- Naser Orić
-
Naser Orić Born March 3, 1967
Potočari, Srebrenica, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR YugoslaviaAllegiance Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Years of service 1992-1995 Rank Brigadier Unit 28th Division (2nd Corps) Commands held Commander in Srebrenica Battles/wars Bosnian War Naser Orić (born March 3, 1967) is a former Bosniak military officer who commanded the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina forces in the Srebrenica enclave in Eastern Bosnia surrounded by Serb forces, during the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
In 2006, he was sentenced to two years' imprisonment by the Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in the Netherlands for failing to prevent the deaths of five and the mistreatment of eleven Bosnian Serb detainees during the period from late 1992 to early 1993 on the basis of superior criminal responsibility.[1] He was acquitted on the other charges of wanton destruction and causing damage to civilian infrastructure beyond the realm of military necessity. On July 3, 2008, the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY reversed the Trial Chamber's conviction and acquitted Orić of all charges brought against him.[2][3]
Contents
Career
Following secondary school Orić reported for conscription in the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) in 1985/1986, where he served in a special unit for atomic and chemical defence. He left the JNA with the rank of Corporal.
In 1988, he completed a six month training course in Zemun and served in Savski Venac in Belgrade as a trainee policeman. As a member of the police unit for special actions, he had courses for two more years. In 1990, Naser Orić was deployed to Kosovo as a member of a Special Police unit of the Ministry of the Interior of the Republic of Serbia. Thereafter, he returned to Belgrade, where he became a bodyguard to Slobodan Milošević. He worked in quelling the civil unrest during the March 1991 mass anti-war protests, arresting Vuk Drašković.
In August 1991, Orić was transferred to a police station in Ilidža, on the outskirts of Sarajevo, Bosnia. In late 1991, Orić was moved to the police station in Srebrenica, and in April 1992 he became the police chief of the Potočari police sub-station.
Territorial Defence (April 1992 - September 1992)
With the disintegration of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, a cadre staff consisting of former JNA officers began to prepare for the defence of Bosnia and Herzegovina. On 8 April 1992, the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina transformed the existing Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina TO (Territorial Defence) into the TO of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
In mid-April 1992, the Potočari TO was established, and Orić became its Commander. In May 1992, members of the Crisis Staff of the TO Srebrenica appointed him as the Commander, which Sefer Halilovic, Chief of the Supreme Command Staff of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ABiH), officially confirmed in June. Orić also became a member of the War Presidency in Srebrenica upon its creation on 1 July.
Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina (September 1992 - 1995)
In September, 1992, the Srebrenica TO HQ was re-named the HQ Srebrenica Armed Forces. Orić remained the commander. Orić's command was further extended when he was appointed the Commander of the Joint Armed Forces of the Sub-Region Srebrenica in early November 1992. Now his command encompassed the geographical regions of several municipalities: Srebrenica, Bratunac, Vlasenica and Zvornik in Eastern Bosnia. Orić received a Certificate of Merit in April 1993.
On New Year's Day 1994, all units under the command of Orić were named the 8th Operative Group Srebrenica HQ, 2nd (Tuzla) Corps of the ABiH. On 12 July 1994, Orić was promoted to the rank of Brigadier, and sometime before the first of March he was awarded the "Golden Lily", the highest award given by the Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command of the ABiH.
In early 1995, the 8th Operative Group Srebrenica HQ was re-named the ABiH 2nd Corps 28th Mountain Division.
