Ivo Skoric on Fri, 26 Jul 2002 18:22:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: Milosevic Ill; Genocide Trial Is Cast in Doubt |
Every succesful Balkan male over 40 suffers from high blood pressure and some sort of a heart problem, including my dad and, evidently, Slobodan Milosevic. I believe that high collesterol levels were assumed to be a status symbol in former Yugoslavia, and that men clogged their arteries with lard in an attempt to raise their sex appeal gently growing their beer/wine bellies as a sign of prestige. Also, it is expected from a man to have short temper, which again, contributes to the risk of heart disease. And they are stubborn: they'd rather die than give up their habit. Seriously. Doctors told my dad that he was at risk of heart attack 20 years ago and that he should change diet, give up alcohol, live less stressfully. He did not change anything, and he still lives and he is still at risk of heart attack, and fortunately he is on the good side of statistics (his diastolic pressure hasn't been under 100 for the past 20 years). If Milosevic is of the same stock, he may live longer than all the judges at ICTY despite whiskey, roasted lamb and Cuban cigars. I didn't know that roasted lamb was Slobo's favorite dish. But I should have expected. After all, in every culture status is connected with a certain way of life, certain clothes, certain foods, drinks, sports, etc. Like here in the US, rich and socially upscalish, play golf - in former Yugoslavia they played tennis (note that Tudjman was an avid tennis player). What do they eat here? Lobster? I guess, there are too many options in the U.S. In former Yugoslavia there was roasted lamb. Roasted lamb unites all post-Yugoslav countries: it is devoured by upstanding Serbs, Croats and Bosnian Muslims alike. Croats and Serbs also eat roasted pork, but the status of pork is clearly below lamb (and that is also reflected in price). Roasted lamb is also my father's favorite dish. I ate so much roasted lamb when I was a kid that I am now sick even thinking of it. If anyone is interested, I can give you a list of top restaurants in Zagreb, where you can get the best roasted lamb (also the best time to go is March...), and the mention of the last name that I share with my dad, will make head waiters be very responsive to you. Lamb also needs to be bathed in copious quantities of white whine (my dad's favorite: Grasevina from Kutjevo wineries). All in all I remember my old man being able to eat a pound of lamb and drink a quart of 'grasevina' - of course, that main dish was always preceded with cevapcici and other (meat again) smaller dishes, while we waited for the lamb to roast. Dishes without meat in former Yugoslavia were not considered meals. I doubt Milosevic will die. But maybe ICTY can enforce a healthier diet on him, that doctors in Zagreb can't do with my dad. ivo ps - on Holbroke's drink: pear brandy is higher up on status ladder than plum brandy; every schmuck drinks plum brandy; of course Milosevic got his US friend drunk on the best available brandy around.... Date sent: Fri, 26 Jul 2002 10:12:55 -0400 Send reply to: Thomas Keenan <keenan@bard.edu> From: Thomas Keenan <keenan@bard.edu> Subject: Milosevic Ill; Genocide Trial Is Cast in Doubt To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU Cross-posting of commentary only permitted Reports from the New York Times, Washington Post, and BBC on Milosevic's health. Marlise Simons in the Times suggests, not (as the headline puts it) that the trial is 'in doubt,' but that the medical findings are "almost certain to change the pace and the shape of his war crimes trial." The witnesses from Mr. Milosevic's government have been a boon for the prosecution, with policemen and soldiers who were on active duty during the war giving sometimes shocking details about atrocities against ethnic Albanians. But the mood among prosecutors and observers anxious to see Mr. Milosevic brought to justice has been far from upbeat. Rather, the confirmation of Mr. Milosevic's ill health has caused alarm. While it is not being said out loud, there is deep concern among court officials about the repercussions if Mr. Milosevic could no longer appear in court or suffered a heart attack. For amusement, I have also included the BBC's special report on Millosevic's eating and drinking habits, "Milosevic the bon viveur." Thomas Keenan Human Rights Project Bard College ========================================================================= http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/26/international/europe/26MILO.html Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company Friday, July 26, 2002; A1 Milosevic Ill; Genocide Trial Is Cast in Doubt By MARLISE SIMONS THE HAGUE, July 25 - The former Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, suffers from severe heart disease and dangerously high blood pressure, and needs medical treatment and less work in court, the United Nations war crimes tribunal announced today. The finding that Mr. Milosevic runs a serious risk of a heart attack is almost certain to change the pace and the shape of his war crimes trial, the most important such prosecution since Nazi and Japanese commanders were tried after World War II. The trial opened five months ago and, even at the current rate, could last three years. Mr. Milosevic, who is 60, is conducting his own defense in the proceedings, which began with charges involving the war he waged against Kosovo Albanians in 1998 and 1999. He is charged with