Tribunal enters not guilty plea on behalf of Karadzic

The UN tribunal for the former Yugoslavia entered a plea of not guilty on behalf of former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic…

The UN tribunal for the former Yugoslavia entered a plea of not guilty on behalf of former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic for war crimes and genocide charges today after he refused to enter one.

At his second plea hearing before his trial for charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in the 1992-95

Bosnian war, Mr Karadzic refused to enter pleas for all of the 11 charges against him in front of presiding judge Iain Bonomy.

"I will not plead in line with my standpoint as regards to this court," Karadzic answered to the first charge of genocide, referring to his refusal to recognise the court's legitimacy.

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Asked whether his position applied to all of the charges, Mr Karadzic said: "Absolutely, yes."

"In other words, your plea is one of not guilty to the indictment as a whole," Mr Bonomy declared during the proceeding, which lasted just under half an hour.

Mr Karadzic appeared at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia wearing a dark suit and red tie and began by confirming his intent to represent himself. He said he was assembling a team of "associates" to aid him.

The charges against Mr Karadzic (63), include two of genocide over the 43-month siege of Sarajevo and the 1995 massacre of 8,000 Muslims at Srebrenica.

In a moment of levity, Mr Karadzic asked Bonomy, "May I hold you to your word... that I'm not guilty?"

"We shall see in due course, Mr Karadzic," Mr Bonomy answered.

The trial is expected to start next year after procedural preparations. But as prosecutors intend to amend Mr Karadzic's 11-count indictment there could be further plea hearings, which would delay the start of the trial.

The prosecution team at the pretrial hearing said they planned to file an amended indictment by the end of September, a timeframe that Mr Bonomy indicated was too late.

"I sincerely hope you're not serious about that date," Mr Bonomy told prosecutors.

A pre-trial status conference was scheduled for September 17th.

Flanked by two court guards, Mr Karadzic repeated his challenge to the court's legitimacy and said that he feared for his life.

He has demanded that former US peace mediator Richard Holbrooke and ex-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright give testimony, arguing that Mr Holbrooke had offered him immunity from prosecution in a secret deal.

Mr Karadzic claims Holbrooke reneged on the deal and now wants him dead, a claim that the former diplomat has denied repeatedly.

Bosnian political analyst Gojko Beric drew a parallel between Karadzic's behaviour and that of former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, who died two years ago in a Hague detention centre before a ruling was handed down in his trial.

"It is also obvious that the wartime leader of Bosnian Serbs, the same as Milosevic, will base his defence on ideological and political grounds, rather than on legal grounds," he said.

But Mr Bonomy, who chairs a working group aimed at speeding up tribunal trials, is expected to avoid lengthy proceedings like the Milosevic trial, which lasted four years and had nearly 300 witnesses.

Arrested in July in Belgrade with a flowing beard and long hair that disguised him while he worked as an alternative healer, Mr Karadzic has shaved off the beard and cut his hair.

Reuters