applicant’s contention that the JNA was a de facto organ of
the FRY is its assertion that the SFRY Presidency, as the main organ of the SFRY and
the supreme commander of the JNA, ceased to function from mid-1991. This assertion
has been elaborated in greater detail in the Memorial and the Respondent has already
successfully rebutted all of the Applicant's cl aims in the relevant part of the Counter-
Memorial. 439In particular, the Respondent has shown that:
a) The dissolution of the SFRY was an extended process which was completed in April
1992 when the FRY came into being, as c onfirmed by the fact that the Security
Council started to refer to the “former Yugoslavia” only on 15 May 1992;
b) In 1991 and early 1992, the SFRY was still recognized as a functioning State and a
subject of international law, and as such participated in international relations;
c) In 1991 and early 1992, the SFRY organs con tinued to function and were headed by
individuals coming from different SFRY republics;
d) These organs, in particular the JNA, were not de facto organs of the “emerging FRY”
or Serbia but de jure organs of the SFRY. 440
434. In the Reply, the Applicant failed to offer any new evidence to rebut the Respondent's
position and instead resorted to simply repeating its assertions from the Memorial, by
referring to certain paragraphs of the Memorial and the same evidence referred to in
the Memorial. For that reason, the Responden t feels no need to further address the
Applicant’s claims on this issue from the Reply and leaves it to the Court to appreciate
and evaluate the positions of both sides.
435. The one thing the Respondent wishes to point out is a rather peculiar manner in which
the Applicant attempts to dismiss the ev idence presented by the Respondent. Namely,
in paras. 516-518 of the Counter-Memorial the Respondent referred to the evidence
presented during the preliminary objections proceedings demonstrating that the SFRY
was regarded as a functioning State and s ubject of international law in 1991 and early
439See Counter-Memorial, paras. 509-537.
440Ibid, para. 537.
166 1992. The documents referred to by the Respondent prove that throughout 1991 and in
early 1992: (a) the SFRY concluded bila teral and multilatera l agreements and
undertook various treaty actions, which were recognized and accepted as valid by
other States and international organizations; (b) the SFRY continued to take part in
diplomatic conferences and meetings; and (c) States continued to maintain their
diplomatic missions to the SFRY, while new heads of missions continued to be
accredited by notifications to the SFRY Presidency until early 1992.
436. The Applicant does not contest any of the evidence presented (since that would be
impossible), but goes on to claim the following:
“In order to demonstrate that the SFRY was a functioning state and a subject of
International Law in 1991 and early 1992 ... The Respondent inter alia refers to a number
of letters from the Ambassadors of the former USSR, Indonesia and Mali written between
November 1991 and the end of January 1992, each of which announce the appointment of
an ambassador from the country concerned to the Presidency of the SFRY. The Applicant
notes that no letter by a Member State of the European Community is included, since none
was sent.”441
437. Does the Applicant try to suggest that the diplomatic actions of the former USSR,
Indonesia and Mali – three countries from th ree different continents – are somehow
less relevant from the perspective of international law than the diplomatic actions of
the Member States of the European Community?
C. Alleged ”Serbianization” and restructuring of the JNA
438. In the Memorial, the Applicant claims that the JNA was from the mid-1980s gradually
transformed into a “Serbian Army” and that it underwent a process of “Serbianisation”
which was reflected in (a) changes to th e JNA’s ethnic composition and management
and (b) its restructuring in 1988. 442 The Respondent has rebutte d these assertions in
443
the Counter-Memorial and, in the Reply, the Applicant had very little to offer in
further support of its claims.
441Reply, para. 3.91 (footnotes omitted).
442Memorial, para. 3.14 et seq.
443See Counter-Memorial, paras. 580-587.
167439. As a matter of fact, the Applicant has, albeit reluctantly, accepted two main points of
the Respondent, that is: 1) that the relative proportions of Serbs and Croats in the JNA
and the ethnic structure of the Army had remained unchanged during the 1980s and up
444
to 1991, and 2) that the 1988 restructuring of the JNA had been done pursuant to a
decision adopted by the SFRY Presidency, wh ich consisted of representatives of all
445
republics and autonomous provinces.
440. The Applicant, however, insists on the fact that, although the relative proportions of
Serbs and Croats in the JNA remained the same in the relevant period, Serbs were over-
represented and Croats under-represented in the JNA officer corps. 446The Respondent
does not challenge this disproportion whic h, as already explained in the Counter-
Memorial, should be seen in light of the fact that over the years the number of Croats
(and Slovenes) who applied to military sch ools and academies had been much lower
than their ratio in the overall population. In connection to this, it should be added that in
the JNA one did not become an officer over night, but only after long studies in military
schools and academies. Thus, any disproportion inthe ethnic structure of the JNA in the
1980s had its roots in the 1970s or earlier (when those officers who were active in the
1980s had begun their studies) and not even the Applicant claims that the alleged
“Serbianization” of the JNA started in the 1970s or earlier. In any case, the mere fact
that this percentage remained the same throughout the whole period in which, according
to the Applicant, the JNA was preparing for genocide against the Croats, clearly proves
that there was no “Serbianization” of the JNA.
441. Furthermore, one document submitted as evidence by the Applicant with the Reply clearly
shows that the vast majority of the high ranking Croatian officers in the JNA decided to
remain in that army even during the conflict. Thus, replying to an enquiry by the Head of
the Croatian Office for Cooperation with International Criminal Courts (and current Co-
Agent of Croatia before the Court), Mr. Gordan Markotić, the Council for Succession to
Military Property of the Croatian Ministry of Defence, stated the following:
“1. as regards the number of generals who crossed to the Croatian Army:
The greatest number of high-ranking JNA corpsof Croatian ethnicity or any other ethnicity,
who had been born in the Republic of Croatia, did not put themselves at the disposal of the
Republic of Croatia, i.e. the Croatian Army (hereinafter referred to as: the “HV”), either at
the start of the war or later. Out of total of 235 generals who were active during that period
only seven generals and admirals, i.e. around three per cent of the total general corps, did
444Reply, para. 4.17.
445Ibid, para. 4.23.
446Ibid, para. 4.17.
168 this. Specifically, no more than three activ e generals (Josip Ignac, Petar Stipeti ć and Ivan
Štimac), two retired generals (Anton Tus and Tomislav Biondić – retired at the start of the
1990s) and two active admirals (Josip Erceg and Božidar Grubišić) joined the ranks of the
447
HV. All other active generals and admirals remained on the opposite side ...”
442. As noted above, concerning the 1988 restructuring of the JNA, the Applicant has
accepted that this had been done pursuant to a decision adopted by the SFRY
Presidency, which consisted of represen tatives of all republics and autonomous
provinces. The Applicant, still, goes on to claim that “the proposal which the Republics
448
approved differed from the changes actually implemented within the JNA” and that
449
Slovenia and even Montenegro had certain objections. However, the Applicant does
not specify these objections and, what is most significant, does not mention that any
objection to the 1988 restructuring of the JNA had been expressed by Croatia.
443. The Applicant further claims that the “Serbianization” of the JNA is evidenced by the
fact that the JNA did not react to the changes to the Serbian Constitution in September
1990 which, according to the Applicant, usurped three basic competences of the
Federation. 450 However, these claims of the Applicant are without basis since it was
not the task of the JNA to react to any change to the constitution of any of the
Republics of the SFRY. On the other hand, it was the task of the JNA to protect the
SFRY and it reacted in Croa tia only after the Croatian au thorities started the war of
secession and began to directly target JNA personnel and property. Serbia, on the
contrary, did not try to secede from the SFRY and it did not attack the JNA, so there
was no reason for the JNA to react in any way to the constitutional changes in Serbia.
444. Finally, in an attempt to substantiate its claims on the alleged “Serbianization” of the JNA,
the Applicant quotes the following passage from the “Balkan Battlegrounds” Report:
“The Army became increasingly Serbianized after the eruption of the Slovenian Ten-Day
War as conscripts began deserting and the other republics refused to send their biannual
451
intakes of conscripts to the JNA.”
447
Letter from the Council for Succession to Military Property to the Ministry of Justice, 23 November 2010,
448ex 108 with the Reply.
449Reply, para. 4.23.
450Ibid.
451Ibid, para. 4.31.
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990–
1995 (2002), Vol. I, p. 93, as quoted in Reply, para. 4.38.
169445. If anything, this sentence proves that, if indeed there were some changes in the ethnic
structure of the JNA in the second half of 1991, they were the result of circumstances
outside the control of the JNA or Serbia, na mely the desertion of conscripts and the
refusal of some republics of the SFRY to send new conscripts to the JNA.
D. The role of the JNA in the conflict in Croatia
446. According to the Applicant, the “Serbianization” and the restructuring of the JNA should be
seen as a lead-up to the alleged genocide committed by and under the control of the JNA
from 1991 onwards. This assertion of the Applicant, however, completely distorts the reality
of the nature of the conflict in Croatia and the role of the JNA in that conflict.
447. First of all, the Applicant constantly omits to explain its role in the events that
preceded the armed conflict in Croatia, its preparation for the war or the process of
creation of Croatian armed forces. 452It is as if the Applicant wants to claim that the
Croatian armed forces did not even exist a nd that the JNA and various forces of the
Croatian Serbs fought only bare-handed Croatian civilians.
448. The reality was, however, quite different and, as the Respondent already showed in the
Counter-Memorial, the HDZ government in Croatia started to prepare for an armed
conflict already in mid-1990. The armed forc es of Croatia gradually grew and by
January 1992 the Croatian Army (HV) numbered some 200,000 troops, while the
Ministry of the Interior (MUP) had over 40,000 personnel. 453The creation of the armed
forces started in 1990, initially within the MUP, where the number of policemen almost
doubled, while at the same time ethnic Serbs were cleansed from the force. 454
449. Simultaneously, ethnic Serbs in the self-proclaimed autonomous regions in Croatia started
organizing themselves, in reaction not only to constitutional changes by which they were
stripped of the status of a constituent nation of the Croatian State, 455 but also due to an
increasingly negative attitude towards the Serbs in Croatia 456and, in particular, to the
emergence of ethnically clean Croatian armed forces as a sign of things to come.
452See Counter-Memorial, paras. 467-472 and 575-577.
453Ibid, para. 575.
454Ibid, para. 468, quoting “Balkan Battlegrounds”.
455Ibid, paras. 458-464.
456Ibid, paras. 434-455.
170450. As the Respondent already explained in the Counter-Memorial, the first armed clashes
between Croatian forces, on the one side, and the Territorial Defense and MUP forces
of the SAO Krajina, on the other, took place in the spring of 1991 in Pakrac, Plitvice
and Borovo Selo. In all these cases, the J NA units intervened as peacekeepers by
positioning themselves as a buffer between the conflicting parties and the
peacekeeping role of the JNA was confirmed by third-party sources. 457
451. The position in which the JNA found itself in Croatia was anything but easy and it is
well summarized by the Trial Chamber in the Mrkšić et al. case before the ICTY:
“By early 1991 the attitude of both the politicalleadership and the general public in Croatia
became increasingly hostile towards the JNA. Of course, the JNA had been constituted as
the national military force of the Yugoslav federation, but it had come to be typically
perceived in Croatia as aligned with Serb interests and effectively commanded from
Belgrade by a Serb dominated leadership. Inthe course of 1991 many Croat and other non-
Serb officers and men of the JNA left the JNA, in many cases to take up arms against the
JNA in Croatia. In March 1991 Croatian forces “blocked”, i.e. effectively blockaded, the
JNA barracks in Bjelovar and Varaždin. Increas ingly acts of hostility or aggression were
manifested against JNA personnel in various parts of Croatia. By July-August 1991 a
general strategy was adopted to block JNA barracks on Croatian territory by cutting off
water, electricity, food supply, andcommunications to the JNA barracks.” 458
452. A few paragraphs later in the same Judgment, the Trial Chamber referred to some of
the hostile acts against the JNA personnel:
“In western Croatia, on 6 May 1991, a JNA soldier was strangled in Split in front of TV
cameras. A report of the Federal Secretariat for National Defence to the SFRY Presidency
of 8 August 1991 indicated that from 9 May until 4 August 1991, 340 attacks against JNA
units and members in Croatia were carried out, in which six JNA soldiers and officers
were killed and 83 were wounded.” 459
453. Acting on the order of its Ministry of De fence, on 14 September 1991 Croatian forces
mounted an all-out attack on the JNA ba rracks and facilities in Croatia. They
457
Ibid, paras. 501-502, quoting “Balkan Battlegrounds”.
458ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, para. 23
(footnotes omitted).
459Ibid, para. 26 (footnotes omitted).
171 surrounded and blockaded every JNA barracks or facilities on the te rritory of Croatia
and overran many of the isolated JNA posts. In some cases, Croatian forces committed
massacres of the JNA soldiers, such as on 21 September 1991 in the town of Karlovac,
where they killed 13 JNA soldiers that ha d surrendered their weapons and had been
promised free passage out of the town. 460
454. It is obvious, thus, that the JNA was not acting in Croatia according to any previously
designed plan or in pursuit of the allege d “Greater Serbia” project. The Respondent,
on the other hand, does not dispute that the role of the JNA in Croatia gradually
changed from a peacekeeping force to one of the warring parties. This change,
however, came only as a reaction to hostile and criminal actions undertaken by the
newly created Croatian armed forces who started a war for secession against the SFRY
– the country that the JNA was tasked to protect.
455. Nevertheless, even after the JNA became a party to the conflict, it did not become “a
Serbian Army”, as suggested by the Applicant, but remained a de jure organ of the
461
SFRY. The JNA’s participation in the armed conflict in Croatia was effectively
over by the end of 1991, after the ceasefire agreement was concluded in Sarajevo on 2
January 1992, and it completely withdrew from Croatia by mid-1992.
E. The role of General Kadijević
456. The Applicant has failed to offer any concrete evidence that any of the actions of the
JNA in Croatia (or elsewhere) had been ordered or instructed by the Serbian
leadership. For that reason, the Applicant places a lot of emphasis, both in the
Memorial and in the Reply, on th e role of Genera l Veljko Kadijevi ć, the Federal
Secretary for National Defence ( i.e. Minister of Defence) at the time. Thus, in the
Memorial, the Applicant extensively quoted from two books by General Kadijević and
Borislav Jović, the member of the SFRY Presidency from Serbia, who both wrote
about their views on the events leading to the break-up of the SFRY. Some of the
same passages from those books are again quoted in the Reply.
460
461See Counter-Memorial, paras. 504-506, quoting “Balkan Battlegrounds”.
See Ibid, paras. 588-604.
172457. The Respondent does not dispute that a number of meetings between General
Kadijević, Borislav Jovi ć and the then President of Serbia, Slobodan Miloševi ć,
indeed took place and that various issues co ncerning the situation in Croatia and the
rest of the SFRY were discussed. Ho wever, the memoirs of both Kadijevi ć and Jović
clearly show that neither Miloševi ć, nor even Jovi ć, as one member of the SFRY
Presidency, were able to issue orders or instructions to General Kadijevi ć and that, at
the most, the three of them (sometimes together with some other people) consulted
about the events taking place in Croatia.
458. For example, in para. 3.98 of the Reply, the Applicant quotes a passage from the
Kadijević book in which he wrote that the JNA had identified three categories of
members of the SFRY Presidency, depending on their commitment to the preservation
of the SFRY and whether they could be trusted by the JNA or not. This passage
clearly shows that neither Serbia nor any other republic of the SFRY was able to issue
orders or instructions to the JNA, but th at, on the contrary, the JNA identified those
members of the SFRY Presidency that could be trusted. Furthermore, the
categorization of the members of the SFRY Presidency was not done based on their
commitment to the alleged “Greater Serbia” project, but on their commitment to
462
“Yugoslavia and to its democratic transformation by peaceful means”.
459. As a further proof of General Kadijevi ć's alleged dependence on the Serbian
leadership, the Applicant refers to a passage from the Jovi ć book, saying that in early
April 1991, Milošević and Jović demanded from Kadijevi ć, and eventually obtained,
463
his promise that the JNA would protect the Krajina. The mere fact that Miloševi ć
and Jovi ć had to ask Kadijevi ć to promise them that the JNA would protect the
ethnically Serbian population in the Krajina shows that the JNA was not under control
of the Serbian leadership, since otherwise Miloševi ć and Jovi ć would certainly not
have to ask Kadijevi ć to promise them anything – they would simply order it. The
Respondent has already pointed out in th e Counter-Memorial to a similar example,
when the Serbian leadership had to ask Kadijevi ć to give them a precise answer on
464
whether the JNA would conduct a redeployment of the military.
462Veljko Kadijević, Moje vidjenje raspada, p. 91, as quoted in the Reply, para. 3.98.
463See Reply, para. 4.48.
464See Counter-Memorial, para. 602.
173460. Another example can be found in the quotations from the Jović book in paras. 3.64-65
of the Reply. In this case Jovi ć discussed the idea of cutting off Slovenia and Croatia
from the SFRY, first with Kadijevi ć and then with Miloševi ć. He then recorded that
Milošević “[...] agrees with the idea of “thr owing out” Slovenia a nd Croatia, but he
asks me whether the army will execute such a command”. 465 Again, how can the
Serbian leadership, headed by Milošević, be in complete control of the JNA and at the
same time ask whether the JNA would execute a command?
461. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent quoted a passage from the Jović book which
clearly shows the nature of th e relationship between Kadijevi ć and the military in
general, on the one side, and Slobodan Milošević on the other:
“I will also record an observation from the last, not so short period of our drama, about a
latent distrust and almost conflict between Slobodan Miloševi ć and the military, in
parctiular, General Kadijevi ć. Their conflict and distrust are less felt at the meetings
attended by all of us (six), and much more when one of them is alone – with me.” 466
462. This passage was recorded on 25 October 1991 and it is significant not only in that it
shows that the Serbian leadership did not have complete control over the JNA and that
Milošević and Kadijević were at most uneasy political allies, but also that this was the
case as late as on 25 October 1991, when, acco rding to the Applicant, the JNA was
firmly engaged in alleged genocidal activities in Croatia as a de facto organ of the
Respondent, which in any case did not even exist yet as a subject of international law.
463. In the Reply, the Applicant further claims that the Respondent's position that the JNA
was and remained an organ of the SFRY cannot be maintained since:
“The Trial Chamber in the Martić case found as a fact that that the SFRY Federal
Secretary for Defence, General Veljko Kadijević (who bore overall responsibility for JNA
deployment in Croatia) was himself a party to a joint criminal enterprise with the
leadership of ‘SAO Krajina’ (Marti ć and Babi ć) and with the Serbian leadership under
467
Slobodan Milošević.”
465Borislav Jović, Poslednji dani SFRJ, p. 161, as quoted in the Reply, para. 3.65.
466Borislav Jović, Poslednji dani SFRJ, p. 402 (Annex 29 with the Counter-Memorial).
467Reply, para. 9.67.
174464. The Respondent does not dispute that th e Trial Chamber of the ICTY indeed
concluded that General Kadijević was a party to the JCE whose common purpose was
the establishment of an ethnically Serb territory through the displacement of the Croat
468
and other non-Serb populati on in the SAO Krajina. However, the Respondent will
demonstrate that this conclusion of the ICTY Trial Chamber has to be taken with
reserve and that it does not, in any case, prove that the JNA was a de facto organ of the
Respondent or that it acted under the Respondent's direction or control.
465. First of all, it should be noted that General Kadijević was not on trial either in this case
or in any other case before the ICTY. He was not authorized to submit evidence or
make other submissions to the ICTY and he was not even heard as a witness. The trial
itself was also not directly concerned with the actions of the JNA in Croatia, but
primarily with the role of Milan Marti ć, one of the most senior figures in the SAO
Krajina. Therefore, any finding of the Tr ial Chamber on the alle ged participation of
General Kadijević in the JCE has to be taken with reserve.
466. Of course, the Martić case was not the first case before the ICTY in which the Trial
Chamber found persons not on trial to be members of a JCE. However, this case
differs significantly from some other cases for the reason that the Trial Chamber did
not write a single sentence to explain Kadijević's role in or his contribution to the JCE,
while his name is otherwise mentioned in the Judgment only on several occasions and
without direct connection to particular crimes.
467. This stands in sharp contrast to, for example, the Judgment in the Gotovina et al. case,
where the Trial Chamber found that Franjo Tu đman, the former President of Croatia,
not only participated in, but was also a key member of JCE whose common objective
was the permanent removal of the Serb ci vilian population from the Krajina by force
or threat of force, which amounted to a nd involved persecution (deportation, forcible
transfer, unlawful attacks against civilians and civilian objects, and discriminatory and
469
restrictive measures), deporta tion, and forcible transfer. In this case, although
Tuđman was not on trial, the Tr ial Chamber devoted almost two hundred pages to the
470
analysis of Tuđman's participation in and contribution to the JCE.
468
469ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, paras. 445-446.
470Ibid, pp. 992-1177. Gotovina et al(IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 2314-2316.
175468. Furthermore, even if one could accept the finding of the Trial Chamber in Martić as
being conclusive, the fact that Veljko Kadijevi ć was found to be a member of the JCE
together with Milan Marti ć, Slobodan Milošević, Radovan Karadžić and others does
not in any way prove that he or the J NA were fully dependent on the Respondent.
Actually, the very fact that General Kadijevi ć was listed as a member of the JCE
together with other people who held the most senior ranks in Serbia, Republika Srpska
and Republika Srpska Krajina shows that he was not merely a pawn in Miloševi ć's or
anybody else's hands and that the JNA he commanded was independent from Serbia or
from any other legal or illegal entity in the SFRY.
469. Finally, it should be noted that the Trial Chamber in Martić also included General
Blagoje Adžić, the Chief of General Staff of the JNA at the time, in the list of persons
found to be members of the JCE. While th e Applicant places much less emphasis on
the role of General Adži ć and mentions him rather rarely in its submissions, the
Respondent submits that all that is said above with respect to General Kadijević also
applies, mutatis mutandis, to General Adžić.
F. The crimes allegedly committed by the JNA
470. The Respondent does not dispute that some of the crimes committed against Croats in the
second part of 1991 were committed by some members of the JNA. However, as will be
shown further in the text, the findings of the ICTY do not support the Applicant's claim
that these crimes were committed as a part of the alleged genocidal policy. Additionally,
the Applicant has also failed to offer even a hint of proof that any of the crimes committed
by the JNA members had been committed on the instructions of the leadership of Serbia at
that time, provided of course that any action of the Serbian leadership before 27 April
1992 can incur the responsibility of the Respondenq t(od non).
471. The Applicant claims that the ICTY Judgments in Martić, Babić, Mrkšić et al, Strugar
and Jokić “provide strong support for key elements of the Applicant’s case” , namely
that the Respondent has committed genocide ag ainst Croats. As will be demonstrated,
these Judgments do not even come close to proving the Applicant’s assertions.
471
Reply, para. 9.30.
176 1) Strugar and Jokić Judgments
472. General Pavle Strugar and Admiral Miodrag Joki ć have both been sentenced for the
crimes committed on 6 December 1991, when the JNA shelled the Old Town in
Dubrovnik, killed two persons, wounded another three (or two according to the Strugar
Judgment) and caused damage to the Old Town. It was not established that any of the two
472
accused had ordered the shelling. Jokić, who pleaded guilty, was sentenced for aiding
and abetting and for failing to prevent and to punish the crimes, while Strugar, who
underwent the whole trial, was sentenced based only on command responsibility, that is
for failing to prevent and to punish the crimes committed on 6 December 1991.
473. The Applicant claims that the case against Strugar and Joć kiwas just a “sample” case and
473
that many more people were killed during the JNA blockade of the town of Dubrovnik.
The Respondent does not dispute that more than two Croats were killed during the
fighting between Croatian forces and the JNA in the Dubrovnik area. However, the facts
474
of the case, as summarized by the ICTY Trial Chamber, clearly show that Croatian
forces were present in Dubrovnik and they bitterly fought the JNA, which included the
attack on the JNA barracks at Plo če and the killing of the JNA soldiers from those
barracks. 475The Trial Chamber has found that Admiral Jokić and General Strugar were
appointed as commanders of the JNA units participating in the fighting as of 7 October
476
and 12 October, respectively. Therefore, while the Respondent is unable to analyze the
prosecutorial policy of Ms. Carla Del Ponte, the ICTY Prosecutor at the time, or her
decisions to prosecute or not prosecute for certain events, it is clear that, by deciding not to
prosecute any event prior to 6 December 1991 (nor to subsequently withdraw the
charges), the ICTY Prosecutor showed that she considered that these events were either
not illegal or not of sufficient gravity to warrant a prosecution by the ICTY. In any case,
the fact that it was not found that either Strugar or Joć kihad ordered the attacks and that it
was also found that Joki ć immediately expressed his remorse for the shelling on 6
477
December 1991, clearly shows that the attacks on Dubrovnik do not even remotely
satisfy the requirements of the crime of genocide.
472
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jokić (IT-01-42/1-S), Sentencing Judgment, 18 March 2004, para. 26.
473Y, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 31 January 2005, para. 348.
Reply, para. 6.97.
474ICTY, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 31 January 2005, paras. 12-78.
475Ibid, para. 27.
476Ibid, para. 24.
477ICTY, Prosecutor v. Jokić (IT-01-42/1-S), Sentencing Judgment, 18 March 2004, paras. 89-92.
177474. More significantly, the Trial Chamber inStrugaraddressed the position of General Veljko
Kadijević towards the shelling and accepted Admiral Jok ći's testimony that Kadijevi was
furious because the attack on Dubrovnik on 6 December had taken place after the ceasefire
agreement. In reaction to finding out about the attack, Kadijćvimmediately summoned the
two accused to Belgrade, while in the meantime Strugar ordered Jokć i to have the attack
478
stopped. It is, therefore, obvious that neither General Kadijevi ć nor the rest of the
leadership of the JNA knew about the attack on Dubrovnik on 6 December 1991, which can
only lead to the conclusion that there was no JNA policy aimed at the destruction of Croats.
475. Even more significantly, the Strugar and Joki ć Judgments do not even mention
Slobodan Milošević or any other organ of the Republic of Serbia in any way and they
do not contain even a hint that the attack on Dubrovnik or any crime committed during
the attack were ordered or instructed by the leadership of Serbia.
2) Mrkšić et al. Judgment
476. The ICTY case against Mile Mrkši ć, Miroslav Radić and Veselin Šljivan čanin deals
with the events in Vukovar, although it do es not deal directly with the battle for
Vukovar. In this respect, the Respondent agan i does not dispute that a certain number of
Croats died in Vukovar during the siege and that some of the victims were civilians.
However, while the battle for Vukovar was the longest battle fought between the JNA
and various forces of the Croatian Serbs on one side and the Croatian forces on the
other, and while this battle was also the subject of great interest for the international
community and international media, it is significant that the ICTY Prosecutor has not
charged anyone with the alleged crimes committed in the course of the battle. Similarly
as in the case of Dubrovnik, the Respondent cannot and will not analyze the decision of
the then Prosecutor, Richard Goldstone (or any of his successors), not to prosecute the
three accused or anyone else for the crimes allegedly committed during the battle.
Nevertheless, the Respondent submits that the lack of prosecutions for these events
demonstrates that, at least according to the information available to the ICTY
Prosecutor, the events during the three months of the battle for Vukovar did not warrant
an ICTY prosecution either because nothing illegal has been suspected or because the
478
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Strugar (IT-01-42-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 31 January 2005, para. 146.
178 suspected crimes were not of a sufficient gravity. This stands in sharp contrast to, for
example, the siege of Sarajevo, where a number of people have been indicted and some
of them have already been sentenced for the crimes committed during the siege.
477. The Mrkšić et al. case is thus concerned solely with the crimes committed in “Ovčara”
on 20 November 1991. The first accused in this case, Mile Mrkši ć was found guilty
for aiding and abetting murder, torture and cruel treatment as violations of the laws
and customs of war. The second accused, Miroslav Radi ć, was acquitted of all
charges. The third accused, Veselin Šljivančanin, was in the first instance found guilty
for aiding and abetting torture as a violation of the laws and customs of war. His
sentence was first overturned on the appeal and he was then also found guilty for
aiding and abetting murder. However, the sentence was again overturned in the review
procedure, when Šljivan čanin was again acquitted of murder and the initial sentence
479
from the first instance for aiding and abetting torture was confirmed. All the three
accused were acquitted of the charges for the alleged participation in a JCE and they
were acquitted of all charges for crimes against humanity.
478. In the Reply, the Applicant tries to portray the Mrkšić et al. Judgment as a
confirmation of its allegation that genocide had been committed by and under the
instructions of the JNA and, in turn, of the Respondent. However, the Judgment
proves quite the contrary. In this section, the Applicant will deal solely with the nature
of the crimes committed at Ov čara and the direct responsibility of the JNA for those
crimes, while the relationship between the JNA and the forces of the Croatian Serbs
will be addressed in a later section of this Chapter. 480
479. Possibly the most important finding of the Trial Chamber in the Mrkšić et al.
Judgment was the one concerning the alleged existence of a JCE and a plan to commit
murders of the Croatian prisoners of war at Ovčara. In this respect, the Trial Chamber,
after a long and thorough analysis, concluded:
“The facts, as the Chamber has found them to be established by the evidence, do not support the
Prosecution case that there was a joint criminal enterprise involving any of the three Accused,
together with others including local TOs, to murder and maltreat the Croat prisoners of war,
479
480See Section 4 infra.Šljivančanin et al. (IT-95-13/1-A), Review Judgment, 8 December 2010.
179 who had been taken from the hospital to the hangar at Ov čara via the JNA barracks on 20
November 1991. The evidence demonstrates that the prisoners were murdered by TOs with
some paramilitary support, although it is the case that one or more JNA soldiers may have been
directly involved on their own individual volition. The evidence does not offer any support for
the view that Mile Mrkšć i, or either of the other Accused, ordered or participated in the murders
or the maltreatment of the prisoners, or that they planned or intended that the murders or
maltreatment should occur, or that the murders or maltreatment were pursuant to their common
481
purpose or were the natural and foreseeable consequence of their common purpose.”
480. Having found that there was no JCE, plan or common purpose aimed at killing or even
maltreatment of the Croatian prisoners of war, the Trial Chamber proceeded to
establish the responsibility of each of the accused for the crimes committed at Ov čara.
Earlier in the Judgment, the Trial Chambe r found that the murders of prisoners took
place after the JNA soldiers had withdrawn from “Ov čara” and that the order for the
482
withdrawal of the JNA soldiers had been given by Mrkšić. Thus it remained for the
Trial Chamber to determine the guilt of each of the accused, in particular Mrkši ć,
taking the order to withdraw the JNA soldiers as a starting point.
481. In this respect, the Trial Chamber first found that Mrkši ć had not ordered that the
prisoners of war be murdered. This finding is summarized as follows:
“615. The Prosecution submits that Mile Mrkć šiis responsible for having ordered JNA soldiers
under his command to deliver custody of the detainees taken from the Vukovar hospital to other
Serb forces under his command (members of TO and paramilitary units) which allegedly
committed the crimes charged in this Indictment. It is submitted that when he made this order,
Mile Mrkšić either intended, or at least was aware of the substantial likelihood, that the order
would result in the persecution, extermination, murder, cruel treatment, torture and other
inhumane acts of the detainees by members of the TO and paramilitary units.
616. This submission appears to confuse the actus reus of ordering and the mental element
or mens rea that must accompany an order. The Prosecution contends that Mile Mrkši ć
ordered JNA soldiers to deliver custody of the prisoners of war to other Serb forces. It is
more accurately the case that Mile Mrkši ć ordered the withdrawal of the remaining JNA
soldiers guarding the prisoners of war; it wasa consequence of that withdrawal that custody
of the prisoners passed to the Serb TO and paramilitary forces that were then at Očvara.
481ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, para. 608.
482Ibid, paras. 293-294.
180 617. However, this order is precisely formulated, Mile Mrkši ć did not order that the
prisoners of war be murdered. His order to the JNA soldiers was not an order to commit
any offence. He gave no order to the Serb TO and paramilitary forces that were then at
Ovčara and who later executed the prisoners of war. That being the case one of the
essential elements of ordering has not been established. The actus reus has not been
proved. It is therefore not necessary to consider the other and distinct element, namely the
mens rea. For this reason the Prosecution has failed to establish that Mile Mrkši ć is guilty
483
of ordering the murder of the prisoners of war who were killed at Ovčara.”
482. Eventually, the Trial Chamber found Mrkšić guilty for aiding and abetting the crime of
murder, having satisfied itself that Mrkš ći“was indeed aware that the TO and paramilitary
forces at Ovčara presented a grave threat to the prisoners of war, a threat he anticipated
would manifest itself in considerable and life threatening violence and indeed death” and
that “the probability, indeed the considerable likelihood, that prisoners of war would be
gravely injured and murdered was, in the established circumstances [...] obvious to Mile
Mrkšić and to anyone with his knowledge of the attitude of the TO and paramilitary forces
to the Croat forces”. The Trial Chamber also found Mrkš ćiguilty of aiding and abetting
485
the crimes of torture and cruel treatment.
483. Further in the Judgment, after acquitting Miroslav Rać diof all charges, the Trial Chamber
considered the connection of Veselin Šljiva čannin with the crimes committed at O čara and
found that it has not been established that Šljivč aannin aided and abetted the commission of
486
murder at Ovčara in any manner argued by the Prosecutor. The Trial Chamber did,
487
however, find him guilty of aiding and abetting torture and cruel treatment.
484. For the question of attribution of the crimes committed at Ov čara it is also important
to determine whether Mrkši ć made the decision to withdraw the JNA soldiers from
Ovčara himself, or whether he did so on orders from his superiors. The Trial Chamber
briefly addressed this issue and found the following:
“Despite suspicions, there is no basis in the evidence on which it could be concluded that
Mile Mrkšić consulted his superiors in Belgrade. No communications of this nature have
483
484Ibid, paras. 615-617 (footnotes omitted).
Ibid, paras. 621-622.
485Ibid, paras. 629 and 632.
486Ibid, paras. 653-676.
487Ibid, para. 674.
181 been produced, and there is no hint of such matters in the oral evidence. There is evidence
of involvement of officers from 1 MD and the Security Administration, including General
Vasiljević and Colonel Pavković, in the preparation of the evacuation of the prisoners of
war from Vukovar hospital, but no evidence has been adduced demonstrating or
suggesting their participation in the final handover of the prisoners to the TOs and
paramilitaries. On the evidence, the relevant decisions with respect to the prisoners of war
then in the custody of forces under his command were those of Mile Mrkšić.” 488
485. The Trial Chamber also considered the motives behind Mrkšić's decision to hand over
custody over the prisoners of war to the TO. The Chamber first found that the original
plan of the JNA, which Mrkši ć was to implement, was to transport the prisoners to
Sremska Mitrovica “for questioning as war crimes suspects and trial and subject to
that, for a prisoner of war exchange at a later time”. 489 However, while Croatian
prisoners captured on previous days were indeed transported to Sremska Mitrovica,
Mrkšić, following the session of the Governme nt of SAO Slavonia, Baranja and
Western Srem that took place on 20 Novemb er 1991, made a different decision with
respect to the prisoners who were later killed at Ov čara. The Trial Chamber explained
the reasons behind Mrkšić's decision in the following way:
“In the circumstances, it is more likely that Mile Mrkši ć was concerned to avoid a
confrontation between the gmtbr [guards motorized brigade], and the other JNA forces
under his command, and the local Serb population, represented by the SAO “government”
which was an attempt by the Serb people of the region to establish their own non-Croat
governmental administration, and in particular the local TOs who saw themselves as the
armed force of the local Serb people and the “government”, and Serb paramilitaries who
had fought the Croat forces. As discussed elsewhere, emotions were highly charged
among these people. While a confrontation with the TOs and any who might support them
could be dealt with, given the numbers and po wer of the JNA forces commanded by Mile
Mrkšić, it would create an embarrassing and politically difficult situation.”90
486. To briefly summarize, the findings of the Trial Chamber in the Mrkšić et al. case show
the following:
a) The killings at Ovčara were perpetrated by local TO members and paramilitaries. It is
possible, but not established, that one or mo re JNA soldiers may have been directly
involved in the killings, but acting individually and in isolation.
488Ibid, para. 586 (footnotes omitted).
489Ibid, para. 579.
490Ibid, para. 586.
182 b) There was no JCE, plan or common purpose aimed at killing or maltreatment of the
prisoners of war held at Ovčara.
c) The killings at Ovčara came as a consequence of the decision by the commander of the
Operational Group “South”, Mile Mrkšić, to withdraw the JNA soldiers from Ov čara.
However, it was not established that Mrkši ć ordered or even wanted the commission
of crimes – he was found guilty because it wa s probable to him that prisoners of war,
once left in the hands of the local TO and paramilitaries, would be gravely injured and
murdered.
d) There is no evidence that Mrkšić consulted his superiors in the JNA before taking the
decision to withdraw the JNA soldiers from Ovčara. On the contrary, there is evidence
that the JNA leadership wanted the prisoners of war to be taken to Sremska Mitrovica
for interrogation as war crimes suspects, a nd later exchanged for prisoners held by
Croatian forces. Thus, it was established that the relevant decisions with respect to the
prisoners of war were taken solely by Mrkšić.
e) There is no evidence of any involvement of any organ of the Republic of Serbia in any
of the events surrounding the crimes committed at Ov čara, and, in particular, there is
no evidence that any action or d ecision of the JNA or of Mrkši ć himself had been
taken on the instructions by any of the organs of the Republic of Serbia.
3) Babić and Martić Judgments
487. The Applicant further relies to the two ICTY judgments dealing with the events in the
Krajina region of Croatia, that is, judgments in the cases against Milan Babi ć and
Milan Martić, two of the most senior leaders of Serbs in Croatia. However, neither of
the two judgments confirms the Applicant's claims on the alleged participation of the
JNA in the commission of crimes in Krajina.
488. First of all, it should be stated that theBabić Judgment was rendered following his guilty
plea and the factual basis of this plea, reproduced in the Judgment, contains only a
general statement that: “In the period of the Indictment, from about 1 August 1991 to 15
February 1992, Serb forces comprised of JNA units, local Serb TO units, TO units from
Serbia and Montenegro, local MUP police units, MUP police units from Serbia, and
paramilitary units attacked and took control of towns, villages, and settlements in the
183 SAO Krajina.” 491The Trial Chamber did not analyze anywhere in the Judgment whether
and in what form the JNA directly participated in the commission of crimes to which
Babić pleaded guilty. It is therefore submitted that the Babić Judgment is clearly
inconclusive as to the participation of the JNA in the commission of crimes covered by
the Indictment and of no particular use for the Court in this case.
