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  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    7:43am, EST

    Jubilation, recrimination as Hague appeal tribunal frees jailed Croatian officers

    Nikola Solic / AP

    War veterans celebrate during the live broadcast from the International War Crimes Tribunal, on the main square in Zagreb, Croatia on Nov. 16, 2012. Appeals judges at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal have overturned the convictions of two Croat generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed against Serb civilians in a 1995 military blitz.

    Bas Czerwinski / Pool via AP

    Former Croatian Army Generals Mladen Markac, right, and Ante Gotovina, left, enter the courtroom of the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal (ICTY) for their appeal judgement in The Hague, Netherlands, on Nov. 16, 2012.

    Reuters reports — The most senior Croatian military officer convicted of war crimes during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s was released after an appeal on Friday and Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic said the "political decision" would open old wounds in the region.

    General Ante Gotovina was cleared by an appeals chamber of the U.N. war crimes tribunal after being convicted of targeting hospitals and other civilian institutions during a Croatian army operation to retake its Krajina region from rebel ethnic Serbs.

    Gotovina, hailed as a hero at home but reviled in neighboring Serbia, was freed along with Croatian police commander Mladen Markac. The two men are expected to fly home later on Friday.

    Their acquittals were greeted with jubilation on the streets of the Croatian capital Zagreb but Serbia reacted with anger and dismay. Nikolic said the U.N. tribunal's decision had destroyed its neutrality. Read the full story.

    Hrvoje Polan / AFP - Getty Images

    A man cries after the UN Yugoslav war crimes court acquitted former generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac of charges including war crimes during the bloody breakup of Yugoslavia and ordered them free, in Zagreb on Nov. 16, 2012.

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    4 comments

    Thanks be to God for freeing our heroes’ generals AnteGotovina and Mladen Markac. Justice was very slow but at the end the truth and hasprevailed. Croatian people will never forget your sacrifices for our bellowed countryCroatia.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: croatia, europe, justice, war-crimes, world-news, ante-gotovina, hague, mladen-markac
  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    12:19pm, EDT

    In unprecedented move, Croatian ministers to join disputed gay pride march

    Hrvoje Polan/AFP/Getty Images

    Police guard participants in a Gay Pride parade in downtown Zagreb, Croatia, on June 19, 2010.

    By msnbc.com news services

    ZAGREB, Croatia -- Several government ministers in Croatia will join a gay pride march set for this weekend amid threats of violence from opponents, saying it was a test of democracy for a country due to join the European Union next year. 

    Last year's event, held in the Adriatic city of Split, plunged into violence as police failed to protect the marchers from angry locals who pelted them with eggs and rocks. Several people were injured and at least 30 arrested. 


    Several nationalist and war veteran groups have issued warnings against this year's June 9 march in Split, calling it a "shameful provocation by sick people to which we will respond."

    Split Mayor Zeljko Kerum has also said he would not take part in the march, which he said was disapproved of by most residents. 

    Where to celebrate Pride Month

    Nevertheless, in an unprecedented move for the Balkans, where gay rights are largely ignored and Pride marches are few and far between, the liberal center-left cabinet said it approved of the event. 

    Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic called on Split residents to show tolerance and accept "standard democratic practice of Western Europe."

    "The eyes of the European Union will be focused on Split on Saturday ... The gay population does not threaten anyone and we just have to accept them," Milanovic told Media Servis, a local electronic news provider. 

    Troops march in San Diego's gay pride parade

    Indeed, the EU delegation in the capital Zagreb said in a statement that it would be watching the march carefully.

    "We are encouraged by government members' plans to take part... but at the same time we express our concern at some homophobic comments by the local (Split) authorities," the AFP quoted an EU statement as saying. 

    The country is set to join the European Union in July 2013.

    Similar marches have been held for a decade in the capital Zagreb under heavy police protection, but with a relatively few incidents. 

    Reuters contributed to this report. 

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    10 comments

    Croatians are very conservative traditional Catholics. This is a good step forward for inclusion.

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    Explore related topics: eu, croatia, split, featured, gay-pride
  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    7:07am, EST

    Cheering crowd greets release of Bosnian war criminal Fikret Abdic

    Hrvoje Polan / AFP - Getty Images

    A crowd holds a statue of Fikret Abdic during his welcome ceremony in front of the prison in Pula, Croatia on March 9, 2012. Abdic, a former Bosnian warlord who fought fellow Muslims during his country's 1992-95 war, was released from prison on Friday after serving two-thirds of his war crimes sentence.

    A former Bosnian warlord who fought fellow Muslims during his country's 1992-95 war was released from prison on Friday after serving two-thirds of his war crimes sentence, The Associated Press reports.

    Fikret Abdic, once one of the richest men in Bosnia and a popular politician, was convicted in 2003 for participating in the detention and killing of fellow Muslims during the war. About 3,000 cheering followers gathered to welcome his release. Read the full story.

    Nikola Solic / AP

    Fikret Abdic, center, greets his family members upon his release from prison on March 9, 2012.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    5 comments

    i'm pretty much entirely against war... but to criticize troops during a war of 'murderous rampages' is kind of like criticizing football players for hitting people during a game... that's just what they are suppose to do... and don't kid yourself... the USA goes on 'murderous rampages' whenever the …

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    Explore related topics: bosnia, croatia, europe, justice, war-crimes, world-news, fikret-abdic

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