genocide committed during the war in Bosnia, and it now seems it could be many months before he answers that accusation. During his 13 years in power, Mr. Milosevic led the Serbs through four wars - in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo - that killed more than 200,000 people and drove more than a million from their homes. The report of serious health problems came as the trial entered a fascinating new phase, with key members of the former Milosevic government - including the chief of the secret police - testifying about the inner workings of the secretive regime as it repressed Albanians in Kosovo in 1998 and 1999. Trial judges had ordered a thorough medical checkup of Mr. Milosevic after he fell ill for the second time in June. They suspended proceedings for a third time a week ago, when Mr. Milosevic's already high blood pressure rose sharply. The presiding judge, Richard May, said today that the medical report described Mr. Milosevic "as a man with severe cardiovascular risk which demands careful future monitoring." He said it recommended treatment by a heart specialist and a reduction in Mr. Milosevic's workload. Judge May said the court was ordering such treatment and would then decide how to proceed. Today Mr. Milosevic's former secret police chief, Rade Markovic, appeared as a witness for the prosecution. Mr. Markovic was transferred here from his prison cell in Belgrade, where he is being held on charges of murdering political opponents, and he is seen as a close Milosevic ally who may shed light on how atrocities in Kosovo were covered up. Mr. Markovic, who ran the secret police for the last two years of Mr. Milosevic's rule, told the court that Interior Ministry and military officials reported in detail to Mr. Milosevic each day on their activities. The witnesses from Mr. Milosevic's government have been a boon for the prosecution, with policemen and soldiers who were on active duty during the war giving sometimes shocking details about atrocities against ethnic Albanians. But the mood among prosecutors and observers anxious to see Mr. Milosevic brought to justice has been far from upbeat. Rather, the confirmation of Mr. Milosevic's ill health has caused alarm. While it is not being said out loud, there is deep concern among court officials about the repercussions if Mr. Milosevic could no longer appear in court or suffered a heart attack. Lawyers who work with Mr. Milosevic said his heart condition is not new. He has been hospitalized in Yugoslavia in the past for heart trouble and he was also taking medicine for high blood pressure while in detention in Belgrade before his arrival in The Hague just over a year ago, the lawyers said. "In Belgrade and here, he always says he is fine," said one lawyer, Zdenko Tomanovic, who sees Mr. Milosevic almost every day. "He takes medicine but he never complains and never wants extra care." The medical report ordered by the court was prepared by two Dutch doctors from outside the prison who examined Mr. Milosevic. A Serbian cardiologist from the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade who had treated Mr. Milosevic before and who had come to The Hague at his request was present during the examination. At today's hearing, the judges did not disclose any details from the report, but a lawyer who had seen it said Mr. Milosevic has a severe problem in his left artery and damage to the heart. "This, together with the high blood pressure, puts him at high risk for a heart attack," the lawyer said, referring to the report. He said the doctors felt that the physical stress of the Yugoslav's illness and the stress of the trial have depressed his immune system, which has made him more prone to infections. Mr. Milosevic has had two long bouts of flu with high fever this year. Mr. Milosevic's systolic blood pressure is about 200, though last week it suddenly rose above 240 and hearings were suspended for two days, the lawyer said. A reading of 140 to 160 would be normal. The task he has undertaken, conducting his own defense, is enormous by any standards. He has insisted on cross-examining every witness, and there have been 100 so far. Mr. Milosevic, who often looks unwell, interrogates witnesses longer than the prosecution. During a hearing today, the chief prosecutor, Geoffrey Nice, said that since the beginning of the trial, prosecutors had held the floor in court for 93 hours and Mr. Milosevic for 140 hours. The two lawyers from Belgrade who assist him say he often spends his evenings preparing questions. To prepare for the next portion of the trial, dealing with the wars in Croatia and Bosnia, he recently received 90,000 pages and 500 videocassettes. "I will need 360 days just to read this once," he said today in court. Prosecutors today suggested that the court impose a lawyer on Mr. Milosevic to reduce his workload. Judge Patrick Robinson proposed a compromise: that the Serb share the cross-examinations with a lawyer without losing his right to defend himself. "That would allow you some rest," the judge said. "It's a bit unusual but it has happened in some places." Mr. Milosevic said he would hold on to every opportunity to "speak the truth." "I do not recognize this court and I have no intention of appointing a counsel for a nonexisting court," he said. "As for my health," he went on, "I never asked in these months for a single break. The fact that you ordered a medical examination and now you have a report, that's your problem. You should not harbor any illusion that I'm asking for