489. On the other hand, unlike Babi ć, Martić underwent a full trial and the Trial Chamber
did analyze the individual crimes alleged by the Indictment. However, as will be
shown, despite a much more thorough analysis, the Martić Judgment remained equally
inconclusive as to the partic ipation of the JNA in the crimes that were found to have
been committed. There are two main reasons for this. Firstly, Marti ć was not a
member of the JNA and he was thus not interested in establishing the exact
circumstances of the JNA involvement in the individual incidents covered by the
Indictment. Secondly, the Trial Chamber found Marti ć guilty on the basis of his
participation in the JCE and, having f ound that the crimes that had been committed
either fell within the common purpose of that enterprise or were consequences of the
JCE foreseeable to Martić, the Trial Chamber did not need to exactly establish which,
if any, of the crimes had been committed by the JNA. While this line of reasoning
might have been enough for the Trial Chamber to establish Marti ć's individual
criminal responsibility, it was certainly not enough to establish whether the JNA
participated in the commission of the particular crimes, especially murders.
490. Examples of the inconclusiveness (as to the participation of the JNA in the
commission of crimes) of the Trial Chamber’s finding in the Martić case can be found
throughout the Judgment. Thus, on two occasi ons the Trial Chamber found that: “[...]
the above-mentioned victims [...] we re killed [...] either by the Milicija Krajine, or
units of the JNA or the TO, or a combination of some of them that the Trial Chamber
492
has found were present in the area at this time.”
491. Admittedly, even if the Trial Chamber had wanted to determine in each particular case
who the perpetrators were, that task woul d have been quite difficult taking into
consideration the fact that most, if not all of the forces participating in the conflict
491
492ICTY, Prosecutor v. Babić (IT-03-72-S), Sentencing Judgment of 29 June 2004, para. 14.
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, paras. 359 and 365.
184 wore the same uniforms. Thus, in relation to the events in Škabrnja, the Trial
Chamber, referring to several witness statements, found:
“245. The TO present in Škabrnja wore the same uniforms, caps and helmets as the JNA.
However, the TO also wore the Serbian flag on their uniforms and some members had a
white band on the left shoulder. There is evidence that some TO soldiers wore SAO
Krajina patches on their uniforms.
246. Paramilitary units, in the evidence often referred to simply as “Chetniks”, were
present in Škabrnja and wore various kinds of JNA uniforms, some with an insignia with
four Cyrillic “S”, and different kinds of hats, including berets, fur hats with cockades and
hats. Their faces were painted, however the ev idence shows that at least some of them
appeared to be local.”493
492. A few paragraphs later, however, the TrialChamber, quoting a witness statement, refers
494
to “ten JNA soldiers” whose faces were painted, which can only indicate that these
people were not regular JNA soldiers but members of some paramilitary unit. Elsewhere
495
in the Judgment, the Trial Chamber refers to a woman in the JNA uniform. It is well
known that there were no women in the JNA, so this woman could have only been a
member of some paramilitary formation or possibly Krajina TO.
493. The Respondent, again, does not dispute th at the JNA units were involved in the
fighting against Croatian armed forces in the Krajina region in the second part of
1991. The Respondent equally does not dispute that there is a possibility that some
units or individual members of the JNA were involved in the commission of some
particular crimes against Croats. However, the Martić Judgment remained
inconclusive in this regard and its findings concerning the alleged participation of the
JNA in the commission of crimes cannot be ta ken as established facts. On the other
hand, the same Judgment contai ns several references to situations in which the JNA
496
officers and soldiers prevented killings of Croats by the soldiers of SAO Krajina.
494. It is thus obvious that, if ever there was some involvement of the JNA in the
commission of crimes in Krajina at the time covered by the Martić Judgment, that was
493
Ibid, paras. 245-246 (footnotes omitted).
494Ibid, para. 248.
495Ibid, para. 182.
496Ibid, paras. 249 and 251.
185 not part of any plan or policy adopted at the level of the JNA command. This is, in a
way, confirmed by the fact that, even though Generals Veljko Kadijevi ć and Blagoje
Adžić, the two people who effectively commanded the JNA at the time, were listed as
members of the JCE in the Martić Judgment, neither of them has ever been indicted
before the ICTY for any crime allegedly committed by the JNA either in Krajina, or in
Vukovar, or in Dubrovnik, or anywhere else in Croatia. More sign ificantly, and with
regard to the Respondent's alleged control over the JNA, the Martić Judgment
contains no evidence that any action of the JNA in Krajina was ordered or instructed
by any organ of the Republic of Serbia.
G. Interimconclusions
495. In the preceding paragraphs and relevant paragraphs of the Counter-Memorial, the
Respondent has analyzed the participation of the JNA in the conflict in Croatia and its
relation to the leadership of Serbia at that time. It was demonstrated that the JNA
participated in the conflict first as a peacekeeping force and became involved as one of
the warring parties only after being directly attacked by Croatian forces. While some
units and individual members of the JNA might have committed some crimes during
the conflict and while some JNA officers have been found responsible for crimes
committed by other forces, the Applicant has failed to prove that any of the crimes has
been committed as a part of a plan or a policy aimed at the destruction of the Croats.
496. In relation to the question of attribution, provided that it is theoretically possible (quod
non) for the Respondent to incur any respons ibility for the events that took place
before it came into existence, it was demonstrated that the Applicant has failed to
prove that the responsibility of the Respond ent for the actions of the JNA could be
engaged either on the basis of Article 4 or on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles
on State Responsibility. In other words, the Applicant has failed to prove either that
the JNA was a de facto organ of the Respondent or that any of the actions of the JNA
in Croatia, and in particular any acti on during which crimes might have been
committed, had been taken on the instructions , or under the direction and control of
the Respondent.
1864. The alleged control of the JNA over the forces of Croatian Serbs and paramilitaries
497. The Applicant alleges that the JNA had command and control over all joint military
operations with the forces of the SAO Krajina. The Respondent has already addressed
the relationship of the JNA and various forces of the Croatian Serbs, as well as of the JNA
and paramilitary units in the Counter-Memorial. 498Further in this text, the Respondent
will restate some of its main points from the Counter-Memorial and reply to the new
claims advanced by the Applicant, in particular those based on the ICTY judgments.
498. It should be repeated, however, that even if the JNA were found to have had command and
control over the forces of Croatian Serbs and paramilitary unitq su(od non), that would still
engage only the responsibility of the SFRY, and not the Respondent, since the Respondent
did not exist at the same time when the JNA existed, that is before 27 April 1992.
A. The alleged control of the JNA over the RSK Armed Forces
499. The forces of Croatian Serbs before 18 May 1992, when the Serb Army of Krajina (SVK)
was created, consisted of TO and MUP units, and later alsoMilicija Krajine– a special
499
purpose unit under the authority of the Ministry of Defence of the SAO Krajina.As the
Respondent stated in the Counter-Memorial, the local TO and MUP units or parts thereof,
on the territory of municipalities in Croatia that had a majority or a substantial minority of
the Serb population, started to operate as TO and MUP units of the emerging Serb regions
in Croatia with the spreading of the conflict in 1991, and largely as a reaction to the rapid
increase in the number of forces under the control of the Croatian Government. As the
SAO Krajina and other Serb autonomous regions in Croatia were established at the end of
1990 and during the course of 1991, and subsequently when the RSK was established on
19 December 1991, these units were created and organized according to the laws of these
regions and then of the RSK, and not under the internal law of either the SFRY, the FRY
(which in any event only came into existence on 27 April 1992), Croatia or even less the
Republic of Serbia (at the relevant time still a constituent entity of the SFRY).500
497Reply, para. 9.71.
498See Counter-Memorial, Chapters VI and IX.
499Ibid, paras. 609-611.
500Ibid, para. 1016.
187500. The decisions concerning the establishment of these forces had been taken while the
JNA still had a neutral role in the conflict. Thus, Milicija Krajine was established on
501
29 May 1991, and on 1 August 1991 the Government of the SAO Krajina
proclaimed Milicija Krajine and the TO forces of Krajina to be “armed forces” of the
SAO Krajina, under the command of the pres ident of the government of the SAO
Krajina, who was also the commander of the TO forces. 502
501. The armed forces of the SAO Krajina and other ethnic Serb regions in Croatia, as well as
the MUP units of the SAO Krajina, fought independently or, once the JNA became a
warring party in Croatia, in cooperation with the JNA. It is not disputed that, at times,
these units were subordinated to the JNA, but this was done on the basis of a decision of
the relevant authority of the RSK/Serb region in Croatia. 503In order to counter the
Respondent's position, the Applicant refers throughout the Reply to the Judgments of the
ICTY in the Mrkšić and Martić cases. However, the Respondent will now demonstrate
that these decisions do not prove that the crimes found to have been committed by the
forces of Croatian Serbs can be attributed to the JNA/SFRY either on the basis of Article
4 or on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility. This analysis, of
course, should be considered as only subsidiary, since the Parties essentially agree that the
504
conduct of the SFRY is not the subject of litigation in the present case.
502. The Martić Judgment makes a clear distinction between the JNA and the forces of
Croatian Serbs. Thus, in para. 344 of the Judgment, the Trial Chamber concludes:
“Furthermore, evidence shows that the [SAO Krajina] leadership established the armed
forces of the SAO Krajina, made up of the TO and the Milicija Krajine, and cooperated
505
with the JNA in organising operations on the ground.”
503. This is completely in line with the Re spondent's position from the Counter-Memorial
that the forces of Croatian Serbs were established by their leadership and that they
fought in cooperation, and not under the command of the JNA.
501
502See Gazette of Krajina, no. 4/1991, p. 188, Annex 16 with the Counter-Memorial.
See Decision on the Implementation of the Law on Defence of the Republic of Serbia on the Territory of the
Serbian Autonomous Region of Krajina, Article 5, The Gazette of Krajina, no. 8/1991, Annex 17 with the
Counter-Memorial.
503See Counter-Memorial, paras. 634 and 1017.
504See para. 57 above.
505ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 344.
188504. In another paragraph, quoted also by the Applicant in para. 4.40 of the Reply, the Trial
Chamber analyzed the conduct of operations in Krajina and concluded:
“142. [...] There is evidence that beginning after the summer of 1991, the SAO Krajina TO
was subordinate to the JNA. There is also evidence of operational cooperation between the
JNA and the armed forces of the SAO Krajina. Any resubordination of MUP units to the
JNA for temporary assignment required prior approval of the Minister of Interior of the
SAO Krajina. When resubordinated, the MU P unit would be under the command of the
JNA unit commander. However, if the MUP unit was merely acting in cooperation or
concert with the JNA unit, it would remain under the command of the MUP commander.
After the completion of a mission where it had been resubordinated, the MUP unit would
return into the structure of the MUP. For the purpose of combat operations, TO units
could also be resubordinated to JNA units. When resubordinating, the largest unit of either
the TO or the JNA would command, which would normally be the JNA unit in a given
area. Such resubordination of TO units would be carried out by the JNA.”506
505. While the Applicant quotes this paragraph as a proof of the JNA’s control over the
Krajina armed forces, the findings of the Trial Chamber actually show that both the
MUP and the TO of Krajina were independent units which could, under particular
circumstances and subject to decisions of their commanders, be subordinated to the JNA
units for the conduct of particular operations, or simply participate in the operations in
cooperation with the JNA. Furthermore, it was possible for a TO unit to be in command
of the joint operation if that unit was larger than the participating JNA unit, although this
was normally not the case on the ground. In any case, however, it is clear from the two
quoted findings of the Trial Chamber in Martić that neither MUP nor TO of Krajina
formed part of the JNA and, for that reason, they cannot be considered as or equated
with de jureor de facto organs of the SFRY (whose responsibility, in any case, is not the
subject of litigation in the present case before the Court). Consequently, Article 4 of the
ILC Articles on State Responsibility cannot apply.
506. The Mrkšić Judgment does not alter this conclusion. Although the Trial Chamber did
find that the local TO units, as well as volunteer and paramilitary units, had been
subordinated to the JNA during the entire ba ttle for Vukovar, it nevertheless drew a
506ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 142 (footnotes
omitted).
189 clear distinction, throughout the Judgment, between the JNA units, on the one side,
and the local TO units, volunteers and paramilitaries, on the other. This means that
neither of the latter units formed part of the JNA and thus the responsibility of the
JNA for their actions cannot be based on Article 4 of the IL C Articles on State
Responsibility.
507. It remains, therefore, to be seen wh ether the responsibility of the JNA, and
consequently theoretically the SFRY, can be established on the basis of Article 8 of
the ILC Articles on State Responsibility, that is whether the units of the Croatian
Serbs acted on the instructions of, or under th e direction or control of the JNA. In this
regard, the Respondent first recalls the Cour t’s interpretation of Article 8 of the ILC
Articles on State Responsibility, according to which:
“it would in principle have to be proved th at that State had effective control of the
military or paramilitary operations in the course of which the alleged violations
507
were committed.”
And that:
“it has to be proved that they [the persons who performed the acts] acted in accordance
with that State’s instructions or under its ‘e ffective control’. It must however be shown
that this ‘effective control’ was exercised, or that the State’s instructions were givenin
respect of each operation in which the alleged violations occurred, not generally in
respect of the overall actions taken by the person or groups of persons having committed
the violations.”08
508. In this regard, the Martić Judgment is not very useful for the reasons explained above
in paras. 489-493. Namely, the Trial Chamber in Martić was not directly concerned
with the JNA's participation and involve ment in the crimes found to have been
committed and it did not analyze, with respect to any of the individual crimes, whether
the crimes had been committed while the JNA exercised its effective control over the
forces who committed the crimes or whether the JNA had specifically instructed the
commission of the crimes. As it was already stated above, the Trial Chamber equally
507ICJ, Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America) ,
Judgment, 27 June 1986, para. 115.
508ICJ, Application of the Convention on the Preventi on and Punishment of th e Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and
Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007, para. 400 (emphasis added).
190 did not analyze or distinguish which, if any, of the crimes found to have been
committed had been committed by the JNA itself. For all these reasons, the findings of
the Trial Chamber in Marti ć remain inconclusive as to the principal question of
concern for the Court, that is, attribution of the actions of the SAO Krajina forces to
the JNA on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
509. The situation is, however, entirely different when it comes to the Mrkšić Judgment. In
this case, the Trial Chamber analyzed in respect of almost every detail possible the
events relevant to the crimes committed at Ov čara and the findings of the Trial Chamber
are such that they only confirm that these crimes cannot be attributed to the JNA.
510. Thus, as already discussed above, 509 after finding that the killings at “Ov čara” had
been perpetrated by local TO members and paramilitaries, the Trial Chamber
proceeded to find that there was no JCE for the commission of crimes charged in the
Indictment. In the words of the Trial Chamber:
“The evidence does not offer any support for the view that Mile Mrkši ć, or either of the
other Accused, ordered or participated in the murders or the maltreatment of the prisoners,
or that they planned or intended that the murders or maltreatment should occur, or that the
murders or maltreatment were pursuant to their common purpose or were the natural and
510
foreseeable consequence of their common purpose.”
511. The Trial Chamber equally found that Mrkši ć did not order that the prisoners of war
be murdered. He gave an order to the JNA soldiers to withdraw from Ov čara, but
this order was not an order to commit any offence. He gave no order to the Serb TO
and paramilitary forces that were then at Ov čara and who later executed the
prisoners of war. 511
512. In addition, the Mrkšić Judgment contains a number of paragraphs which illustrate the
relationship between the JNA and the local Serbian forces (TO and paramilitaries) and
clearly show that the JNA did not exercise effective control over the latter. First of all,
the Trial Chamber extensively discussed the meeting of the Government of the SAO
509See paras. 476-486 above.
510ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, para. 608.
511Ibid, paras. 615-617.
191 512
Slavonia, Baranja and Western Srem that took place on 20 November 1991. The
Chamber's account of this meeting, as well as a subsequent statement to the press by
Goran Hadžić, the Prime Minister in that Government, show that the participants at
the Government session discusse d the fate of the captured prisoners and decided that
the prisoners should not be transported to Sremska Mitrovica and then exchanged, as
had been done with previous groups of prisoners, but instead that the prisoners should
be put on trial before the local judiciary. 513This finding of the Trial Chamber, as well
as the mere fact that the SAO Government met and discussed the fate of prisoners, is a
clear confirmation that the Serbs from Croatia had their own political structures that
were independent from the SFRY. Furthermore, these structures were taking decisions
that reflected the state of mind of the local Serbs, in particular those engaged in the TO
and paramilitary units, and these decisions were contrary to the decisions and plans of
the JNA.
513. In this regard, elsewhere in the Judgment the Trial Chamber found:
“Further, the cause of concern was the conduct of a group of people, comprising TOs,
paramilitary personnel, including local Serb volunteers, who together were marking the
surrender of the Croat forces by pursuing Croat prisoners of war. This group, while some
of them were still formally under the command of OG South, were also persons who, it
can be understood in the political situation, saw the so called government of SAO as their
“government”, and it was the concern of these people that the prisoners of war were
“their” prisoners, not JNA prisoners, and that it was for them or at least for their
“government” to determine the fate of the prisoners.”514
514. It is, thus, submitted that the findings of the Trial Chamber in Mrkšić clearly point to
the conclusion that the crime committed at “Ov čara” was neither committed under the
instructions of the JNA nor that the JNA exercised its effective control over the Serb
TO and paramilitary forces at the time when the crime was committed. Accordingly,
this crime cannot be attributed to the JNA/ SFRY on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC
Articles on State Responsibility.
512
Ibid, paras. 225-233 and 585-588 in particular, but references to this meeting can be found throughout the
judgment.
513Ibid, para. 226-228.
514Ibid, para. 301.
192 B. The alleged control of the JNA over the paramilitary units
515. The Applicant also claims that the J NA had control over various volunteer and
paramilitary units that participated in the conflict. In order, however, to prove that any
action of the paramilitaries could be attributed to the JNA/SFRY either on the basis of
Article 4 or on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Article s on State Responsibility, the
Applicant would have to prove either that the paramilitary units were de jure units of
the JNA or that they acted under the JNA’s in structions or its effective control in the
course of particular operations when the alleged crimes had been committed. The
Applicant has failed to prove either of the two.
516. Both in the Memorial and in the Reply, the Applicant claims that members of
volunteer paramilitary groups were integrated into the JNA by an order of the Federal
Secretariat for National Defense of the SFRY dated 13 September 1991. 515 In the
Counter-Memorial, the Respondent already explained that, according to the order of
13 September 1991, volunteers were individually integrated into the JNA and had to
file an individual applicati on (the relevant form was appended to the order). The
volunteers that applied would be accepted to the JNA upon a decision of an
appropriate military officer and would be assigned to a JNA unit. Such volunteers
would be equal to other JNA members. This means that for each volunteer that was
integrated into the JNA there would be an individual decision to that effect. 516The
Applicant has failed to identify, either in the Memorial or in the Reply, specific
instances in which volunteers were incorporated into the JNA.
517. Quite to the contrary, the documents submitted by the Applicant with both the
Memorial and the Reply show that the above order was never implemented with
respect to the volunteer or paramilitary units, since the JNA and General Kadijevi ć
were issuing instructions that volunteer and paramilitary units either accept the JNA
517
command or be disarmed and removed from the battlefield both in mid-October and
mid-December 1991. 518
515See Memorial, para. 3.80; Reply, para. 4.108.
516See Counter-Memorial, paras. 649-650.
517Command of the 1st Military District, Strictly Confidential No. 1614-82 27, 15 October 1991, Annex 67 with
the Reply.
518Federal Secretariat for National Defence, Order of 10 December 1991, Annex 74 with the Memorial.
193518. In order to compensate for the obvious lack of evidence that volunteer and paramilitary
units were integrated in the JNA, the Applicant refers to the findings of the ICTY in the
Mrkšić and Martić Judgments. However, neither of the two Judgments confirms that the
volunteer or paramilitary units were integrated in the JNA collectively.
519. The Martić Judgment is rather sparse on this issue, since it only occasionally mentions
paramilitary units, without analyzing their status or relation to the JNA and other
forces participating in the conflict. However, this Judgment also illustrates that the
paramilitary units were at times confused with the “official” units of the SAO Krajina.
Thus, one of the witnesses, quoted by the Trial Chamber in the Judgment, identified
“reserve forces, Martić's troops or Marti ć's army” as paramilitary forces, saying that
for him “a paramilitary unit is the same thing as a reserve force or the TO”. 519
520. The Trial Chamber in Mrkšić devoted more attention to the status of volunteers and
paramilitary units and, what is very sign ificant as it confirms the Respondent's
position, made a clear distinction betw een individual volunteers and volunteer
(paramilitary) units. According to the Chamber, there were first:
“[I]ndividuals who were not subject to military service and who had been accepted and
had joined the armed forces at their own request. In this way volunteers became either
members of the JNA or TO. The volunteers had the same rights and duties as the other
military personnel and conscripts.” 520
On the other hand:
“While individuals could and did volunteer in this way, it was also common for volunteer
units to be formed under the auspices of organisations such as political parties or trade
unions and for these units, trained and equipped, to present for voluntary service, usually
as TO. These often wore distinguishing emblems. Volunteers, especially volunteer units,
521
were often referred to as paramilitaries [...].”
521. In the rest of the Mrkšić Judgment, the Trial Chamber continued to refer to the
paramilitary units almost always together with the units of the local TO and made a
clear distinction between the JNA units, on the one side, and the local TO units,
522
volunteers and paramilitaries on the other.
519ICTY,Prosecutorv. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para. 203 and footnote 539.
520ICTY, Prosecutor v. Mrkšić et al. (IT-95-13/1-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 27 September 2007, para. 83.
521Ibid.
522See above, para. 506.
194522. Accordingly, neither the Martić nor the Mrkšić Judgment confirmed that paramilitary
units had been integrated in or had been treated as part of the JNA and accordingly the
responsibility of the JNA/SFRY for their ac tions cannot be based on Article 4 of the
ILC Articles on State Responsibility. In as much as some individual volunteers might
have been accepted in the JNA, they shoul d indeed be regarded equal to the JNA
members. However, the Applicant has failed to show that any of the individual
volunteers had been accepted in the JNA or th at any of thus integrated volunteers had
committed any crime.
523. Concerning the possible attribution of the alleged crimes committed by paramilitaries
to the JNA/SFRY on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility,
all that is said above with respect to the alleged responsibility of the JNA for the
actions of the formal forces of Croatian Serbs (MUP, TO and Milicija Krajine) equally
applies here. Therefore, the fi ndings of the Trial Chamber in Martić remain
inconclusive as to this issue, since the Trial Chamber did not precisely identify either
the exact crimes committed by paramilitary units or whether any of the crimes had
523
been committed under the effective control or under the instructions of the JNA.
524. On the other hand, the Trial Chamber in Mrkšić did analyze, in great detail, the crimes
found to have been committed and the re lation of the JNA and Mile Mrkši ć towards
the crimes. In this regard, however, all that is said above with respect to the TO units
equally applies to paramilitaries and it is submitted that the crime at Ov čara,
committed jointly by local TO and paramilitary units, cannot be attributed to the
JNA/SFRY on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
525. The Applicant also refers to the finding of the Trial Chamber in Martić that Vojislav
Šešelj, Serbian politician whose volunteers participated in the conflict in Croatia, was
party to the JCE together with generals Veljko Kadijevi ć and Blagoje Adži ć of the
JNA, Slobodan Milošević and others, and seeks to draw the proof of attribution from
this finding.524The Respondent has already addr essed in the Counter-Memorial the
evidence which the Applicant had submitted concerning the alleged attribution of the
actions of the Šešelj's volunteer units to the SFRY or the Respondent, which in any
523
524See above, paras. 489-493 and 508.
Reply, para. 4.106.
195 case did not exist at the time to which the evidence submitted by the Applicant and the
Martić Judgment correspond. The Respondent ha s demonstrated that the evidence
submitted by the Applicant is neither reliable nor sufficient to establish the
responsibility of either the SFRY or the Respondent on that basis. 525 The Respondent
will now show that the Martić Judgment is equally not sufficient for a finding on
attribution.
526. The Respondent, of course, does not di spute that the Trial Chamber in Martić indeed
found that Šešelj was party to the JCE. Howe ver, as in the case of generals Veljko
Kadijević and Blagoje Adžić, the Trial Chamber did not explain in a single sentence in
which way Šešelj had participated in or contributed to the JCE. Apart from the
paragraph which lists Šešelj as one of the members of the JCE, the Judgment mentions
526
him on only two more occasions, both times with respect to the same incident, and
without any explanation of hi s direct involvement in th e crimes found to have been
committed. The Judgment, on the other hand, does not contain a single reference to the
Šešelj volunteer units. It is thus submitted that the findings of the Trial Chamber in
Martić on the alleged participation of Vojislav Šešelj in the JCE are inconclusive and
have to be taken by the Court with a strong reserve. Furthermore, even if the findings
in Martić are to be taken as conclusive (quod non), the mere fact that Šešelj was listed
as party to the JCE does not prove that his actions or the actions of his units can be
attributed to either the JNA/SFRY or even less to the Respondent which did not even
exist at the time covered by the Judgment.
C. The status of the Territorial Defence of Serbia
527. In the Reply, the Applicant emphasizes its “discovery” that the Territorial Defence
(TO) units from the Republic of Serbia participated in 1991 in the conflict in Croatia,
in particular in Eastern Slavonia, and seeks to engage the responsibility of the
527
Respondent on this basis. In this respect, the Respondent's main position remains
the same, that is, the Respondent cannot ev en theoretically be responsible for any
525See Counter-Memorial, paras. 641-645.
526Šešelj allegedly visited the old hospital in Knine detainees of Croatian ethnicity have been held and
insulted the detainees asking them “how many Serbian children they slaughtered, how many mothers”. See
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, paras. 288 and 416.
527Reply, paras. 4.78-4.84.
196 event occurring before 27 April 1992, i.e. before the Respondent came into existence
as a State. Nevertheless, even if this is left aside for a moment, the evidence referred to
by the Applicant still does not prove that Serbia had control over the TO units from
that republic that were engaged in combat on the Croatian territory as units attached
and subordinated to the JNA. Furthermore, some of the evidence referred to by the
Applicant actually shows that there was a clear difference in the status and the
relationship with the JNA between TO units from Serbia and TO units composed of
Croatian Serbs.
528. In this regard, the Respondent does not dispute that the TO units from Serbia that were
engaged in the conflict in Eastern Slavonia were fully subordinated to the JNA. This
follows from the document of the Command of the 1st Military District from 16
November 1991, the same document referred to by the Applicant on page 121 of the
Reply in footnote 136. In relation to this document, however, the Respondent has to
note that, although the document can hardly be considered as readily available, the
Applicant referred to it without submitting it as evidence, which is not particularly
528
helpful for the Court. For that reason, the Respondent submits the said document
529
with this Rejoinder.
529. This document provides a full overview of the JNA units that were engaged in Eastern
Slavonia at the time of the writing of the do cument, as well as of the units of TO
Serbia that were attach ed and subordinated to the respective JNA units. The
Respondent, accordingly, does not dispute that TO units from the Republic of Serbia
were under the effective control of the JNA throughout all operations that took place
in Eastern Slavonia. For that reason, any action of the TO units from Serbia should be
equated to the actions of th e JNA and attributed to the JNA and, consequently, the
SFRY. This further means that the actions of the TO units from Serbia, which were
fully subordinated to the JNA, cannot be a ttributed to the Respondent either on the
basis of Article 4 or on the basis of Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility.
528
529The Applicant did the same for a number of other documents, see Chapter III, para. 278.
Command of the 1st Military District, Strictly Confidential nr. 1614-162, 16 November 1991 (Annex 9).
197530. The Applicant has not offered any credible evidence that Serbia had control over the
TO units coming from that republic that were engaged in combat in Eastern Slavonia.
The only thing that the Applicant had to say about this was that: “In early July 1991,
parts of the TO’s of Serbia and of Bosnia and Herzegovina were mobilized”, and that:
“In Serbia, such a decision could not have been made without the agreement of
530
President Miloševi ć”. However, the Applicant reasoning is based on pure
speculation about Milošević's knowledge of the mobilization and it does not explain
how did it happen that TO in Bosn ia and Herzegovina, where Miloševi ć was not the
president, was also mobilized. In any case, even if Miloševi ć knew about the
mobilization, which was indeed quite likely si nce he was the President of Serbia, that
still does not prove that he or any other orga n of the Republic of Serbia had effective
control over the TO units while they we re engaged in Eastern Slavonia under the
command of the JNA.
531. On the other hand, the above mentioned document of the 1st Military District confirms
that the local TO units of Croatian Serbs we re not considered as part of the JNA.
While the document gives a comprehens ive overview of the forces under the
command of the JNA, including the units of TO Serbia, none of the TO units of
Croatian Serbs was lis ted in the document and it is obvious that the JNA did not
consider these units as its part. As expl ained above, the TO units of Croatian Serbs
were formed independently as the armed forces of the emerging Serb regions in
Croatia with the spreading of the conflict in 1991 and they were never integrated in the
JNA, although they were occasionally subordinated to the JNA for the conduct of
particular operations.
D. Interimconclusions
532. On the basis of the foregoing and the releva nt paragraphs of the Counter-Memorial, it
is submitted that the Applicant has failed to prove that the forces of Croatian Serbs
(TO, MUP, Milicija Krajine) and paramilitary units had been de jure or de facto parts
of the JNA, and consequently de jure or de facto organs of the SFRY, at any time. The
Applicant has further failed to prove that the JNA had had or had exercised effective
530
Reply, para. 4.78.
198 control over the forces of the Croatian Serbs and paramilitary units at the time when
some of these units had committed crimes against Croatian population. The Applicant
has equally failed to prove that any of the crimes committed by the forces of Croatian
Serbs or paramilitary units had been committed under the instructions of the JNA. For
these reasons, it is submitted that none of the crimes committed by the forces of
Croatian Serbs or paramilitary units can be attributed to the JNA/SFRY on the basis of
either Article 4 or Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility.
533. As far as the TO from Serbia is concerned, these units, unlike the units of local
Croatian Serbs TO, were fully integrated and subordinated to the JNA and their
actions should be equated to those of the J NA. However, since the actions of the JNA
cannot be attributed to the Respondent for the reasons explained earlier in this Chapter
and in Chapter III of this Rejoinder, neither can the actions of the TO units from
Serbia that were subordinated to the JNA at all times while engaged outside of Serbia.
The Applicant has failed to prove that the Republic of Serbia ever had control over the
TO units from Serbia while they were engage d in combat in Eastern Slavonia or that
any of the actions of these units, fully subordinated to the JNA, had been taken on the
instructions from Serbia.
5. The alleged control of the Respondent over the forces of Croatian Serbs and
paramilitaries
534. Apart from claiming that the JNA was a de facto organ of the Respondent and that
through the JNA the Respondent exercised its control over the forces of Croatian
Serbs and paramilitaries, the Applicant o ccasionally asserts that the Respondent
exercised the alleged control over the forces of Croatian Serbs and paramilitaries
directly, that is, either through the Serbian MUP or through Miloševi ć's political
influence on the leadership of Croatian Serbs.
535. At the outset, the Respondent stresses once again that, as a matter of fact and as a
matter of law, it cannot bear any responsibility for any of the events that took place
before 27 April 1992, that is before the FRY came into existence as a state.
Nevertheless, for the sake of completeness of this analysis and ex abundanti cautela,
the Respondent will address some of the claims raised by the Applicant.
199536. In the first place, the Respondent has alr eady given its account of the historical and
531
political background to the conflict in Croatia in the Counter-Memorial. It was
demonstrated that the political organization of the Serbs in Croatia who lived in areas
with the majority or subs tantial minority of Serbian population was a result of a
Croatian policy to dissociate itself from the SFRY and was, to a large extent,
motivated by the fear held by the Serbian population that genocide committed against
the Serbs during World War II in the Indepe ndent State of Croatia would be repeated
under the new nationalistic government in Cr oatia, which had denied Serbs the status
of a constitutional people as one of its first steps after taking power.
537. The Respondent does not deny that the lead ership of the Republic of Serbia at the
time, headed by Slobodan Miloševi ć, publicly or covertly, politically, and perhaps
financially, supported the esta blishment of the Serb territorial autonomy in Croatia.
However, this political or even financial support does not make the organs established
by the Croatian Serbs either de jure or de facto organs of the Republic of Serbia and
the Applicant has failed to produce any credible evidence in that regard. The
Applicant has equally failed to produce any credible evidence that the establishment of
the Serb territorial autonomy in Croatia or political organization of Croatian Serbs was
effected under the effective control or direc tions of the Republic of Serbia, but that
would in any case be irrelevant since th ese actions, although illegal under the legal
order of both the SFRY and Croatia, were not forbidden by international law.
538. Accordingly, since the Reply mostly repeats the Applicant's assertions from the
Memorial without offering anything new on the subject, the Respondent finds that the
issue of the establishment of the Serb territorial autonomy in Croatia and other
political issues that preceded the conflict in Croatia, as much as they contain matters
relevant to the question of attribution, have been sufficiently addressed in the Counter-
Memorial. For that reason, the Respondent feels no need to further address the
Applicant's claims on this issue from the Reply and leaves it to the Court to appreciate
and evaluate the positions of both sides.
531
See Chapter V of the Counter-Memorial.
200539. The same can be said for the Applicant's claims that the actions of various forces of
Croatian Serbs and pa ramilitaries should be attribut ed to the Respondent. In
connection to this, the Responde nt will, nevertheless, addr ess a few points raised in
the Reply.
540. In the introduction to the factual analysis of the question of attribution in the Reply,
the Applicant twice repeats the claim that the ICTY has found that the JNA and other
participants in military opera tions in Croatia acted under the effective control and
direction of the then Presid ent of Serbia, Slobodan Miloševi ć, and the “Serb
532
leadership”.
541. However, neither of the two assertions is accompanied by a quotation from an ICTY
judgment or even by a reference to a pa ragraph of an ICTY judgment that would
confirm the Applicant's claims. This is, of course, for the reason that there is no ICTY
judgment that contains the alleged finding , while the Applicant, by making these
assertions, intentionally confuses and misrepresents the other findings of the ICTY.
542. Namely, there is absolutely no judgment of the ICTY that contains the finding that:
“all perpetrators participated in military operations on the instructions of, or under the
533
effective direction and control of” Milošević himself. Even the Indictment against
Milošević, which the Applicant quoted in para. 9.63 of the Reply, only claims that the
various forces engaged in combat acted “under the effective control of Slobodan
Milošević or other participants in the joint criminal enterprise ”.534 Thus, it is
submitted that there is no conclusive finding by the ICTY that Miloševi ć had effective
control over any of the forces that participated in the conflict in Croatia. Equally, there
is no conclusive finding of the ICTY that Miloševi ć exercised the alleged effective
532
Reply, paras. 9.62 and 9.64. In para. 9.62 the Applicant claims that:
“The ICTY has also found that the JNA, in its turn, was operating under the direction and control of
Milošević and the other members of the Serb political and military leadership who were party to the joint
criminal enterprise.”
In para. 9.64, the Applicant claims that:
“The ICTY had found that these crimes [on Croat civilian population] were committed under the direction
and control of the JNA, and that all perpetrators participated in military operations on the instructions of, or
under the effective direction and control of, Milošć and the other members of the Serb leadership for
whose criminal acts the FRY is internationally responsible.”
533Reply, para. 9.64.
534ICTY, Prosecutor v. Slobodan Miloševi ć (IT-02-54-T), Second Amended Indictment, 27 July 2004, para. 68
(emphasis added).
201 control over the forces which committed the crimes in Croatia at the time when the
crimes were committed or that any of the crimes was committed under his instructions
or direction.
543. As far as the rest of the Applicant's claim is concerned, namely that: “the ICTY has
found that [...] all perpetrators participated in military op erations on the instructions
of, or under the effective direction and contro l of [...] the other members of the Serb
leadership for whose criminal acts th e FRY is internationally responsible”, 535this is
both inaccurate and misleading. It is inaccurate since it obviously refers to all persons
that the Applicant sees as the part of the “S erb leadership”, that is Serb leaders from
Croatia (such as Marti ć and Babi ć), JNA leadership (Kadijevi ć and Adži ć) and the
leadership of the Republic of Serbia (Miloševi ć in the first place). It is misleading
since it attempts to claim that the ICTY has found that the FRY is internationally
responsible for the acts of these persons , something the ICTY has never found as it
was not its task to do it in the first place.
544. In this way, the Applicant tries to present to the Court the question of attribution as
already solved by the ICTY, while in trut h the judgments of the ICTY do not confirm
that any of the crimes committed in Croatia can be attributed to the Respondent on the
basis of the relevant articles of the IL C Articles on State Responsibility and the
536
Court’s practice in that regard.
545. Apart from this, the Applicant offers very little evidence for its occasional claims that
the Respondent directly controlled the fo rces of Croatian Se rbs and paramilitaries.
Some of the evidence relates to training of the forces of Croatian Serbs (Krajina MUP
in the first place) by instructors coming from the Serbian MUP, some to the assistance
in weapons and other material which Se rbia provided to Croatian Serbs for the
establishment of their armed forces (again to Krajina MUP in the first place) and some
to the alleged links between paramilitary leaders (primarily Arkan) and the leadership
of the Republic of Serbia.
535Reply, para. 9.64.
536For a more thorough analysis of the relevant ICTYjudgments see the discussion earlier in this Chapter.
202546. The Respondent reserves its position with re spect to the individual evidence produced
by the Applicant, but in general does not di spute that Serbia provided some support to
the Croatian Serbs for the establishment of their armed forces. However, this support,
which took the form of occasional combat training and the occasional provision of
weapons and other material, is not enough to consider the forces established in Serb
autonomous regions in Croatia as either de jure or de facto organs of Serbia, since it
clearly does not amount to “complete dependence” in terms of the Court's findings in
the Bosnia Judgment. Equally, the occasional combat training and the occasional
provision of weapons does not prove that the Republic of Serbia had or exercised
effective control over the forces of Croatian Serbs at the time when these forces were
engaged in combat operations and in particular when some of these forces committed
crimes against Croatian population.
547. Regarding Arkan, the Respondent does not di spute that Arkan had certain political
connections with the leadership of Serbia, a lthough the nature and the extent of these
connections are not easy to determine. Nevertheless, even if some political
connections of Arkan and the leadership of Serbia existed, this is still far from the
proof of the “complete dependence” and doe s not make Arkan a nd his unit either de
jure or de facto organs of Serbia. Likewise, the Applicant has offered no evidence that
Serbia had or exercised effective control over Arkan and his unit at the time when they
were engaged in combat operations and in particular when (and if) they committed
crimes against Croatian population. As a matter of fact, the Applicant itself discusses
Arkan extensively under the heading of “failure to prevent”, 537 confirming thereby that
even it does not consider that Arkan was unde r the control of any authorities at that
time.
548. In conclusion, the Applicant has failed to prove that the actions of the political
structures and the armed forces of Croatian Serbs, or of the paramilitary units can be
attributed to the Respondent on the basis of either Article 4 or Article 8 of the ILC
Articles on State Responsibility. This, of course, is only provided that the
responsibility of the Respondent for th e events before 27 April 1992 could
theoretically be engaged, which it cannot.
537
Reply, 9.83 – 9.89.
2036. The alleged control of th e Respondent over the RSK and its Armed Forces after
27 April 1992
549. As the Respondent has already stated in this Rejoinder, its principal position
concerning the question of attribution is th at it cannot be held responsible for any
event that took place before 27 April 1992, that is before the FRY came into existence.