Orić in Srebrenica 1992-1995
Beginning of the war in Srebrenica
The Serbian takeover of the municipalities of Bratunac and Srebrenica signalled the beginning of large-scale ethnic cleansing. Following the Serb takeover of Srebrenica town on 18 April 1992 by Yugoslav Peoples Army and local Serb militia, most of the Bosniak population was forcibly expelled from the town, thousands of them forced on a local stadium and then to Vuk Karadzic school where they were tortured. Many fled to the surrounding area. Some of these who stayed were killed, while many others were arrested and deported.[4] In the words of the ICTY judgement:
- "Once towns and villages were securely in their hands, the Serb forces - the military, the police, the paramilitaries and, sometimes, even Serb villagers - applied the same pattern: Muslim houses and apartments were systematically ransacked or burnt down, Muslim villagers were rounded up or captured, and sometimes beaten or killed in the process. Men and women were separated, with many of the men detained in the former KP Dom prison."[5]
In 1992, Bosniak villages around Srebrenica were under constant attacks by Serb forces. According to the Naser Oric trial judgement:[6]
{{quotation| "Between April 1992 and March 1993, Srebrenica town and the villages in the area held by Bosnian Muslims were constantly subjected to Serb military assaults, including artillery attacks, sniper fire, as well as occasional bombing from aircrafts. Each onslaught followed a similar pattern. Serb soldiers and paramilitaries surrounded a Bosnian Muslim village or hamlet, called upon the population to surrender their weapons, and then began with indiscriminate shelling and shooting. In most cases, they then entered the village or hamlet, expelled or killed the population, who offered no significant resistance, and destroyed their homes. Meanwhile, in a number of villages around Srebrenica the Bosniak population began to organize local resistance groups. Orić was one of the leaders.
At the start, Orić found few supporters and his small group of militiamen only had hunting rifles and automatic rifles from the police armory in Srebrenica.
By early May 1992 the Bosniak forces began to organized pillages en murdered Serbian civilians in and around Srebrenica. On 6 May, Bosniak forces under Naser Orić carried out their first attack on a village, Gniona, to the north of the town of Srebrenica. A leader of the Serb Democratic Party in Srebrenica, Goran Zekic, was killed in an ambush on 8 May. Soon thereafter Serb paramilitaries began to flee Srebrenica or were driven out by Bosniak forces.[citation needed] Bosniak forces under Orić and other Bosniak commanders took control of Srebrenica on 9 May.[7] Bosnian Serb forces committed a massacre in the village of Glogova on May 9 and in Bratunac on May 10 through May 13.
In the following days, Bosniaks who had been hiding in the woods emerged and gradually returned to their houses in Srebrenica. Serb forces surrounded Srebrenica and started to bomb the town.
General Philippe Morillon of France, Commander of the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR), visited Srebrenica in March 1993. By then the town was overcrowded and siege conditions prevailed. There was almost no running water as the advancing Serb forces had destroyed the town’s water supplies; people relied on makeshift generators for electricity, and food, medicine and other essentials were extremely scarce. Before leaving, General Morillon told the panicked residents of Srebrenica at a public gathering that the town was under the protection of the UN and that he would never abandon them.
The attacks
The attacks mentioned in the ICTY indictment of Orić are listed below:
-
- 15–20 May the villages of Viogor, Orahovica and Osredak were attacked. The main objective of these attacks was to link up various Bosniak resistance centres around Srebrenica.[4]
- June 21 and June 27 the village of Ratkovici, and the surrounding villages of Bradjevina, Ducici, and Gornji Ratkovici were attacked by Orić's forces.[5]
- August 8, the villages of Jezestica and Bozici were attacked by forces under the command of Naser Orić.[6]
- 24 September, attacked the village of Podravanje which was on the road between Srebrenica and Žepa.
- 26 September, Orić's forces attacked the villages of Nedeljista and Rogosija near Milici.
- 5 October, Orić attacked Fakovici and other villages along the river Drina. According to a Dutch government report (NIOD report), Orić's forces killed at least 24 Serbs and burned down 120 houses. The attackers also shot at Serbs at the other (i.e. Serbian) side of the Drina. Serb civilians fled on small boats to the other side of the river, in Serbia.[7][8]
- November 6, Bosniak forces, led by Orić, attacked and captured the village of Kamenica. [9]
- December 14 and 19, Bosniak forces and irregulars under the command of Orić attacked the villages of Bjelovac, Voljavica, Loznica, and Sikiric and expelled the Serb population.[10]
- 7 January 1993 (Orthodox Christmas Day), Bosniak forces under Naser Orić captured the Serb village of Kravica and two nearby villages, Siljkovici and Jezestica. An estimated 25 VRS troops and 11 civilians were killed in the attack.[11][12][13]
- 16 January 1993, Orić attacked the village of Skelani, on the border with Serbia. According to a Dutch government investigation, Orić's forces killed an estimated 48 Serbs. However, the attack failed and this marked the beginning of the end of Orić's successes.[14][15]
UN Safe Area
On February 9, 1993 the Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladić launched a full-scale offensive against Srebrenica. [16] On April 17, 1993, Srebrenica was made a safe haven by the United Nations, while fighting between Serb forces and the forces of Orić in Srebrenica continued with the Serbs retaking much of the territory lost during 1992.
