Hague Tribunal Urged to Report Serbia to UN Security Council

Judge Liu Daqun of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals in The Hague issued a ruling on Friday calling on the president of the court to "notify the [UN] Security Council of Serbia's failure to comply with its obligations" for failing to arrest wanted Serbian Radical Party politicians Petar Jojic and Vjerica Radeta.

Jojic and Radeta, both former Serbian MPs, are charged with contempt of the Hague court during the ultranationalist Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj's trial.

They are accused of threatening, blackmailing and bribing witnesses to either change their testimonies or to not testify at all.

Daqun said that "it is undisputed that the accused are in Serbia and that Serbia has not complied with the repeated requests" to arrest them and send them to The Hague.

He noted that more than a year has passed since the UN court's decision in February 2020 which "confirmed with finality Serbia's obligation to arrest and transfer the accused" to face trial.

The Serbian authorities have been in dispute with the UN court for several years over the arrest and extradition of the Radical Party politicians. The court initially submitted a warrant ordering their arrest in January 2015.

But in May 2016, Belgrade Higher Court ruled that there were no legal grounds for extraditing Jojic and Radeta because Serbia's Law on Cooperation with the Hague Tribunal obliged Belgrade to extradite people charged with war crimes, but not those charged with contempt of court.

Daqun said that last month, Serbia reiterated its position, arguing that its obligation to cooperate for the arrest and transfer of indictees is "limited to those charged with serious violations of international humanitarian law".

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