For that reason, the analysis of the issues relating to attribution has to be divided into:
a) analysis of the conduct of the SFRY Stat e organs, i.e. before 27 April 1992, and b)
538
analysis of the conduct of the FRY State organs, i.e. after 27 April 1992.
550. This division becomes particularly important in light of the fact that only very few of
the incidents described in the Memorial ar e alleged to have taken place after April
539
1992, while a vast majority of those incidents took place in 1991. The Respondent
notes that, although the Applicant continues to claim in the Reply that the Respondent
is responsible for the events that took place before 27 April 1992, it has nevertheless
tacitly accepted that the analysis should be divided according to the temporal criteria.
Accordingly, the events from before April 1992 and the allegations on the attribution
of these events to the Respondent are dealt w ith by the Applicant in Parts I and II of
the Reply (in particular in Chapters 4, 7 and 9), devoted to the Applicant's claims
against the Respondent. On the other hand, the allegations concerning the links
between the Respondent and the RSK after 27 April 1992 are presented exclusively in
Part III, dealing with the counter-claims.
551. In the previous sections of this Chapter th e Respondent has demonstrated that, even if
it were theoretically possible for it to bear any responsibility for events before 27 April
1992 (quod non), the Applicant still failed to prove that any crimes committed against
the Croatian population before 27 April 1992 could be attributed to the Respondent on
the basis of articles 4 and 8 of the ILC Artic les on State Responsibility, either directly
or through the alleged control of the Re spondent over the JNA. In the subsequent
paragraphs the Respondent will demonstrat e that it cannot bear any responsibility
either for acts committed after 27 April 1992.
538
539See Counter-Memorial, para. 1007.
See para. 427 above with footnote 432.
204552. As already shown in the Counter-Memorial, the process of the creation of the Republika
Srpska Krajina, the political entity of the Croatian Serbs, was a lengthy process which took
place in 1991 and 1992 through a number of decisions taken by the political bodies formed
and governed by the Serbs from Croatia. Officially, the RSK was created on 19 December
1991 from the SAO Krajina, while on 26 February 1992 it was joined by the SAO Western
Slavonia and the Serbian Regions of Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium. Throughout
its existence, until 1995, the RSK exercisedde facto control over substantial territory and
540
had an independent government with organized armed forces under its control.
553. Therefore, in order to prove that the crimes allegedly committed by the armed forces of
the RSK after 27 April 1992 could be attributed to the Respondent, the Applicant would
have to prove that either the RSK as a political entity or its armed forces werede jureor
de facto organs of the Respondent or th at the crimes were committed under the
Respondent's direction or control. The Applican t has failed to prove either of the two.
554. Firstly, the Applicant has failed to prove that the RSK as a whole or any of its organs
were de jure organs of the Respondent. Truthful ly, the Applicant does not seem to
really pursue this line of reasoning and instead it claims that the RSK and its Army,
the SVK, were de facto organs of the Respondent. Howe ver, the evidence submitted
541
by the Applicant does not support this allegation.
555. Namely, the Respondent does not disput e that the FRY provided political and
financial assistance to the RSK during its existence, including financial assistance to
the Army of the RSK. However, this assistan ce was not of such kind that the RSK or
the SVK, to apply the Court's standard developed in the Bosnia case
“could be regarded as mere instruments through which the FRY was acting, and as lacking
any real autonomy”. 542
556. In other words, this assistance was not of such kind that the relationship between the
FRY, on the one side, and the RSK or the S VK, on the other, could be described as
“complete dependence”.
540See Counter-Memorial, paras. 486-498, 609-620, see also above, paras. 499-501.
541See, in particular, Reply, paras. 10.25-10.33.
542See ICJ, Case concerning the Application of the Conven tion on the Prevention and Puni shment of the Crime
of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007, para. 394.
205557. Furthermore, while the Respondent does not dispute that a certain number of VJ
officers who originated from Croatia volunteer ed to serve in the SVK, this does not
prove that the SVK was a de facto part of the VJ, nor that the VJ had control over the
SVK. While in the service of the SVK, these individuals were subordinated to the
authorities of the RSK and not the FRY, and they acted on behalf of the RSK.
Accordingly, they could not leave their pos ts in the SVK without the consent of the
RSK authorities, as is clear from the evidence provided by the Applicant itself both in
543
the Memorial and in the Reply.
558. The Applicant places a lot of emphasis on th e attempts of the RSK to unite with the
Respondent and the Republika Srpska. 544However, all of the documents and decisions
to which the Applicant refers come eith er from the RSK or from the RS and none
comes from the Respondent. The attempts of the RSK for unification were, thus, never
accepted by the Respondent and the Respondent did not even react to these attempts in
any way. It is, of course, a well known fact that the unification of the RSK, the RS and
the Respondent never took place. As a matter of fact, not even the unification of the
RSK and the RS was effected and the most that the authorities of the two self-
proclaimed Serbian entities did was to create a few joint bodies which never rendered
any significant decision. Actually, it seems that the authorities of the RSK were the
only who really strived for the unification, wh ile their wishes were not shared either
by the Respondent or even by the Republik a Srpska. Thus, according to a Croatian
author Nikica Barić (the same which the Applicant quotes in support of its claims), the
Republika Srpska “was not ready to concretely achieve the unification despite its
declaratory statements in favor of it”. 545
559. The Applicant also discussed in some length the Operation Pauk, conducted in the
Bihać pocket in Bosnia and Herzegovina. 546However, even though the evidence
provided by the Applicant proves that some individuals from the official organs of the
Respondent were involved in the operation, this is irrelevant for the present case
because: 1) the operation was conducted on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2)
the Applicant has not identified any single crime committed in the course of this
543See annex 116 with the Memorial, vol. 4, and annex 122 with the Reply.
544See Reply, paras. 10.68-10.70.
545Nikica Barić, Srpska pobuna u Hrvatskoj 1990-1995 (The Serb Rebellion in Croatia) , Zagreb, 2005, p. 201.
546See Reply, paras. 10.106-10.109.
206 operation nor was any such crime established by the ICTY, 3) even if some crimes have
been committed (quod non), the possible victims were Bosnian Muslims and not Croats.
Incidentally, it is quite telling that the Operation Pauk was mentioned only as a part of
the Applicant's defense against the counter-claims and not as a part of the allegations on
the crimes allegedly committed by or with the assistance of the Respondent.
560. It is thus submitted that the Applicant has failed to prove that the actions of the RSK
or any of its organs, including the SVK, that took place after 27 April 1992, can be
attributed to the Respondent on the basis of Article 4 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility. Equally, the Applicant has failed to offer any evidence, either with the
Memorial or with the Reply, that would prove or even suggest that any of the crimes
allegedly or truly comm itted after 27 April 1992 had been committed by the RSK
forces under the effective control or dir ection of the Respondent. Accordingly, the
responsibility of the Respondent for these acts cannot be engaged on the basis of
Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility either.
7. The alleged violation of the obligatio ns to prevent and punish the crime of
genocide
A. Obligation to prevent
561. As already stated in th e Counter-Memorial, in accordance with the Court’s Bosnia
Judgment, the question of the Respondent’s violation of the obligation to prevent
genocide can arise only if the Court finds that: (a) genocide has been committed
against Croats, (b) it was not committed by organs or persons or groups whose
conduct is attributable to the Respondent, (c) the Responde nt is not responsible for
complicity in genocide, (d) the Respondent was aware of the possibility that genocide
would be committed but failed to take reasonable action to prevent it, and (e) the
Respondent was in a position to influence the actions of the principal perpetrator.
562. Therefore, the first and the most important condition for the existence of the violation
of the obligation to prevent genocide is th e actual commission of genocide. Having in
mind that the Respondent has already dem onstrated, both in the Counter-Memorial
and in this Rejoinder, that neither ge nocide nor any other act prohibited by the
207 Genocide Convention was committed against Cr oats, it follows that the Respondent
has, accordingly, not violated its obligation to prevent genocide.
563. In addition, the Respondent submits that it ca nnot, in any case, be responsible for the
failure to prevent the alleged genocide since the Applicant has failed to prove that the
Respondent was in a position to sufficiently influence the actions of the principal
perpetrators of the alleged genocide. Finally, since all of the evidence to which the
Applicant referred to in the relevant section of the Reply 547relates to the events from
1991, the responsibility of the Respondent ca nnot even be considered since the
Respondent did not exist as a State before 27 April 1992.
564. Turning, nevertheless, to the new evidence submitted by the Applicant, which
concerns the activities of Željko Ražnjatovi ć “Arkan” and his paramilitary unit, the
Respondent submits that this evidence is not sufficient to establish either that genocide
has been committed or that the Respondent (non-existent at the time) failed to prevent
it. What it does indicate, however, is that Arkan obviously was not under effective
control of the JNA or any other authority at the time.
565. From the perspective of the alleged genocide committed by Arkan’s unit, the alleged
crimes of that unit are not identified or specified, not even approximately, and the
Applicant tries to blend the allegations of the crimes allegedly committed by Arkan’s
unit with the other crimes alleged to ha ve been committed against the Croats. The
Applicant thus refers to Arkan’s alleged boa sting in public that his paramilitary group
would ‘mop up’ after houses had been shelled, and then goes on to claim that
548
approximately 1,700 people were killed in Vukovar, of whom 70% were civilians.
The Applicant however does not attempt to separate the participation of Arkan in the
events in Vukovar and it is not clear whether it wants to allege that Arkan and his forces
perpetrated genocide in a sense that was separate from the overall allegations of the
alleged genocide perpetrated by the Respondent. This all leaves one big confusion as to
what is that the Applicant actually claims before the Court. Fortunately, though, this
confusion has no practical consequences since, whichever way one looks at the events,
genocide has not been committed and there was nothing to prevent in the first place.
547 Reply, paras. 9.83-9.89.
548 Reply, para. 9.88.
208 B. Obligation to punish
566. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent showed that it could not be held responsible
for failing to punish genocide since, in the first place, neither genocide nor any of the
acts enumerated in Article III of the Genocide Convention had been committed. In
addition, the Respondent showed that, even if the Court would find that some of the
acts prohibited by the Genocide Convention had been committed ( quod non ), the
Respondent would still not be responsible for failure to punish them because the
alleged crimes had ne ither been committed on the Respondent's territory nor had
549
anyone been charged by the ICTY for genocide committed in Croatia.
567. Still, while acknowledging that a number of persons charged by the ICTY have been
arrested and transferred to the ICTY by the Respondent since the filing of the
Memorial, the Applicant continues to cla im that the Respondent has violated its
obligation to punish genocide by failing to arrest Goran Hadžić, former high official of
the Croatian Serbs, in spite of the fact that Hadži ć was never charged for genocide
before the ICTY. The Applicant then exte nsively quotes a press statement by the
former Prosecutor of the ICTY, Carla Del Ponte, in which Ms. Del Ponte expressed
her views and assessments concerning the circumstances of the delivery of the
550
indictment and arrest warrant to the Serbian authorities and Hadžić's escape.
568. Taking into consideration that Goran Hadži ć was arrested in Serbia on 20 July 2011
and transferred to the ICTY on 22 July 2011, the Respondent considers this part of the
Applicant's submissions moot. Accordingly, the Respondent does not feel the need to
discuss the Applicant's assumptions on the circumstances of Hadži ć's escape, 551since
they in any case represent pure speculation and are not based on the quoted statement
of the ICTY Prosecutor.
569. The Respondent, however, wishes to point out that at the time when Ms. Del Ponte made
her statement the total number of accused at large was 22, while at the moment of the
writing of this text, seven years later, there are no remaining fugitives before the ICTY. This
outstanding achievement was in the most part due to the Respondent’s efforts, which clearly
demonstrates the Respondent's willingness to fully cooperate with the ICTY.
549
550See Counter-Memorial, paras. 1051-1057.
551Reply, para. 9.94.
2098. Conclusion
570. On the basis of the arguments set above, it is submitted that:
a) The Respondent cannot, as a matter of fact and as a matter of law, be held responsible
for any alleged violation of the Genocide Convention that took place before 27 April
1992;
b) In any case, the Applicant has failed to prove that any action or any crime, allegedly or
truly committed by the JNA, can be attribut ed to the Respondent on the basis of the
ILC Articles on State Responsibility and the relevant practice of the Court;
c) The Applicant has equally faile d to prove that any action or any crime, allegedly or
truly committed by the forces of Croatian Serbs or paramilitary units, can be attributed
to the Respondent on the basis of the IL C Articles on State Responsibility and the
relevant practice of the Court, either di rectly or through the Respondent's alleged
control over the JNA;
d) The Respondent has not violated the obligations to prevent and to punish genocide.
210 SUMMARY OF PART I
571. In Part I of this Rejoinder, the Respondent has shown that the Applicant's case is based
on:
a) Erroneous interpretation of the Genocide Convention, the rules on State responsibility
and the practice of the Court,
b) Evidence that does not satisfy the standard of proof required for the charges of such
gravity as those advanced by the Applicant and which is, in any case, not credible and
reliable,
c) Erroneous interpretation of that evidence in a way purported to prove the Applicant's
allegations, while the evidence, such asit is, actually disproves those allegations.
572. Thus, in order to establish the jurisdiction of the Court for the events that took place
before 27 April 1992, that is before the Res pondent came to existence as a State, the
Applicant implicitly asks the Court to appl y Article IX of the Genocide Convention
retroactively, so as to cover the period predating the coming into existence of the
Respondent (27 April 1992) and even of the Applicant (8 October 1991).
573. Since this is still not enough for the Respondent to incur State responsibility for the
alleged breaches of the Ge nocide Convention that occurred at the time when the
Respondent still did not exist as a State, the Applicant then asks the Court to apply
Article 10(2) of the ILC Ar ticles on State Responsibility (e ven though this Article
does not represent customary international law) despite the fact that none of the
conditions for the application of this article is met.
574. If this first obstacle is surpassed (and it is not), the Applicant then wants the Court to
find that genocide has been committed against the Croats because “when the evidence
is viewed as a whole” it is inevitable to infer that “the policy of ‘ethnic cleansing’
through the commission of crimes against hum anity and war crimes [...] was pursued
with the intention of bringing about the de struction of the group” and not “merely its
552
dissolution or the displacement of its members”. But the Applicant still does not
offer any evidence of the existence of the alleged genocidal intent and instead
repeatedly asks the Court to infer the intent from the ICTY's findings that some of the
actual crimes alleged by the Applicant have been committed. At the same time,
552
Reply, para. 9.24.
211 however, the Applicant chooses to disregar d the fact that, when the ICTY had the
opportunity to view the alleged crimes as a w hole, such as in the indictment against
Slobodan Milošević, it did not even try to qualify those crimes as genocide.
575. The Applicant again relies on a number of elements, invoked first in the Memorial,
553
which are supposed to prove the genocidal intent. However, apart from repeating
these elements, the Applicant does not o ffer anything to rebut the Respondent’s
thorough analysis, in the Counter-Memoria l, of each and every element and the
successful demonstration that none of these elements, even if established, proves the
existence of the alleged genocidal intent, wh ether they are considered individually or
collectively.554The Applicant, on the other hand, cla ims that “all but the last of these
elements has been substantially confirmed by judicial findings of the ICTY in
proceedings brought against senior Serb officials”, 555but offers absolutely no
quotation nor even a reference to any ICTY decision in support of these claims.
576. The Applicant's original submissions in the Application and the Memorial were
premised on an approach to the interpretation of Article II of the Genocide Convention
that has been systematically rejected in judicial determinations since that time, both by
the ICTY and the Court. In the Reply, the Applicant has struggled to repackage its
evidence to fit it in the interpretation of the Genocide Convention adopted by the
Court and the ICTY, but this attempt was bound to fail.
577. The Applicant is equally unable to prove that the alleged crimes can be attributed to
the Respondent. Leaving aside for the moment very important issue of the Court’s
jurisdiction ratione temporis for the events preceding the Respondent's coming into
existence as a State and the question whether the Respondent can even theoretically be
responsible for these events, the Applicant has nevertheless faile d to prove that the
actions of the JNA or the Croatian Serbs or the paramilitaries could be attributed to
Serbia on the basis of either Article 4 or Article 8 of the ILC Articles on State
Responsibility. The Applicant has equally faile d to prove that the actions of the RSK
after 27 April 1992 (when the Respondent became a State) could be attributed to the
Respondent on the basis of either of the two mentioned articles.
553 Reply, para. 9.6.
554 See Counter-Memorial, paras. 947-983.
555 Reply, para. 9.7.
212578. These many weaknesses of its case, in terms of the relevant facts and the applicable
law, the Applicant seeks to compensate by referring to the finding on the existence of
a JCE in the Martić Judgment, as a kind of a wild card which is supposed to confirm
all of the Applicant's allegations. In reality, however, the Martić Judgment proves
much less than the Applicant wants to read into it and, with some of its main findings,
actually supports the Respondent’s position in this case.
213 PART II
THE RESPONDENT’S COUNTER-CLAIM CHAPTER VI
EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY THE RESPONDENT
1. Brief overview
579. The Respondent has establis hed its counter-claim on th e relevant, reliable and
irrefutable documents which have been produced to the Court in annexes 52-65 to the
Counter-Memorial (Volume IV). Among thos e documentary materials, the Court can
find a significant compilation of human rights reporting in the days following
556
Operation Storm prepared by the UN monitoring teams and European Community
557
Monitoring Mission, as well as by the UN Special Rapporteur of the Commission
558
on Human Rights. These documents are brief accounts of the situation observed
directly on the territory of the RSK from August to November 1995. The impartiality
and professional approach of the author s of these documents have never been
challenged. In addition to these documen ts, the Counter-Memorial has frequently
referred to the ICTY witness testimonies from the Gotovina et al. case. 559
580. Furthermore, the Respondent has sub mitted two reports of the non-governmental
560
organizations – “Veritas” and Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights
561
(hereinafter “CHC”) which, in a professional manne r, examined information on
victims of Operation Storm. The plan for Operation Storm has been shown in the
original transcript of the meeting held by Croatian President Franjo Tu đman with
military officials of the Croatian Army and Police on the island of Brioni on 31 July
1995. It has been accepted as evidence in the ICTY case Gotovina et al . 562The
Respondent finds that this plan contains dir ect evidence of intent to destroy the group
of Krajina Serbs. Excerpts from the report “Croatian Armed Forces and Operation
Storm” 563written by Reynaud Theunens, an expert engaged by the ICTY Prosecution
in Gotovina et al , contain sufficient data for the international responsibility of the
Republic of Croatia to be established.
556
557Annexes nos. 55, 57 & 58 to the Counter-Memorial.
558Annexes nos. 54 & 60 to the Counter-Memorial.
559Annex 59 to the Counter-Memorial.
www.icty.org/case/gotovina/4#trans. Some excerpts from those testimonies are produced now as annexes to
560 Rejoinder, nos. 44 – 51.
561Annex 62 to the Counter-Memorial.
562Annex 61 to the Counter-Memorial.
Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial.
563Annex 64 to the Counter-Memorial.
217581. However, the Respondent could not suppose that the Applicant would deny the
commission of any crime by the Croatian ar med forces during and after Operation
Storm as a result of the plan prepared in detail by President Tuđman and his supporters
on the Brioni Island. That approach of the Applicant requires an appropriate reaction:
one of the objectives of this Rejoinder is to clearly demonstrate sufficient examples of
the acts of genocide committed in August 1995 and afterwards.
582. Thus, the Respondent submits 15 witness st atements given before the Serbian and
564
Bosnian domestic courts from 1995 to 1999. All of these statements have been
taken in accordance with the domestic rules of criminal procedure, which are very
similar in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. In these testimonies, the Court
will find horrific eye-witness accounts of the massive crimes committed by the
Croatian Governmental forces, which can only be termed genocide.
583. In addition to the Brioni transcript of 31 July 1995, the Respondent submits excerpts
from three transcripts made during Tu đman’s meetings with his close supporters in
August 1995, when the military operation was over, but the criminal operation was
still under way.565 These three documents are again exhibits from the Gotovina et al.
case. They further strengthen the Res pondent’s position concerning the correct
meaning of Tu đman’s words on Brioni. It is also confirmed by his address to the
crowd in Knin on 26 August 1995, when the success of Operation Storm was
celebrated.
584. On 15 April 2011, the ICTY Trial Chamber fo und General Gotovina guilty of crimes
against humanity and violations of the laws or customs of war, and sentenced him to
24-years’ imprisonment, whilst General Marka č was sentenced to 18 years for the
566
same crimes. The factual finding of this J udgment should prompt Applicant’s
representatives in the further proceedings before the Court to admit, at least, the
commission of crimes against humanity prepared in advance at the meeting on Brioni
Island.
564Annexex nos. 52 – 66 to the Rejoinder.
565Annexes nos. 67-69 to the Rejoinder.
566Available on www.icty.org/case/gotovina/4#tjug.
218585. Consistent with its approach to the question of proof adopted in the Counter-Memorial, the
Respondent will continueto make a distinction between te hstandards of proof required, on
one hand, for matters that mustbe proven in relation to itscounter-claim, and on the other
hand, for the factual background of Operation Storm. Annexed to the Rejoinder are 34
exhibits relating to massive crimes committed against the Serb people dating to the very
567
beginning of the armed conflict. These materials contain witness statements given before
domestic courts, the OSCE Report concerning war-time killings of civilians in Sisak in
1991-92, some original documents collected and translated by a group of Serbian authors,
but also some statements sent to the Federal Assembly or given to the State Expert Team
for Collecting Evidence of Crimes against Humanity and International Law. The names of
some witnesses who suffered exceptionally grave humiliation are protected. They are being
produced in the supplementary confidential submission.
2. Objections to the counter-claim evidence
586. The Applicant has submitted two objections to the documentary evidence presented by
568
the Respondent. The first objection is related to the CHC Report and based on the
alleged methodological flaws which led to the purported inaccuracy of the Report,
whilst the second objection is directed to the reports written by the Centre for
Collecting Documents and Information “Veritas”, 569 on the basis of alleged lack of
neutrality and objectivity of the head of that organization, Mr. Savo Štrbac.
A. Objections to the CHC Report
587. The CHC Report “Military Operation ‘Storm’ and It’s [ sic] Aftermath”, published in
the Croatian capital in 2001, was a remarkab le and affirmative attempt of that non-
governmental organization, whose members clearly did not support the political and
military objectives of the Krajina Serbs, to examine the real consequences of the
operation. The Report was based on an in-fi eld investigation which, although limited
in sources, was directed to collecting all available and verifiable information about the
victims. From the very broad Report, the Respondent has produced to the Court only
567Annexes 10 – 43.
568Annex 61 to the Counter-Memorial.
569Annexes nos. 62 & 66 to the Counter-Memorial.
219 those parts relating to the crimes committed against Serb civilians in the UN Sectors
North and South, as well as against persons from the refugee columns.
588. The insubstantiated objection to this re port becomes clear upon reading the Reply.
This is how the Applicant presents “t he significant methodological flaws and
mistakes” discovered by it’s official bodies:
“1. The biographical details essential for identification are inaccurate or incomplete for a
large number of those said to be killed (e.g. wrong name, name of fathers, wrong dates of
570
birth/death, wrong location) […]”
With regard to the matter asserted by the Respondent, this objection is inappropriate.
In searching for a rationale for this objecti on, one could ask whether this means that a
person whose fate was connected with a wrong location should not be listed as a
victim. Or that a person whose fathe r’s name was unknown c ould be legitimate
military target? 571
“2. Mistakes in characterising members of the SVK and paramilitary formations as
civilians […]”572
Even if this objection is accurate, it is unclear why the Applicant would like to
advance such an objection. Whether or not the victims of genocide are civilians or
members of military or paramilitary units is not germane to the main issue.
Combatants, and persons of combatant age, can certainly be victims of genocide in the
same way as civilians. The issue is not thei r identity as combatants or non-combatants
but rather their ethnicity.
“3. The CHC lists all persons as ‘killed’, whereas official records and documentation
provide differently e.g. a number of individuals on the List appear to have died from
natural causes, accidents, or were combatants who are missing and so on.” 573
This objection might be relevant if it were true. But how many individuals, according
to the Croatian official records, died from natural causes and accidents? In fact, the
Applicant does not provide the Court with its “official records and documentation of
570
571Reply, para. 2.65.
See Annex 208 to the Reply.
572Reply, para. 2.65.
573Ibid.
220 the Ministry of Family, Croatian Homeland War Veterans and Intergeneration
Solidarity” to which it has referred. 574 Why would the Court accept the Applicant’s
assertion without any proof about the numbe r of individuals who died from natural
causes and accidents? How many died in this way? What were the accidents? What
methodology has been used in the creation of the official data? Can the Applicant’s
official data concerning so sensitive matter be considered impartial and reliable? The
questions are many and not one is answered by the Applicant.
589. In conclusion, the Applicant, firstly, has failed to prove its assertion that the CHC
Report contains some methodological flaws. That allegation has not been proved by
any serious analysis. Secondly, several weak examples of inaccuracy produced in
Annexes nos. 204-208 to the Reply are irrelevant for what the Report is being used to
prove. Indeed, as the Court says in the Bosnia Judgment,
“it is not necessary to examine every single incident reported by the Applicant, nor it is
necessary to make an exhaustive list of the allegations; the Court finds it sufficient to
examine those facts that would illuminate the question of intent…”75
590. The same conclusion is applicable to the Re spondent’s counter-claim. It is indeed not
necessary that the Respondent prove each and every death of the RSK civilians and
soldiers killed during and after Operation Storm by the indiscriminate shelling of the
towns, by attacking to the helpless refugee columns and by the execution of those who
decided to remain at home. The CHC Re port proves beyond a reasonable doubt that:
a) the Croatian armed forces during and after Operation Storm committed killings on a
massive scale; and b) all victims registered in the Report were members of the Serbian
national and ethnic group.
B. Objections to the “Veritas” Reports
591. The objections to the “Verita s” 2007 Report “Victims of the Storm and Post-Storm”
and 2009 Report “Serb Victims of War and Post -War in the Territories of Croatia and
the former Republic of Serbian Kra jina 1990-1998” are mainly based on the
574Ibid, para. 11.92.
575ICJ,Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and MonteneJ)dgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91, para. 242.
221 argumentum ad hominem regarding Mr. Štrbac, the head of this non-governmental
organization. In support of its assertion that Mr. Štrbac is ready “to manipulate the
presentation of events of and facts about the Homeland War”, 576 the Applicant refers
to one statement allegedly given by Mr. Št rbac in his capacity as defense counsel
577
before the Supreme Martial Court in 1992. The source of this allegation is Decision
no. II K.111/92 of 7 May 1992, which, again, has not been submitted to the Court. The
Respondent has verified the above mentioned Decision of the Supreme Martial Court
and found that it does not contain any quotatio n of a statement given by Mr. Štrbac.
The quotation to which the Applicant refers in para. 2.68 of the Reply is actually the
Military Court’s interpretation of the appeal ’s submission, and not at all a statement
directly given by Mr. Štrbac. The Applican t’s presentation of this issue is quite
misleading. It goes to the core of its critique of the “Veritas” report.
592. Even if the Military Court interpreted the defense sub mission precisely, it should be
noted that Mr. Štrbac is not a witness, nor an expert witness, nor defense counsel in
this case. He is merely the head of an NGO. It is the organization, and not Mr. Štrbac
personally, that has collected evidence of the Serb victims in Croatia. As far as the
methodology of the Report produced in Annex 66 to the Counter-Memorial is
concerned, the Respondent observes that only ten cases of inaccuracies among 6,119
578
victims have been registered by the Applicant’s official bodies. This is an error that
can commonly emerge rather than a consequence of some methodological flaws.
593. This is how the ICTY Prosecution evaluated the work of the NGO “Veritas” in 2000:
“The Centre “Veritas”, led by Mr. Savo Štrbac, has assisted and still assists the work of
the Office of the Prosecutor in a professional, serious and responsible manner by
collecting information about certain events which occurred during the period 1990-1995
in Croatia. In addition “Veritas” identifies and provides access by the Office of the
Prosecutor to the victims and witnesses of violations of the international humanitarian law
which fall within the mandate of this Tribunal.
The Office of the Prosecutor is familiar with the general directions of activity of Centre
“Veritas” aimed at the two main issues – Missing in War and Witnesses for The Hague –
576Reply, para. 2.67.
577Reply, para. 2.68, footnote 99.
578See Reply, para. 11.68.
222 which, if properly funded and successfully managed, could advance considerably some
important investigations conducted by the Office of the Prosecutor.” 579
594. In a similar way, the activities of the “Veritas” were evaluated by the UN Liaison
Office in Belgrade:
“On the basis of direct insight into the work of Veritas and following its activities, we
have an impression that it is a serious organization, which can provide its contribution into
the findings of the true developments in Krajina during the period of 1990-1995,
regarding violations of the international humanitarian law and establishing the destiny of
missing persons.” 580
595. In light of the fact that Croatia has failed to show its official records concerning the
alleged 12,211 victims, the upda ted list of 6,279 Serb vi ctims according to the
“Veritas” Report presents a completely different image of the Croatian armed conflict.
It is for this reason that Croatia objects so vehemently to the moral credibility of Mr.
Štrbac.
C. Whereabouts of the RSK documents
596. In rebuttal to the counter-claim, the Appli cant frequently submits that the Respondent
is in possession of the documentation of the Republic of Srpska Krajina to which the
581
Applicant does not have access. In fact, it is evident from the very Reply that the
Applicant actually holds this documenta tion: see annexes to the Reply no. 120
(Minutes on the Session of the RSK Gove rnment), no. 156 (Minutes of the Meeting
between the President of the RSK and L eaders of the Deputies’ Groups), no. 160
(Daily Report of the General Staff of th e SVK), no. 168 (Daily Report of the RSK
Security Department). It is obvious also from the website of the Croatian Memorial
Centre of the Homeland War (HMCDR) that Croatia has access to the entire archive
of the Republic of Serbian Krajina. 582 Nevertheless, the Applicant has used that
archive for the purpose of the current case in a very selective manner.
579
580Annex 63 to the Counter-Memorial. See also www.veritas.org.rs/srpski/preporuke.htm
581Ibid.
582Reply, para. 1.9.
Source: www.centardomovinskograta.hr/izdanja_centra.html. In particular, the HMCDR Report 2005-2009
(page 12) confirms how many the RSK documents are in the possession of this organization
(www.centardomovinskograta.hr/pdf/izvjesce_o_radu_centra_od_ njegova_osnutka_2005-do-2009-godine.pdf ).
2233. The HV artillery documents from Operation Storm
597. The Counter-Memorial has drawn the Court’ s attention to some missing military and
police documents of the applicant State that were requested by the ICTY Prosecutor in
2007 in the Gotovina et al. case, and which are also expected to contain relevant
information concerning the current case. Among these documents are regular military
reports issued during Operation Storm, orders for attacks a nd orders to continue
attacks, war/operations diaries, plans of actions, lists of targets, artillery deployment
maps, etc. The Respondent has quoted th e ICTY Sixteenth Annual Report dated 31
July 2009, in which the Prosecutor stated that
“since 2007, Croatia [had] continuously failed to hand over key military documents
related to Operation Storm. Moreover, progress [had been] limited in the investigation
which the Court [had] ordered Croatia to c onduct into the missing documents. The Office
of the Prosecutor [had] raised with Croatia concerns about the focus, manner, and
583
methodology of the investigation conducted.”
598. The Applicant did not comment on these developments in its Reply. In the meantime,
the ICTY Trial Chamber in Gotovina et al. denied the Prosecutor’s request for the
production of the above men tioned documents for the reason that it was unable to
determine with sufficient certainty the whereabouts of these documents and therefore
whether they were accessable to Croatia. The Chamber, however, emphasized that its
decision is without prejudice to Croatia’s obligation to co-operate with the Tribunal in
584
regard to the matter pursuant to Article 29 of the Tribunal’s Statute.
599. In his address to the UN Security Council on 6 December 2010, the ICTY Prosecutor
Mr. Serge Brammertz stressed that the OTP’s request for important military
documents relating to Operation Storm remained the key outstanding issue. Once
again, the Prosecutor observed that the repo rts produced by the Croatian Government
in relation to the search for the missing documents had revealed inconsistencies and
585
had raised questions that had not been resolved.
583Counter-Memorial, para. 204, footnote 144.
584ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Public Decision on Prosecution’s Application for an Order
pursuant to Rule 54 bis directing the Government of the Republic of Croatia to produce Documents or
Information, dated 26 July 2010.
585Available on
www.icty.org/x/file/Press/Statements%20and%20Speeches/Prosecutor/101206…
224600. Having in mind the limited scope of the charges against the three Croatian Generals,
the missing documents did not have an impact on the ICTY Judgment of 15 April
2011, by which two of the three generals were convicted for the crimes against
humanity. The Respondent believes that the missing documents could be even more
important for a charge of genocide. In the light of the ICTY Trial Chamber Decision
of 26 July 2010 in Gotovina et al., the Respondent considers it of no avail to request
the Court to call upon the Agent of the Applicant to produce the missing military
documents of Operation Storm. If verifiab le information on the existence of these
documents appears, the Respondent reserves its right to request them.
4. The scope of the ICTY charges against the Croatian Generals and its significance
601. The Applicant claims that no probative value should be accorded to the decision of the
Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tr ibunal for the former Yugoslavia not to
include a charge of genocide with respect to the acts upon which the Applicant bases
586
its claim. On the other side, the Respondent takes a view that the fact that the ICTY
Prosecutor has decided to exclude a charge of genocide in the cases where the
atrocities were committed by Serbs may be significant, in the light of the Court’s
position taken in the Bosnia case. 587Accordingly, the Respondent takes note of the
fact that the ICTY has not indicted anyone for genocide for the crimes committed by
Croatian armed forces during Operation Storm, but submits that there is a significant
difference between the Applicant's and the Respondent's case in this respect.
602. Namely, Serbian Pres ident Slobodan Miloševi ć was charged with the most serious
crimes committed by Serbs in Croatia which fully coincide, in terms of the relevant
time-period and the territory, with the Appli cant’s allegations in this case. The same
cannot be said of the Croatian generals. Generals Gotovina, Čermak and Markač were
accused within the limits of what the ICTY Pr osecutor considered to have been their
own personal participation in the JCE. They were not the highest ranking officers in
the Croatian army or police – Gotovina was the Commander of the Split Military
District; Čermak only the Commander of the Knin Garrison established on 5 August
586Reply, para. 2.27.
587ICJ, Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and Montenegro,)Judgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91,
para. 217.
225 1995, and Markač an Assistent Minister of Interior and the Commander of the Special
Police. On 8 June 2001, when the Indictment against General Gotovina was confirmed
by the ICTY, 588 all his superiors that were pres ent on the Brioni Island on 31 July
1995 had already passed away: General Zvonimir Červenko, the former Head of the
General Staff of the Croatian Army died in February 2001; Gojko Šušak, the former
Minister of Defence, died in 1998, and Franjo Tu đman, the former President of
Croatia died in 1999. At the moment of the confirmation of the Initial Indictment, the
investigation in this case had not been finished yet. Indeed, due to the ICTY
prosecutorial policy, this was one of the last invetigations of the ICTY. On 24
February 2004 an additional I ndictment against Generals Čermak and Marka č was
confirmed. The indictment against the three Croatian Generals was thus geographicaly
limited to the zone of their responsibility, that is to say, to the UN Sector South, which
is only a part of the crime scene of Operation Storm. 589 In the Counter-Memorial, the
Respondent presented credible evidence that the UN Sector North was also a scene of
grave violations of international humanitarian law. 590
603. Consequently, the absence of genocide charges in the Gotovina et al. proceedings does
not have the same import as it does in the Milošević case. Tu đman escaped
prosecution, and we will probably never know what the Prosecutor would have
included in his indictment. Be that as it may, the counter-claim of the Respondent is
consderably broader in scope than the Indictment of the three Croatian Generals.
588See the ICTY, Case Information Sheet, available on
www.icty.org/x/cases/gotovina/cis/en/cis_gotovina_al_en.pdf
589Sector South comprised of towns of Knin, Gračac and Obrovac, as well as some small municipalities as
Civljane, Donji Lapac, Drniš, Ervenik, Kistanje, Lišane Ostrovičke, Lisičić, Nadvoda, Oklaj and Orlić.
590Counter-Memorial, paras. 1301 – 1311.
226 CHAPTER VII
FACTUAL BACKGROUND OF OPERATION STORM:
MASSIVE CRIMES AGAINST SERBS IN CROATIA 1991-1995
1. Introductroeryarks
604. In this Chapter, the Respondent will res pond to allegations conc erning the factual
background presented throughout the Reply, but principally in Chapter 10 and to a
limited extent in Chapters 3 and 11. While th is section presents some introductory
remarks, in the second section new evidence on crimes committed against the Croatian
Serbs in 1991/92 will be presented. The thir d section deals with the existence of an
overall context of national, ethnic and religious hatred directed against Serbs from the
very beginning of the armed conflict in Croatia, which contributed in creating the
atmosphere in which Operation Storm was planned and executed. The fourth section
will discuss the continuation of human ri ghts violations faced by Serbs after
deployment of UNPROFOR onwards and the Applicant’s position regarding these
events; the fifth section will deal with the alleged refusal of peace plans by the RSK,
while the sixth section will provide evidence that it was actually the Republic of
Croatia that was not genuine in its alleged peaceful efforts. All events described in this
Chapter are included as the factual background of the later OperationStorm.
605. The Respondent will not address at this point the argument presented by the Applicant in
respect of the legality of the status of the RSK as it does not have much bearing on the issue
591
before the Court. In order not to overburden the Court with numerous issues that do not
directly relate to the main issue at dispute, the Respondent will focus only on answering
those arguments raised by the Applicant wh hiare important for the Court’s assessment.
2. Massive crimes committed against the Croatian Serbs in 1991/92
606. In paras. 538-559 of the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent briefly reported about a
discrimination and systematic violation of human rights of the Serbs in Croatia in
1991. Some notorious examples of extraj udicial executions, disappearances and
591
See para 10.11 of the Reply.
227 crimes committed in the prison camps run by the Croatian authorities have been listed
as a part of the background to the crimes which are the subject matter of this case. The
Respondent could not expect that such notor ious atrocities would be disputed by the
Applicant: most of the sources to which th e Respondent referred were of Croatian or
592
international origin, including judgments of Croatian courts.
607. Nevertheless, the Applicant harshly replies that
“There is no credible evidence presented of the alleged numerous executions and
disappearances or the massive killing campaign against the Serbs. There is no evidence
that any crimes that may have been committed were not investigated and prosecuted.
There is no evidence that these alleged acts were carried out by local military and political
officials. […] Finally there is no evidence presented to support the allegation that the
593
government was aware of ‘what was going on but did nothing to stop the killing’.”
608. The Respondent finds that such an approach to the events, which are notorious and
well known to anyone in Croatia who wants to face the past, deserves to be answered
now. The credible and reliable evidence will be therefore presented. This evidence
will meet the standard of proof required for the establishment of factual elements that
are not the subject matter of the dispute, but indicate its context which is important for
a full understanding of the dispute.