anything." Judge Robinson responded: "Your health is of paramount concern to the chamber. The overriding concern for me is your health." -------------- http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2176-2002Jul25.html Copyright 2002 The Washington Post Company Friday, July 26, 2002; Page A30 Milosevic Gets Health Warning By Keith B. Richburg Washington Post Foreign Service PARIS, July 25 -- Judges in the war crimes trial of Slobodan Milosevic in The Hague said today that the former Yugoslav president is at serious risk of a heart attack if he continues to insist on acting as his own attorney and spend hours in heated cross-examinations of witnesses. The three-judge panel, revealing the results of medical tests conducted last month on Milosevic, 60, recommended that he appoint an assistant to help him in the complex case, and suggested that if he resisted, the panel would impose "measures" to protect his health and reduce his workload. Milosevic rejected the idea of an assistant. "I have never demanded any medical checkup, not even when I suffered a high fever," he said, firing back angrily at the judges. "You should not harbor any illusion that I am asking for anything." The trial has already been suspended three times, as Milosevic has grappled with flu and high blood pressure. Some prosecutors and court watchers have said they thought he was bluffing, but today the judges disagreed. "Milosevic is a man with serious cardiovascular risk which requires future monitoring," said the presiding judge, Richard May. "His workload must be reduced and the medical treatment by a cardiologist is most advisable," May said. He said the court would await further tests and "consider any option that may be available for the future conduct of the trial." Neither he nor the other judge who spoke, Patrick Robinson, said what those other options might be. But court watchers said the options might include appointing a defense lawyer to represent Milosevic even against his wishes; legal analysts said the judges might have concluded that he is currently not getting a proper defense, which could lead to a conviction being overturned on appeal. Milosevic maintained the same defiance today that he has shown throughout the lengthy trial, which began early this year and has heard testimony about abuses committed against ethnic Albanians by Serbian security forces in Kosovo, a province of Serbia, the dominant republic of Yugoslavia, in 1998 and 1999. The trial is scheduled to wrap up next year, after shifting in October to cover war crimes -- including genocide -- allegedly committed in Bosnia and Croatia during the violent breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. Milosevic has complained that he did not have adequate time to prepare his defense. He spends each night in his cell alone poring over voluminous prosecution documents and outlining his cross-examinations. On the upcoming Bosnian and Croatian indictments against him, he said he was given 90,000 pages of documents to read and 500 cassette tapes to listen to. Prosecutors have long protested Milosevic's strategy of representing himself, believing that he is deliberately delaying the presentation of their complex case by engaging in lengthy cross-examinations that sound more like political speeches. Also, without a cooperative attorney on the opposite side, the prosecutors have no counterpart to meet with regularly to decide, for example, which undisputed points can be agreed to beforehand, and which witnesses can be allowed to submit written testimony. Even while he takes part energetically in the proceedings, Milosevic declares that he does not recognize the legitimacy of the U.N. court, calling it a tool of the NATO alliance victors who bombed Yugoslavia in 1999. Responding to May's suggestion today that he take on an assistant counsel to help with cross-examination, Milosevic said: "You are an honorable man. [But] this entire matter is a farce. I have no intention of appointing counsel for a nonexistent court." ---------------- Copyright MMII BBC News http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2150951.stm Thursday, 25 July, 2002, 15:02 GMT 16:02 UK 'Heart risk' Milosevic told to rest A full health check on former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic has found he is at serious risk of a heart attack and will need to rest. "The medical report describes the accused as a man with severe cardiovascular risks," presiding judge Richard May, told the international war crimes tribunal in The Hague. Mr Milosevic faces more than 60 counts of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity relating to the wars which broke up the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The prosecution's top insider witness, former Serbian secret service chief Rade Markovic, told the tribunal on Thursday that Mr Milosevic had known of alleged atrocities by the Yugoslav police and army in Kosovo. He said Mr Milosevic had been the effective boss of state security operations against the ethnic Albanian population in Kosovo during the 1998-1999 war which led to Nato intervention. Mr Milosevic, 60, is due to cross-examine Mr Markovic on Friday. Health problems The former Yugoslav leader has suffered at least two bouts of flu since his trial started in February, causing proceedings to be delayed by a month. However, he has conducted a robust defence, and never looked frail. In April last year, he was rushed to hospital with chest pains, but was subsequently given a clean bill of health. Last