Widows of Srebrenica massacre victims on Thursday slammed as inadequate the 40 year sentence handed down to former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, as supporters dismissed the ruling as biased.
"He killed so many children and will perhaps live long enough to regain freedom. Where he is is not really a prison. It is warm, he eats, he even looks good," said Bida Smajlovic who lost her husband and brother in the atrocity.
"My pain and my loneliness endure and nothing will change that, nothing can reduce my suffering," she said.
The 63-year-old's husband was one of three brothers who died at Srebrenica.
Almost 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed and their bodies dumped in mass graves by Bosnian Serb forces in the 1995 massacre, the worst bloodshed on European soil since World War II.
On Thursday, their wives, including Bida, gathered nervously in Srebrenica around a television set to watch war crimes judges in The Hague sentence Karadzic, now 70, who will receive credit for time already spent in detention since 2008.
Another Smajlovic widow, Sajma, wept as she saw Karadzic on television.
"As soon as I see him it angers me," she said, adding that she had taken tranquillisers to cope with the pain of the sentencing.
The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) on Thursday sentenced Karadzic to 40 years in jail after finding him guilty of 10 charges relating to Bosnia's 1992-1995 war, including genocide for the Srebrenica slaughter.
- No sentence 'adequate' -
But Vasva Smajlovic, 73, said no sentence, however long, could compensate her for the loss of her husband Ismet.
"There is no adequate sentence for him, he will perhaps live long enough to be freed and has already lived for a long time, unlike my Ismet," she said.
"The best sentence would be to kill him on the spot, for the world to see him decompose. The fact I have lived to see him condemned brings me some comfort," she added.
In Belgrade after the sentencing, up to 5,000 ultranationalists briefly broke out in chants of "Radovan Karadzic!" during a pre-election rally against the government, which also took aim at the Hague-based tribunal.
"The verdict on Radovan Karadzic is a verdict on all Serb people, all of Serb history and the Serbian nation," Serbian Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj told the crowds, some of whom let off firecrackers.
"He was sentenced while innocent... just because in a crucial historical moment he led Serbs in Bosnia," said Seselj, who faces his own verdict from the court next week but is excused from attending for medical reasons.
In 1992 Karadzic founded the Republika Srpska (RS), a breakaway Bosnian Serb territory, and the conflict that ensued pitted his forces against the country's Muslims and Croats.
The Dayton peace accord which ended the war in 1995 formalised Bosnia's division into two semi-independent entities -- the RS and a Muslim-Croat Federation.
- Serb stereotypes -
Current RS leader, firebrand Milorad Dodik said it was "absolutely clear that today's verdict... was made under strong pressure from various international lobbies".
He said the ruling was in accordance with "stereotypes about Serbs' exclusive guilt for the war in Bosnia", Beta news agency reported.
Earlier Thursday, Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic warned against attacks on the RS in light of the verdict, saying Serbia would "stand with our people, we will protect the right to survive and exist" in the RS.
But in Sarajevo, Bosnian Muslim political leader Bakir Izetbegovic described the conviction as the "most important verdict" since the Nuremberg trials for prominent Nazis.
Other victims of Karadzic's aggression, while drawing some comfort from the ruling, seemed less satisfied.
"I was hoping for a life sentence," said Adil Draganovic, 63, who was held captive in a Bosnian Serb concentration camp during the war and travelled to the Hague for the verdict.
"But then again 40 years is as good as a life sentence for him," he said, while sporting a Bosnian flag around his neck.
In the remote and snowy Montenegrin village of Petnjica, where Karadzic was born, there was further disappointment for different reasons.
Relative Simeon Karadzic, 65, said the war crimes convict had shown a "spirit of tolerance" towards Muslims after moving to Sarajevo in his teens.
"The tribunal... simplified reality too much. All the actors were divided into good and bad."
AFP
Thu Mar 24 2016
Bosnian Muslim women, survivors of July 1995 massacre in Srebrenica react as they watch live broadcast of the verdict reading in the trial of former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, in Tuzla. - AFP Photo
'No one will win a trade war,' China says after Trump tariff threat
Donald Trump says he would impose the tariffs until China stops the flow of illegal drugs, particularly fentanyl, into the United States.
What has caused Pakistan's deadly clashes between police and supporters of Imran Khan?
Topping the demands of Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party is the release of all its leaders, including Khan, who has been jailed on a series of corruption charges since August 2023.
One woman or girl killed every 10 minutes by intimate partner or family member - UN
The report highlights that "60 per cent of all female homicides" are committed by "people closely related to them".
Sweden urges Chinese ship to return for undersea cable investigation
Two subsea cables, one linking Finland and Germany and the other connecting Sweden to Lithuania, were damaged in less than 24 hours.
[COLUMNIST] Building more highways won’t solve traffic congestion - reducing demand will
It is clear that adding more lanes and highways doesn't work, because we are still attempting the same approach to solve the issue.
Hyundai to invest RM2.16 bil in Malaysia through strategic partnership with INOKOM
This investment includes efforts to upgrade INOKOM's existing assembly capacity to meet Hyundai's automotive needs.
‘C4Cinta’ sets record as highest-grossing Malaysian Tamil film
'C4Cinta', directed by young filmmaker Karthik Shamalan, has set a new benchmark in Malaysian Tamil cinema.
Man charged with mother's murder, storing body in freezer
The court denied bail and scheduled case mention on Feb 7 for the submission of forensic, autopsy, and chemist reports.
Abolition of examination in schools to reduce pressure on pupils - Fadhlina
The classroom assessment approach offers a much more interesting learning ecosystem, says Fadhlina Sidek.
Google, Meta urge Australia to delay bill on social media ban for children
Google and Meta says the government should wait for the results of an age-verification trial before going ahead.
Judge tosses Trump 2020 election case after prosecutors' request
It represents a big legal victory for Donald Trump, who won the Nov. 5 US election and is set to return to office on Jan. 20.
DHL plane crash in Lithuania leaves authorities searching for answers
Rescue services said the plane hit the ground, split into pieces and slid over 100 metres (110 yards).
National squad to hold friendly matches for 2025 Indoor Hockey World Cup
The warm-up matches will involve matches against better ranked teams in the world, namely Austria (first) and Belgium (third).
G7 seeks unity on ICC arrest warrant for Netanyahu
The United States, part of the G7, has rejected the ICC decision, with President Joe Biden describing it as outrageous.
Francissca Peter remembers Tan Sri Ahmad Nawab: A tribute to a musical legend
A legend who has influenced our music for decades, was one of the highlights of my career, says Francissca Peter.
TikTok decision coming soon as Jan. 19 divestment deadline looms
Judges are reviewing TikTok's challenge to a law requiring ByteDance to sell its US assets by Jan. 19 or face a ban.
Lebanese sources: Biden, Macron set to announce Israel-Hezbollah truce
In Washington, White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said, "We're close" but "nothing is done until everything is done".
PM meets chaebol tycoon to attract more FDI to Malaysia
Chaebols are prominent figures from South Korea's family-owned conglomerates.
Govt won't allow non-citizen vehicles to enjoy RON95 subsidy - Economy Ministry
The implementation of the RON95 subsidy in 2025 is expected to provide savings of RM3.6 billion to government expenditure.
Ringgit opens lower as greenback gains ground
Dr Mohd Afzanizam says the market responded positively to news of hedge fund manager Scott Bessent heading the US Treasury Department.