A. Evidence of the massive crimes committed against Serbs in Croatia in 1991/92
609. As has already been presented in the Counter-Memorial, the discrimination and
persecution of the Serbs in Croatia by the Tu đman Government existed from 1990
onwards and increased at the beginning of the armed conflict in 1991. Annex 32 to this
Rejoinder is a copy of the original receipt for the explosives received by the local
members of the Croatian Democratic Union of Vinkovci, Županja and Vukovar, the
towns of Eastern Slavonia. The receipt was signed on 21 November 1990, much before
the beginning of the armed conflict in Croatia. Between 2,000 and 3,000 homes owned by
ethnic Serbs were consequently blown up, according to the research made by Croatian
592See Counter-Memorial, footnotes 462-503.
593Reply, para. 3.115.
228 historian Nikica Barić. 594 Annex 37 to the Counter-Memorial contains an exemplary
series of articles published in the Croatian press in 1990 and 1991. All of them briefly
reported about the night attacks on the Serbs and their properties. A common
characteristic of all those news is that the perpetrators were usually “unknown”.
610. Even if this series of short articles published in the Croatian dailies cannot convince the
Applicant that massive crimes against the Serb population were committed in Croatia,
the Respondent’s assertions are further supported by witness statements taken fully in
accordance with the rules of criminal procedure. This is how witness Lazo Stojić, in his
statement given before the District Court in Zrenjanin on 27 November 1996, testified
about the violations of human rights in Sisak where he lived from 1954 to 1991:
“In 1990, as I already said, and again in 1991following the Croatian elections, discrimination
against Serbs by Croats was increased: Serbs were dismissed from their jobs and a real
campaign of harassment against them began in their places of work. The harassment was
reflected in the fact that Serbs were not alloe to work on certain cases and, in other words,
Croats by-passed them regarding the jobs that were their responsibility.
This form of nationalism was intensified every day to turn into the booby-trapping of
shops and locals owned by Sisak Serbs. Alongside, there was maltreatment by
machinegun fire against the windows and fronts of houses owned by Serbs.
I remember a few such cases very vividly. For instance, mines were planted in the local of
Ilija Kačar several times. I believe that he now lives in Belgrade. His local was blown up
on several occasions.
I also remember the mining of the local meat shop owned by a Serb entrepreneur named
Novaković.
Also mined was the shop of Mirko Gavrilovi ć in 1991. At that time, detonations could be
heard overnight across Sisak, mostly in the quarters inhabited by Serbs and the next day,
we found out the names of the owners of those shops or houses. I can’t recall at the
moment all the names of people whose shops or homes had been blown up, but I know
that there were many such instances.
All this created great fear among Serbs like me, living in Sisak, so much so that a Serb
could literally not meet another Serb in the street. I too experienced a lot of
embarrassment in the street. […]
594Nikica Bari ć, Srpska pobuna u Hrvatskoj 1990-1995. (Serb Rebellion in Croatia 1990-1995), Golden
marketing-Tehnička knjiga, Zagreb, 2005, p. 137.
229 In August 1991, while I still worked at the medical centre, a neighbour of mine was killed
by the police. His name was Jovan Crnobrnja, who used to work at the Sisak Police
Headquarters, while his wife Dobrila worked with me. The day before he was killed, Jovo
Crnobrnja went to see his wife at work and sa w me too. I learned from his wife that the
Croatian police killed him in front of her in their home and I know that his wife Dobrila
suffered a nervous breakdown because of it and was rushed to hospital. I know that after
Jovo Crnobrnja was killed, the newspaper “Ve černji list” reported on its pages the next
day that Jovo Crnobrnja had ambushed a police patrol and that he was killed in the fire
with policemen, which was not true. He was killed purely and simply because he was a
Serb. He was a very honest man and was not a rabid or nationally coloured man. All this
went on through the night when the police and civilians killed Serbs and one could not get
595
hold of any name of those Croatian police officers.”
611. In his statement, witness Stoji ć continued to testify about the killings of the Serbs in
Sisak: according to him, the victims included Dragan Rajši ć, five members of Vila
family, daughter of Jovo and Vera Solar, Boži ć who was a driver of “Slavija Trans”
from Petrinja, and Stoji ć’s workmate Dragan Sunda ć. When he heard that the Sisak
Police had a list of Serbs including him, Mr. Stojić decided to escape from the town. 596
In 2009, the OSCE Office in Zagreb published an updated “sample list of 35 yet
unaccounted-for war-time killings of Serb civilians in the Sisak area. The list [was]
based on data from civil compensation claim files, forensic reports, interviews with
relatives, NGOs and media information. Most listed killing incidents seem to form
597
part of more extensive crime pa tterns which remain unprosecuted.” According to
the 2010 Amnesty International Briefing to the UN Committee against Torture, around
598
a hundred Serb civilians were killed or disappeared in the town of Sisak.
595
District Court in Zrenjanin, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Lazo Stoji ć, dated 27 November 1996
596nex 11).
Ibid.
597OSCE Report: “Unaddressed war-time killings of civilians in Sisak in 1991-92, April 2009 (Annex 11). The
Report continues: “As part of the attack on the Serb civilian population in the town of Sisak (22 listed
victims), five members of the Vila family were killed in August 1991. Unaddressed war crimes cases include the
detention, mistreatment and killing in the ORA detention facility (five listed victims), the abduction and killings
of Serb employees of the Sisak oil factory (four listed victims) and the 22 August 1991 ”T hunders”
Operation in surrounding villages (nine listed victims). Regarding the latter, not even forensic examination of
the bodies was undertaken. The available sample data demonstrate crime patterns. Seventeen of the listed victims
were killed by gunshots. Eleven victims’ bodies indicate serious ante mortem mistreatment. The bodies of
thirteen listed victims were disposed of in the river following their killing, the bodies of another three in Sisak’s
old town.”
598
Annex 73 to the Rejoinder, page 8.
230612. The same situation also existed in other Croatian towns. Witness Milan Crnko ćvtiestified
about the situation in Karlovac. In his statement, given on 2 May 1997 before the Basic
Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, he described how Serbs had been dismissed
from their jobs in the police and the local courts and from other executive posts. He also
described the campaign of harassment and intimidation of the Serb population, which had
began in 1990 in the media and was later followed by demonstrations of the paramilitary
units which sang the Ustashe songs in the streets of Karlovac. The situation deteriorated day
599
by day and culminated when the Croatian paramilitary units besieged the JNA barracks.
613. The Counter-Memorial also briefly repor ts on the camps run by the Croatian
Government where the prisoners of war and civilians were subjected to torture,
maltreatment, rapes and killings. 600One of the worst camps was Kerestinec in the
vicinity of the Croatian capital Zagreb. Due to the horrific humiliation described in the
statements given in 1993 and 1994 to the State Commission established in accordance
with UN SC res. 780 (1992), the Respondent has decided to protect the names of
victims who gave those statements. They are produced to the Court and the Applicant
in the supplementary confidential submission. The statement of Witness SER 002, a
reserve JNA soldier from Serbia who was arrested on 11 January 1992 by the Croatian
Police, contains, inter alia, a description of his detention in Kerestinec:
“On the third day of our arrival in Kerestinec theytook the four of us to the room where we
had previously written our statements. “Vet” anfdour other HOS men were in. They asked me
the date of my birth. When I said “August”, instead of “Kolovoz” as they say in Croatian, they
beat me viciously for that. The four HOS guys used karate punches and kicks. On that
occasion they broke my right underarm and five ribs. One of them punched N. so hard in the
head that he fell down and then, “Vet” came up to him trying to cut his tooth out by a knife.
Having failed, he forced me to lick the blood off hknife. When all the five of them got tired
of beating us, they made us beat one another.If our strike was not good enough, they would
beat the one who didn’t do it properly. Then, they told us to unzip our pants and pull them
down and put our penises into one another’s mouh ts until we ejaculated. After that, they told
me to lie down with my belly on the table and ordred R. to have an intercourse with me. Then
we reversed the roles: R. was sprawled on his blly and I had to have an intercourse with him.
All that time, “Vet” and the HOS guys watched and laughed at us. When this torment was
over, they sent us to a bathroom to have shower with completely cold water.
599Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Milan Crnkovi ć,
dated 2 May 1997 (Annex 10).
600Counter-Memorial, paras. 548-551.
231 During the time we were detained in this camp, they took us twice into the corridor over
night to waltz to the sound of music with elderly lady prisoners. On the first such occasion
we had nothing on from waist down and ladies from waist up, while on the second occasion
elderly ladies were stripped off their clothes from waist down and we men from waist up.
601
With the dance over, women had to stand upagainst the wall and watch us masturbate.”
614. The similar account of the horrific conditions that the Croatian guards imposed on the
Serb prisoners in the Kerestinec camp can be found in the statement of SER 001, 602
while the statement of Saša Mirković contains information about the torture and murder
of prisoners of war Bratislav Bjelobrk, Dušan Bjelobrk, Rade Uzelac, Slobodan Jakšić
and Saša Kostić, who were detained in the camp in Slavonski Brod in May 1992. 603
615. The situation was no better in Dalmatian towns which were also far from any battlefield
and under the full control of the Croatian Government. Witness Marko Dragaš testifies
about his personal experience from the town of Šibenik, while witness Nenad Kanazir
gives an account on the situation in the town of Zadar, his unjustified arrest and torture
he suffered in the dungeon of Lora Harbor in the town of Split. 605
616. Witness Vojkan Živkovi ć, a JNA officer captured by the Croatian forces in March
1992, gives a following account on his days spent in the Lora dungeon:
“My unit withdrew to another village and we battled with the Croatian forces until 2 March
1992. During this fighting, I was wounded in my left leg and was also injured in the head, in a
hand-grenade explosion. I was also taken prisoner by ZNG forces, on that occasion. As soon as
they caught me wounded and injured, they threw me into a nearby stream and started drowning
me. Then they took me out of water and walked over me. They kicked me all over my body.
[…]On 3 March 1992, I was transferred from the prison at D ćreavac to a military prison located
within the naval port of Lora, in Split. I was driven to Lora together with 6 other JNA soldiers,
most of whom were active soldiers, but there were also some reservists among them.[…] As
soon as they took us out of this truck, a group of guards was already lined up waiting to beat us,
601
Statement of Witness SER 002 given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of Crimes against Humanity
and International Law, dated 30 December 1993 (Annex 15).
602Statement of Witness SER 001 given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of Crimes against Humanity
and International Law, dated 3 March 1994 (Annex 14).
603Statement of Saša Mirkovi ć given to the Expert Team for Collecting Evidence of Crimes against Humanity
and International Law, dated 25 April 1994 (Annex 13).
604Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Marko Dragaš, dated
605June 1998 (Annex 18).
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Nenad Kanazir, dated
30 April 1997 (Annex 16).
232 kick us with their boots and hit us with rifle butts and clubs. […] The cell I was in was the size
of 2 by 3 metres. It had no beds and no chairs or any other furniture. The floor was made of
concrete. I had no blanket or mattress to sleep or sit on, and I lay there on the concrete floor
itself. As soon as I was put into this cell, I was beaten. A group of 3 guards burst in and they
beat me, kicked me and hit me with baseball bats, all over my body. […] Tomo Dujic again
gave me a piece of paper with a text which says that I had killed Croatian soldiers and civilians,
to sign it, and since I refused, he told a guard to cut off my fingers. Then the guard who was
present in the office came to me, pulled out his knife, put my hand onto the table, took my right
hand first, and then he made a move to cut my index finger, of which I even have a scar today.”
The investigating magistrate noted that, having the witness shown his right hand index finger
and a visible scar in the middle of it, as well as that he had the same scar also on the index
finger of this left hand.“Having started cutting my right had index finger, the guard took my
left hand and repeated the same process with my left hand index finger. Then, Dujic stopped
him and told me to sit on a chair, tying my arms and legs to it himself, after which he tied two
wires on the improvised earrings that had already been put into my ears at Drćaevac. I noticed
that the wires were connected to the field inductor telephone. Then, Dujic turned the handle of
the telephone and switched on the electric current. That was a 115 volt current and it caused
strong electric shocks and pains so that mywhole body twitched, following which Dujic tied
the wires to my legs and to my penis so that this torture lasted for several hours. […] After these
electric shocks, they used to take me back to my cell, and I recall that, after a while, some
children came in and beat me also with various objects. I believe that one of them was the son
of Dujic or another prison guard. […] Again, they threw me into my cell and the guards
brought German Shepherd dogs which were trained and gave them orders to dig their teeth into
my neck. After that, they would sooth the dogs and the guards would force me to kiss the dog,
which held me by the neck, on its mouth. After this torture, the guards would take me and the
others to the prison grounds, saying that they were taking us out for execution by shooting,
because we were all sentenced to death and they lined us up against the wall. One of the guards
who wore a black cap with a slit on the head would stand out, pull out his gun and shoot me and
others, just missing our heads. During my detention at Lora, I was taken out a dozen times for
these mock ‘shootings’. […] My detention in these prisons in Croatia that I would refer to as
detention camps has resulted in my terrible physical and psychological condition, even today.
For instance, when I was captured I weighed 97 kg and when I was exchanged, I weighed only
46 kg. I had my ribs broken in these prisons, five ribs on my right hand side and two on my left
606
hand side. I can prove it with my medical documents.”
606First Municipal Court in Belgrade, Minutes of Witness Hearing of Vojkan Živkovi ć dated 21 February 2002
(Annex 45 to the Counter-Memorial).
233617. According to the Judgment of the Croatian District Court of Rijeka K.11/01 dated 24
March 2003, more than 32 Serb civilians were executed in the town of Gospi ć on 17
and 18 October 1991 by the Croatian Army. 607 Thus, it is very strange that the
Applicant overlooked this Judgment when it declared that there was no credible
evidence presented on the numerous executions of Serbs. More information about the
suffering of the Serbian People in the area of Northern Dalmatia in the spring of 1991
can be found in Annex 17 to this Rejoinder.
618. The same pattern of atrocities inflicted on the Serbs is characteristic for the whole of
Croatia. Evidence about massive crimes committed against the Serbs in Western Slavonia
includes witness statements of Milka Bunčić Kukić and Jovo Krajnović, taken by the
District Court in Belgrade in 1996 and 1998 respectively; a witness statement ofĐurđa
Vujasin concerning the massacre of Serbs from the village of Mašićka Šagovina on 19
December 1991; a copy of the threatening letter received by a Serb Radovan
Radosavljević shortly before he was killed in Daruvar on 25 February 1992, together with
his wife and two sons; a monitoring report of the trial for war crimes committed in the
town of Virovitica in 1991; tracing request for victim Milos Grmuša who went missing in
the town of Petrinja on 19 July 1991; and a list of non grata Serbs posted on several
hundred places in Podravska Slatina on 15 January 1992. These various documents are
annexed to the Rejoinder to demonstrate clearly and without any doubt that the Croatian
Government forces committed all forms of persecution of Serbs already in 1991. As an
example, this is how witness Jovo Krajnov ćitestified about his personal experience:
“I used to live with my family in the village of Kip in the Municipality of Daruvar and my
village was predominantly Serb. There were a few Czech and Croatian homes. Up un til
the first multi-party elections in Croatia or more precisely, until the creation of the HDZ
(Croatian Democratic Union) party, we all by and large lived in harmony and without any
major inter-ethnic frictions, whether at work or in the community. I went to work as usual
up to 15November 1991 when at 6:00 a.m. Croatian military police encircled my house in
the village (No. 35) and arrested me and my father, and the other Serb villagers. That
morning, I was all dressed up and I waited for a colleague of mine to give me a ride to
Daruvar for work at the machine factory “Dalit” when the Croatian police came to the
house. One of them hit me and my father Mijo: they tied us and forced us into the yard.
There, a few military police members (MPs) that I didn’t know beat us.” 609
607See Annex 41 to the Counter-Memorial.
608Annexes 20 – 26.
609District Court in Belgrade, Minutes of the witness hearing of Jovo Krajnović, dated 1 June 1998 (Annex 20).
234619. Witness Krajnovi ć further gives an account on th e horrific torture of the Serbs
detained in the place called Ribarske Kolib e in Marino Selo, including the executions
of at least 13 men. Witness continues:
“On Wednesday, 20 November 1991, the Croatian soldiers brought me into a hotel room
where they interrogated prisoners. They told me to sit on a chair and tied my hands on the
back; they took off my shoes and tied my legs to the chair. They tied each toe with one
piece of wire to the inductor and began rolling it. I shook all over from those electric
shocks. When this treatment of theirs was over, I rolled down the stairs into the basement.
They took Nikola Krajnović out of the basement after me and severely beat him, because
he had no Deutsch Marks that they asked him to give them. They punctured his earlobe
with a knife and put a bullet into the punctur e and connected it with the wire to the
inductor. They cut off his other ear. They subjected him to torture by electric shocks until
he collapsed from the chair. They dumped him out. The next one to be taken out was
Milan Popović. They cut off both his ears. They did the same to Pero Novkovi ć and Savo
Gojković. One ZNG member threw Savo Gojković’s ear before my father Mijo Krajnović
and forced him to gulp it down. […] In Marino Selo, the Croatian soldiers had smashed all
my teeth, broken three ribs, injured my spine and broken my jaw at three places.” 610
620. The Croatian non-governmental organization “Centre for Peace, Non-Violence and
Human Rights” from Osijek also reports about the atrocities in monitoring reports on
611
the domestic trial for war crimes committed in Marino Selo. The trial is ongoing.
621. Witness Dušan Kovač testifies how Serbs were killed by the Croatian armed forces in
villages Trnava and Medare in Western Slavonia:
“In the middle of 1991, the Croatian army coming from neighbouring Croatian villages
stormed the Serb villages of Trnava and Me dare, plundering Serbian property and going
back to those Croat villages. At that time, Serbvillages organized territorial defence units in
which I also took part. During the attack by the Croatian army on the villages of Trnava and
Medare, on 14 August 1991, the Croatian soldiers arrested me in my home. During that
attack on the village of Medare, Croatian soldiers killed Milan Zakula. They massacred him
in his home. They also killed my neighbour Dusan Strbac. They beat me severely and took
me to Slavonska Pozega, detaining me at theDistrict prison. I was held up there for 28 days
and, during this time, they interrogated and beat me several times. They fractured my lower
610Ibid.
611See Annex 40 to the Counter-Memorial.
235 jaw on the left side of my face; they damaged my left kidney as well. They mostly kicked
me with their shoes or punched me. I still feel the terrible consequences of those beatings in
the form of kidney pains or aches and pains in other parts of my body.” 612
622. The “Centre for Peace, Non-Violence and Human Rights” from Osijek also reported on
the Croatian trials for massive war crimes committed in Osijek and Paulin Dvor, two
places in Eastern Slavonia. In Osijek, at least twelve Serb civilians were executed in 1991
and thrown into the Drava River, while others were tortured and killed in the garage of the
613
National Defence Secretariat. In December 1991, eighteen residents of Paulin Dvor
614
were also killed. However, a person accused for this crime has been acquitted.
623. The Respondent also provides the Court w ith some additional sources about the
crimes committed against the Serbs in the to wns and villages of Eastern Slavonia,
615 616 617 618
including Vukovar, Sotin, Borovo and Sarvaš. According to the 2011 Youth
Initiative for Human Rights (YIHR) Re port, from early April 1991, Vukovar was a
place of “systematic terror over citizens of Serbian nationality”. Most kidnappings and
murders were committed in the summer of 1991. 619
B. Evidence that the massive crimes committed against Serbs in 1991/92 have not been
fully investigated and prosecuted
624. Although the situation concerning the pr osecution for war crimes in Croatia has
improved in the last few years under sign ificant pressure fro m the international
community, the Respondent presents evidence which clearly shows that some massive
612
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dušan Kova č, dated
613uly 1998 (Annex 40). See also, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dušan Bošnjak (Annex 39).
See Annex 38 to the Counter-Memorial.
614See Annex 39 to the Counter-Memorial.
615Municipal Court in Vukovar, Croatia, Minutes of the petitioner hearing of Nadać,lidated 21 November 2006
(Annex 28); Excerpt from the letter by Helsinki Watch to Dr. Franjo Tuđman, President of the Republic of Croatia,
concerning crimes committed in Vukovar and Sisak, published in Da,iLukić, Perović & Šalić, “Persecution of Serbs
and Ethnic Cleansing in Croatia 1991-1998 – Documents and Testimonies”, Belgrade, 1998, pp. 91-93 (Annex 29).
616
Military Court in Belgrade, Serbia, Minutes of the witness hearing of Smilja Ivkovi ć, dated 27 January 1993
617nex 27).
Statement of Vlatka Stepanović from Borovo, received by the Federal Assembly of the SFR Yugoslavia on 7
618il 1992 (Annex 30).
Letter of Bogdanka Radovi ć from the Village of Sarvaš to the Federal Assembly of the SFR Yugoslavia,
dated 2 August 1991 (Annex 31) and List of the Serb Victims killed on 2 August 1991 in Sarvaš, prepared by the
Local Community of Jelenovo, Municipality of Dalj (Annex 32).
619Annex 74 to the Rejoinder, p. 11. The Youth Initiative for Human Rights is a regional non-governmental
organization. In March 2011, this NGO published a report “Against immunity of power: prosecution of war
crimes in Croatia”.
236 crimes against Serb civilians remain unaddressed. For example, this is the case with
the above mentioned mass murd er in Paulin Dvor (see the Monitoring Report of the
Centre for Peace, Non-Violance a nd Human Rights from Osijek, Croatia), 620massive
executions and terror in Sisak (the 2009 OSCE Report on the unaddressed war-time
killings of civilians in Sisak in 1991-92; 621 the 2010 Amnesty International Briefing to
the UN Committee against Torture; 622 the 2011 YIHR Report, p. 12 62), kidnapping
and murders committed in V ukovar (YIHR Report, p. 11 624), as well as massive
expulsion of the Serb population from the vicinity of Požega in October 1991, when at
least 1,000 buildings were destroyed, 1,462 civilians forcibly displaced, and 44
civilians killed (YIHR Report, p. 14 625).
C. Evidence that massive crimes against Se rbs in 1991/92 were committed by Croatian
officials
625. From the very beginning of the armed conflict in Croatia, the leaders of Croatia’s
ruling party, the HDZ, were involved in th e planning and perpetration of the crimes
against the JNA and Serb population. On 25 January 1991, Television Belgrade and
Television Sarajevo broadcast a film compiled from the videos, pictures and other
information obtained by the Counter-Intellig ence Service of the JNA, entitled: “The
Truth about the Armament of the HDZ in Croatia”. 626One of the videos filmed in
secrect shows Croatian Defence Minister Martin Špegelj making a clear statement that
the JNA officers were planed to be executed:“Each officer is covered with five men in
Virovitica, and all of them will be cut down while they are still at home. [...] Because,
they [The HDZ paramilitary units] got a ta sk, no doubt, no one alive can come to the
barracks.” 627 This was how the Croatian “peacef ul” struggle for independence was
planned in early 1991 by the Tuđman’s political party.
620
621Annex 39 to the Counter-Memorial.
Annex 12 to the Rejoinder.
622Annex 73 to the Rejoinder.
623Annex 74 to the Rejoinder.
624Ibid.
625Ibid.
626
627Memorial, para. 2.97.
TV Belgrade, video footage, “The Truth about th e Armament of the HDZ in Croatia”, 25 January 1991,
referred to by the Applicant in the Memorial, para. 2.97.
237626. When the Memorial mentions the outbreak of the conflict at Borovo Selo and the
killing of twelve Croatian policemen, 628 it forgets to note the preceding event – a night
attack on this village with anti-tank missile s, involving radical HDZ activists led by
Gojko Šušak. The eye-witness to the attack was the regional police chief Josip Reihl-
Kir, who was a moderate person and who had worked tirelessly on both sides to
629
restore mutual trust. The HDZ extremists killed him on 1 July 1991.
627. On 13 September 1991, the then Defence Mini ster of the Republic of Croatia Luka
Bebić (and the current President of the Croatian Parliament) issued an order to all
ZNG units, as a military formation of the HDZ, and to all Crisis Committees, to start
cutting off all municipal services and the s upply of fuel to the JNA in Croatia, and
blocking of barracks, storage depots, and all routes used for the Army movements.
Commanders in the field were also author ized to undertake appropriate actions if
630
necessary. Only a week later, there was a first mass execution of the JNA soldiers
on Korana Bridge in Karlovac, when 13 soldiers were killed and two wounded. Only
one Croatian policeman, Mihajlo Hrastov, wa s charged with this crime in Croatia.
However, he was three times acquitted of a ll charges. The criminal proceedings were
reinstituted again, and he was found guilty in 2009 by the Croatian Supreme Court. In
2010, his sentence was reduced from eight to seven-years of imprisonment. Finally,
the Croatian Constitutional Court in December 2010 quashed the conviction again.
628. Branimir Glavaš, a former Secretary of the Osijek County National Defense and a
member of the Croatian Par liament, was found guilty and se ntenced to ten years in
prison by the District Court in Zagreb in 2009 for ordering murders of Serb civilians
in Osijek. 631Yet, he managed to escape justi ce, fleeing from Croatia to neighboring
Bosnia and Herzegovina. A nother Accused, Tomislav Mer čep, was also a Croatian
local National Defense Secretary, respons ible for the town of Vukovar. He was
arrested in 2010 under the order of the Croatia n Court. He is indicted for killing 43
civilians, disappearances of 3 persons, as well as torture and inhumane treatment
committed in Pakračka Poljana and Zagreb.
628Memorial, para. 2.102.
629See Laura Silber & Allan Little, The Death of Yugoslavia, Penguin Books, BBC Books, 1997, pp. 140-144.
630Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990-
1995, Vol. I, Chapter 10, p, 95, Washington DC, 2002.
631See Annex 38 to the Counter-Memorial.
238629. The District Court in Rijeka convicted General Mirko Norac, a commander of the
118 HV Brigade, as well as Tihomir Oreškovi ć, a Secretary of the Gospi ć
Operational Headquarter, for massive executions of the Serb civilians in that town in
1991. 632In addition, it is obvious from the very Judgment of the Split District Court
that the military prison in Lora harbor in Split was run in 1992 by the Croatian
military police. Also, in 2009, six Croatian military policemen were convicted for war
633
crimes in relation to the murder of 17 Serbs in Pakra čka Poljana. These recent
judgments of the Croatian courts show that the Applicant’s claim that “there is no
evidence that alleged acts were carried out by local military and political officials” is
untenable.
D. Evidence that the Croatian Government wa s aware that the Croatian armed forces
had committed massive crimes against the Serbs in 1991/92
630. The Respondent will further present eviden ce that Croatian President Franjo Tu đman
was well informed that the Croatian armed forces had committed massive crimes
against the Serb population and still did nothing to punish the crimes committed and to
prevent the further commission of such crimes. In November 1991, Mr. Ante Kari ć,
Chairman of the Emergency Headquarters for the Municipality of Gospi ć, duly
634
informed Croatian President about the te rror in that town and its vicinity. On 13
February 1992, the international NGO “Helsink i Watch” also sent a letter to the
Croatian President in order to inform him about the crimes committed against the Serb
civilians in Vukovar and Sisak. 635It is impossible that the information contained
therein remained unknown to the Croatian au thorities. By his public statement given
shortly after the 2011 ICTY verdict in Gotovina et al. case, Mr. Stjepan Mesi ć
confirmed that he was present in December 1991 when President Tu đman was
informed by one of the ministers that Serbian villages in Western Slavonia were being
636
burned “in three shifts”. Finally, it is impossible that the Croatian Government did
not note the UN reports submitted by the Sp ecial Rapporteur on human rights in the
territory of the former Yugoslavia in 1993 and 1994, to which the Respondent has
632See Annex 41 to the Counter-Memorial.
633See Counter-Memorial, para. 544.
634Annex 19.
635Annex 29.
636http://www.novilist.hr/hr/Vijesti/Hrvatska/Mesic-Kljucni-dokaz-Haagu-do…-
znao-da-srpska-sela-gore-u-tri-smjene, last visited on 29 July 2011.
239 referred in the Counter-Memorial. Accordin g to the Tenth periodic report, dated 16
January 1995, the Rapporteur received in formation that between 100 and 200 Serbs
were killed in Gospić in mid-October 1991 by Croatian army soldiers. 637
631. However, this did not prompt the Croatian Government to prevent further ethnically
motivated killings. Instead of directing Croatian commanders to show respect for
international humanitarian law, the CroatianPresident and top military officials prepared
further criminal actions: OperationsFlashand Storm. Instead of punishing perpetrators of
the above-mentioned crimes, the Croatian Government promoted them. Thus, Tomislav
Merčep became Deputy Minister of the Interior, while Gojko Šušak was appointed
Minister of Defence of the Republic of Croatia. Mirko Norac, liable for the killings in the
area of Gospić, became one of the commanders in field of OperatioS ntorm.
3. Context of national, ethnic and religious hatred
632. While the conflict in Croatia escalated and number of Croatian victims rose, many
Croat politicians and intellectuals were giving public statements which pretended to
portray the Serbian nation as animals, beasts or creatures of lower value than normal
people. This public dehumanization of the enemy created a general context of deep
national, ethnic and religious hatred which finally led to genocide during and after
Operation Storm. It was only one step from such statements to the merciless killings of
helpless Serbian civilians and those who were hors de combat.
633. The Counter-Memorial refers to the statement of Marjan Juri ć, Member of the
Croatian Parliament, at the session held on 1-3 August 1991, which inter alia reads:
“Our almighty God has created at the same time both good people and a lot of vermin.
One of such vermin is the moth which, when let into the closet, in fact when it comes into
it, it eats at the shirt, then it turns to the pullover; it eats and eats until it has eaten
638
everything away. The same is true of those who came to us as our guest-workers.”
This statement refers to the Serb population in Croatia. The Applicant does not dispute
the accuracy of the quotation. 639
637Counter-Memorial, para. 546 and fn. 478.
638Counter-Memorial, para. 440.
639Reply, para. 3.27.
240634. In a similar manner, Šime Đodan, Special Envoy of the Croatian President Franjo
Tuđman, in his speech at a traditional competition in Sinj held in August 1991, stated:
“The Serbs had pointed heads and probably also small brains.” 640
635. The Counter-Memorial also point s out the Croatian magazine Slobodni tjednik (Free
Weekly) as a notorious example of a ta bloid which only published inflammatory
articles about Serbs. 641 The Reply answers that Slobodni tjednik was a private tabloid
and the mainstream Croatian media distanced itself from it. 642 As an example, the
Applicant offers a quote from the weekly Danas (Today) that should represent the
position of the Croatian mainstream media reporting. 643 Yet, the following quote
comes from an article published in Danas on 12 November 1991, in which Krešimir
Dolenčić, Director of Gavella Theatre in Zagreb, described Serbs in the following
way:
“Beasts from the East stand no chance. A monkey smashes everything around the house
and it is all the same to the animal whether it smashed a glass or a Chinese vase, because
it is unable to tell the difference. There is no way that the monkey has any chances in the
fight against the human. There will always be a way to put it to sleep and place it in a cage
where it belongs. [...] The distinction between us and them is like between computers of
the first and the fifth generation. They should either be held in captivity or destroyed ,
because nothing better could be expected of them. There could not be much talk or
negotiation with them. I am convinced that their culture is below the primitive level, since
644
primitive cultures can be interesting and rich spiritually.”
645
636. There is no doubt that the above-quoted st atement went beyond mere hate-speech.
This statement publicly and directly communicated the call to members of the general
public at large for destroying Serbs. The specific genocidal intent is obvious from the
very text of this message.
640
641N. Barić, Serb Rebellion in Croatia 1990-1995 (Srpska pobuna u Hrvatskoj 1990-1995)., Zagreb, 2005, p. 137.
Couner-Memorial, para. 438.
642Reply, para. 3.26.
643Ibid, footnote 64.
644See Annex 51 to the Counter-Memorial.
645“Hate-speech is a discriminatory form of aggression that destroys the dignity of those in the group under
attack. It creates a lesser status not only in the eyes of the group members themselves but also in the eyes of
others who perceive and treat them as less than human”, ICTR, Nahimana et al. v. Prosecutor (ICTR-99-52-A),
Appeals Chamber Judgment of 28 November 2007, para. 1072.
241637. This atmosphere persistently existed in Croatia even after 1991. For instance,
Zvonimir Šekulin, Editor-in-chief of Hrvatski vijesnik, in his interview published in
magazine Globus, Zagreb, on 9 September 1994, stated:
“Considering that the Hrvatski vijesnik really runs a column entitled ‘hard-core Serb
pornographic pages’, I also admit that this newspaper is in part pornographic as the Serbs
themselves are pornography. Photograph of Patriarch Pavle [Head of the Serbian
Orthodox Church], published on these pages, is more pornographic than the photos of the
biggest whores. […] [N ame] wrote that I said that some people were vermin. But I say
646
that only the so-called Serbian people are vermin.”
638. All of these statements were reprinted in Annex 51 to the Counter-Memorial. Not one
of the above mentioned persons have ever been indicted in Croatia for these
statements, neither as direct and public incitement to genocide nor as any other crime
under the Croatian domestic cr iminal law. This was an overall context in which
Operation Storm took place. As Croatian philos opher and vice-president of the
Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights Professor Žarko Puhovski stated in
the documentary Storm over Krajina,
“a large number of incidents [during Operation Storm] … were influenced by motions,
[b]ut these incidents, these motions had been prepared for years through propaganda, from
television to the president of the country and all public factors in Croatia who convinced
the Croatian population and especially the soldiers that the Serbs are guilty as such and
647
that they should be punished as such.”
4. Massive crimes against Serbs after the deployment of UNPROFOR in 1992
639. In this section the Respondent will further show that crimes were committed against
Serb civilians even after the deployment of UNPROFOR which preceded the genocide
in August 1995 against Krajina Serbs and will address the Applicant’s position
towards such crimes. While the Applicant acknowledged that the Respondent admitted
648
the victims on Croatian side, the Applicant does not show even an attempt to
express remorse for the Serbian victims . Accordingly, the Respondent does not
646See Annex 51 to the Counter-Memorial.
647ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al, Transcripts, 13 Fabruary 2009, page 15901; available on
http://www.icty.org/x/cases/gotovina/trans/en/090213ED.htm
648Reply, para.10.16.
242 generally dispute that there were numerous Croatian civilian victims – it only disputes
that any such crimes amounted to genocide and that those victims were victims of
genocide, approach also taken in the Counter-Memorial. The Applicant takes the polar
opposite position, completely dismissing all a llegations of crimes against Serbs. The
Respondent finds this particularly striking considering that Serb victims killed prior to
Operation Storm are not even claimed to be the victims of genocide and there is
therefore no need for the Applicant to attempt to dismiss those casualties in the present
proceeding. Furthermore, crimes committed in Maslenica, Medak Pocket or Western
Slavonia are hardly in dispute as their existence was affirmed by documents. The truth
that civilians on both sides suffered by the ha nds of the other side cannot therefore be
denied. This is clearly visible from, amon g other things, reports on the status of
refugees and displaced persons relating to co mbat activities that were taking place in
Croatia. For example the US State Departme nt reported the situation on the ground
before 1993 in the following manner:
“According to statistics compiled by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), as of October 1993, there was a total of 247,000 Croatian and other non-
Serbian displaced persons coming from areas under the control of the ‘RSK’ and 254,000
Serbian displaced persons and refugees from the rest of Croatia, an estimated 87,000 of
649
whom were inhabitants of the UNPA’s.”
640. Therefore, any attempt on the part of the Applicant to deny the crimes committed by
its forces cannot succeed and it moreover fu rther undermines its objectivity in these
proceedings, the methodology it relies on in presenting the facts, and the way it is
using evidence in support of its claims.
641. Returning to the subject matter of the Reply, in the present submission the Respondent
will reply only to the Applicant’s most serious mischaracterizations of crimes
committed against Serbs which were set out in the Counter-Memorial. As for the other
crimes against Serb victims before Operation Storm, the Court is referred to the
650
updated list of Serbs who were killed. The following paragraphs therefore deal with
actions taken by Croatia in Maslenica, Medak Pocket, and during Operation Flash.
649Croatia Human Rights Practices, 1993, U.S. Department of State, 31 January 1994.
650See www.veritas.org.rs
243 A. OperationMaslenica
642. At the outset, the Respondent has to not e the Applicant’s position in relation to
Operation Maslenica, namely that Croatia achieved a legitimate humanitarian and
651
military objective through this operation. However, the UN Security Council took a
different position in relation to this attack, stating in its resolution 802/93 that it was:
“Deeply concerned by the information provided by the Secretary-General to the Security
Council on 25 January 1993 on the rapid and violent deterioration of the situation in
Croatia as a result of military attacks by Croatian armed forces on the areas under the
protection of the United Nation Protection Force (UNPROFOR),
Strongly condemning those attacks which have led to casualties and loss of life in
UNPROFOR, as well as among the civilian population,
Demands the immediate cessation of hostile activities by Croatian armed forces within or
adjacent to the United Nation Protected Areas and the withdrawal of the Croatian armed
forces from these areas…”
643. What is furthermore problematic is that the Applicant simply fails to acknowledge that
the operation was an attack on a protected z one and that it was planned in advance by
Croatian armed forces. It ignores the fact that Croatia refused to withdraw pursuant to
the UN SC resolution 802 and that this action resulted in forced expulsion out of the
protected area of over 10,000 Serbs 652 who were never allowed to return to their
homes. 653 In addition to ignoring certain facts, the Applicant also misrepresents others
in an effort to present its actions as fully legitimate. For example, the Applicant states
that the RSK forces detonated explosives on Peru ča Dam calling upon the Report of
the UN Secretary General from 16 March 1994 and Security Council resolution
654
779. However, this Security Council reso lution is based on the report of the
Secretary General from 28 September 1992 that is not cited by the Applicant. This
report does not mention any such incident, namely that the explosive was detonated or
655
that the Dam was damaged by the RSK forces. This clearly shows that the
651Reply, para.10.48.
652
653N. Barić, Serb Rebellion in Croatia 1990-1995 (Srpska pobuna u Hrvatskoj 1990),. agreb, 2005, page.186.
654See UN SC res. 802 (25 January 1993), see also Counter Memorial, para.1125.
655See Reply para.10.49, footnote 100.
See Further Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to Security Council Resolution 743 (1992) and 762
(1992), 28 September 1992, UN Doc. S/24600, paras. 29-30.
244 Applicant’s portrayal of events in Maslenica fails to include significant aspects which
seriously bring into question the alleged legitimate objectives of the attack, as well as
the Applicant’s version of the events represented in the Reply.
B. Medak Pocket
644. The Respondent will begin addressing the Appl icant’s allegations in this respect by
referring to the Applicant’s alleged reason for the attack on the Medak Pocket, namely
the allegation that the reason behind the attack was an attempt to stop the shelling of
656
Gospić from Serbian strongholds. This is in contradiction with the fact that after the
takeover of the Medak Pocket the town of Gospi ć nevertheless remained within the
657
range of the SVK heavy artillery.