week he was temporarily unable to attend hearings because of high blood pressure. Experts recommend his workload be reduced, and further tests are to be carried out on him by a cardiologist, the court's spokesman Jim Langdale told BBC News Online. The court will then consider all options open to it before deciding what action to take. One of the three trial judges, Patrick Robinson, urged Mr Milosevic to appoint a defence lawyer, saying: "Your health is of paramount concern to the chamber." But Mr Milosevic - who says he does not recognise the tribunal - stuck to his earlier refusals to be legally represented, replying: "This entire matter is a farce. I have no intention of appointing counsels for a non-existent court." Prosecutors suggested imposing a defence counsel on Mr Milosevic. One judge has suggested a compromise - that Mr Milosevic may be allowed to cross-examine witnesses with his lawyer. The crucial link The BBC's Geraldine Coughlan, at The Hague, says there is a strong possibility that after the summer recess, Mr Milosevic will no longer be wholly responsible for his own defence. Thursday's hearing gave the prosecution until 13 September to finish its case against Mr Milosevic concerning events in Kosovo, and until 16 May 2003 to finish the cases relating to Bosnia and Croatia. The tribunal starts a four-week summer recess this weekend. Mr Markovic, who was brought from a Belgrade jail to testify at the tribunal, said the interior ministry had submitted daily secret reports on the Kosovo situation to Mr Milosevic and other Serbian Government members. "Vlajko Stojiljkovic [the former interior minister] was duty-bound to inform Slobodan Milosevic daily on the activities of the interior ministry," he told the court. He said Mr Milosevic had also been briefed daily on army activities. Stojiljkovic committed suicide in Belgrade in April. Mr Markovic is the first witness to testify that Mr Milosevic had effectively been the centre of power in Belgrade - a key point the prosecution has to prove for the former leader to be convicted. Mr Markovic himself is being questioned in Serbia on charges of alleged involvement in the assassination of Mr Milosevic's opponents when he was head of the Serbian state security service. +++++ Thursday, 25 July, 2002, 16:48 GMT 17:48 UK Milosevic the bon viveur The news that former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic is in danger of a heart attack comes as no surprise to veteran Balkans watchers. He may now observe the strict regime of a prison inmate, but when in power he was well known as a bon viveur who enjoyed his food and drink. His principal vices were a weakness for scotch whisky and fine Cuban cigars. He also enjoyed a rich diet of roasted lamb, being especially fond of a traditional Yugoslav barbecue. At Mr Milosevic's Belgrade residence, filled with antique furniture and French paintings, he would greet visitors with whisky glass and cigar in hand. Foreign dignitaries and journalists alike were invited to join him in late night drinking sessions where he would drink copious amounts of whisky - reportedly with little effect - puff away on a Montecristo and indulge in telling dirty jokes. During one mid-morning meeting with US negotiator Richard Holbrooke, Mr Milosevic plied the American with brandy whilst hammering out a deal on Sarajevo. When someone later objected that he had got Mr Holbrooke "drunk on plum brandy" Mr Milosevic replied: "No, I did not get him drunk on plum brandy. I got him drunk on pear brandy." Mr Milosevic also enjoyed wine, especially Californian varieties. There are reports that sometimes Mr Milosevic would turn up to important negotiations a little the worse for wear. One former US ambassador to Croatia - Peter Galbraith - remembers the first day of the 1995 peace talks in Dayton, Ohio, when Mr Milosevic was due to attend a meeting with Warren Christopher, the then US Secretary of State, and Croatian President Franjo Tudjman at 1600 (1400 GMT). He arrived at 1635 looking somewhat ruffled, tie skew-whiff, straight from an afternoon at the officers' club. "He'd obviously had a liquid lunch," Mr Galbraith said in an interview with Newsweek. Even when police surrounded his home in the early hours of 1 April 2001 to arrest him, witnesses holed up inside said he lay on a sofa, dosed up on whisky and tranquilisers, smoking a cigar and cradling his pistol. Another constant presence was the roast lamb. Former US Assistant Deputy Secretary of State Robert Frasure had frequent meetings with Mr Milosevic in which he was plied with so much of the stuff that he once cabled Washington with the message, "the lambs of Serbia will be delighted that I'm leaving!" The rotund Mr Milosevic is not known for being fond exercise either, unlike his late Croatian counterpart who was known for his vicious tennis game. In fact, many observers argue that now he is in prison Mr Milosevic is in fact healthier than he has ever been. He has access to a coffee machine, a library and satellite TV and can go to a gym, walk in the courtyard or play board games with his fellow inmates. Nonetheless as his trial goes on, correspondents say it is apparent the strain of long hours in court and evenings spent preparing are taking their toll on Mr Milosevic, who is defending himself. But old habits die hard: "He is a politician - he wants to do the talking," one of his Belgrade lawyers said. ========================================================================== _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold