Loading...
You are here:  Home  >  Serb. Monitoring  >  Current Article

Vučić: We will ask for the extradition of Haradinaj (media)

By   /  05/01/2017  /  No Comments

    Print       Email

Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic has commented on the arrest of Ramush Haradinaj in France to say it is “good for justice to be above politics.”

Vucic said that the Serbian prosecution has numerous pieces of evidence and “incriminating things” against Haradinaj, and that he wished that France, “as a serious country with the rule of law,” would not act in line with political positions, but rather in line with justice.

“That would then raise the question of how Serbia would react in a reciprocal situation,” he said.

When a B92 reporter asked whether Serbia would officially seek Haradinaj’s extradition, the prime minister responded: “You bet it will.”

“We have him on so many (criminal) acts that they can’t be counted. Nobody has the right to undermine the decisions of an independent prosecution,” said Vucic.

Former Hague indictee and leader of the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo Ramush Haradinaj has been arrested in France on a Serbian warrant.

Albanian language media reported first that Haradinaj had been detained based on an international warrant issued by Serbia, the N1 broadcaster reported.

The 48-year-old former leader of the KLA (“Kosovo Liberation Army”) and former Kosovo prime minister traveled with a diplomatic passport when he was stopped at the airport in the eastern French town of Basel-Mulhous.

The arrest has since been confirmed by his family, as well as his party and the Kosovo Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The Pristina daily Zeri said this ministry was “working on Haradinaj being released soon.”

Reuters reported that “a French judiciary source said that investigators would on Thursday begin looking into whether there were reasons not to execute the extradition request, especially in the case that it had been issued for political reasons.”

The same source said that investigators will consider whether Haradinaj, an ethnic Albanian from Kosovo, “had already been tried before the UN court on the same charges as those the arrest warrant had been issued on.”

Haradinaj was in 2015 arrested in Slovenia, also on an Interpol notice issued by Serbia, and then released.

Serbia has filed 108 criminal complaints against him, on suspicion that he committed grave crimes, including terrorism and murder of civilians in Kosovo in 1998 and 1999.

Haradinaj was indicted for war crimes and put on trial by the Hague Tribinal but was acquitted of all charges in 2012.

 

 

 

    Print       Email

You might also like...

Montenegrin language school in Pristina banned (Gracanicaonline.info)

Read More →