645. The sources invoked by the Applicant such as the Final Report of the UN Commission
of Experts, more specifically its Annex VII, which is used in an attempt to dispute the
Respondent’s evidence, also do not help th e Applicant. A closer look at the said
Annex VII only further reaffirms the Respondent’s case, as the Special Rapporteur
noted that:
“As UN forces entered the Pocket, they found every building burning or demolished.
There were hundreds of such buildings in the several villages and hamlets, none of which
were habitable. Special sweep teams assessed and recorded damage, searched for
survivors and collected bodies. The teams included UNPROFOR medical officers,
UNCIVPOLs, and soldiers.” 658
646. And the Applicant fails to appreciate that the UN Final Report also states that:
„Unlike the deaths arising from the Medak Pocket Operation, there is a clear, obvious and
overwhelming pattern of wanton destruct ion. Hundreds of homes were destroyed,
virtually hundreds of other buildings were destroyed, most animals were killed or taken,
virtually all personal property was destroyed or taken, all vehicles and farm equipment
656
657See Reply, para.10.57.
See the CIA map of Operation Storm, map no. 9 with the Counter-Memorial, Sourse: Balkan Battlegrounds.
658See Final Report of the Commission of Experts established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780
(1992), 27 May 1994, UN Doc. S/1994/674, Annex VII, para.36.
245 were destroyed or taken, haystacks were fired, and many wells were polluted. Devastation
was total. The timing of the destruction is inconsistent with any legitimate military
conduct or of military necessity. The bulk of this destruction occurred on 16 September,
according to the many eyewitnesses. The sounds of the explosions, the rising of the smoke
from fires, and the fact many buildings were still on fire as UN personnel entered the
659
Pocket establish this.“
647. The fact referred to by the Respondent in the Counter-Memorial that Croatian forces
were preventing entry of UNPROFOR into the area, in an attempt to complete the
ethnic cleansing of the Serbian population, is confirmed by Annex VII of the Final
Report:
„As the UN forces began to deploy into the Pocket on 16 September, they could hear tens
of explosions and see new smoke rising from Croat-controlled territory. There were no
Serb forces in those areas nor had there been for many days. Such explosions and smoke
had not been seen before 15 September. They also heard small arms fire from the same
area. There are many witnesses to this including nearly all Canbat I personnel, UNMOs,
UNCIVPOLs, UN civilian personnel, UN and Canadian Forces public affairs personnel
and news reporters. All suspected that the Croats were engaged in ethnic cleansing of the
Pocket before turning it over to the UN. [...]
At noon, 16 September, Croat forces prevented Canbat I soldiers from crossing into the
Pocket. ...UN personnel felt the delay was a deliberate tactic used by the Croats to give
660
them more time to complete their ethnic cleansing of the Pocket.”
648. In a mere effort to dismiss all allegations of crimes which had taken place in the
Medak Pocket, the Applicant seems to have also forgotten the facts established in
judgments rendered by its own courts in relation to these crimes. This pertains to the
case against Ademi and Norac which was transferred to the Croatian judiciary
according to Rule 11bis of the ICTY Rules of Procedure and Evidence on 1 November
2005. 661The proceeding, although very problematic in the sense of the scope of the
Indictment, type of responsibility and the level of punishment, did establish that
serious crimes against Serb’s civilians, POWs and property had been perpetrated in the
659
660Ibid, para.88.
Ibid, paras. 32-34.
661ICTY, Ademi and Norac , IT-01-46 & IT-04-76, Decision for Referal to the Authorities of the Republic of
Croatia pursuant to Rule 11bis, 14 September 2005.
246 Medak Pocket in September 1993. The Accu sed Mirko Norac was found guilty of
killing, including that of civilians Nedeljko and Stana Krajnovi ć (that were killed and
burned), and Djuro and Stevo Vujnovi ć, destruction of more than 150 houses in six
villages, killing of war prisoners Nikola Stojisavljevi ć (who was first wounded with
gun and than hanged from the three and the knifes were thrown at him) and killing of
Nikola Bulje (who was humiliated in different ways before he died – he was hit with a
whip and salt was poured on his wounds). 662
649. This same case, unfortunately, also refutes the Applicant’s claim that it has held its
highest officials accountable for all crimes which took place in Medak Pocket at the
time. Responsibility was therefore not estab lished for the killing of more than 30
civilians, many of whom were killed in a very brutal manner, 663 as charged in the
Indictment, or killings of at least 5 war prisoners. This is also reaffirmed in reports
made by NGOs in relation to the Judgment against Mirko Norac. For example, the
NGO “Centre for Dealing with the Past” issued the following statement in respect to
the finding of the second instance court:
“[...] By passing the sentence upon appeal in the case against the accused Rahim Ademi
and Mirko Norac for the crime committed at Medacki Dzep, the judiciary has not been
half way through in bringing to justice those responsible for the serious crime in which
dozens of civilians were killed (around 40 bodies were hidden in an organized fashion-
collected and thrown into the septic tank and buried) and by destroying more then a
hundred houses and a number of farmhouses in villages of Rajcevici, Krajnovici,
Potkonjaci, Drljici, Strunici, Veliki Kraj, Donje Selo i Divosel the civilian population
were prevented from getting back to their homes and therefore all these villages remained
uninhabited even today [...].”664
650. Although involvement in atrocities was es tablished, the defendant Mirko Norac was
not only given a light sentence at the first instance, his sentence was later reduced by
the Supreme Court of Croatia. He also con tinues to enjoy benefits while serving his
662District Court in Zagreb, Ademi and Norac case, excerpt from the Judgment of 29 May 2008 (Annex 35).
663
Murder of Bosiljka Bjegovi ć, 84-year-old blind woman in front of her house; murder of Sara Kri čković in the
basement of her house, where her neck was cut; murder of disabled Dmitar Jovi ć; murder of Boja Pjevač, whose
three fingers were cut; murder of retarded Milan Račević who was tied between two threes, stabbed by the
664fes that were thrown at him and at the end put on fire.
Available on
http://www.documenta.hr/documenta/attachments/189_Povodom%20presude%20V…-
%20Medacki%20dzep.doc
247 665
time in prison, which together with other noted facts in relation to his conviction
further demonstrates that Croatia considers this man, twice convicted for crimes
against Serbs, 666 to be a war hero rather than a war criminal.
C. Operation Flash
651. Operation Flash was the most notorious criminal action preceding the genocide
committed in Operation Storm. In regard to this operation, the Applicant again
chooses to simply dismiss the killings and other crimes committe d by the Croatian
Army. This however cannot stand in face of abundant evidence speaking about those
crimes, such as the evidence which th e Respondent presented in the Counter-
Memorial and the evidence that will be briefly discussed below.
652. The nature of the crimes committed during Operation Flash are best understood from
statements of Serb victims. The Serb population fled in the face of the Croatian Army
from the area of Oku čani, but also from other areas, towards Bosanska Gradiška and
the Republica Srpska. The column of Serbs was moving very slowly toward the bridge
on the River Sava, which allowe d Croat forces to shell and shoot at the column. On
the road and on the side of the road th ere were many bodies of killed civilians,
damaged and destroyed tractors, destroye d and damaged passengers vehicles and
trucks. Among dead bodies there were bodies of women, children and elderly. 667This
was described by eye witness Dušan Bošnjak:
“The convoy of tractors and horse-drawn carts left on the morning of 2 May. When we
came to the village of Nova Varos, which was halfway through between Okucani and
Gradiska, we were attacked with the heaviest gunfire from both sides, by the Croatian
army. About 3.5 kilometres of the road were covered by so many bodies of dead Serbs
that it was difficult to walk without stepping on them. [...]
The Croatian soldiers overturned tractors and set them relentlessly on fire, killing elderly
men, women and children. Their bodies lay on the road or by the roadside. I recognized
many men, women and children among those killed. They were all from the village of
66Norac was given provisional relief from prison to be able to attend his wedding celebration with 400 guests
which became the main event in the Croatian newspapers -
http://www.slobodnadalmacija.hr/Hrvatska/tabid/66/articleType/ArticleVi…
666Norac was also convicted for crimes which took place in Gospić , see District Court Rijeka, Orešković et al.,
Judgment of 24 March 2003 (Annex 41 to the Counter-Memorial).
667See Annex 37 (witness statement of Anđelko Đurić) and Annex 38 (witness statement of Milena Milojević).
248 Medare. I saw the Croatian soldiers killing Milan Daic and wounding his namesake father
Milan in the back. I also saw when they wounded Milan Daic’s cousin Aco, in seven
places. As I drove in my tractor with a trai ler, I managed to load many of those wounded
who were still alive. I don’t know their exact number, but the trailer, which could carry a
load of 5 tons, was full of wounded people. I managed to drive the tractor to the Save
bridge and to cross to the other bank of the river into Gradiska, in the Republic of Srpska.
I was shot, together with my tractor and trailer, and those pictures were shown on the
Banja Luka television.” 668
653. Witness Milena Milojević described what she witnessed on the road:
“The convoy crawled and was constantly incessantly targeted by the Croatian army all the
way until it reached the Sava bridge. The shell-fire became very heavy when we got near
the village of Nova Varos, which is half way through and farther on to the village of
Kanalstruk. The road wound through the forest there and the Croatian army opened fire at
the convoy from both sides of the road, hiding in the forest. People driving in tractor-
trailers, horse-drawn carts fell on the road or by the roadside, and their bodies lay in the
trailers or horse-drawn carts or below them. There were many dead bodies of women,
669
children, elderly people and others.”
654. Specific accounts of children that were k illed were also given by witness Milena
Milojević who testified that Nemanja Goji ć, age 9, and Dajana Goji ć, age 7, were
670
killed in the convoy. Witness Anđelko Đurić stated that the road from Oku čani to
671
the bridge on River Sava was all covered in blood. However, witnesses also stated
that soon after the events the road to Okučani to Gradiška was shown on the television
and was completely clean free of any traces of dead bodies and destroyed vehicles.
According to the witnesses this was done very fast in order to conceal the extent of the
crimes committed, 672by first burning the bodies and then by burying them while
UNPROFOR was being denied access to the area. 673
668
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dušan Bošnjak, dated
669September 1995 (Annex 39).
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Milena Milojevi ć,
dated 22 September 1995 (Annex 38).
670Ibid.
671Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of An đelko Đurić, dated
1 July 1998 (Annex 37).
672Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Milena Milojevi ć,
dated 22 September 1995 (Annex 38).
673Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Dušan Bošnjak, dated
22 September 1995 (Annex 39).
249655. Witness Radojica Vukovi ć gave an account of killing of his family members who
stayed behind the refugee column. In the village of Merdare, which was a scene of
massive crimes already in 1991 (see supra in this Chapter, Section 2.A), two of his
674
brothers were executed together with their spouses and children. The bodies of
675
family Vuković were identified only in March 2011.
656. In addition to this, the criminal intent of Croatian forces towards Serbs can be seen
from witness statements describing cond itions under which they were detained.
Witness Zoran Malini ć described how, while detained in Varaždin, the victims were
continuously beaten while being interrogate d and how they were not given water.
Malinić was also tortured while he was detained in Bjelovar. He testified that 17
prisoners were lined up against the wall and beaten with steel bars, with electric wires,
wooden buttons. When he was exchanged on 4 August 1997 he weighed 62 kilos
compared with 85 kilos when he had been arrested. 676
657. The few Serbs who remained in Western Slavonia were, according to the testimony of
witnesses, persecuted by the Croa tian forces. Witness Branko Mudrini ć testified that
after he was released from detention as a civi lian and returned to Pakrac, he and other
Serbs there were prevented from leaving their houses because Croatian police told
them that Serbs are not allowed to move around the town. He confirmed that in the
evening hours Croatian police entered the Se rbian apartments threatening that Serbs
should either leave as soon as possible or expect to be taken to prison camps and
677
executed.
658. The Respondent will also address at this point arguments adduced by the Applicant in
its Reply in support of its thesis that Operation Flash was justified since it was
provoked by the Serbian side. One of the most cited documents in section IV is a Serb
Report on the Causes and Manner of the Fall of Western Slavonia. 678 Contrary to the
674Basic Court in Gradiška, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Radojica Vukovi ć, dated
20 September 1995 (Annex 41).
675
http://www.politika.rs/vesti/najnovije-vesti/Identifikovani-posmrtni-os…-
676atskoj.lt.html
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Zoran Malini ć, dated
677June 1998 (Annex 43).
Basic Court in Prijedor, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Branko Mudrini ć, dated
10 April 1997 (Annex 42).
678Annex 140 of the Reply.
250 Applicant’s arguments, the report plainly reaffirms what was written by the
Respondent in the Counter-Memorial about the preparation of the plan for an attack
Serbs territory in Western Slavonia long before Operation Flash took place.
“Members of the army, the police and local municipal authorities through their work
prevented the functioning of the rule of law on the territory of Western Slavonia. These
structures aided by Knin highest level, prev ented the RSK as a state to comply with a
single international agreement that it had signed itself. In this way, they directly helped
Croatia by proving a pretext for a military attack, before the eyes of the whole world,
despite all the warnings. The fact is that Croatia had long before prepared a plan of the
attack on Western Slavonia, that our authorities had known about that plan and that the
plan itself envisaged its realization once the Serbs could be accused before the whole
world of provoking an attack. That is precisely what happened on 1 May 1995.” 679
659. Information from the report further confirms that the Serb heavy artillery was kept
with UNPROFOR and could not have been deployed when Operation Flash begun.
“Insufficient perseverance and tenacity of defence was caused by late deployment of
heavy hardware, as they had been held in the depots of UN forces. The hardware left the
depots and was sent to the areas of deployment when the aggression had already
begun.” 680
660. The allegation that the rebel Serbs committed several crimes in the period preceding
Operation Flash is supposedly supported by a reference to a book of Nikica Bari ć,
681
Serb Rebellion in Croatia 1990–1991 . This was obviously a mistake considering
that the book makes no reference to such crimes. Notably, on p. 492 of the book there
is an explanation that Operation Flash was planned well in advance. Bari ć, who was
cited by the Applicant, states that the attack on Western Slavonia was not at all
provoked by the closing of the highwa y. He furthermore notes that Tu đman and his
associates agreed to stage a new attack on motor vehicles if there was a possibility that
the highway would be opened. This staged attack was prepared in order to show that a
682
peaceful solution was not possible.
679
680Ibid (emphasis added).
681Ibid.
682See Reply, para.10.89, footnote 186.
See N.Barić, Srpska pobuna u Hrvatskoj 1990 – 1995, Zagreb, 2005, pp. 492-493.
251661. This was actually discussed at length on 30 April 1995 during the session of Croatia’s
683
Council for Defense and National Security. President Tu đman explained to the
participants:
“President: So, at six a.m. when they start, we should say Serbian forces caused an
incident again. I told Ministers that they should go in two or three cars and let them shoot
at them [...]
Gojko Šušak: We will do our best, Mr. President.
President: So, a new incident and police forces went to take control of the highway.
Gojko Šušak: Mr. President, the worst case scenario would be to go in, lets say, two cars,
two vans, leave them, have them riddled all over with bullets, and film this for television,
684
if there is no other option.”
662. What is even more symptomatic about the behaviour of the Croatian leadership is that
they knew that the Serbs were trying to open the highway. As stated by Ivan Jarnjak
on the 30 April meeting:
“Ivan Jarnjak: […] what is striking, Mr. President, is that those who came from their
side yesterday, said this – that they had been treated fairly, actually more than fairly, that
one could almost feel panic, insecurity, among the Serbs, that they did their best to be as
cooperative as possible and all the morning they insisted on opening the highway. But we
refused and stuck to what we had agreed the previous day.” 685
663. The quoted sources show that Croatia actually knew that there was a real possibility
that the highway would be opened and di d everything to provoke further conflict
because their real intent was to cleanse Western Slavonia of Serbs regardless of the
means required to accomplish that.
664. As for the Applicant’s allegation that the Serb population left not because it was being
driven out but pursuant to an “exodus” plan made by the rebel Serb leadership, 686 this
issue will be dealt in greater length in the next section. The Respondent, however,
reminds the Court that chilling testimonies of Serb witnesses presented above clearly
refute this allegation.
683
Document is in the possession of the Applicant. It was published in the weekly newspaper NIN, Belgrade on
6 February 2004, available at: http://www.nin.co.rs/pages/article.php?id=14735
684Ibid.
685Ibid.
686See Reply, para.10.97.
252665. The Respondent also points to Croatia’s a ttitude of both denying and justifying the
crimes committed against Serbs during Operation Flash and during the previous
operations in Maslenica and the Medak Pocket, which fostered a climate of a tacit
understanding that serious crimes against the Serbs were acceptable and justifiable. This
attitude helped pave the way for the genocide that was perpetrated against Krajina Serbs
and, unfortunately, this attitude remains in place even today. During the celebration of
16 years of Operation Flash the current President of the Croatian Assembly, Luka
Bebić, stated that the military action Flash had “lightened the upcoming Storm”, and
687
that the “military OperationFlash famously began and finished.”
5. Refusal of the peace plans by the RSK
666. The Respondent now turns to the Applicant’ s allegation that a peaceful resolution of
the conflict was not a possibility due to the RSK’s position in that respect. The
Applicant states that although it was w illing to reach such a settlement and was
extensively involved in negotiations to that end, the RSK constantly refused to engage
in any meaningful dialogue. 688 However evidence shows that negotiations were
heading towards a peaceful solution and that there was no need for an attack by
Croatia, because it would have accordin gly achieved its goal, which was the
reintegration of contentious territories , through peace negotiations. It nonetheless
consciously opted for Operation Storm because a peaceful solution would have
implied that Krajina Serbs would remain in Croatia. This is confirmed by the ICTY
first instance Judgment in Gotovina et al. case where the Trial Chamber found that the
JCE developed by the Croatian leadership e nvisaged quite the contrary of what the
Applicant is arguing, namely the plan to violently cleanse Krajina of Serbs.
A. Refusal of the RSK to fully demilitarize
667. It should also be noted at the outset that the Applicant’s claim that Serbs refused to
accept any peace plans and constantly armed themselves for defense is contradictory
to another claim also advanced by the Applicant – that Serbs left Croatia according to
687
See http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/bebic- bljesak-je-obasjao-nadolazecu-oluju/549679.aspx, last visited
688May 2011.
paras.11.4, 11.12, 11.16, 11.20-11.22, 11.25, 11.29, 11.31, 11.36.y negotiations unlike the RSK was advanced in
253 a prepared plan. 689 In addition to that, this thesis was also presented by the defense in
the Gotovina et al case and was turned down by the ICTY Trial Chamber. 690
668. At the outset, the Respondent wishes to respond to the Applicant’s reference to
demilitarization. As noted in the Counte r-Memorial, demilitarization of the RSK
691
began with withdrawal of JNA forces, pursuant to the Vence Plan. The Respondent
acknowledged that Krajina was not fully de militarized. However, when alleging that
some units of the RSK had automatic rifles and machine guns the Applicant fails to
692
acknowledge that the RSK in fact did hand over its heavy artillery to the UN.
Therefore, although the RSK did not fully demilitarize, it did in fact voluntarily hand
over its most important weaponry. This was confirmed in the Martić Judgment cited
693
by the Applicant. The part of the Judgment not cited by the Applicant notes:
“Thus, the Vance Plan was interpreted by th e RSK authorities to mean that UNPROFOR was
to protect the population in the aeas of deployment. In this context, the Trial Chamber notes
that Croatian forces carried out several armed incursions into the UNPAs between 1992 and
1995, including on the Miljevac plateau on 21 June 1992, Maslenica on 22 January 1993,
694
Medak pocket on 9 and 12 September 1993, and Operation Flash from 1 May 1995.”
669. The Applicant further selectively cites the Special Rapporteur Tadeusz Mazowiecki
Report omitting to cite the end of para. 13 of the Report that states that
“[…] from November 1992 onwards, the situation improved in all but a few areas. The
maintenance of law and order was gradually enhanced through the reorganization and
redeployment of the local police. The carrying of ‘long arms’, in breach of the agreed
plan, greatly diminished, and by January 1993 such arms were being carried only by the
‘border militia’. The Serb authorities had informed UNPROFOR that these, too, would be
withdrawn once they were sure that UNPROFO R could exercise full protection against
Croatian incursions across the line of confrontation.” 695
689
In relation to Operation Flash see Reply paras. 10.97-10.100; and in relation to OperatioStorm see Reply
690as 11.31,11.65, 11.77-11.86.
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al(IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 1512-1539.
691Counter Memorial, para.1121.
692See Counter Memorial para 1121-1122.
693Reply, para.10.40.
694ICTY, Prosecutor v. Martić (IT-95-11-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 12 June 2007, para.153.
695See Report on the situation of human rights in the territory of the former Yugoslavia submitted by Mr.
Tadeusz Mazowiecki, Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights, pursuant to Commission
resolution 1992/S-1/1 of 14 August 1992, 10 February 1993, UN Doc. E/CN.4/1993/50.
254670. It is therefore obvious that the Applicant’s assertion that the Respondent is contradictory
in his statements regarding factors which had impact on demilitarization of the RSK is
696
incorrect. The weapons in possession of the Serbs mentioned in the Report above were
sufficient to defend a civilian population from small scale actions and incursions but were
not enough to defend it from more serious attacks by Croatian forces. Therefore, the RSK
was in fact demilitarized to a large extent and did in fact heavily rely on UN forces for
protection (which failed in that respect). The aforementioned outcomes of various attacks
by the Croatian army and the victims on Serbian side clearly confirm this point as Serbs,
because of the failure of UN forces to provide protection when situation became critical,
were obviously not able to defend themselves despite efforts to that effect.
B. There was progress between the parties
671. The Applicant asserts, in response to Chapter XII of the Counter-Memorial, that there was
697
no real progress between the parties (Croatia and the RSK). However, the analysis
698
provided by the Applicant is contradictory even prima facie. While the Applicant
acknowledges that the RSK signed a general ceasefire agreement, it asserts that negotiations
699
were impossible through the summer of 1994. The Secretary-General’s report from 17
September 1994 also noted that after June 1994 the Serb side continued to express support
for the cease-fire agreement and that discussions between the two sides were held in Knin of
700
5 August. Furthermore, an Economic Agreement was signed on 2 December 1994 and
the highway was opened in Sectors East and West on 21 December 1994. However, as was
701
shown supra, the Croatian leadership even provoked an incident in order to halt the
existing progress and implement its plans to cleanse the Western Slavonia of Serbs.
672. Evidence relied on by the Applicant in respect to this argument, which it repeats in
Chapter 11 of the Reply, is also taken out of context. For example, in paras 11.12 and
11.13 of the Reply, as evidence that the RSK was not willing to reach a peaceful
solution the Applicant cites Mrkši ć’s testimony in the Gotovina case and Mrkši ć’s
696
697Reply, para.10.40.
698Reply, para.10.41.
699Reply, paras. 10.62-10.67.
700Reply, paras. 10.64-10.65.
See Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to Security Council Resolution 908 (1994), 17 September 1994,
UN Doc. S/1994/1067.
701See paras. 666-669 above.
255 order dated 1 June 1995 (Annex 152 with the Reply). Both of these documents
however show that Mrkši ć is saying that he wants to do everything in his power to
turn Croatia away from the attack and to accept a peaceful solution.
C. Refusal of the Z4 plan
673. The allegation that the Z4 plan was turned dow n by Serbs (para. 11.18) is also erroneous.
During the extraordinary session of the RSK, on 8 February 1995, 702there was no
decision to withdraw from the negotiations until the mandate of the UN peacekeeping
forces was extended. What actually happe ned during the Assembly session was a
discussion about requesting an extension ofthe UN mandate and postponing negotiations
until such a decision was made. The Assembly accepted this proposal. At the Assembly
session on 30 March 1995, the RSK was trying to find ways to keep its political position
when Croatia proclaimed its sovereignty over the entire territory. 703Considering that on
1 May Croatia engaged in the OperationFlash, which had well known consequences for
Serbian population of WesternSlavonia, it becomes more than clear why the RSK was
not very eager to accept a new UNCRO mandate instead of UNPROFOR.
674. The Applicant furthermore misinterprets the substance of the Letter from the
Secretary-General addressed to the Presiden t of the Security Council, dated 7 August
(Annex 151 to the Reply) with the view of eliminating its responsibility for
continuation of hostilities between the tw o sides, and namely the beginning of
Operation Storm. 704 However, a careful reading of this letter sheds a completely
different light in regards to attribution of blame:
“Meanwhile, on 29 July, my Special Representative, Mr. Yasushi Akashi, had met with
President Tuđman to forestall what appeared to be an imminent military confrontation.
President Tuđman expressed his Government’s willingness to participate in political and
military talks with Knin, but stressed that progress on the ground must necessarily follow.
If such progress was not achieved in a matter of days, Croatia would take whatever
measures it deemed necessary to redress the situation. Specifically the President insisted
on the reopening of the Adriatic oil pipeline within 24 hours, rapid agreement on the
opening of the Zagreb-Knin-Split railway and immediate progress on political re-
702See Annex 148 to the Reply.
703See Annex 150 to the Reply.
704See paras 11.32-11.35 of the Reply.
256 integration of the Serbs on the basis of Croatia’s Constitution and Law on Minorities.
President Tuđman did, however, agree to send representatives to Geneva for the meeting
sponsored by the International Conference on 3 August.
My Special Representative held emergency talks on 30 July with the local Serb authorities in
Knin. He secured a six-point commitment that their forces would withdraw fully from the
Bihac pocket and desist from further cross-border interference (see annex I). However, the
Croatian Government considered these commitments insufficient. In a written reply, President
Tuđman rejected the agreement, on the grounds that it did not meet the terms he had presented
to my Special Representative (see annex II). The Croatian Government did, however, reaffirm
its readiness to participate in the talks at Geneva. On 3 August, at Geneva, Mr. Stoltenberg duly
chaired the meeting of the representatives of the Croatian Government and the Croatian Serbs.
The former took the position that the Croatian Serb leadership must immediately accept
reintegration under the Croatian Constitution and Laws. The Croatian Serb delegation
proceeded from the starting-point that there should be a cessation of hostilities, following which
other issues could be discussed. After a series of bilateral meetings, the Co-Chairman presented
to the two delegations a list of seven points covering, inter alia, the reopening of the oil pipeline,
the reopening of the Zagreb-Knin-Split railway and negotiations on a final settlement on the
basis of the "Zagreb-4" plan.The Croatian Serb delegation was inclined to accept the paper as
a useful basis for progress, subject to clearance by its political leadership, but the Croatian
Government delegation’s view was that the paper did not address its fundamental concern for
the Krajina Serbs to be reintegrated under the Croatian Constitution and Laws.
Following the Croatian Government’s rejection of the paper prepared at Geneva, I
telephoned President Tuđman on the evening of 3 August and urged the utmost restraint.
At the same time, I instructed Mr. Stoltenberg to proceed to Zagreb the next morning and
to continue to work closely with Mr. Akashi in trying to prevent an outbreak of hostilities.
Despite these United Nations efforts and similar efforts by various Member States, at
0500 hours on 4 August the Croatian Army launched a major offensive against the Krajina
region (Sectors North and South).” (emphasis added)
675. The Applicant also cites, in para. 11.35 of the Reply, Babi ć’s testimony in the
705
Milošević case, in particular the part where Babi ć is saying that he personally
accepted the plan but had to confirm with Miloševi ć. In support of this the Applicant
cites the Galbraith testimony that Babi ć accepted the plan but that there were doubts
that he would have more leverage than Milošević and Martić as to the final outcome –
705Annex 162 to the Reply.
257 i.e. acceptance of the plan. However, this fragment of a more comprehensive account
comes into context when one looks at the rest of Babi ć’s testimony which the
Applicant omitted to cite. From that testimony it is clear that Milošević told Babić that
he was in favor of accepting the plan and that everything should be done peacefully.
Furthermore, Babić said that he publicly announced that the plan was accepted. The
omitted part of Babi ć’s testimony explains that he spoke with Slobodan Miloševi ć in
relation to the Z-4 plan and that Miloševi ć told him “Yes, yes. Just slowly, slowly,
everything should be conducted calmly or peacefully”. 706 Furthermore, to the question
by the prosecution regarding the urgency on 3 August and whether he had an
ultimatum from Mr. Galbraith to accept the plan immediately Mr. Babić responded:
“Answer: Yes. Reactions were to come the following day. I was to give a statement, and
this was to be implemented, what I had accepted and what I was to make public by way of
a statement.
Question: Did you actually have an ultimatum from Mr. Galbraith to accept the plan
right now, otherwise consequences would happen?
A: He said what we could expect if we didn't accept, which meant a Croatian aggression,
and that we could fare the same as Western Slavonia.
Q: And did you accept it publicly, and could prevent this aggression?
A: Yes, I did. I made a statement to that effect, that I accepted.
Q: Was the RSK then attacked?
707
A: Yes, it was, the next day, in the morning.”
676. The statement given by Mr. Akashi to the ICTY in the Gotovina et al. case provides a
proper context in light of which the negoti ations have to be assessed. Mr. Akashi
confirmed that situation during and after the meeting when the signing of the agreement
was discussed with Mr. Babi ć. According to the witness, during the negotiations an
agreement was reached with Mr. Marti ć on six important matters. 708 The witness
confirmed that towards the end of the meeting Martćiaccepted the agreement:
“And Mr. Marti ć, somehow, had a sudden change of mind, and the -- originally we
discussed and agreed to go before the press to show that agreement had, indeed, been
706ICTY, Prosecutor v. Milošević , Transcripts, 21 November 2003, witness Babić, page 13259.
707ICTY, Prosecutor v. Milošević , Transcripts, 21 November 2003, witness Babić, pages 13259-13260.
708ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina , Transcripts, 16 September 2009, witness Akashi, pages 21756-21757.
258 reached. Therefore, sort of a defusing the atmosphere of impending crisis. […] But at
some point in time, we were certain that there was a set of assurances given to us when
they were all clear-headed.”09
677. All of the above clearly shows that the App licant’s argument that the RSK leadership
was the only side to blame for failure of peace negotiation cannot stand because, as
will be shown in the following subsection, Croatia’s concealed intent was not to allow
the Serb population to remain on its territory.
6. It was Croatia that was not genuine in its alleged peaceful efforts
678. The Applicant in para. 11.31 of the Reply states that “[s]imultaneously with the military
preparation, the Serb leadership engaged the international community in sham negotiations
to create the impression that they are willing to agree to peace”. However, in this section,
evidence will be presented that directly shows that it was the Croatian leadership that
conducted sham negotiations knowing that its plan to get rid of the Serbian population
would be outright condemned by the international community if it ever came to light.
679. The fact that Croatia was not acting in good faith in its allegedly peaceful efforts to
resolve the situation can be seen from its offensive military attacks. The previous
section showed that prior to Operation Storm, Croatia, although allegedly involved in
peaceful negotiations, conducted the unlawfu l and criminal operations of the Medak
Pocket and Flash. The fact that during the cour se of 1994 Croatia undertook several
such attacks is not even disputed by th e Applicant. In para. 11.9 it accepts that
Operation Winter was conducted in November 1994, in para. 11.10, that Operation
Leap 1 was conducted in the mountains borderi ng Croatia and Bosnia in April 1995,
and it further accepts in para. 11.13 that Operation Leap 2 took place on 4 June 1995,
and in para. 11.25 that Operation Summer 95 was undertaken in July 1995 (when
Croatian forces conquered towns of Glamoč and Grahovo).
680. It is also submitted that excuses and explanations provided by Croatia for such offensive
actions cannot dispel the fact that they were conducted against protected areas and had
resulted in violent and massive crimes. Furthermore, the Applicant’s presentation of
709
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina , Transcripts, 16 September 2009, witness Akashi, pages 21756-21757.
259 reasons for such military actions is one-sided and simply ignores the facts cited in the
Counter-Memorial that cannot be refuted. Fo r example, in para. 11.22, the Applicant
cites Mr. Galbraith’s testimony in order toshow the reason behind the attack of Croatia
on Bihać, but fails to cite an answer previously given by Mr. Galbraith’s that shows that
the plan to attack Krajina preceded any of these events:
“THE WITNESS: Let me clarify. I knew substantially before June 10th, and this is
reflected in lots of documents, that it was Tu đman's plan in 1994 to take the Krajina
militarily. As is true for the entry on this date, we believed that he would do this when the
United Nations mandate ran out November 30th. The reason being that that would be a
time of the year when it would be very difficult for weather reasons for Serbia to resupply
the Krajina, but where it would be still relatively easy for Croatian forces to attack up
710
from the coast and where it wouldn't do any damage to the Croatian tourist season.”
681. Further, in para. 11.25 the Applicant c ites the Report of the Secretary-General
regarding the conflict in Bosanska Krajina. Part of the Report showing the reasons for
the actions by the SVK was however not cited by the Applicant:
“Sector North saw relatively little activity except in the area bordering the Bihac pocket.
Fighting between the Bosnian Government Fifth Corps and the separatist forces of Mr.
Fikret Abdic, supported by Krajina Serb forces, flared up again. The Fifth Corps attacked
Krajina Serb-controlled territory in Sector North on both the east and the west sides of the
pocket. This generated a strong reaction from the Krajina Serbs […].” 711
682. The document produced as Annex 211 to th e Reply and invoked in para. 11.104, also
speaks in favor of the fact that it was Croa tia, not the RSK, who did not participate in
th
the negotiations in good faith. This document, which reflects the 257 closed session
of the Government of the Republic of Cr oatia, shows a statement of Deputy Prime
Minister, Mr. Grani ć, that Croatia had a problem because Serbs accepted the
Stoltenberg plan. 712 This statement plainly suggests that Croatia did not want a
peaceful solution of the conflict and that any step in direction towards peace taken by
the RSK leadership, like the acceptance of the Stoltenberg plan, was viewed as being
negative in the light of Croatian plans. This statement taken together with Tu đman’s
710
ICTY Prosecutor v. Gotovina, Transcripts, 23 June 2008, witness Galbraith, pages 4921-4922.
711See Report of the Secretary-General Submitted pursuant to Security Council Resolution 981 (1995), 3 August
1995, UN Doc. S/1995/650, para.9.
712See Annex 211 to the Reply (page 484 of the original document).
260 statement to provoke casualties on the Croatian side (see supra) shows the irony of the
Applicant’s accusations of the RSK.
683. Finally, the Applicant fails to address the words of late President Tu đman where he
openly stated that Croatia did not have the intention to negotiate:
“I'm going to Geneva to hide this and not to talk. I won't send a minister but the assistant
foreign minister. That's on Thursday. So I want to hide what we are preparing for the day
713
after. And we can rebut any argument in the world about how we didn't want to talk…”
684. When Mr. Akashi testified before the ICTY Trial Chamber in the Gotovina et al. case,
the representative of the Prosecution Office r ead the previous passage of the Brioni
Minutes to him and asked:
“Question: Now, Mr. Akashi, in your statement to the Gotovina Defence at paragraph 5,
you described President Tuđman as a reliable negotiator. Now when you said that, you
were not aware of this passage I just read to you; correct?
714
Answer: That's correct.”
685. One separate part of Chapter 10 of the Reply is devoted to reasons behind the Croatian
refusal to extend the UNPROFOR mandate, namely relying on Tu đman’s public
speeches to show that this refusal did not mean much because Croatia in fact did not
give up hope for a peaceful solution. 715One should first note that Tuđman’s and other
speeches of Croatian officials were ma de predominately from 1993 and 1994, while
the refusal of the UNPROFOR ma ndate happened in January 1995. 716 Moreover,
Tuđman’s subsequent acts and statements made behind closed doors show the
insincerity of his public statements.
713
714Brioni Minutes, p.32.
715ICTY Prosecutor v. Gotovina, Transcripts, 16 September 2009, witness Akashi, pages 21758-9.
Reply, para.10.72.
716See annexes with the Reply nos. 133 (June 1993), 134 (December 1993), 135 (August 1994), and footnotes
155 (May 1994).
261 CHAPTER VIII
OPERATION STORM AS A VIOLATION
OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION
686. While Chapter 11 of the Cr oatian Reply (“Operation Storm”) can be read as a factual
rebuttal to the counter-claim, Chapter 12 of the same submission, under the heading
“There was no genocide against Serbs in the ‘RSK’ and no responsibility of Croatia”,
apparently deals with legal issues of the Respondent's counter-claims. However, both
chapters of the Reply mainly discuss evidentiary issues. In the Respondent’s view, it
seems appropriate to answer all issues ra ised by Chapters 11 and 12 of the Reply
together, in their logical context. This will be done in this Chapter.
1. Relation between the claim and counter-claim
687. It is in the nature of a counter-claim that a respondent State may answer the allegations
of an applicant State by advancing its position on the law and the facts, but then add to
its contentions that if the Court accepts certain legal and factual claims by the
Applicant, the Respondent says in effect tu quoque. Although both the claim and
counter-claim in this case belong to the same factual complex, the factual issues
involved in the counter-claim are somewhat distinct from those advanced in the
Applicant’s submission. The same cannot be said about the legal issues, as they
involve the interpretation of the same provisions. The Re spondent has advanced an
interpretation of the provisions of the Ge nocide Convention that is in line with the
arguments it has made previously before this Court, but obviously taking into account
the Court’s pronouncements in the Bosnia case, including some of the views
expressed in the separate and dissenting opinions of me mbers of the Court. In
assessing the Respondent’s legal arguments with respect to the counter-claim, the
Court is asked to bear in mind that these are premised on the possibility that the Court
actually accepts some of the interpretative proposals advanced by the Applicant and
with which the Respondent takes issue. However, this does not mean that the counter-
claim is fully dependent on the Applicant’s claim, because the two claims are based on
the different factual grounds and evidence.
263688. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent pr esented a counter-claim charging that the
Applicant was liable for the crime of genocide perpetrated during Operation Storm in
August 1995 (see especially chapters XIII and XIV). Operation Storm consisted of a
brutal attack on the Krajina region, using a range of military and terrorist methods and
techniques, with the purpose of entirely eliminating Serb life in that territory. As many
as 200,000 Serbs who had been resident in the region as part of a centuries-old
community were driven from the area with the view that they not be allowed to return.
The forcible displacement of the Serb population was accompanied by mass killings,
in particular of those who decided to stay at their homes, as well as by other prohibited
acts, such as the indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina towns and villages, the plunder
and destruction of Serb pr operty, and the total eradication of life of the Serb
community in the Krajina region. This was, as the Counter-Mem orial explained, the
intentional destruction of the Krajina Serbs and it amounted to a violation of articles II
and III of the Convention on the Preven tion and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide.
2. The protected group
689. The Respondent notes that the Applicant doe s not disagree with its proposal on the
nature of the protected group: “The Applicant does not dispute the Respondent’s claim
that Croatian Serbs constitute a separate national or ethnic group […] Nor does the
Applicant dispute that the Serb civilian population living in ‘Krajina’ represented a
717
substantial part of that national or ethnic group.”
