By Beth Kampschror
Christian Science MonitorDecember 23, 2003
International donors have already pledged the first $18 million of the estimated $44.5 million that the new chamber needs over five years. The panel is supposed to be taking cases by late 2004. But people like Jovo Janjic, a Serbs rights advocate in the Sarajevo suburb of Ilidza, are skeptical. "I don't have great trust in the court, at least at this moment, because the courts that should have done this by now were formed on ethnic lines," he says, referring to the local courts that have tried war-crimes cases. Mr. Janjic's office is just blocks from the former front line, where a once-grand, tree-lined boulevard lies deserted, the windows of its Austro-Hungarian spa hotels shattered or boarded up. Nearby buildings are wrapped in red tape warning of land mines. Janjic says the chamber would be more trustworthy if it used foreign judges. And that's the plan. For the first five years, panels of foreign judges and prosecutors will work with Bosnians, taking cases deferred by the UN tribunal or its prosecutors, or new cases approved by the tribunal. By using foreigners for the first few years, the Bosnian war-crimes court will mirror a state court department that's been open since March, prosecuting mafia groups that engage in smuggling and trafficking in women. One of the department's four foreign prosecutors said it was too soon to say whether it has been successful. "It's a legal adventure," says Canadian prosecutor Jonathan Ratel, adding that the "huge question" is the state court's lack of a police force. Without such a force, the war-crimes chamber will be hard-pressed to collect documents, protect witnesses or judges, or punish nationalist politicians trying to interfere with the court. But any international moves to create a state police force may meet with resistance. Nationalists - Serbs in particular, since they fought the war for Bosnian territory and consider their entity a state within a state - want to keep a weaker central structure. Some people say that, even if there are convictions, the local trials may not persuade people in Bosnia that genocide and similar crimes actually occurred during the war. Jakob Finci is a local Jewish leader who has been trying to establish a truth and reconciliation commission similar to South Africa's for several years. Local war-crimes trials, he says, won't do much for truth-seeking while Bosnia's Croats, Muslims, and Serbs cannot see that their side committed atrocities. "Because of our history, I don't think that the courts are really accepted as independent institutions. Even The Hague is only accepted when they aren't investigating 'our own' people," Mr. Finci says. Still, Bosnians hope to see justice served. "There's no peace while criminals are walking free," says Mr. Janjic in Ilidza. Refugees won't return home while the people who drove them away are still around, and he says, "That's the final point of ethnic cleansing."
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