In the July 1995, the partially disarmed "UN safe area" was ultimately overrun by the Bosnian Serb Army, resulting in the Srebrenica Massacre. However, Orić, along with rest of the command staff of 8th OG, had been evacuated by helicopter in May 1995 two months prior to the fall of the enclave. Orić maintains that he was ordered to leave while the Bosnian government claims that he left on his own accord.
ICTY war crimes trial
After the Dayton Peace Accords, Orić opened a fitness club in Tuzla. In a post-war TV interview, he stated "It's a fact that I was one of the main commanders in Srebrenica and, if I have to answer to someone, I'll answer; but I'd first have to bring up the time, space and situation in which we lived, as well as what the Serbs did to us compared to what we did to them. If Naser has to answer to someone, I'm right here and I'm not running away from responsibility, I'm not running away from the court, I'm not running away from the Hague or anyone. You just have to call on me and no problem."[17]
An indictment at the ICTY against Orić was submitted on March 17, 2003 and confirmed on March 28. He was indicted on two counts of individual responsibility and four counts of command responsibility for violations of the laws or customs of war, and was arrested without further incident at his club by SFOR on April 10, 2003 and transferred to the Hague the next day.
Orić appeared before the court on April 15 and pleaded "not guilty" to all the counts of the indictment. He was denied a provisional release on July 25, 2003 and was held at the ICTY from April 11, 2003 until June 30, 2006.
The indictment
Orić was accused of torture and cruel treatment of eleven and killing of seven Serb men being detained in the Srebrenica police station in 1992/1993, and to punish the perpetrators thereof.
He was also accused of having ordered (and led) numerous guerilla raids into as many as 50 Serb-populated villages in 1992-1993, particularly in the municipalities of Bratunac and Srebrenica. In the course of such combat activities, Bosnian Serb buildings, dwellings, and other property in predominantly Serb villages, were burnt and destroyed, hundreds of Serbs were murdered and thousands of Serb individuals fled the area.[18]
The trial
The trial began on October 6, 2004 and the prosecution completed its case on June 1, 2005. A week later the tribunal dropped two of the counts against him, withdrew all allegation of plundering public and private property; the tribunal also dropped two villages from the list of alleged raids.[8] The defense case commenced on July 4, 2005 and ended on April 10, 2006. The prosecution asked for an 18 year prison term, while the defense asked for an acquittal. In all there were 182 trial days, 82 witnesses testifying (52 prosecution and 20 defense) and 1,649 exhibits presented as evidence. The decision in the case was delivered on June 30, 2006. .[9]
The verdict
The International Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) convicted Naser Orić for failing to prevent the murder and inhumane treatment of Serb prisoners. Orić, sentenced to two years in prison,[10] was released immediately for time already served. He was acquitted of direct involvement in the murder or cruel treatment of Serbs, and of responsibility for the "wanton destruction" of homes and property.[11]
The judges noted that militarily superior Serb forces encircled the town and that there was an unmanageable influx of refugees there, as well as a critical shortage of food and the breakdown of law and order. The judges also noted that it was in these circumstances that Orić, then aged 25, was elected commander of a poorly trained volunteer force that lacked effective links with government forces in Sarajevo. His authority was scorned by some other Bosnian leaders and his situation became worse as the Serb forces increased the momentum of their siege.[12]
The judges stated in the verdict that Orić had reason to know about murder and cruel treatment of Serbs on two specific occasions in the Police station, but acquitted him of all other crimes. Orić was acquitted of direct involvement in the murder of prisoners in the early years of the 1992-95 Bosnia war. But the court found he had closed his eyes to their mistreatment and failed to punish their killers. The three judges acquitted him of all charges related to the wanton destruction of Serb villages. The judges also took into account the lack of food and supplies and resulting lack of order and law during the Serbian siege on Srebrenica.[12]
As for the destruction in the villages of Kravica, Bjelovac, Fakovići and Sikiric, the judgment states that "the Accused and members of his group of fighters participated in the attack" . In the case of the village of Siljkovici, the court states that "there is evidence to establish that property was destroyed on a large scale."[13]
The appeal
On 31 July 2006 UN chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte announced that she would appeal against the two-year sentence, saying it was too short. Oric's lawyer said she would also launch an appeal, saying her client did not commit any crime and should be acquitted.[14][15][16][17]
Post-trial developments
Since Orić had already spent more than 2 years in detention, following his trial he was released. He arrived at Sarajevo International Airport on July 1, 2006.