690. In addition, the Respondent has also argued that the Krajina Serbs represented a
distinct geographically located community in an area which was of immense
importance to Croatian Serbs and the historical centre of Serbian life in Croatia for
718
centuries. Neither of these contentions nor their legal implications have been
challenged by the Applicant. Consequently, it seems that this issue is not in dispute
between the Parties.
717
718Reply, para. 12.2.
Counter-Memorial, paras. 1375-1390.
2643. Difference between “goal” and “intent”
691. The Applicant offers in defence for its actions in Operation Storm the proposal that its
“goal” was not the physical destruction of the Serb population of Krajina. Here it
confounds the idea of “goal” with “inten tion” although these are not identical
concepts. Criminal law makes a clear distinction between “goal” or “purpose”, which
is often labelled “motive”, and “intent”, which refers to acts that are not accidental or
automatic, and result from a conscious and active mind. In para. 12.3 of the Reply, the
Applicant appears to be using the word “intention” when it actually is speaking of the
“purpose”, “goal” or “motive”. The Reply a ffirms: “Croatia’s primary intention in
pursuing Operation Storm was to achieve the lawful re storation of control over its
sovereign territory, restoring its internationally recognised borders, and reintegrating
those territories that had been unlawfully o ccupied by Serbia since its aggression in
1991 and 1992.” Footnote 3 indicates what it claims was its “secondary purpose”: “As
noted in Chapters 10 and 11 above, Croa tia’s secondary purpose was humanitarian
intervention in the territory of Bosnia-Herzegovina to prevent a Serbian massacre
719
occurring in Biha ć, as had occurred in Srebrenica.” But the argument that other
purposes lay behind the intentional destruc tion of a national or ethnic group is no
answer to a charge of genocide. After all, Hitler claimed his “purpose” was to unite
ethnic Germans in one State, to recover territory that had been taken from Germany in
the past, and to obtain Lebensraum for Germans in Europe. The genocide of the
European Jews may not have been his prima ry or even his secondary purpose, but it
changes nothing to the charge that he did so intentionally.
4. Reading of the Brioni Minutes of 31 July 1995
692. The Respondent has provided the Court with the Minutes of the meeting held by the
President of the Republic of Croatia, Dr. Franjo Tuđman, with military officials, on 31
July 1995 at Brioni Island. 720 This material, in the Respondent’s view, directly proves
the dolus specialis of the crime of genocide.
719
720Reply, para. 12.3.
Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial.
265693. In its Reply, the Applicant argues that “there is no statement at Brioni from which a
genocidal intent can be inferred, let alone a plan to commit genocide or any other
721
crimes against Serb civilians”. Furthermore, the Applicant tries to convince the
Court that the Respondent relies on the mischaracterization of an introductory
statement made by the Croatian President who, inter alia, said:
“Therefore we should leave the east totally alone, and resolve the question of the south
and north. In which way do we resolve it? This is the subject of our discussion today. We
have to inflict such blows that the Serbs will to all practical purposes disappear, that is to
say, the areas we do not take at once must capitulate within a few days.” 722
The Respondent notes that the Applicant does not deny the accuracy of the translation
of the Brioni Minutes that was prepared originally by the ICTY.
694. According to the Applicant, “the use of term ‘capitulate’ also points to the conclusion
723
that the statement refers to the capitulation of the Serbian forces, not Serb civilians”.
The Respondent will further demonstrate that the Applicant’s interpretation of the
Brioni Minutes is nothing but an unsuccessful attempt to escape its responsibility for
genocide against the Krajina Serbs.
A. Who had to disappear from Croatia: Serb forces, Serb people, or all of them?
695. There is no doubt that the Brioni meeting was a gathering of the Croatian senior military
leadership led by the State President as the Commander-in-chief of the Croatian armed
forces.724 Also, it is not contested that these offciials discussed the plan for re-conquering
(the Applicant would say “liberating”) territory of the Republika Srpska Krajina, i.e. the
protected areas of the UN Sectors North a nd South. Nevertheless, the Brioni Minutes
clearly show that President Tuđman, as a key member of the JCE identified in the ICTY
Judgment in Gotovina et al, gave a clear message concerni ng the destiny of the Serb
people in the protected areas, sharing thus his criminal goal with the top military officials
of the Croatian armed forces who were obligedto execute his orders. The Serbs would to
all practical purposes disappear, Tuđman said. Yet, he added: “…that is to say, the areas
721
Reply, para. 11.42.
722Brioni Minutes, p.2.
723Reply, para. 11.43.
724Ibid,, para. 11.41.
266 we do not take at once must capitulate within a few days”. The Applicant relies on a
detail that later, on the same page, one can find in Tuđman’s statement a goal that also
“the Serbian forces …[would] have to capitulate”. 725From the Applicant’s point of view,
this is sufficient to lead the Court to the conclusion that the Croatian President, ordering
his military officials that the Serbs “to all practical purposes disappear”, allegedly
referred to their forces, and not to civilians.
696. The question is whether President Tuđman really referred to the Serbian armed forces
when he used the term “Serbs”. While Admiral Davor Domazet, who spoke after
President Tuđman, in his military-style presentation mainly used the term “adversary”,
Tuđman used different expressions to refer to those to whom the Governmental action
should be directed: “the Serbs”, “the Serbia n forces”, “the enemy”, “the Knin Serbs”,
“the adversary”, “the areas”, “some minor enclaves” and so on. At the very beginning
of his introductory speech in which he said that the Se rbs would to all practical
purposes disappear, Tuđman made the following statement:
“However, the situation as its stands now is that the United Nations representatives,
Akashi, Stoltenberg and the Serbs have deprived of us this reason, since they are in the
726
process of withdrawingtheir forces from the Bihać area.”
It is clear that Tuđman here distinguished between “the Serbs” and “their forces”.
697. Yet, the point here is not so much which term the President of Croatia used but rather
what he really meant about the destiny of the Krajina Serb national and ethnic group. The
Croatian President did not indicate any difference in treatment depending upon whether
his troops were dealing with Serb forces, Serb politicians or Serb civilians – all of them
had to disappear in one way or another, thaits to say, leave Croatian soil or be killed.
698. Page 15 of the Brioni Minutes offers a convincing example of Tuđman’s attitude with
respect to the Serb civilians. Tuđman said:
“[W]e must take those points in order to comlpetely vanquish the enemy later and force him to
capitulate. But I’ve said, and we’ve said here, that they should be given a way out here […]
Because it is important that those civilians set out, and then the army will follow them, and when
727
the columns set out, they will have a psychological impact on each other.”
725
726Brioni Minutes, p. 1 (emphasis added).
727Ibid, p. 15.
267699. Thus, Tuđman talked about the civilians and the army separately, but nevertheless, the
treatment of both was the same: the Serb army and the civilians were together in the
columns, they had a psychological impact on each other, and they both had to get out
and disappear. The Croatian President treated both the Serb forces and civilians as
enemies who had to be completely va nquished. His language is clear and
unambiguous, and it cannot be softened by interpretation.
700. The same intent can be seen on the page 22 of the Brioni Minutes, where the
following words of President Tuđman were recorded:
“If we had enough [ammunition], then I too w ould be in favour of destroying everything
728
by shelling prior to advancing.”
Once again, the Croatian President did not ta lk about the Serbian forces and military
targets only; he recommended that he would be in favour of destroying everything.
None of the participants at the meeting protested.
701. The events that followed the Brioni meeting confirmedđ Tmuan’s words. The Krajina Serbs
were attacked by deliberate indiscriminate shelling in order to be forced to flee their homes,
towns and villages. And if some parts of Krajina towns escaped shelling, this was only
because Croatian forces did not have enough ammunition to shell everything. Those who
decided to stay at home in spite of the threat were hunted down and killed. Their houses
were set on fire and looted. Their cattle were killed, and their wells were poisoned. The
Governmental forces did not show any difference in treatment between the Serb army and
the civilians. Mr. John William Hill, UN Military Police commander in Sector South,
testified before the ICTY about what he witnessed in the streets of Knin during Operation
Storm. His words demonstrate that Croatian soldiers treated all Serbs as enemies:
“In front of the camp, I saw an individual wiahaved head and grey uniform, almost like an
overall uniform with a black belt. But he was carrying an MP-5, which is a sub-machine gun. It
was suppressed with a laser sight. He had an old man at his feet, almost like a dog. I had asked
Ivan [Jurić, Croatian Military Police commander] what he was, and he said he was counter-
terrorist unit. And I asked if that was parhmilitary police, and he said, yes, that they had
military police, the HV. But as part of the may police, they had a counter-terrorism unit. I
729
asked Ivan, I said, ‘Well, who are terrorists?’ And he said, ‘Serbs’.”
728Ibid, p. 22.
729ICTY, Gotovina et al, IT-06-90, Testimony of Witness John William Hill, 28 May 2008, Transcript pp. 3785-3786.
268702. Finally, the Serbs disappeared from Krajina and the main goal of President Tu đman
was executed. Only eleven days after th e meeting at Brioni Island, he commenced
discussion with his Party supporters on how to organize a new register of the
population and how to amend the Electoral La w, as well as the Constitutional Law on
730
Human Rights and National Minorities. Thus, it is highly difficult to conclude that
Tuđman at Brioni talked merely about the disappearance, destroying and vanquishing
of the Serbian forces. His aim was to destroy the Serb people of Krajina, as such.
B. Criminal agreement directed against the Serb population was reached at Brioni
703. In light of the previous analysis, the Re spondent will further discuss some factual
allegations misleadingly invoked by the A pplicant. The first of them has been
expressed in para. 11.46 of the Reply in the following words: “there was no agreement
at Brioni to forcibly remove the Serb popul ation”. Quite to the contrary, at the very
beginning of the Brioni meeting the Croatia n President, as previously demonstrated,
gave an instruction to the senior military officials that the Serbs should for all practical
purposes disappear. Further discussions were directed to the issue of how to remove
the Serb people together with their armed forces, with minimum losses on the
Governmental side. In that sense, Genera l Gotovina confirmed that the aim of the
operation was to remove the Serbs from Krajina:
“A large number of civilians are already evacuating Knin and heading towards Banja
Luka and Belgrade. That means that if we continue this pressure, probably for some time
to come, there won’t be so many civilians just those who have to stay, who have no
731
possibility of leaving.”
704. The Applicant’s argument that the Serbs fled the region because they were afraid of an
HV attack 732does not have any significance for th e legal characterization of this case.
The previous experience of the Serb people in the areas attacked by the Governmental
forces (for example, Operation Flash, see supra), as well as the subsequent killings
and other serious crimes which were committed in the Sectors North and South, prove
that the fears of the Serb people were fully justified. They had to flee in order to save
730See Excerpts from the Minutes of the session of the Presidency of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) held
on 11 August 1995 at the Presidential Palace in Zagreb (Annex 67).
731Brioni Minutes, p. 15 (emphasis added).
732Reply, para. 11.46, which quotes the Croatian Intelligence Report of 30 July 1995 (Annex 158 to the Reply).
269 their lives. For that reason, it is not astonish ing, as the Applicant pretends to show,
that the Krajina Serbs had some plans for evacuation in the case of the massive
Croatian attack.
705. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent presented the practice of the ICTY,
according to which the forced character of the acts could be deduced from the absence
733
of a genuine choice. The Croatian military leaders did not give any genuine choice
to the Krajina Serbs. Their massive displacement was organized and executed against
their will. President Tuđman at the Brioni meeting considered only two options: a) that
the Serbs be pushed out and forced to flee, or b) that the Serbs be forced to fight to
“the bitter end”. An option in which the Serbs could freely continue to live in Krajina
was not considered at all. Tu đman preferred the option (a) merely for the reason to
734
minimize the engagement and losses of the Governmental forces. For that reason,
the Croatian military leaders even planned psychological effects in order to remove as
many civilians as possible. Thus, President Tuđman discussed special public messages
735
which should be “constantly repeated on TV and on the radio” . His son, Dr.
Miroslav Tuđman, asked:
“Should the information be relayed over the radio as to which routes are open for them to
use to pull out?”
President: “Yes, that should be said, not the fact that the routes are open, but that it has
been noticed that civilians are getting out by using such and such a route.
Dr. Miroslav Tuđman: “Can we say this at some point at the beginning of the operation?
Can we publicise the fact so they know that the civilians are using these routes to
withdraw?”
President: “Yes, it should be said that they have set out with passenger cars, and so
on.”736
733
734Counter-Memorial, para. 1440.
Brioni minutes, p. 7: “It’s all very well that the Admiral is now supposed to close off their remaining three
exits, but you are not providing them with an exit anywhere. There is no way out to […] (to close it off). To pull
out and flee, instead, you are forcing them to fight to the bitter end, which exacts a greater engagement and
greater losses on our side. Therefore, let us also please take this into consideration because it’s true, they are
absolutely demoralized, and just as they have started moving out of Grahovo and Glamoc, when we put pressure
on them, now they are already partly moving out of Knin. Accordingly, let us take into consideration, on a
military level, the possibility of leaving them a way out somewhere, so they can pull out/ part of their forces
735”
736Brioni Minutes, p. 23.
Ibid.
270706. It is quite unfortunate that, in arguing its case, the Applicant stipulates that the
737
Security Council “insisted” that Croatia allow the Serbs to leave the attacked area.
This cynically untrue argument is undermined by the relevant paragraph of the SC
resolution 1009 (1995) which reads as follows:
“2. Demands further that the Government of the Republic of Croatia, in conformity with
internationally recognized standards and in compliance with the agreement of 6 August
1995 between the Republic of Croatia and the United Nations Peace Forces (a) respect
fully the rights of the local Serb population including their rights to remain, leave or
return in safety , (b) allow access to this population by international humanitarian
organizations, and (c) create conditions conducive to the return of those persons who have
left their homes; […].” (Emphasis added).
C. There was a plan to direct artillery against Serb civilians
707. Contrary to the Applicant’s argument expressed in para. 11.47 of the Reply, President
Tuđman and his subordinates disc ussed and planned to use artillery against the Serb
civilians. Although he was afraid of the lack of ammunition during the forthcoming
criminal operation, it was evident that the Cr oatian President “would be in favour of
destroying everything by shelling prio r to advancing”, only if he had enough
738
ammunition.
708. In order to escape this unavoidable factual finding, the Applicant tries to mislead the
Court with respect to another quote of President T đuman: “The psychological effect of the
739
fall of a town is greater than if you shell it for two days.” But, the Applicant avoids
informing the Court that this statement was related to the town of Gračac, an important
strategic point in which the HV had to “enter as quickly as possible”. Concerning the
destiny of the town of Knin, the capital of the Krajina Serbs, T đmu an had no doubt:
“Accordingly, we should provide for certain forces which will be directly engaged in the
direction of Knin. And, particularly, gentlemen, please remember how many Croatian villages
740
and towns have been destroyed, but that’s still not the situation in Knin today [...].”
737
Reply, para. 11.50.
738Ibid, p. 22.
739Ibid, p. 18.
740Ibid, p. 10.
271709. Some UNCRO officers who directly observed the shelling of Knin testified about their
firsthand experience before the ICTY in the Gotovina et al. case. General Lesli, Chief
of Staff of the UN Sector S outh, stated that, at his visit to the Knin hospital on the
morning of 5 August, “there were large quantities of dead, men, women, and children,
stacked in the hospital corridors in a pile”. Asked by the Presiding Judge to estimate
more precisely the number of victims of shelling, the witness answered that “the
741
number [had not been] lower than 30 and probably no higher than 50 to 60.”
710. Witness Bellerose was the UN Sector engineer who observed the shelling from the
balcony of the UN HQ building. He gave the following statement: “In my opinion the
shelling of Knin was carried out to driv e away the civilian population. The shelling
was not directed at specific military targets. I believe it was deliberate harassment
shelling.” 742 Asked to explain his opinion, Mr. Bellerose testified:
“In my opinion, if there would have been military target in those locations that would
have been causing a threat to the Croat forces, they would have been more intensive and
direct at a specific target, be more concentrated. […] The artillery fire wasn’t concentrated
into one location. It was landing all over the town more to a random fashion and at a
743
random interval.”
711. In order to have a full impression of what really happened in the town of Knin, the
above quoted eyewitness statements can be compared now with the statement of
General Gotovina given to President Tuđman at the Brioni meeting. Gotovina said:
“At this moment, we can engage in extremely precise operations at Knin, systematically,
without aiming at the barracks in which UNCRO is located. (We have all the photographs,
744
and know exactly […]. At this moment, all of our weapons are guided, directly guided.”
741
742ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-06-90, Testimony of Witness Andrew Lesli, 22 April 2008, Transcript pp. 1967-68.
ICTY, Gotovina et al., IT-06-90, Testimony of Witness Joseph Lorenzo Claude Bellerose, 7 July 2008,
743nscript p. 5871.
744Ibid.
Brioni Minutes, p. 15.
272 D. The decision to target fleeing civilians was directly provoked by the wording and
atmosphere at the Brioni meeting
712. Although it is obvious that the participants at the Brioni meeting did not directly
discuss targeting civilian columns who pulled out from the Krajina, such criminal acts
were committed against the Serb people (see evidence presented infra) as a direct
consequence of the wording and atmosphere which President Tuđman shared with his
senior military officials on that occasion. If the Croat forces were instructed to “inflict
745
such blows that the Serbs [would] to all practical purposes disappear” , then it is not
strange that one of the methods was air st rikes and artillery attacks on the fleeing
746
columns of desperate people.
5. Evideo nfce dolus specialis for the crime of genocide
713. The plans for the destruction of the Serb population in Krajina were finalized at the
meeting held on Brioni Island in the Adriatic Sea,. Under the heading “No Evidence of
Genocidal Intent”, the Applicant claims that “the Respondent expressly acknowledges
that its case on genocidal intent depends upon the interpretation of the transcript of
747
that meeting.” It continues: “The Respondent expressly accepts that if it is unable to
prove that a plan or policy to commit genoci de was adopted at Br ioni, as it alleges,
then its case on genocidal intent must fail.” 748The Brioni transcripts are obviously
very important to the Respondent’s counter-claim, but it is not accurate to say that the
counter-claim “depends upon the interpretation of the transcript of that meeting”. The
Brioni transcripts are of great assistance in clarifying the intent of the military and
political leadership of the Applicant. They contribute to an appreciation of this intent.
There is, by the way, nothing comparable to the Brioni transcripts with respect to the
conduct of the Respondent in the events that are germane to these proceedings. In the
Counter-Memorial, the Respondent describe d the Brioni transcripts as being of
749
“exceptional importance”, and they are.
745Ibid, p. 2.
746See below, paras. 751-767.
747Reply, para. 12.4.
748Reply, para. 12.6.
749Counter-Memorial, para. 179.
273714. It is at the Brioni meeting that the President of Croatia instructed his military personal
“to inflict such blows that the Serbs to all practical purposes disappear”. As
demonstrated above, he clearly expressed his objectives concerning the Serb armed
forces and the Serb civilians without any distinction in regard to their destiny. He also
pointed out that he “would be in favour of destroying everything by shelling prior to
advancing”, and moreover, he implicitly invited the Croatian Army to take revenge
against the Krajina Serbs. He said: “And, particularly, gentlemen, please remember
how many Croatian villages and towns have been destroyed, but that’s still not the
situation in Knin today […].” 750
715. The Applicant’s Reply contends “that the transcript of the Brioni meeting contains no
evidence of intent on the part of the Croa tian leadership to bring about the physical
751
destruction of the Serb ci vilian population of ‘Krajina’”. Obviously a statement by
the President of a country prior to a major military operation that suggests its objective
is to bring about the disappearance of a national or ethnic group that has inhabited the
territory for centuries cannot be simply di smissed with the claim that there is “no
evidence of intent”. This is evidence of genocidal intent. The question is whether the
words, taken in their context, including th e actions that were taken subsequently and
in their implementation, are sufficiently co mpelling, credible and consistent to
conclude that Applicant is responsible for genocide as a result of Operation Storm.
716. The Reply urges a “fair reading” of these disgraceful remarks. The Applicant attaches
752
importance to the fact that this was delivered to military men, as if that changes
anything. It was a military operation; the President had to give the message to the
military forces. The Applicant explains: “President Tu đman was simply directing that
Croatian military deploy ments on the ground should ensure an avenue of retreat so
that it would not be necessary for Serb forces to stand and fight to the end.” 753In the
eyes of the Applicant, President Tuđman was a true humanitarian, doing his utmost to
ensure that civilians, especially of the “o ther” ethnic group, should be spared in this
apocalyptic military adventure aimed at establishing the final ceasefire line in a brutal
conflict.
750Brioni Minutes, p. 10.
751Reply, para. 12.7.
752Reply, para. 12.14.
753Reply, para. 12.16.
274717. The Respondent persists in its interpreta tion of these remarks as evidence of the
genocidal intent of the Croa tian leadership. The context of the remarks is, of course,
decisive. That context includes the subse quent behaviour of those whose conduct was
governed by Tuđman’s remarks. It should be recalled that he was speaking to an inner
circle of military leaders where his remarks could be more frank and direct than if he
were in a public environment. It was important for him to be clearly understood. There
was no need for him to speak in euphemism. It is preposterous, as the Applicant
argues, that “President Tu đman was simply directing that Croatian military
deployments on the ground should ensure an av enue of retreat so that it would not be
necessary for Serb forces to stand and fight to the end”. 754 Viewed in this way, the
word “disappear” and the absence of any qualification take on a special importance.
718. The Applicant provides the Court with two military documents as counter-evidence that
the Croatian commanding officers were to ensure compliance with international
humanitarian law (Reply, Annexes 170 & 172). The existence of these documents is not
in dispute, but the respect for the orders contained within is. Not surprisingly, it seems that
the commanding officers chose to observe the messages of their President given at Brioni
rather than the orders. Actually, how the pa rticipants of the Brioni meeting conveyed
President Tuđman’s messages to their subordinates can be best understood from the
testimony of witness John William Hill, UN Military Police Commander in Sector South.
Mr. Hill described his first direct contacts with Croatian soldiers in front of the UN camp
in Knin on 4 August 1995 to the Trial Chamber in thG eotovina et alcase:
“The Croats told us that ‘We must stay in the camp’. I was there discussing with the
soldiers. Two of them were Canadians. One was on top of a tank. I talked to him and
asked him how the offensive had gone. They said they took 30 hours to take Drnis, and
then it only took five from there to Knin.
I asked what they were going to do. He said they were going to kill all the Serb. The
other individual, who was from, I believe, Montreal or Ottawa, was on the left, was
infanteer. And I had asked him, because he spoke good English, what he was doing there,
and he said he had come back to fight against the Serbs and that he had been waiting for
755
this since 1945. He was approximately 22 years old.”
754Ibid.
755ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al,IT-06-90, Testimony of Witnes s John William Hill, 27 May 2008,
Transcript pp. 3750-3751.
275719. Colonel Hill also described an incident with a UN interpreter of Serbian origin that
occurred in downtown Knin where an HV officer intended to kill that individual. Mr.
Hill stated to the Trial Chamber:
“We negotiated back and forth that he could not shoot the individual, it was not his
responsibility, the individual belonged to me.
And, eventually, he agreed that the individual would go with me; however, he said that he
could not guarantee the safety of the individual if his soldiers saw him, or my safety which
was the first time they said that. He said that any helicopters leaving our camp with Serbs
would be shot down, and any Serb men of military age, 19 to 60, who leave our camp
would be shot.” 756
720. These examples clearly show that Croatian soldiers were armed with the intent to kill
all Serbs. In 1998, the Croatian daily “Jutarnji list” brought a dramatic account of one
HV soldier, which can serve as additional and illustrative example of the real intent of
the Croatian army:
“The plan was to clean everything up as soonas possible. Some will get out and we’ll waste
the others. […] There were no civilians for us; they were simply all enemies. […] It was an
unwritten order that there were no prisoners of war to be taken but, for the sake of saving our
face before the world public opinion, a very small number of prisoners of war were
nonetheless left alive. One in twenty were le ft to be interviewed with newsmen and taken
pictures of, to show how merciufl and good we were. The aim was to liberate the Krajina at all
costs. […] We called the Udbina road ‘the roadof the corpses’ because hundreds of corpses
were scattered across it. We were those who killed people and after us, there came the forces
which held positions and made sure that the corpses were removed. They loaded them onto
refrigerator trucks. There were also the trucks used by Jakopecmeat industry, as well as
refrigerator trucks of some other meat companies. On our way back we saw refrigerator trucks
full of corpses put into bags. […] When we s otrmed into Lapac, some people managed to flee
while many of them were killed. We found their still warm soups on the table. We received
orders to clean everything up and leave no pr isoners of war. We entered the city and saw
people fleeing in panic before us. We intersectedthe road between Donji Lapac and Srb, their
only way out. We killed many people then. There were bodies lying all over the place and
757
terrible stench could be smelt even the following day.”
756Ibid, p. 3767.
757Jutarnji list, Zagreb, 4 May 1998 , page 8: “War turned me into a killing machine” (Annex 71).
2766. The conduct of the Croatian Armed Forces confirms the existence of the
genocidal intent
721. The dolus specialis of the crime of genocide that is manifested in the statement of the
Croatian President at the Brioni Island and in the words of some Croatian soldiers can
also be confirmed by the general conduct of the Croatian armed forces which followed
the Brioni meeting. Executors of Operation Storm accomplished all of Tu đman’s
instructions. The group of the Krajina Serb s, which represented 30% of the Serbian
population in Croatia that existed in 1991, 758was attacked in whole and subjected to
deliberate indiscriminate shelling, expulsion, massive killings, destruction and looting
of their homes and property in order to s ecure that they would never come back. The
crimes were committed against Serb civilians, hors de combat and combatants,
without any distinction among them. This magnitude of the criminal activities,
convincingly demonstrated in the Counter-M emorial, confirms that the words of
President Tuđman were not misunderstood by his soldiers.
722. With regard to the events in the UN Sector South, the ICTY Judgment in Gotovina et
al of 15 April 2011 fully confirms the previous view:
“The […] evidence […] shows that the whole Se rb population of the southern portion of
the Krajina region during a relatively short period of time became victim of a large
number of crimes, including persecution, murder, inhumane acts, destruction and plunder
of property, and deportation. Although the categories of perpetrators might have changed
over time, the victims were always Krajina Serbs remaining in the area and as a result
almost all of the Krajina Serb population left their homes during or within weeks or
months following Operation Storm. The ev idence shows that the persons targeted
primarily were members of the civilian population. Based on the evidence described
above, including the evidence with regard to individual counts in the Indictment, the Trial
Chamber finds beyond a reasonable doubt that there was a widespread and systematic
attack directed against the Serb civilian population of the southern portion of the Krajina
759
region.”
758See Counter-Memorial, para. 1372.
759ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 1720-
1721.
277 A. Croatia undertook deliberate indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina Serbs
723. The deliberate indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina towns and villages has been
760
presented in the Counter-Memorial by num erous relevant and probative exhibits. In
761
rebuttal to the statements of 14 eye-witnesses and one expert cited by the Respondent,
the Applicant offers a single statement of the US Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith,
762
who said that he was in the town of Petrinja “not long after the town was trashed”. The
Applicant fails to address the statements of a vast number of UN military officers cited in
the Counter-Memorial whose testimonies conflict Galbraith’s statement.
724. In addition, the Applicant refers to an Orde r of Attack issued by the Split Military
District on 2 August 1995 and quotes some pa rts of that document which are not in
763
direct relation to the issue. The fact that the quoted se ntences from the first three
paragraphs of this order relate to military tasks does not negate the fact that fourth
764
paragraph reads: “Shell the towns of Drvar, Knin, Benkovac, Obrovac and Gračac.”
However, this paragraph of the document has been omitted by the Applicant who
allegedly believes that only military targets were shelled. At this point, it seems that
the Applicant has had some important reas ons not to provide the ICTY with the
artillery documents from Operation Storm requested repeatedly by the Office of the
Prosecutor, or at least not to provide it with satisfactory information about the
765
circumstances of disappearance of those relevant documents.
725. The Applicant also refers to one document of the SVK Intelligence Department issued
in the morning of 4 August, at so early stage of the operation that no reasonable
766
conclusion can be inferred from that. Finally, the Applicant invokes in a very
general manner the testimony of the SVK Commander General Mrkši ć before the
ICTY, but without any reference to the speci fic case or relevant page of the ICTY
transcripts.
760Counter-Memorial, paras. 1215-1228.
761Witnesses: Roland Dagerfield, Adreas Dreyer, Jo seph Bellarose, Peter Marti, John William Hill, Alun
Roberts, Andrew Lesli, Jacques Morneu, Alain Robert Forand, Mira Grubor, Jovan Dopu đ, Sava Mirković, Vida
Gaćeša and Herman Steenbergen. Expert: Reynaud Theunens.
762Reply, footnotes 159 and 160 with para. 11.74.
763
764Reply, para. 11.72.
765See Annex 171 to the Reply.
766See more, Counter-Memorial, paras. 200-205; also, supra, paras. 602-605.
Reply, para. 11.73.
278726. The Respondent has already presented supra the accuracy of the HV directly guided
artillery (see the statement of General Gotovina at the Brioni meeting 767). This was
confirmed by the ICTY’s factual finding in Gotovina et al. The following exemplary
quote demonstrates the thorough factual examination made by the ICTY Trial
Chamber regarding the shelling of civilian areas of the town of Knin:
“The Trial Chamber has considered several factors in determining whether the artillery
impacts in these areas could have been the resulotf errors or inaccuracies in the HV’s artillery
fire. In this respect, the Trial Chamber ha s considered specifically the abovementioned
testimony of expert Konings and of Rajčić and Leslie on the accuracy of the HV’s artillery
weaponry at the range used on 4 and 5 August 1995 during the shelling of Knin. The Trial
Chamber considers firstly that at distances of300 to 700 metres, these areas of impacts were
relatively far away from identified artillery targets. Secondly, a significant number of artillery
projectiles, namely at least 50, landed in theseareas. Thirdly, the areas are spread out across
Knin, to its southern, eastern, and northern outsktisr. Finally, the Trial Chamber recalls that on
at least two occasions, the TS-4 reported firing atthe general area of Knin or at Knin, without
specifying an artillery target. In conclusion, the Trial Chamber finds that too many projectiles
impacted in areas which were too far away from identified artillery targets and which were
located around Knin, for the artillery projectiles tve impacted in these areas incidentally as
a result of errors or inaccuracies in the HV’s atrillery fire. Thus, the Trial Chamber finds that
the HV deliberately fired the artillery projectiles targeting these areas in Knin.”
727. The Trial Chamber found beyond a reasonable doubt that as a result the HV’s shelling of
Knin on 4 and 5 August 1995 constituted an indiscriminate attack on the town and thus an
769
unlawful attack on civilians and civilian objects in Knin. The same factual conclusions
have been reached in relation to the towns of Benkovac, Gč rac and Obrovac.
728. In order to avoid any doubt and further de bate, the Respondent stresses that the
deliberate indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina towns and villages is not evidence of
the genocidal intent per se . However, as a part of a range of widespread and
systematic criminal acts committed during and after Operation Storm, the shelling
demonstrates that the Brioni messages concerning the disappearance of the Serbs were
well understood and fully implemented.
767Brioni Minutes, p. 15.
768ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 1906.
769Ibid, para. 1911.
279 B. Croatia removed Serbs from the Krajina region by force
729. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent s howed that the instructions from Brioni
were also implemented through the inten tional expulsion of the Serb population from
the Krajina region. 770The Respondent has quoted a Report of the UN Secretary-
General of 18 October 1995, the part of which reads as follows:
“The exodus of 200,000 Krajina Serbs fleeing the C oatian offensive in early August created a
humanitarian crisis of major proportions. It isnow estimated that only about 3,000 Krajina
Serbs remain in the former Sector North ana dbout 2,000 in the former Sector South […].” 771
730. The Applicant has not denied this estimae t, and has even admitted that “OperationStorm
led to the displacement of the majority of the Serb civilian population”. 772Still, the
Applicant tries to prove that the departure of Serbs from Krajina was voluntary and
planned by the RSK leadership. The Applicant states that “[f]rom mid July 1995, the
authorities of the ‘RSK’ issued a series of orders regarding the updating of plans and
preparations for shelter and evacuation of the population […].” In addition, it advances
the argument that the Krajina Serbs departed from the region due to the attitude of their
774
leadership that “any co-existence between the Serbs and Croats was impossible”, as
775
well as due to “difficult living conditions, poverty and insecurity”.
731. The argument about the alleged volunt ary emigration of Serbs from Croatia
completely ignores what President Tuđman said at the Brioni meeting:
“It is important that those civilians set out, and then army will follow them, and when the
776
columns set out, they will have a psychological impact on each other”.
770Counter-Memorial, para. 1229-1236, 1438-1447.
771The situation in the occupied territories of Croatia: Report of the Secretary-General, 18 October 1995, UN
Doc. A/50/648, para. 27. See also the ICTY, ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber
Judgment of 15 April 2011Judgment, para. 1712: “According to another report by the UN Secretary-General to
the UN Security Council, dated 29 September 1995, more than 90 per cent of the Serb inhabitants had fled
Sectors North and South, and the continuing reports of human rights abuses and of looting and burning were not
conducive to their possible return. According to the report, despite Croatian government statements that Serbs
were welcome to return, UNCRO continued to receive well-documented reports of human rights abuses and
destruction of property from HRAT. On 21 December 199 5, the UN Secretary-General reported that according
to the ICRC, there were slightly more than 9,000 Serbs in the former UN Sectors North and South, whereof
approximately 75 per cent were elderly, disabled, or otherwise ‘vulnerable’.”
772Reply, para. 12.35
773Reply, para. 11.77.
774Ibid, para. 11.80-11.81.
775Ibid, para. 11.82.
776
Brioni Minutes, p. 15 (Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial).
280732. It also completely ignores how the Krajina Serbs were subjected to indiscriminate
shelling, by which they were forced to run away from the line of fire that was gradually
moving forward. Nevertheless, the Applicant claims that “the evacuation was not a
result of artillery use by the HV”. 777 In light of the fact that the crucial HV artillery
documents are hidden and/or destroyed, th e Applicant's claims cannot be verified.
733. This is how witness Boris Martinovi ć testified before the Basic Court in Banja Luka,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, in 1997:
“The attack of the Croatian army was preceded by the heavy shelling of Glina and its
surroundings, which lasted all day on 4 – 7 August 1995, forcing the local population to
leave their homes and seek shelter in the direction of Dvor-upon-Una and further on in the
territory of the Republic of Srpska. The shelling was very intense and even before the
population left their homes, there were victims. Shelling was an indication that the
Croatian infantry would launch an attack, which was why convoys of people fled the area.
As a matter of fact, the civilian population was not fleeing; they were actually retreating.
They used passenger cars, freight vehicles, tractors and horse-drawn carts. There were
many of them who walked because they had no means of transport. Convoys of refugees
fleeing Knin and Kordun joined and the entire convoy became very long. As the convoys
moved on, Croatian warplanes flew over, causing panic on the ground. However, after the
overflight of these planes, the convoy would continue its movement. The convoy was
shelled by the Croatian army at Brezovo Polje, which is some 20 kilometres away from
Glina. I saw for myself six bodies of killed ci vilians, but I had no time to turn them over
and inspect them to see if I could recognize anyone. The second shelling of the convoy
778
came when we were close to Gornji Zirovac.”
734. Furthermore, the existence of some plans for evacuation does not automatically mean
that the Serbs were not expelled from their homes by force. According to the 1990
Law on Overall People Defense of the Repub lic of Croatia (“Narodne Novine” no.
47/90), evacuation was defined a nd envisaged in such a way that in the case of war,
imminent danger of war and other extraord inary circumstances it is possible to
organize evacuation of people, organizations and communities and that such
evacuation is to be planned by municipalitie s, in accordance with the general defense
777Reply, para. 11.78.
778Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Boris Martinovi ć,
dated 7 May 1997 (Annex 53).
281 plan of the Republic. 779 The same system existed in other republics of the former
Yugoslavia after its dissolution. A very simila r law was in force in the RSK (Law on
Defense, accompanied with the Special Decision of the RSK Government, “Official
Gazette” no. 2/93). It prescribed that one of the measures of civilian protection was
evacuation. Article 65 envisaged that in time of imminent danger of war, state of war
or state of emergency, evacuation of popul ation, or namely specific categories of
population (children, elderly, etc.) from a cert ain part of the territory can be ordered.
Such evacuation would have been done in accordance with the general defense plan.
Thus, the existence of plans for evacua tion was a common practice in the former
Yugoslavia, including both the RSK and the Republic of Croatia.
735. In support of the thesis that the Krajina Serbs were not displaced from the region by force,
but evacuated by orders of their local authorities, the Applicant submitted some RSK
documents, majority of which were seized by the Croatian Army following Operation
Storm.780 However, the contents of these documents show that their purpose was not to
evacuate the entire Serb population to Bosnia and Herzegovina or Serbia. Quite to the
contrary, a number of documents cited by the Applicant indicate preparations for resistance.
736. For instance, a document submitted as Annex 191 to the Reply is the Civil Defense
Headquarters Order, dated 29 July 1995, which deals with plans of conducting
evacuation and rescue but also with othe r methods of preparing the population for a
military attack. The content of the document shows a routine preparation for defense
and does not support the Applicant’s claim.
737. A document submitted by the Applicant as Annex 166 is an Order signed by General
Mrkšić, Commander of the SVK General Staff. The Order purported to prevent departure
of families of professional serviceman and the population from the territory of the RSK.
738. Finally, a document submitted as Annex 198 to the Reply is a decision for evacuation made
by the RSK Supreme Defense Council, in the evening hours of 4 August 1995. This
document shows that the Order actually pertains only to the evacuation of people who were
unfit for combat. Furthermore, evacuation was ordered only from those municipalities that
779
780Article 144 of the Law on Overall People Defense of the Republic of Croatia (“Narodne Novine” 47/90).
Reply, paras. 11.77-78, footnotes 165-169.
282 were in an imminent danger of being taken over or had already been taken over, such as:
Knin, Benkovac, Obrovac, Drniš and Gra čac. Moreover, the document shows that
population should be evacuated to the towns of Srb and Lapac that are within the territory of
the RSK. There was no order for evacuation to Serbia or Bosnia-Herzegovina.
739. Again, the Applicant invokes in very general terms the statement ofGeneral Mile Mrkšić,
given before the ICTY Trial Chamber in Gotovina et al.case. 781 Yet, his witness statement
actually supports the Respondent’s position e pressed in the previous paragraph:
“Question: General, the evacuation which was ordered by the Supreme Defence Council,
that evacuation was never intended, much less planned, as a permanent removal of the
entire civilian population into Bosnia, was it?
Answer: That should not have been that. The population was supposed to be moved. We
were always expecting the international commun ity to stop that at any point and for us to
return from Srb.
Q. Now, your plan was to move the civilians to the area of Srb and to hold out until
international pressure forced the Croatians to stop their advance; is that right?
Yes, that's correct. […] Correct, because we didn't have the forces to stop them
ourselves.”782
740. After all, the finding of the ICTY in Gotovina et al. dismisses any doubt, if any
existed at all, concerning the reasons for the massive exodus of the Serbian
population. The Trial Chamber says:
“[R]eviewing the testimonies of people who left their homes, there are no or few
indications that their decisions to do so was initiated by RSK or SVK authorities. Further,
the evidence does not indicate that the movement of people itself was in any way
organized, for example with SVK providing assistance or security for the people leaving.
Rather, as Mrkšić testified, many SVK soldiers left their units in order to assist their own
families leaving and as a result the units collapsed. Based on the above, the Trial Chamber
finds that in general people did not leave their homes due to any evacuation planned or
organized by the RSK and SVK authorities.” 783
781
Reply, para. 11.79.
782ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Testimony of Witness Mile Mrkši ć, 23 June 2009,
Transcript pp. 19076-19077.
783ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011Judgment, para.
1539. Also, see excerpts from the testimonies of the Protected Witnesses P-136 (Annex 49) and P-054 (Annex 50).
283741. The Trial Chamber concluded that the fear of violence and duress caused by the shelling of
the towns of Benkovac, Gra čac, Knin and Obrovac created an environment in which those
present there had no choice but to leave. Consequently, the Trial Chamber found that the
shelling amounted to the forcible displacement of the population on 4 and 5 August 1995. 784
742. In light of the shelling and killings committed against Krajina Serbs from the very
commencement of Operation Storm it is sinister to state that the departure was a result of
785
“difficult living conditions, poverty and insecurity”, as the Applicant does. The
Croatian armed forces actually did everything to prove the unfortunate thesis of the Serb
786
leadership that “any co-existence between the Serbs and Croats was impossible”.
743. However, it seems that the Applicant had realized that its arguments made in Chapter
11 had not been very convincing, and thus, it made some additional efforts to advance
a new thesis in Chapter 12 of the Reply, which deals with legal issues arising from
Operation Storm. The Applicant states: “A military operation on the scale of Operation
787
Storm is bound to result in the large scale movement of civilians”.
744. Is it true that large-scale movement of civilians is a necessary outcome of a military
operation merely because of the scale of that operation? In accordance with
international humanitarian law, civilians are not to be made the object of attack. If
they are sufficiently reassured that they are not targeted, it is wrong to presume that
population displacement is inevitable. In f act, the Serbs of Krajina abandoned their
homes in huge numbers out of fear that they would be attacked and exterminated. The
destiny of those who decided to stay behind shows that the fear was justified.
C. Croatia targetted the fleeing Krajina Serbs
745. The Counter-Memorial gives a convincing acco unt of the systematic attacks of the
Croatian Army on the fleeing Krajina Serbs. According to the Croatian CHC Report,
four attacks on the refugee columns occurred in the territory of the UN Sector North,
784ICTY,Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al(IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011Judgment, para. 1745.
785See Reply, para.11.82.
786Reply, para. 11.80. For example, see CHC Report, Military Operation Storm and Its Aftermath, Zagreb, 2001,
p. 22, quoted in para. 1445 of the Counter-Memorial.
787Reply, para. 12.32.
284 788
near the places called Glina, Žirovac, Maja and Cetingrad. The fifth happened in the
territory of Bosnia and Her zegovina, near Petrovac, where the Serbs from the Sector
789
South were pulling out. In addition to the CHC Report from 2001, the Respondent
th
has quoted the following entry of the 4 HV Guards Brigade Operative Logbook for 7
August 1995:
“Our artillery was hitting the column pulling from Petrovac to Grahovo, the score is
excellent, the Chetniks have many dead and wounded […].” 790
746. Nevertheless, the Applicant completely ignores the evidence presented in the Counter-
Memorial and offers just general remarks. First, it observes that “the Respondent does
not claim that all the ‘Serbs’ in escaping columns were civilians; they also comprised
armed members of the SVK (both in uniform and without).” 791This remark is without
any relevance to the issue. As the Respondent has presented in the Counter-Memorial,
the refugee columns ran for their lives in a completely chaotic and unorganized
manner. They did not have any protecti on. Civilians do not become a legitimate
military target because they flee together with soldiers.
792
747. Second, the Applicant claims that “the Croatian forces did not target civilians”. This
statement sounds like a solemn declaration of a general rule, which must be respected
as such. However, Operation Storm demonstrated a rather different practice of the
Croatian forces. This was confir med by the ICTY Judgment in Gotovina et al, vis-à-
vis the Sector South. Thus, the Croatian forces did target civilians.
748. The third and fourth general remarks made by the Applicant are somehow connected and
confused: “the columns passed through areas of ongoing fighting and were on occasion
th
caught in the crossfire […] The ‘ABIH’ (5 Corps) was also involved in the fighting […]
793
It follows that the Applicant cannot be held responsible for their acts.” It is not quite
clear whether the Applicant wants to say that the Krajina Serbs, who allegedly decided to
depart from the region voluntary and in a way organized by their local authorities, now
788Counter-Memorial, paras. 1243-1253.
789Ibid, paras. 1254-1257.
790
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Reynaud Theunens, Expert report: Croatian Armed Forces
791 Operation Storm, Part II, p. 189.
792Reply, para. 11.87.
793Ibid.
Ibid.
285 voluntary chose a way through the crossfire, or that they were forced to go to the exits left
open upon the generous instructions made by President T đuman at Brioni Island. It would
be really unfortunate if the Croatian President could not presume the crossfire when he
planned the humanitarian objectives of Operation Storm with his military leadership. And
who was engaged in that crossfire? The Serbian Army of Krajina obviously not, because
they decided, according to the Applicant, to flee the region due to “difficult living
conditions, poverty and insecurity”. It is difficult to imagine such people fighting. Was it
then that the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina fought against the Croatian Army there?
Yet, at least from undisputed part of the Brioni Minutes, as well as from the map of
Operation Stormmade by the US Central Intelligence Agency and proposed by the
Applicant as Annex 174 to the Reply, it follows that the ABiH 5 Corps was attached to
the HV. 794From eye-witness testimony of Boris Martinov ć,iit is evident that the attack on
the Serb column by the 5 thCorps near Donji Žirovac was done in coordination with
Croatian forces because the witness saw Croa stoldiers attacking the column from one and
795
Muslim soldiers from the other side of the road.
796
749. Fifth, the Applicant claims that “the Serbs themselves caused casualties”. No
evidence has been proposed for this unbelievable allegation, so it is impossible for the
Respondent to even try to discuss it.
750. Sixth, the Applicant says that it “cannot be held responsible for acts that were
797
committed in Bosnia, by unknown persons.” Yet, the persons who committed those
acts in Bosnia and Herzegovina are very well known to the Croatian Government
because, as their Operative Logbook confirms, they belonged to the 4 thGuards
Brigade of Croatian official armed forces (HV). 798
751. In addition, the Applicant criticizes the source of information about the attacks on the
refugee columns as unreliable and inconsistent. 799 The Respondent has already made
some observations in the Chapter dealing with the questions of proof in regard to the
794
795See infra, paras. 817-819.
Basic Court in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of the witness hearing of Boris Martinovi ć,
796ed 7 May 1997 (Annex 53).
797Reply, para. 11.87.
Ibid.
798See para. 751 supra.
799Reply, paras. 11.91, 11.92, 12.10(3).
286 Applicant’s objections to the CHC 2001 Report. 800The Report “Military Operation
‘Storm’ and Its Aftermath”, published in Zagreb, was a remarkable attempt of that
non-governmental organization, whose me mbers did not support the political and
military objectives of the Krajina Serbs, to examine the real consequences of the
operation. The Report was based on the in-fi eld-investigation which, although limited
in sources, was directed to the collection of all available and verifiable information
about the victims. As the Court pronounced in the Bosnia case, “it is not necessary to
examine every single incident reported by the Applicant, nor it is necessary to make an
exhaustive list of the allegations”. 801 This Report, of course, cannot provide the Court
with names of each and every victim and perpetrator of the genocidal acts, and
therefore it cannot serve to the ICTY in ex amination of the personal criminal liability.
But it proves beyond a reasonable doubt th at the Serb refugee columns were
intentionally attacked and that people were killed in them.
752. In Chapter 12, the Applicant even adds a new argument concerning the CHC Report.
It suggests that “statements obtained by an NGO from individuals whose identities are
unknown can be of no more evidential weight in proceedings before the ICJ than
before a criminal tribunal. Even the Respondent is unaware of the identity or
reliability of the sources on which it relies. In the absence of any information about a
particular witness, it is impossible for the Court to evaluate the credibility, reliability,
802
or potential bias of the testimony.”
753. This is unjustifably severe and unfair assessment of materials generated by non-
governmental organizations. International tribunals, including international criminal
tribunals, have found NGO materials to be useful and reliable in adjudicating various
issues. It is true that they could not be decisive in ruling on core issues of guilt or
innocence but that does not mean they lack evidential weight merely because they are
based upon sources that are not identified. In the Milosevic case, the Trial Chamber said:
“In most cases, human rights reports constitute hearsay evidence, which is admissible under
Rule 89 (C), provided it is relevant and reliable. Whether such evidence will be evidence on
which the Trial Chamber could convict depends on a number of factors, including the way
800See paras. 592-595 supra.
801ICJ, Bosnia case, para. 242.
802Reply, para. 12.10(3).
287 in which the evidence was collected and presented, the nature of the evidence, for example
how general or specific it is, and whether it is the only evidence relating to a specific
charge. These reports must therefore be considered on a case by case basis.” 803
754. The Respondent notes that the sources of such reports are usually not identified out of
concern for their safety and security, and not because of any sinister motive. Those who
use such material must balance the difficulty in evaluating the credibility of the sources
with the overall credibility of the organization that has furnished the report.
755. There are many examples in the case law of the international crim inal tribunals of
reliance upon NGO reports. For example, th e International Crim inal Tribunal for
Rwanda has regularly referred to and relied upon material s produced by organizations
like Human Rights Watch. 804The United Nations reports ar e not very different. They
are assembled by independent experts or by consultants based upon a range of
unspecified, anonymous sources. They will be worded more cautiously because of the
association with the United Nations, and th is is the source of their credibility and
authority. The Respondent notes that the Appl icant has not hesitate d to invoke various
reports from independent experts retained by the United Nations. Yet the same concerns
it expresses with regard to NGO materials are present. Again, as is the case with NGOs,
international criminal tribunals regularly re fer to reports prepar ed by experts for the
United Nations.
756. Nevertheless, the Respondent, in addition to the evidence produced with the Counter-
Memorial, submits now twelve witness statements given before the domestic criminal
courts in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, from 1995 to 1998. 805These are the
statements of eye-witnesses of the Croa tian attacks on the refugee columns. The
traumatic experience and vivid memory of th ese individuals will depict the horrific
scenes of genocide. All of those statements were given in accordance with the criminal
rules applicable in the territory of the former Yugoslavia.
803
Prosecutor v. Milošević (IT-02-54-T), Decision on Motion for Judgment of Acquittal, 16 June 2004, para. 38
804ference omitted).
For example, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda relied upon a report of
the NGO Human Rights Watch in concluding that it should take judicial notice that genocide was committed in
Rwanda in 1994: Prosecutor v. Karamera (Case No. ICTR-98-44-AR73(C)), Decision on Prosecutor’s
Interlocutory Appeal of Decision on Judicial Notice, para. 35, fn. 58.
805See annexes nos. 52 – 66, Minutes of the witness hearing of Mirko Mrkobrad, Boris Martinović, Dragomir
Kotur, Božo Ivanović, Ljubica Krasulja, MO, Dara Valentić, Mile Vračar, Dušanka Mraović, Sava Utržen,
Jovica Piplica and Željko Dubajić.
288757. Witness Mirko Mrkobrad testifies:
“I think it was a Sunday, 8 August 1995 I was in a refugee convoy. […] When the convoy
reached the so-called Ravno Rasce, the Croatian army staged its attack. The convoy was cut
off from its left flank so that it was halved. I found myself in the other part of the convoy
heading for Glina. Before the Croatian army attacked us, we had been bombarded by the
artillery. The shelling lasted for some ten minutes. […] Since the shelling continued, there
were a number of dead and wounded people in the convoy I was in, meaning the severed part
of it. I can't be more specific about the deadand wounded, but my wild guess was that there
were at least 30 dead and many more wounded people. […] When the shelling stopped, we
could see a unit of the Croatian army of approximately 50 soldiers wearing sub-machine guns,
rocket launchers and stingers. Part of the convoyin front of the burning vehicle continued its
flight to Bosnia and the part of it I was in, wsain disarray, turning back to Glina. The Croatian
soldiers used machineguns and mortars to fire upon this part of the convoy. People were
falling down as if they had been mowed down. It was hard to tell the number of dead and
wounded. […] When the convoy managed to get to Glina, which was some 15 kilometres
away from Ravno Rasce, the Croatian army had already taken control of Glina. The convoy
was allowed to get into Glina and, when it was in the centre of the town, it was surrounded
from all sides by the Croatian army. […] From the position I was on, roundabout near the
outpatient hospital in Glina, I estimated that there were some 600 refugees, women and
children, mainly civilians and a very small number of uniformed people. All of a sudden, a
small-arms fire was opened at themP .eople were falling down like flies.”06
758. Witness Božo Ivanović stated:
“I picked up a little boy and put him in my car, heading for Dvor. When I reached Dvor, it
was shelled by Ustashe from Kostajnica, and the residential quarters were under direct
attack. There was a tractor in front of me in the convoy with the trailer carrying hay. The
trailer was packed with people. There were probably between 15 and 20 of them. At one
point, the tractor and trailer were hit by a grenade and people flew like mannequins in the
air and they were instantly dead. With my little companion, I fled from the car and
sheltered in a deserted house. Next to me, there was a stranger who also took shelter in the
same building. I saw that he had lost part of his leg. He was practically legless, even
though he was not aware of it. Another man was hit in the forehead and his wound was
807
bleeding.”
806
District Court in Požarevac, Serbia, Minutes of witness hearing of Mirko Mrkobrad, dated 13 March 1997
807nex 52).
Municipal Court of Vršac, Serbia, Minutes of witness hearing of Božo Ivo,iated 17 April 1997 (Annex 55).
289759. And this is how witness MO describes his dreadful eye-witness experience:
“In August 1995 I worked as a driver at the urgent care day centre in Novi Grad. On 7
August 1995, I was given orders to drive th e ambulance in the afternoon in the direction
of Dvor-upon-Una and the village of Zirovac so as to drive the injured civilians at which
the Croatian Army opened strong fire at close range. I was accompanied by another urgent
care vehicle bearing the Red Cross sign, driven by Milan Popovic. When we reached the
village of Trgovo, which is situated along th e Novi Grad – Glina road, I saw that both
sides of the roadway were crowded by over turned and damaged tractors and trailers,
horse-drawn carts and other vehicles. All of them were bullet ridden and destroyed by
explosives so that they were rendered inopera ble for further travel. I was told that the
Croatian Army attacked from close range a convoy of refugees moving from Glina to
Novi Grad on that section of the road. The civ ilians had left those vehicles and fled in
panic. There were many dead civilians in those vehicles and around them, but how many
there were I could not tell, because I had no tim e to make the count or to look around. I
know that there were surviving children who crie d, so I put at least seven of them into the
808
ambulance that I drove and proceeded further to do the job I had been given.”
760. The similar situation was in the Sector South. Witness Sava Utržen testifies what he saw
immediately after the Croatian soldiers entered into Knin:
“I saw that the Croatian soldiers intercepte d a convoy of civilians fleeing Knin on their
tractors. The Croatian soldiers killed four tr actor drivers and threw their bodies into the
river. Before they killed those drivers whom they called “Chetniks”, they shot them and
threw them into the river. I saw afterwards th e Croatian soldiers bringing a group of Serb
soldiers, whom they have brutally beaten and taken to the Slavko Rodic barracks. Beside
the barracks, there were many dead bodies of ci vilians killed in the street. I noticed that
there were women among the dead, but I had not seen any dead children. The bodies were
mainly in the street which the fleeing civilians used on their way out of Knin heading for
Bosansko Grahovo. I saw about 25 killed civilia ns in the same street. Their bodies were
lying beside the abandoned tractors. There were also civilians killed in the tractor trailers
809
in which they tried to flee in the direction of Bosansko Grahovo.”
808Basic Court in Novi Grad, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of witness hearing of MO, dated 2 April 1997
(Annex 57).
809Basic Court in Prijedor, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of witness hearing of Sava Utržen, dated 7 April,
1997 (Annex 61). See also minutes of witness hearing of Jovica Piplica (Annex 65) and Željko Dubajić (Annex
66), concerning the shelling of the refugee column near Petrovac.
290761. The killings described above were the manuscript of genocide committed by the
Croatian Army and Police. There was no military need to attack the fleeing refugee
columns. The refugees were attacked for a sole reason: to be destroyed as a national
group living in Krajina. At the same time, the killings sent a message to those who
survived that return was not possible. These killings clarify, if any clarification is still
necessary, the meaning of the words of Croatian President at the Brioni Island: “We
have to inflict such blows that the Serbs will to all practical purposes disappear.”
D. Croatia systematically killed the Krajina Serbs who stayed behind
762. Numerous examples of the systematic killing campaign directed against the members
of the Serb national group who did not flee from the Krajina region but stayed at their
810
homes have been presented in the Counter-Memorial. The Special Rapporteur of the
UN Commission on Human Rights Mme Elisabeth Rehn reported:
“Field staff of the Centre for Human Rights received numerous reports of killing taking
place in former sectors South and North while the military operation was ongoing, without
any military justification, and after the Croatian army had assumed control of the region.
More than 120 bodies have been discovered by the United Nations and reports of killings
have been especially numerous in the Knin area. According to information received, a
common murder method was shots in the back of the head.” 811
763. Witness Sava Utržen confirms this by his first hand account:
“Croatian soldiers killed those Kninians a nd Serb soldiers who happened to be at the
bridge near the Slavko Rodic barracks or on the street when they pushed into Knin. I saw
with my own eyes how the Croatian soldiers killed a civilian filming their entrance with
his camera. […] I discovered that he was a reporter and cameraman from Sarajevo.” 812
764. In the characteristically sweeping approach, the Chapter 11 of the Applicant’s Reply
completely ignores the evidence presente d by the Counter-Memorial vis-à-vis the
systematic killings of the Serbs who stayed behind. Some problematic objections are
raised again. For example, the Applicant accuses the Respondent of failure to provide
810
Counter-Memorial, paras. 1258-1311.
811See Annex 59 to the Counter-Memorial, p. 9, para. 24.
812Basic Court in Prijedor, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Minutes of witness hearing of Sava Utržen, dated 7 April
1997 (Annex 61).
291 more particulars about the death of the vic tims, such as their full names, exact place
and date of their killings, data about perpetrators, etc. 813 At this point, it seems that the
Applicant once again misunderstands the me thods of proof required for a dispute
concerning the application of the Geno cide Convention. As has already been
explained in Chapters III and VI of this Rejoinder, the Parties should present evidence
of genocide; this is not a case concerning specific murders.
765. It is well known that the Respondent did not have access to the crime scenes of
Operation Storm. It was not in position to conduct investigations there. In the days
following the operation even the UN observe rs were denied free movement. Andrew
Brook Lesli, Chief of staff of the UN Sector South, testified before the ICTY about an
embargo on free movement imposed to his staff:
“Question: And just to be clear on the exchange of points of view, did you demand on
behalf of UNCRO that UNCRO personnel be permitted to leave the compound?
Answer: Yes.
Q. And did you explain for what purpose UNCRO wanted to leave the compound?
Yes.
Q. And what was that purpose?
To ensure that the laws of war were being respected, to ensure that no humanitarian
violations were being perpetrated, to allow us access and visibility as per the United
Nations Security Council resolutions which granted us such, and I also mentioned that we
were willing to accept the responsibility and risk in doing so.
Q. Okay. If you recall, what response did you receive to the demand
to leave the compound?
Endless repetitions of no.
Q. How long did -- for how long did the tank remain there and how long was UNCRO
personnel prevented from leaving the camp?
We were prevented from leaving the camp up until the 9th of August, where I believe I
was one of the first outside of the camp.”814
813Reply, paras. 11.94 – 11.101.
814ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Testimony of Witness Andrew Lesli, 22 April 2008,
Transcript pp. 1972-73. (Annex 46).
292766. A similar account has been given by J. W. Hill, UN Military Police Commander in Sector
815
South. Under these circumstances, it is not strange that even the ICTY Trial Chamber
could not find sufficient information about all prepetrators and their affiliation in the case
concerning the specific incidents of murders that had to be deliberate in relation to the
individual criminal liability of the Croatian Generals, out of whom one belonged to the
Police and the other two to the Croatian Army. Yet, the matter properly provable in this
case is significantly different than in the ICTY case, as previously explained in Chapter VI
of this Rejoinder. This is not a case about the individual criminal responsibility of the
middle rank officers, but about the State responsibility. Both the HV led by General
Gotovina and the Special Police led by General Marka č belonged to the Republic of
Croatia. For that reason, the exact data about the place or time of each death, which for
sure occurred in the territory of Croatia during and after Operation Storm, as well as the
names of perpetrators, are not relevant for the core issue of this case.
767. The Applicant again points out some “met hodological flows” of the CHC Report as a
source for the Respondent’s claim. The Responde nt has already replied to this sort of
objections in the previous sections. 816The witness testimonies given in the ICTY
Gotovina et al. case, to which the Respondent also refers in the Counter-Memorial,
have not been opposed in the Reply. More over, the ICTY Judgment of 15 April 2011
confirms that, at least in the Sector South, members of Croatian military forces and the
817
Special Police committed more than 40 specific murders. However, the ICTY
Judgment also confirms that other mass killing incidents occurred, as for example the
massacre of all remaining inhabitants of the village of Kijane on 8 August in the
818
Gračac Municipality. It is also significant that the Croatian War Crimes Prosecutor
Mr. Mladen Bajić testified in the Gotovina et al. case that his offi ce had disinterred
about 300 bodies in Knin in 2001. He verifi ed that most of the bodies were buried
“without an on-site investigation or cr iminal report being f iled, and this was a
819
significant factor in delaying the prosecution of the incidents”. The Judgment reads:
“128 of the disinterred bodies had been identified at the time of his testimony. Of those
128, 104 were killed by fire-arm wounds to the chest, head, and abdomen with some of
the wounds occurring at point-blank range. Of these persons killed by fire-arms, 75
victims were killed around the time of 4-7 August 1995 with the remaining victims being
killed in the 30 subsequent days (i.e., in the wake of Operation Storm).” 820
815ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Testimony of Witness John William Hill, 27 May 2008,
Transcript p. 3750. (Annex 44). See also Counter-Memorial, paras. 1237-38, 1258, 1263, 1318-19.
816See paras. 757-761 supra.
817ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para 1710.
818Ibid, paras. 257-259.
819Ibid, para. 2119.
820Ibid (footnotes omitted).
293768. The Applicant offers some counter-allegations claiming that “a number of civilians
alleged to have been killed/missing as a result of OperationStorm, in the former Sector
North, died before OperationStorm; died from natural causes; committed suicide; or were
killed by accident; […] or died much later”. 821 No evidence has been produced here. It
seems that the Applicant has forgotten that a party asserting a fact must establish it.
769. However, it is important to note that in Chapter 12 of the Reply, the Applicant slightly
changes its position in the direction of r ecognition of the victims among those Serbs
who stayed behind. There, the Applican t states: “[T]he Respondent’s Counter-
Memorial cites numerous instances in whic h individual Serb civilians were found
dead, in sectors South and North, in circumstances suggesting that they may have been
murdered. Examples include elderly peopl e found dead with their throats cut,
decapitated or mutilated remains, bodies obser ved in the streets, found inside their
homes, or found in shallow graves. As regards Knin, the Respondent relies on a CHC
report alleging that 13 people were kille d by the HV ground forces entering the
822
town.” The Applicant continues: “It may well be that some of these deaths were
attributable to the acts of individual members of the HV and the Croatian MUP, and it
823
may be that some of those amounted to the war crime of murder.”
770. The Applicant is reluctant to admit its responsibility for death of these victims. It suggests
how “extremely difficult” is to respond to the allegations due to their “level of
824
generality”. Yet, a certain level of generality is definitely required in the examination of
the crime of genocide, according to the Court’s practice in tB hoesniacase (para. 242).
771. The Applicant continues: “The mere finding of mortal remains, even if there is forensic
evidence that the cause of death is suggestive of murder, does not provide sufficient
information to enable reliable conclusions to be drawn as to the circumstances in which
825
the death occurred or the identity of the perpetrator.” But the Respondent does not ask
for any conclusion to be drawn. The evidence here directly points to the obvious facts.
Otherwise, who could cut throats of the elderly Serb women after OperationStorm in a
hamlet in the surrounding area of Podinarje where “only a few elderly people remained
821Reply, para. 11.100.
822Reply, para. 12.46 (footnotes ommited).
823Ibid, para. 12.50.
824Ibid, para. 12.47.
825Ibid.
294 826
to live”, if not the units who took that area undertheir exclusive control? What would
be the unknown circumstances of their death in this case? And, is the name of the
perpetrator really necessary for the examination of State responsibility?
772. Yet, the next thesis of the Applicant fully demonstrates how weak its position is.
Namely, the Applicant urges the Court to bear in mind that “ at least some of these
deaths must have occurred in the context of a military operation as ground troops
827
entered towns”. The Applicant suggests that “there is an inevitable risk that
individuals encountered on entry will be tr eated as hostile unless they promptly and
828
convincingly demonstrate peaceful intent.” These semi-admissions speak for
themselves and a comment is not necessary.
E. Croatia imposed physical barriers to the return of the Serb refugees
773. In the Counter-Memorial, the Respondent has produced credible and reliable evidence
that the systematic killings of Serbs in the Krajina region were followed by other
activities geared toward destroying every possibility that Serbs who were not killed
829
could live in the region. The Counter-Memorial reads that upon entering the Serb
populated villages, Croatian forces killed Se rbs that they managed to find, destroyed
houses and other Serb property, killed lives tock, polluted wells and waterways, and
830
stole or removed fire-wood st ored for the upcoming winter. UNMO Report from 4
November 1995 on Sector South states that 17,270 houses were destroyed or damaged
831
after the commencement of Operation Storm. As of the end of September 1995, the
European Community Monitoring Mission (ECMM) documented that 73 per cent of
832
Serb houses were burned and looted in 243 villages investigated.
774. Although the Applicant has undertaken some serious efforts to put into question the above-
833
mentioned facts, the ICTY Judgment inGotovina et al. fully confirms the Respondent’s
assertions concerning the Sector South. Thus, the Trial Chamber found beyond a reasonable
826CHC Report, Zagreb, 2001, p. 46.
827
828Reply, para. 12.48 (emphasis added)
829Ibid.
830Counter-Memorial, paras. 1312-1325.
831Ibid, para. 1312.
UNMO HQ Sector South & Human Rights Activities Team (HRAT), Survey Report on the Humanitarian
832hts Situation in Sector South, 4 October-4 November 1995 (Annex 58 to the Counter-Memorial).
833Counter-Memorial, para. 1325.
Reply, paras. 11.103-11.108.
295 doubt that 22 specific incidents of destruction of property owned or inhabited by Serbs had
been committed in eight municipalities in the Sector South. The destruction was of “large
scale” either on the basis of the value or on the basis of the number of destroyed objects.
Further, the destruction cannot reasonably be explained by military necessity. Finally, the
834
Trial Chamber found that the perpetrators intended the destruction.Similar reasoning was
835
applied in the case of plunder of the property owned or inhabited by Serbs.
F. Croatia imposed legal barriers to the return of the Serb refugees
775. In its Counter-Memorial, the Respondent has produced sufficient information about
the actions of the Croatian Government ta rgeting the Serb population after Operation
Storm. 836On the other hand, the Applicant has apparently missed the point in the
Reply where it has discussed the recent and current developments concerning the
legislative and administrative measures th at should provide the conditions for the
return of all refugees. The Applicant has even argued that the Respondent has referred
to “a number of outdated reports of various international organizations and NGO’s”. 837
Yet, this case is not about Croatia’s ad mission to the European Union, but about
genocide committed during and after Operation Storm in 1995, and it is normal that
the reports from the relevant time are particularly important for this case.
776. However, the Applicant has neither denied nor challenged the contents of the
“outdated” reports presented by the Counte r-Memorial. No answer has been given to
the following Report of the UN Secretary-General from 18 October 1995:
“[T]he United Nations High Commissioner fH oruman Rights, UNCHR and UNCRO, as well as
a number of Member States and independent human rights organizations, have expressed their
concerns over the fact that serious violati ons of human rights have taken place and have
continued to occur after the military operations had been successfully concluded. These
violations, together with a number of recently adopted executive and legislative measures,
appear de facto to restrict the civil, political,economic and social rights of the Croatian Serb
population and the refugees’ right to return, in contravention of international conventions.”
834
835ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al(IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 1767-1773.
836ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al(IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 1780-1785.
837Counter-Memorial, paras. 1326-1352.
838Reply, para. 11.111.
The situation in the occupied territories of Croatia: Report of the Secretary-General, 18 October 1995, UN
Doc. A/50/648, para. 28.
296777. The restrictive measures imposed on the Croatian Serb population can shed more light
on the intent of the Croatian leadership. Among the annexes to this submission, the
Court can find excerpts from the records of three meetings held by President Tu đman
in August 1995 with other State offi cials and his political associates. 839The Minutes
of the session of the Presidency of the Cr oatian Democratic Union, held on 11 August
1995 at the Presidential Palace in Zagreb, s how the horrific scale of ethnic cleansing,
as well as the intent of the Croatian Presid ent, who discussed with his associates how
to resettle the Serbian Krajina with ethnic Croats and how to prevent Serb refugees
from returning:
“Dr Jure Radic : Nothing is more important […] in Croatia today than this, because
people are coming, Croats, and […] you know that Vojnic used to have only 51
inhabitants today, it’s a town of 15,000 people, tomorrow we can fill it up with 15,000. In
addition, Lapac has 14 inhabitants, 14 Croats, Donji Lapac 14 inhabitants. It’s more than
the number of houses… I agree, but it’s strategically so important, and it’s in such a
position that we must repair the houses, Gojko [he talked to Gojko Susak] and put Croats
there, such is the position of the place.
President: I am with the more radical, if someone has left the country and does not appear
there, I don’t know, a month, or three months, etc, that shall be considered, think of the
wording, state property, etc. We have come out of a war, etc, define it like that.
Nikica Valentic: Not three months, three months is too long, because we…
840
President: OK, a month, then.”
778. The plan of urgent colonization of the Croa ts in Serbian houses was further discussed
between President Tu đman and Minister Jure Radi ć, obviously an expert on
demographic stabilisation of ethnic cleansing, at the meeting held on 22 August at the
Presidential Palace in Zagreb:
“Dr Jure Radic : …I defined 5 priorities according to the urgency of colonising these
places with Croats… If you ask me this thing right here is the first and the second priority,
we should bring Croats back here urgently and this area should be urgently colonised with
Croats and we should by no means let more that 10% of Serbs be here ever again.
Because, that’s where we were cut off.
841
President: Not even 10%.”
839Annexes 67-69.
840Annex 67, pp. 11 and 12.
297779. These words are a direct reflection of President Tu đman’s state of mind from the
Brioni Island three weeks earlier, when he instructed his military personal that they
“have to inflict such blows that the Serbs [would] to all practical purposes disappear”.
These ex post facto documents confirm that the instruction was not related to the
armed forces of the adversary, but to the Serbian population of Krajina as such.
780. This was further confirmed by the testimony before the ICTY of Mr. Peter Galbraith,
former US Ambassador in Croatia, a witness particularly appreciated by the Applicant.
Although his estimations of the shelling of Knin are highly doubtful because he was
not an eye-witness of that event, 842his testimony in part concerning his firsthand
experiences must be taken with due respect. This is a summary of his testimony in
Gotovina et al. case, cited in the Judgment of 15 April 2011:
“1999. According to Galbraith, Tu đman preferred a reasonably or basically homogenous
Croatia. He believed and stated that the Serbs in Croatia were too numerous and
constituted a strategic threat to the state. Tu đman spoke approvingly of population
transfers, and also believed that Croats should leave areas that he did not think they could
hold. He considered both Muslims and Serbs as part of a different civilization than Croats.
Tuđman believed in the idea of a “Greater Croatia”.
2000. Tuđman informed Galbraith after the Krajina Serbs had left Croatia in August 1995
that these Serbs could not return. According to a US embassy cable dated 11 December
1995, Tuđman had told a visiting US congressman that it would be “impossible for these
Serbs to return to the place where their famili es lived for centuries”. Galbraith stated that
since this was Tuđman’s policy, it was also Croatia’s policy. He added that senior figures
in the Croatian leadership, including Šarini ć, shared this view. Galbraith recalled, for
example, Šarinić describing Serbs as “a cancer on the stomach of Croatia”.
2001. Further, Tuđman’s wish was that Croats from the diaspora might come and settle in
the Krajina. According to Galbraith, Tu đman took action to ensure that Serbs did not
return. This included enacting laws confiscating property with the aim of preventing
people from returning. Initially people were only given 30 days to return with the risk of
otherwise losing their property. According to Galbraith, given the disciplined nature of the
HV and the fact that the leadership was fully in command and had full power to prevent
crimes, these crimes that were committed, in particular the destruction of Serb property,
were either ordered, or it was a matter of policy to tolerate or encourage them. Further
indications of this were the scale and time over which the crimes occurred. Galbraith
843
knew of no specific attempts by Croatia to bring matters under contol.”
841See Annex 68.
842See Reply, para. 11.74, footnote 59.
843ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, paras. 1999-
2001 (footnotes omitted).
2987. Motive for genocide
781. A purpose behind a course of action can beimportant to better understand how and why
dolus specialisof the crime of genocide was formed. At this point the Respondent will
not discuss the publicly proclaimed “goal” of Operation Storm. 844Instead, it will show
how the criminal goal to eradicate all life of the Serb national group from the Krajina
region was established. In other words, this part will explain why was it that the
Croatian President had the intent to commit genocide against the Serb population of
Krajina, and how did it happen that hi s criminal intention, clearly and undoubtedly
expressed at the meeting on Brioni, was sosmoothly accepted by his subordinates.
A. Solution of the Serbian question in Croatia
782. There is no doubt that the rebel Serbs and th eir entity caused serious problems to the
sovereign functioning of the Croatian State and its Government. The Reply reads:
“The existence of the ‘RSK’ in the heart of the sovereign Republic of Croatia was a
critical obstacle to the political and economic development of the country. In the face of
over 4 years of failed negotiations, the intransigence of the rebel Serbs and the
inefficiency of the UN, the Republic of Croatia was compelled to resolve the problem
directly through the use of military force and in 1995 Croatian forces, in two key
Operations - Flash and Storm - regained control over the occupied territories.”845
783. Two critical points – political and economic - are equally important for a better
understanding of the Governmental attitude towards the rebel Serbs. Firstly, the number of
the Serbs in Croatia made them a significa nt factor on the Croatian political scene.
According to the 1991 census there were around 580,000 Serbs in Croatia constituting
846
approximately 12% of its total population. Yet, the Croatian President Franjo Tu đman,
who was described as “protofascist” by Mr. Efraim Zuroff, Director of the Simon
Wiesenthal Centre in Jerusalem, wanted Croatian people to be “the master in their own
house”. That is why he urged Admiral Domazet at the Brioni meeting, where Operation
Storm were planned, to open one exit through which the Serb columns can pull out and
844
See para. 697 supra.
845Reply, para. 3.132.
846R. Petrović, The national composition of Yugoslav population 1991 , Yugoslav Survey, 1992, No. 1, p.12.
847See E. Zuroff, Operation Last Chance, New York, 2009, p. 136 (Annex 9 to the Counter-Memorial).
299 flee.848This is also why only eleven days later he discussed how to organize new register
of the Croatian population, as well as the amendments to the Electoral Law and
Constitutional Law on Human Rights and Freedoms and the Rights of Ethnic and
849
National Communities or Minorities in the Republic of Croatia.
784. The second important factor was the geographical position of the Republic of Croatia and
850
the Republic of Srpska Krajina in it. There is no doubt that the RSK divided Croatia
into two parts, Slavonia and Dalmatia, and the maintenance of economic and traffic ties
between these two regions was very difficult. Yet a military intervention against the
Republic of Srpska Krajina would still not have meant the end of Croatian problems with
the disputed sovereignty over the areas predominantly inhabited by Serbs: even if the
armed rebellion could have been defeated, this rebellion could have been later transformed
into many other forms of disobedience. For that reason, the Croatian President decided
that only the “disappearance” of the Republic of Srpska Krajina and its population can
reunite Croatia and secure it from the inter-ethnic conflicts in the future.
785. Tuđman’s attitude towards the Kr ajina Serbs can be seen in his euphoric, victorious
public statement given in Knin, on 26 August 1995:
“[T]here can be no return to the past, to the times when they the Serbs were spreading
cancer in the heart of Croatia, cancer which was destroying the Croatian national being
and which did not allow the Croatian people to be the master in its own house and did not
allow Croatia to lead an independent and sovereign life under this wide, blue sky and
851
within the world community of sovereign nations.”
848
849Brioni Minutes, p. 7 (Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial).
See Annex 67 to the Rejoinder, in particular the following conversation:
“President: Naturally, the Government must render the decision on amendments to the Electoral Law, the st
decision on register of ethnic minorities which should probably be made at the beginning of September (1
September). Please, 1 September…
Drago Krpina: How shall we elect Serbs to the Sabor [the Parliament of the Republic of Croatia]?
President: So, there, after the register.
Drago Krpina: But, we are not obliged to 8 % any more. (No, no.)
President: Precisely so, to determine the percentage, because on that basis the amendments to the
Constitutional Law should be made, because I know that you will…
Drago Krpina: Mister President, the Constitutional Law must be changed.
President: Yes, well yes, and because of that, we need the register in order to have what we all know, in
order to have a real basis for it.
Nikica Valentic: From the political point of view, is it opportunistic to determine that there are 3 % of Serbs
in Croatia at this moment?
President: It will not be at this moment, it will be in a month.”
850See the maps nos. 4, 5 and 6 annexed to the Counter-Memorial (Volume III).
851BBC Summary of World Broadcasts, August 28, 1995, Monday, Part 2 Central Europe, the Balkans; Former
Yugoslavia; Croatia; EE/D2393/C.
300786. This negation of any possibility of further existence of the Serbs in Croatia was merely
repeated by the Tu đman’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Hrvoje Šarini ć in his
conversation with Ambassador Galbright: “We cannot accept them to come back.
852
They are a cancer in the stomach of Croatia”. The choice of metaphor is a damning
one. This is the same poisonous language th at characterized genocidal statements in
853
Rwanda, aptly described by the ICTR in the Nahimana et al. case. The concept of
“cancer” implies a subversive, poisonous presen ce, and one that re quires elimination.
854
It confirms the sense of Tuđman’s infamous reference at Brioni some days earlier.