On July 4, he gave an interview to the Sarajevo daily Dnevni Avaz in which he stated among other things that the atmosphere in the ICTY detention unit was jovial and that there was no hostility between the inmates who were former war time adversaries. Orić said that he was most friendly with Gen. Enver Hadžihasanović, Lahi Brahimaj and Isak Musliu and he also reported having a friendly relationship with Ante Gotovina. Orić said that he passed the time by working out and learning the English language. He also stated that he believed that the behavior of an indictee in the detention unit and in the courtroom would reflect the severity of the prison term one would receive.
Racketeering case
Naser Orić was arrested on 3 October 2008 by Bosnian police.[18] He was charged in November 2008 with extorting 240,000 Bosnian Marka ($157,000) and illegal possession of weapons and ammunition.[19]
See also
References
- ^ ICTY. "Prosecutor vs Naser Orić , Judgment". United Nations. 30 June 2006. [1]
- ^ Srebrenica Muslim chief cleared, BBC News, July 3, 2008
- ^ UN appeals court acquits Bosnian Muslim war hero, Associated Press/Google News, July 3, 2008
- ^ Netherlands Institute for War Documentation."Appendix IV, History and Reminders in East Bosnia". 2002.[2]
- ^ "ICTY: The attack against the civilian population and related requirements". http://www.un.org/icty/kunarac/trialc2/judgement/kun-tj010222e-5.htm#VC.
- ^ Naser Oric Trial Judgement, ICTY
- ^ Secretary General. "Srebrenica Report". United Nations. 1998
- ^ SENSE Tribunal : ICTY
- ^ http://iwpr.gn.apc.org/?s=f&o=163810&apc_state=henitri2004 Naser Oric Tiral-False Witness Accounts- War and Peace Reporting
- ^ Naser Oric Convicted
- ^ "Bosnian Muslim guilty but freed". BBC News. 2006-06-30. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5132684.stm?ls. Retrieved 2010-05-19.
- ^ a b ICTY Press release -
- ^ [3]
- ^ JURIST - Paper Chase: ICTY prosecutor appeals light sentence for Bosnian Muslim war criminal
- ^ "Bosnian Muslim sentence contested". BBC News. 2006-07-30. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5229926.stm. Retrieved 2010-05-19.
- ^ Hague prosecutors appeal Oric's sentence (SETimes.com)
- ^ SENSE Tribunal : ICTY
- ^ http://www.b92.net/eng/news/region-article.php?yyyy=2008&mm=10&dd=03&nav_id=53961
- ^ http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LE361169.htm
External links
- ICTY Case Information Sheet on Naser Oric
- ICTY latest Indictment: Third Amended Indictment, 30 June 2005
- Facts about alleged Serb casualties around Srebrenica
- ICTY Indictment against Naser Orić
- Naser Oric - Research File on Hague Justice Portal
- Srebrenica - a 'safe' area by the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation, 2002
- UN 1998 'Srebrenica Report'
- Orić Trial Drama
- Inconsistencies Mar Orić Trial
- Doubts Cast on Orić Evidence
- Orić praised by prosecution witnesses
- Thousands Welcome Srebrenica Commander
- Suspects who went to war over diversity pass jail days in harmony
Categories:- 1967 births
- Living people
- People from Srebrenica
- Bosniaks of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bosnia and Herzegovina soldiers
- People acquitted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
- Bosnia and Herzegovina police officers
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