B. Tu đman’s “scientific” justification of genocide
787. That Croatian President Tu đman was not hesitant to appl y the genocidal policy as a
last resort in solving the inter-ethnic conflict in his newly independent State is
evidenced by his book “Wastelands of Historic al Reality”, translated in English as
“Horrors of War”. In that book, Dr. Tuđman tried to justify genocide from a historical
point of view:
“All this successive pogrom-like violence against big foreign ethnic populations
numbering even millions of people have always been aimed at ‘final’ solution: removing a
foreign – if not an enemy fifth column of one’s national being. Seen from this point of
view – and this can only account for the incessant repetition of historical events – such
violent even genocidal changes that were made also after the end of the Second World
War always bring about dual consequences. On the one hand, they inevitably deepen
historical discord […] On the other hand, they bring about ethnic homogenization of some
peoples, leading to more harmony in the national composition of the population and state
borders of individual countries, thus also having possible positive impact on developments
in the future, in the sense of fewer reasons of fresh violence and pretexts for the outbreak
of new conflicts and international friction.”55
852ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Testimony of Witness Peter Galbraight, 23 June 2008,
Transcript, p. 4939.
853Prosecutor v. Nahimana et al. (ICTR-99-52-T), Judgment and Sentence, 3 December 2003; Prosecutor v.
854imana et al. (ICTR-99-52-A), Judgment, 28 November 2007.
This statement can also be compared with the similar one of Dr. Mladen Lorkovi ć, the NDH Minister of
Foreign Affairs: “Croatian people must clean itself from all elements which are its misfortune; which are foreign
and strange to that people; which dissolute from one evil to another through decades and centuries. Those are our
855bs and our Jews.” (Croatian People, 28 June 1941).
Dr. Franjo Tuđman, Wastelands of Historical Reality, Nakladni zavod Matice Hrvatske, Zagreb, p. 163.
301788. Thus, it is not strange that someone like Dr. Tu đman, once he became a head of the
nation, decided to sacrifice some historical discord, in order to reach “more harmony
in the national composition of the populati on” and “positive impact on developments
in the future” in Croatia.
C. Revenge
789. Furthermore, it is not disputed that the Serbian side committed crimes during the
armed conflict in Croatia, pa rticularly in 1991. In such a situation, the calling for
national revenge was nothing new in the long history of Balkan’s conflicts. Croatian
President made such an implicit call at a very important moment, at the meeting with
top military officials at Brioni Island, in the dawn of Operation Storm:
“And, particularly, gentlemen, please remember how many Croatian villages and towns
856
have been destroyed, but that’s still not the situation in Knin today [...].”
790. In a televised address on 26 August 1995, he even tried to find an excuse for
perpetrators engaged in the reprisal:
“[F]rom biblical times, as of the Old Testamenwt hich advocated the principle of an eye for an
eye, a tooth for a tooth, and its New Testament which was unsuccessful in overcoming this
type of resentment amongst people against whom sufferance and evil have been afflicted, so
that they never again […] respond to those who committed evil with evil. No country in the
world, not even the most sophi sticated armies […] were able to prevent incidents from
happening during the wars, and neither were weable to, although we condemn all incidents
which took place and call upon the Croatian people not to commit acts of retaliation, not to
destroy the homes of Serbs who left because this is now Croatian property!”57
8. Specific acts of genocide
A. Killing members of the group
791. The Court can find in the Counter-Memorial (paras. 1237 – 1311), as well as in the
858
previous paragraphs of the Rejoinder, a lot of evidence that the Croatian armed
forces killed members of the Krajina Serb national and ethnic group, as such.
856Brioni Minutes, p. 10 (Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial).
857ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 2008.
858See for example paras. 751, 763-766, 768-769, 773.
302792. In para. 11.85 of the Reply, the Applicant, in rebuttal to the Respondent’s claim about the
victims of Operation Storm, makes three general remarkF s.irst, “no order to commit crimes
was executed, since no such order existed”. This is simply not correct. The Respondent’s
previous analysis clearly demonstrates that the instruction for the eradication of the Serbian
life in Krajina was given on the Brioni Island on 31 July 1995. It was documented by the
Minutes from that meeting produced as Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial. Second, the
Applicant claims that all efforts were made to encourage the Serbs to stay. Allegedly, “[o]n
4 August, President Tuđman appealed to the Serbs to remain ‘at home’.” However, the
Applicant ignores the words of its President from the Brioni Island:
“A leaflet of this sort - general chaos, the victory of the Croatian Army supported by the
international community and so forth (Serbs, you are already withdrawing, and so forth),
and we are appealing to you not to withdraw, we guarantee […] This means giving them a
way out, while pretending to guarantee civil rights, etc.”
793. Finally, there is no doubt that many Serb civilians who decided to stay behind met their
destiny at their homes, as the evidence showsT .hird, the Applicant claims that “no precise
data on the number of Serbs killed or missing during Stormhas been established”. Yet, is
the precise number really necessary for this case? The evidence offered by the Respondent
has established that the Croatian armed forces killed the Krajina Seb ens masse.
794. The Applicant does not contest the fact that members of the group were killed, thereby
acknowledging the actus reus of the first act of genocide enumerated in Article 2 of
the Convention. According to the Applicant, “[w]hilst it is undeniable that there were
civilian casualties during Operation Storm and thereafter, the Respondent has adduced
no reliable evidence to prove that such casualties resulted from the unlawful acts by
the armed forces of Croatia (that is, acts in breach of international humanitarian law).
Insofar as there is evidence of the deaths of non-combatants, there is no reliable
evidence as to the circumstances of d eath or the identity of the perpetrators.” 860 This
reference to international humanitarian law is perplexing in that it suggests that acts
intended to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group in whole or in part
might not be genocidal to the extent that they were “lawful” acts of war. The
Respondent submits that the lawfulness of th e belligerent activity is irrelevant if the
act is associated with genocidal intent.
859
860Reply, para. 12.58.29.
303795. In any case, the alleged “lawful” nature of the killing of civilians by Croat armed
forces, upon which the Applicant stakes its fi rst line of defence to this charge, is
effectively demolished by the findings of the Trial Chamber in Gotovina et al .
According to the Trial Chamber,
“members of the Croatian military forces and the Special Police committed unlawful
attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as the crime against humanity of persecution,
against the towns of Knin, Benkovac, Obrovac, and Gra čac. The Trial Chamber finds that
861
crimes were committed throughout the Indictment area in August and September 1995”.
796. The Court is referred to the Judgment of the Trial Chamber, with its highly detailed analysis
of specific incidents, including the unlawful shelling of important population centres like the
city of Knin. The findings of the Tribunal are based on evidence from experienced military
observers and human rights monitors, including members of the European Union
Monitoring Mission, as well as upon expert testimony with respect to the purported military
purposes of artillery attacks on towns that the defendants in the case unsuccessfully invoked.
B. Causing serious bodily or mental harm
797. The Counter-Memorial presents well-documented examples of causing serious bodily
or mental harm to the members of the Kr ajina Serb national and ethnic group (paras.
1399 – 1401). As in the case of killing, the Applicant attempts to refute the allegation
that the second enumerated act of genocide was perpetrated by Croat forces with the
strange suggestion that “there is no convincing evidence that bodily or mental harm
862
was inflicted unlawfully (in breach of international humanitarian law)”. Again, this
argument can be laid to rest by even the most summary consultation of the Judgment
of the ICTY Trial Chamber in Gotovina et al:
“When assessing whether the acts directed against the victims in those incidents caused
serious mental or physical suffering or injury, the Trial Chamber considered the
circumstances under which the acts were carried out, in particular where the victims were
at the time, as well as the victims’ age and gender. The Trial Chamber further considered
the number of perpetrators, whether the perpetrators were armed, and whether they used
861ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 1710
(emphasis added).
862Reply, para. 1258.
304 some kind of weapon for the ill-treatment. The Trial Chamber finds that all the victims in
the incidents referred to above were subjected to acts that caused serious mental or
physical suffering or injury and that the perpetrators of the acts intended this result.”
798. In the view of the Respondent, such serious bodily and mental harm was conducted in
addition to the killings and forcible displacement of the Serb population, driven by the
same intent to destroy the group of Krajina Serbs as such.
C. Conditions of life
799. With respect to the third act of genocide, namely “[d]eliberately inflicting on the
group conditions of life designed to bring about its destruction in whole or in part”,
there is ample evidence in the Trial Chamber Judgment in Gotovina et al., as well as
in other authorities previously cited and submitted by the Respondent, to establish the
actus reus (see Counter-Memorial, paras. 1406-1409). The Applicant does not in fact
dispute the issue of the actus reus in the Reply, but insists that there “is no evidence of
genocidal intent on the part of the Government of Croatia”. 864 As the Respondent has
indicated above, this is not a sustainable statement, not only taking into account the
remarks of the President of Croatia during the Brioni meeting but many other facts
that indicate that the Applicant’s intent was to destroy forever Serb life in the Krajina.
800. The Respondent takes note of the statemen t by the Applicant that neither the
displacement of individuals from the protected group, nor the destruction of property
865
can constitute an unlawful act contrary to Article II(c).
801. The Respondent also takes note of the claim in the Reply with respect to the statement
in the Application that initiated these pr oceedings, where it is stated that the
evacuation of “Croatian citizens of Serb ethnicity in the Knin region” (Republika
Srpska Krajina) amounted to “a second round of ‘ethnic cleansing’, in violation of the
Genocide Convention”. 866The Applicant has now retreated from this allegation, it
appears. 867 The Respondent will leave it to the C ourt to assess the legal consequences
863ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 1794.
864Reply, para. 12.58(3).
865Ibid.
866Application instituting proceedings, paras. 2 and 33.
867Reply, para. 12.59.
305 of the Applicant’s admission in the Appli cation instituting proceedings. It confines
itself to the observation that this is characteristic of the Applicant’s cavalier use of the
term genocide, a term that it casually uses to describe the behaviour of others while
being incapable to assess its own conduct using the same standard. In this respect, it is
interesting that in the Reply the Applicant explains that it included the allegations on
the genocide against the Serb population in the Application because it thought that the
868
FRY and not Croatia was responsible. So, does a crime become or cease to be
genocide depending on who is responsible for it?
9. Conspiracy to commit genocide
802. The Reply to the charge of conspiracy to commit genocide, which is set out in detail in
869
the Counter-Memorial, confines itself to little more than a simple denial, arguing
that the Respondent has “misread ” the remarks of President Tu đman at the Brioni
meeting. 870The arguments of the Respondent ar e not addressed and they are not
challenged. The Respondent reiterates th at the Brioni Minutes provides very
compelling evidence of the existence of a genocidal conspiracy.
10. Failure to punish
803. The obligation to prosecute and punish ge nocide is a consequence of several
provisions of the Genocide Convention, incl uding articles 1, 4, 5 and 6. It should be
noted that the Convention points to a primary responsibility of the territorial State for
prosecution of the crime. According to article VI,
“Persons charged with genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in article 3 shall be
tried by a competent tribunal of the State in the territory of which the act was committed,
or by such international penal tribunal as may have jurisdiction with respect to those
Contracting Parties which shall have accepted its jurisdiction.”
804. In the Bosnia case, the Court examined whether the International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia was described by the expression “such international penal
tribunal”. 871That issue need not arise here because there is no debate in the present
868Ibid.
869Counter-Memorial, paras. 1465-1469.
870Reply, para. 12.60.
871ICJ,Case concerning the Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia and MontenegJ)dgment, 26 February 2007, General List No. 91, para. 445.
306 proceedings as to the fact that OperationStorm, including its planning and preparation,
took place on the territory of the Applicant. It is Applicant’s responsibility to ensure
that such acts are punished in accordance with article VI of the Convention. Although
the Court does not have jurisdiction over the obligation to prosecute more generally,
the Respondent notes that even if the acts are not given the qualification of genocide
before the courts of the Applicant, the latter is in any case under a duty to prosecute
the atrocities associated with Operation Storm pursuant to its obligations under
international human rights norms such as the European Convention on Human Rights,
because these constitute serious violent crimes against the person. It has not done so.
805. According to the Report by the UN Secretary-General to the UN Security Council,
dated 14 February 1996:
“[t]he discrepancy […] between the number of apparent violations of the right to life
recorded by United Nations investigators in the former Sectors – at least 150 – and the
number of cases acknowledged by the Croatian authorities continues to be unaccountably
large. While the Government has pursued prosecutions in the most dramatic cases, e.g. the
massacre of nine Serbs at Varivode, and some others, there is little evidence of progress in
resolving the many other reported cases of individual killings.”2
806. The Applicant continues to present Operation Storm as a patriotic struggle to reclaim
territory rather than what it was in reality, a brutal expulsion of an ethnic group from a
territory it has inhabited for generations. The Trial Chamber of the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has already brought the Applicant closer
to reality, although the reaction of its government and its civil society to the decision
in Gotovina et al. shows just how far it remains from accepting the importance of
justice, be it international or national. The Respondent urges the Court to contribute to
setting the Applicant on a path that better acknowledges its history.
11. Attribution of acts of genocide to Croatia
807. The fact that crimes during and after Operation Storm are attributable to the Republic
of Croatia cannot be in dispute in light of all the evidence presented to date. The
evidence clearly shows that numerous underl ying crimes which represented the actus
872
ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 2103.
307 reus of the crime of genocide were perpetrated by members of the Croatian army and
police as de jure organs of the Applicant, while the genocidal plan was designed by
873
the highest leadership of Croatia.
808. Attribution of all such crimes against Krajina Serbs to the Applicant is obvious from
several facts. Namely, the genocidal plan was confirmed on Brioni by the highest
Croatian political and military officials and was ordered on that occasion by the
Supreme Commander of the Croatian ar med forces, President Franjo Tu đman. This
genocidal plan was coordinated and its implementation on the ground was supervised
by the highest military and police officers, many of whom were present at Brioni and
had received the criminal orders from the President himself. Croatian armed forces
enclosed Krajina so that nobody could en ter and witness the crimes being committed.
They had complete and effective control of the entire territory of Krajina and all
individuals participating in Operation Storm were under direct command and control
of the Croatian political and military leadership . Individual crimes were committed by
Croatian soldiers and police officers. Finally, Operation Storm and the disappearance
of Krajina Serbs from the territory of Republic of Croatia is celebrated by the
Applicant, while military and police comma nders, who were later accused and found
guilty of crimes before the ICTY, had been promoted after the operation and are still
celebrated in Croatia as heroes.
809. It is hard to conceive how the Applican t, after a long period of acceptance and
celebration of Operation Storm and of the participation of its army in this operation,
can today attempt to claim that somebody else may have been culpable for the crimes
committed during the operation. It is obvious from all evidence presented that it was
actually the Croatian army and police that had orchestrated and committed the
underlying acts of genocide committed agains t the Krajina Serb population. This was
furthermore confirmed by the Judgment in Gotovina et al. that clearly identified
“members of the Croatian military forces and the Special Police“, as perpetrators of
these crimes. 874
873See Counter-Memorial, paras. 1316-1322, 1337.
874ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al (IT-06-90-T), Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011, para. 1710.
308810. Actually, one can see from the Reply that even the Applicant is aware of the fact that
it cannot deny its responsibility for Operation Storm considering that it chose to
specifically dispute only the killings of Krajina Serbs fleeing in the columns. 875The
Applicant, namely, claims that it cannot be responsible for murders perpetrated by the
“ABIH” (5 Corps). 876
811. Nevertheless, from the new evidence and the eye-witness statements offered with this
Rejoinder it is even more clear that it was the Croatian army who conducted majority of
attacks on the column and most of the killings of Serbs. Evidence of Mirko Mrkobad
and Božo Ivanović were already cited and the two clearly state seeing Croatian forces,
not somebody else, targeting Serb columns near the towns of Glina and Dvor na Uni. 877
The entry from the 4 HV Guards Brigade Operative Logbook for 7 August 1995 was
also cited and shows a report by the Croatian unit that the 4th HV Brigade was attacking
the column and that many “Chetn iks” had died and were wounded. 878
812. Concerning the participation of the 5 Corps of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina
in Operation Storm and the crimes committed in the course of the operation, the
Respondent submits that the participation of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina
units in Operation Storm was planned in advance, while one of the overall objectives
of Operation Storm was quick merging with 5 ABIH Corps. 879 The Respondent does
not possess a document that would precisely explain the basis for the participation of
the 5 Corps of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the operation, but the minutes
of the Brioni meeting demonstrate that the participants, who were members of only
Croatian institutions, discussed how and where the 5 thABIH Corps should be
deployed and what military actions it should take. 880This could imply that the 5 th
ABIH Corps was put under full disposal and under full command and control of the
Croatian Army for the purpose of Operation Storm, in which case Croatia, and not
Bosnia and Herzegovina, should bear responsibility for the actions of that unit and the
875Reply, para. 11.87.
876Ibid.
877Annexes 52 and 55.
878See para. 751 above.
879See Reply, Annex 174 (map made by the US Central Intelligence Agency and printed in Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990-1995 (2002), ICTY,
Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al. (IT-06-90-T), Reynaud Theunens, Expert Report: Croatian Armed Forces and
880ration Storm, Part II, p. 96., O. Žunec, Naked Life (Goli Život), Zagreb, 2007, p.842.
Brioni Minutes, pp. 4, 9, 16-18.
309 crimes committed by that unit during the ope ration. This even more so since the
operation was genocidal from its very inception and the crimes committed were not
excesses committed during regular military operation but rather a direct consequence
of the genocidal plan expressed at the Brioni meeting.
813. In any case, however, it is of very little importance what the status of the 5 thABIH
Corps really was, namely whether it acte d under the instructions of Croatia or
independently, since the facts of the case and the evidence presented clearly show that
it was undoubtedly the Croatian army and the Police which committed most of the
crimes during and after Operation Storm, including most of the killings of the people
in the refugee columns. Therefore, whether or not some of the crimes against the Serbs
during Operation Storm were indeed perpetrated by the Army of Bosnia and
Herzegovina changes nothing in terms of responsibility of Cr oatia for genocide
committed against the Serbian population. The bulk of the genocidal acts during and
after Operation Storm was committed by the official organs of Croatia and Croatia
accordingly bears international responsibility for that genocide.
12. Disappearance of the RSK and other consequences of genocide
814. On 7 August 1995, at 18:00, Croatian Minister of Defense Gojko Šušak released a statement
that the military OperationStormwas completed. He stated that the Croatian forces reached
the internationally recognized borders of the Republic of Croatia. The criminal operation, as
it was demonstratedsupra, continued in the coming weeks. Mass killing incidents occurred
in the village of Grubori, on 25 August, in Gošć ii, on 27 August, and in Varivode, on 28
881
September 1995. Those Serbs imprisoned during and after the operation were tortured
882
and humiliated. The houses and other properties of the Krajina Serbs were devastated.
Even in 1998, Mr. Ivan ZvonimirČičak, President of the Croatian Helsinki Committee for
Human Rights, reported how the houses of Krajina were still set on fire:
“It all began by mysterious stories about numerous fires in Banija and Kordun regions
‘because of dry grass’. However, the dry grass swallowed up the houses as well. But when
the smoke was gone, Croatian Helsinki Committee monitors discovered that the purpose
881See Counter-Memorial, para. 1281-1283.
882See witness statements of Mirko Mrkobrad (Annex 52), Mile Vra čar (Annex 59), Dušanka Mraović (Annex
60), Milan Beric (Annex 63).
310 of the fire was to further the planned burning of houses to prevent possible return of Serbs.
Croatian Helsinki Committee monitors have filmed in the Municipality of Vrginmost as
many as 47 newly burned households, meaning that more than a hundred buildings have
been burnt down. Similarly, 20 houses were burnt down in Korenica, Topusko, Kistanje,
Donje Budacko and there are even news of the new burning coming in from all sides. […]
It is that method of burning houses when, for instance, a returnee gets all documents
properly signed within the process which lasts for months, but as soon as he crosses the
Croatian border or even while he is on his way from the border to his former home, his
house suddenly catches fire and burns down. That was what happened in Topusko these
days when a returning family with two children was on its way home. Two days before
883
their arrival in Topusko, their home simply burned down.”
815. The Republic of Serbian Krajina seized to exist on 7 August 1995. The Serb life was
physically eradicated in the wide region of the UN Sectors North and South. This is
how Amnesty International reported about the situation in Krajina three years later:
“Driving through the Krajina three years later the countryside retains an abnormal air. The
majority of houses have been completely destroyed by fire or looting, and fields are
overgrown. Here and there sown fields and laundry on the clothesline indicate life;
however, most commonly the clothes hanging on the line include military uniforms or the
cars parked in the drive bear license plates from Bosnia-Herzegovina. Apart from the
devastated property, evidence of the human rights violations is unseen. However, town
cemeteries contain row after row of closel y packed wooden crosses marked only with
884
numbers and the initials ‘NN’ – unidentified.”
816. In paras. 1326-1352 of the Counter-Memor ial, the Respondent reported about the
Applicant’s legislative measures and physical obstacles imposed to prevent return of
the Serb refugees in the years following the operation. While the criminal impunity
was imposed in favour of the perpetrators of the killings and other acts of genocide,
indictments were issued against the Krajina Serbs en masse , charging them with
885
genocide, war crimes and arme d rebellion against Croatia. The Respondent based
these claims on reliable international reports. Not one of them was contested or denied
883
Ivan Zvonimir Čičak, President of the Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights: Krajina Burning
884in, authorized article published in Feral Tribune, Croatia, on 16 March 1998.
885Amnesty International, Croatia: Impunity for killing after Storm, August 1998, p. 2, AI Index: EUR 64/04/98.
Human Rights Watch Report, Impunity for abuses committed during Operation Storm, and the denial of the
right of refugees to return to the Krajina, August 1996, Vol.8, No. 13(D), pp. 29-31 (para. 1351 of the Counter-
Memorial).
311 by the Applicant’s Reply. Instead, the Applicant tries to demonstrate a positive image
of its humanitarian efforts, by producing so me recent data concerning the process of
return of refugees, but still avoiding to inform how many of those refugees returning
to Croatia are of the Serb ethnic origin.
817. While the relations between Serbia and Croatia have significantly improved after 2000
in many fields, including bilateral political relations, regional co-operation, trade and
886
investments, tourism, culture, co-operation between the war crimes prosecutors, as
887
well as between national commissions for missing persons, many consequences of
Operation Storm are still present and visible.
818. According to public data of the non-governmental organization “Veritas”, 6,279 Serbs
from Croatia have so far been registered as killed during and after the armed conflict
888
in that country, out of which 1,787 are believed to be the victims of Operation
889
Storm.
819. According to the official registry of the Commesariat for Refugees of the Republic of
Serbia prepared in co-ordination with UNHCR, a total number of Croatian Serb
890
refugees in 1996 in Serbia was 290,667. In the meantime, only 68,000 have
returned to Croatia. Most of the others have obtained the citizenship of the Republic of
Serbia, while 56,363 persons orig inating from Croatia are still refugees today. Their
return is not easy. The United States 2010 Human Rights Report concerning Croatia,
inter alia, reads as follows:
“While constitutional protections against discrimination applied to all minorities, open
discrimination and harassment continued ag ainst ethnic Serbs and Roma. Incidents,
including looting, physical threats, verbal abuse, and spraying graffiti on Serb property,
continued in the Dalmatian hinterland and the central part of the country.” 891
886In 2011, for example, Mr. Slobodan Šnajder, one of the leading Croatian writers, published his moving story
about expulsion of Serbs from Croatia in the Belgrade’s Literature Magazine.
887See Counter-Memorial, paras. 15-17.
8884,269 Serb victims have been identified and buried, while 2,010 are still registered as missing.
889See www.veritas.org.rs.
890
Letter of the Commissariat for Refugees of the Republic of Serbia, No. 019-542/1 of 5 August 2011 (Annex
891.
US, Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, 2010 Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices, Croatia, April 8, 2011, http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2010/eur/154418.htm
312820. By his report of 17 June 2010, Mr. Thom as Hammarberg, Commissioner for Human
Rights of the Council of Europe, commends “the Croatian aut horities’ efforts to
resolve the crucial human rights issues arising out of the forced displacement that
occurred during the 1991-1995 war. He underlines that the right to voluntary return in
safety and dignity is a fundamental, internationally established principle corresponding
892
to a right of all refugees and internally displaced persons.” The Report particularly
emphasized one specific problem of the Serb refugees:
“The Commissioner is concerned by the situ ation of holders of socially owned flats
(‘Holders of occupancy/tenancy rights’ – ‘OTR holders’). This form of housing
represented 70% of housing units in the former Yugoslavia. The OTR status had many
characteristics of that of ownership as the occupancy/tenancy right was kept for one’s
lifetime. Until 1995 most OTR holders were able to transform their right into ownership
by paying a symbolic sum. This however was not the case for a large number of refugees,
mostly ethnic Serbs, whose rights were terminated when they fled during the armed
conflict. Ethnic Serbs in areas that were outside government control lost their right ex lege
when the conflict ended. The Commissioner was informed that 23,800 persons, mainly
893
ethnic Serbs, lost their entitlements.”
821. In July 2011, Mr. Miodrag Linta, President of the Coalition of the Refugee
Associations stated:
“Annex G to the Vienna Agreement explicitly says that the rights of all citizens existing
on 31 December 1990 will be protected, restored or compensated. This Annex also
provides that all contracts concluded during the war - mostly under threat or duress - will
become null and void. Unfortunately, it has been a decade since the signing and seven
years since the entry into force of the Agreement, that is, since the Croatian Sabor ratified
it, being the last among the parliaments of the former Yugoslav republics to do so, and
none of the provisions concerning our rights have been complied with. […] We demand
free access to and disposal of our houses of which we were unlawfully dispossessed and
which were given for occupancy by other persons, because most of the 10,000 Serb
houses were sold illegally, while some 10,000 Serbian families were forced to conclude
residency swap agreements.” 894
892
Report by Thomas Hammarberg, Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe, following his
visit to Croatia from 6 to 9 April 2010, Strasbourg, 17 June 2010, CommDH(2010)20, para. 53,
893ps://wcd.coe.int/wcd/ViewDoc.jsp?id=1636837 .
894Ibid, para. 29.
Politika, Belgrade, 30 July 2011.
313822. The continuing impunity for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes
committed during the 1991-1995 ar med conflict remains th e main human rights
problem in the Republic of Croatia. The many perpetrators of such crimes committed
against Croatian Serbs largely continue to enjoy impunity while the victims and their
895
families are denied access to justice and redress.
823. The Respondent notes that the Applicant did not deny the statement of its Ministry of
Justice given to the ICTY in the 2005 written submission i Andemi and Noraccase to which
the Counter-Memorial referred. Namely, the Ministry confirmed that ethnic differences in
896
the criminal proceedings are “readily understandable” given the “open wounds of war”.
But, even in the cases where the investigations have been opened, the feeling of justice
among the families of Serb victims is hard reached. Thus, the Judgment against Mihajlo
Hrastov, accused for murder of 13 JNA soldiers on the Korana Bridge in Karlovac, have so
far been reversed four times. An overwhelming majority of Karlovac residents saw Hrastov
as one of the heroes of the homeland war who saved the city from being overtaken by the
enemy army. While waiting for his judgment to take effect, his supporters were publicly
raising money for his cause, organizing campaigns of support and benefit events. When897
Đuro Brodarac, a war-time chief of police in the town of Sisak, died as a suspect in
detention in July 2011, the Croatian Parliament (Sabor) even opened a book of condolences
in his honor. 898Branimir Glavaš, infamous commander of the Osijek defense, was
sentenced by the District Court in Zagreb to ten years in prison, but managed to escape to
neighboring Bosnia and Herzegovina. Finally, General Mirko Norac serves his sentence
in the Croatian jail, but enjoys benefits, including a provisional release for the reason of his
wedding celebration which became the main event in the Croatian newspapers. 900
824. The unwillingness of the Croatian Government and society to face the past is
particularly visible in relation to the IC TY decisions. The Judgment of 15 April 2011
in the case Gotovina et al. was followed by the massive demonstrations in Croatia.
895See the 2010 Amnesty International Briefing to the UN Committee against Torture (Annex 73) and the 2011
Report of the Youth Initiative for Human Rights (Annex 74).
896See Counter-Memorial, para. 197.
897Jutarnji list, Hrastov case: Although considered hero by Karlovac residents, Prosecutor asks for harsher
898tencing, 8 July 2009.
http://www.jutarnji.hr/preminuo-duro-brodarac--andrija-hebrang--tragedi…-
899atvor/959160
900Voice of America, Arhives and News, Branimir Glavas on the run, 8 May 2009.
http://www.slobodnadalmacija.hr/Hrvatska/tabid/66/articleType/ArticleVi… .
314 The Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor stated that the factual finding of the Trial
Chamber concerning the JCE, led by the Croatian leadership, is unacceptable to her
Government, 901 while the President of the Croatian Parliament Luka Bebi ć denied that
Generals Gotovina and Marka č could be liable. 902 The City Council of Split decided
on 21 April 2011, seven days after the ICTY Judgment, to rename one of the squares
after General Ante Gotovina. 903
825. In such environment, it is not strange at all that the 5 of August is still celebrated as a
public holiday in honor of Operation Storm. 904 On that day in 2011, the Croatian
leadership participated at the celebration in Knin, where a monument devoted to this
criminal operation was unveiled. During her speech at the celebration, Croatian Prime
Minister Jadranka Kosor expressed her sp ecial appreciation fo r Croatian Generals
Ante Gotovina and Mladen Marka č, two persons sentenced by the ICTY for very
905
serious crimes committed during Operation Storm. Her mention of the two generals
was followed by the standing ovation of the entire Croatian leadership.
826. Indeed, Operation Storm often gets mythological dimensions of collective admiration,
or as one member of Croatian ruling party has put it:
“This century hasn’t seen, considering certain comparative elements, such a liberating
action as Operation Storm. And that is a visible proof of the great Croat vitality. It is a
906
proof that in one moment this people were touched by God.”
901
http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/kosor-istine-se-ne-bojimo-josipovic-…-
902tojao/547323.aspx
http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/luka-bebic-ako -je-tudjman-zlocinac-onda-sam-i-ja-zlocinac/547374.aspx
903http://wwwdnevno.hr/vijesti/split_dobio_trg_ante_gotovine/28879.html
904See Counter-Memorial, paras. 1473-1476.
905http://www.dalmacijanews.com/Hrvatska/View/tabid/77/ID/63219/Kosor-u-Kn…-
Gotovini-FOTO-VIDEO.aspx, last visited on 30 August 2011
906
Maja Freundlich, HDZ, MagazineWe (Mi), June 1997, according to Jovan Mirić, Twihlight of Mind (Sumrak
intelekta), Zagreb, 2006, p. 84.
315 SUMMARY OF PART II
827. In this Rejoinder, the Respondent presented convincing evidence of mass-killings and
other serious violations of international humanitarian law against the Serb people from
the very beginning of the armed conflict in Croatia. The hate speech against Serbs as a
national and ethnic group was directed to their dehumanization. Such a policy of the
HDZ Government culminated in 1995, when Operations Flash and Storm were
executed with an aim to ethnically cleanse the territory where the Krajina Serbs lived
for centuries. As Croatian philosopher Žarko Puhovski stated, the crimes committed
during and after Operation Storm “had been prepared for years through propaganda,
from television to the president of the count ry and all public factors in Croatia who
convinced the Croatian population and especially the soldiers that the Serbs are guilty
907
as such and that they should be punished as such”.
828. The Respondent does not contest that the Serbian side also committed serious crimes
during the armed conflict in Croatia, but submits that, even if the Court accepts some
proposals for the interpretation of the Genocide Convention advanced by the
Applicant, the only case of genocide was in fact Operation Storm. That criminal
operation was planned and executed with mens rea required by the Genocide
Convention, and proved by credible and reliable evidence. The requirements of proper
standard and methods of proof convinced the Respondent to limit its counter-claim to
Operation Storm. The other crimes and atrocities against the Serb population of
Croatia, described in this Rejoinder, have been included as the factual background.
829. The existence of the intent of the Croatian President Franjo Tu đman and top military
leaders of the Croatian Army and Police to destroy the Krajina Serb national and
ethnical group as such, in whole or in part, is confirmed by the Minutes of the meeting
held on the Brioni Island on 31 July 1995. 908Although this was a meeting where the
military aspects of the upcoming operation were discussed, the Croatian President and
other participants were not hesitant to use the expressions such as to “have to inflict
such blows that the Serbs … to all practical purposes disappear”, or to “be in favour of
907ICTY, Prosecutor v. Gotovina et al, Transcripts, 13 Fabruary 2009, page 15901; available on
http://www.icty.org/x/cases/gotovina/trans/en/090213ED.htm
908Annex 52 to the Counter-Memorial.
317 destroying everything”, or to “pretend to guarantee civil rights”, or to “clear the entire
area”, etc.909Some mitigating interpretations of these words, adduced by the Applicant
in the Reply, cannot bear the test of the comparison with the subsequent events which
clearly point to the real meaning of the instructions and recommendations given by the
Croatian President. The magnitude of the subsequent criminal acts against the Krajina
Serbs in the UN Protected Areas South and North during and after Operation Storm
also confirms the existence of the dolus specialis of the crime of genocide.
830. The Krajina Serbs who represented the substa ntial part of the Cr oatian Serb national
and ethnical group, as well as a distinct geographically located community and
historical centre of the Serbian life in Croatia, were subjected to mass killings, either
by merciless attacks to the refugee columns or by executions of those who stayed
behind. The killings were accompanied by causing serious bodily or mental harm to
members of the group, in particular those who were attacked while pulling out in
refugee columns and those who were capture d and subsequently tortured in Croatian
prisons. The group of Krajina Serbs was also subjected to conditions of life which
were calculated to bring about the physical eradication of its life in the territory of
Krajina: deliberate and indiscriminate shelling of the Krajina towns, forcible
displacement of the Serb civilians, massive destruction and looting of Serb property,
and finally, imposing administrative measures to prevent the Krajina Serbs from
returning to their homes.
831. According to public data of the NGO “Ver itas”, 1,787 members of the Krajina Serb
national and ethnical group ar e believed to be killed as a result of the Brioni
910
conspiracy. According to the Report of UN Secretary-General of 18 October 1995,
approximately 200,000 Krajina Serbs fled fro m the region attacked by the Croatian
Governmental Forces. 911The killings and the expulsion were results of the same
intent. Destiny of those who stayed at thei r homes confirms that had the more Serbs
decided to stay behind, the more of them would have been killed.
909Ibid.
910Data available on www.veritas.org.rs.
911The situation in the occupied territories of Croatia: Report of the Secretary-General, 18 October 1995, UN
Doc. A/50/648, para. 27.
318832. The ICTY Trial Chamber Judgment of 15 April 2011 in the case Gotovina et al.
confirms that massive crime s were committed against the Serb population in Sector
South during and after Operation Storm. 912Two middle-ranking Croatian Generals
were convicted in accordance with their pe rsonal role in the JCE run by the Croatian
Government. President Tu đman and other high-ranking architects of genocide died
before the ICTY investigation was completed.
833. However, the State responsibility of the Republic of Croatia for the crime of genocide
cannot be easily disputed: the crimes were committed on the Croatian territory by its
de jure organs. In addition, the Applicant is re sponsible for its failure to punish those
liable for the crime of genocide. Moreover , the Applicant continues to celebrate
Operation Storm as its “Day of Victory and Homeland Gratitude”, in spite of the
finding of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
912Available on http://www.icty.org/x/cases/gotovina/tjug/en/110415_judgement_vol1.pdf and
http://www.icty.org/x/cases/gotovina/tjug/en/110415_judgement_vol2.pdf
319 SUBMISSIONS
834. On the basis of the facts and legal argume nts presented in the Counter-Memorial and
this Rejoinder, the Republic of Serbia respectfully requests the Court to adjudge and
declare:
I
1. That the requests in paras. 2(a), 2(b), 2( c), 2(d), 3(a), 3(b), 3(c) and 3(d) of the
Submissions of the Republic of Croatia as far as they relate to acts and omissions,
whatever their legal qualification, that took place before 27 April 1992, i.e. prior to the
date when Serbia came into existence as a State, are inadmissible.
2. That the requests in paras. 2(a), 2(b), 2( c), 2(d), 3(a), 3(b), 3(c) and 3(d) of the
Submissions of the Republic of Croatia relating to the alleged violations of the
obligations under the Convention on the Prev ention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide after 27 April 1992 be rejected as lacking any basis either in law or in fact.
3. Alternatively, should the Court find that the requests relating to acts and omissions that took
place before 27 April 1992 are admissible, that the requests in paras. 2(a), 2(b), 2(c), 2(d),
3(a), 3(b), 3(c) and 3(d) of the Submissions of the Republic of Croatia be rejected in their
entirety as lacking any basis either in law or in fact.
II
4. That the Republic of Croatia has violated its obligations under the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide by committing, during and after
Operation Storm in 1995, the following acts with intent to destroy the Serb national
and ethnical group in Croatia, in its substantial part living in the Krajina Region (UN
Protected Areas North and South), as such:
- killing members of the group,
- causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group, and
- deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its
physical destruction.
5. Alternatively, that the Republic of Croa tia has violated its obligations under the
Convention on the Prevention and Punish ment of the Crime of Genocide by
conspiring to commit genocide against the Serb national and ethnical group in Croatia,
in its substantial part living in the Krajina Region, as such.
321 6. As a subsidiary finding, that the Republic of Croatia has violated its obligations under
the Convention on the Prevention and Puni shment of the Crime of Genocide by
having failed and by still failing to punish ac ts of genocide that have been committed
against the Serb national and ethnical group in Croatia, in its substantial part living in
the Krajina Region, as such.
7. That the violations of international law set out in paras. 4, 5 and 6 above constitute
wrongful acts attributable to the Republic of Croatia which entail its international
responsibility, and, accordingly,
1) That the Republic of Croatia shall immediately take effective steps to ensure full
compliance with its obligation to punish acts of genocide as defined by Article II of
the Convention, or any other acts proscribed by Article III of the Convention
committed on its territory during and after OperatioSntorm; and
2) That the Republic of Croatia shall redress the consequences of its international
wrongful acts, that is, in particular:
a) Pay full compensation to the members of the Serb national and ethnical group
from the Republic of Croatia for all damages and losses caused by the acts of
genocide;
b) Establish all necessary legal conditions a nd secure environment for the safe and
free return of the members of the Serb national and ethnical group to their homes
in the Republic of Croatia, and to ensure conditions of their peaceful and normal
life including full respect for their national and human rights;
c) Amend its Law on Public Holidays, Remembrance Days and Non-Working Days,
by way of removing the “Day of Victory and Homeland Gratitude” and the “Day of
th
Croatian Defenders”, celebrated on the 5 of August, as a day of triumph in the
genocidal OperationStorm, from its list of public holidays.
III
8. That the requests in paras. 1 and 4 of th e Submissions of the Republic of Croatia
concerning the objections to the counter-claim be rejected as lacking anybasis either in
law or in fact.
The Republic of Serbia reserves its right to supplement or amend these submissions in
the further proceedings.
The Hague, 1 November 2011 ____________________________
Saša Obradović,
Agent of the Republic of Serbia
322
Rejoinder of Serbia