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AFP via Yahoo! News - Tue Oct 27, 9:57 am ET
Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic was the "supreme commander" of an ethnic cleansing campaign during Bosnia's 1992-95 war, a UN court heard Tuesday.
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Boise Weekly - Mon Oct 26, 5:35 pm ET
Muslim law professor and Fulbright Scholar Fikret Karcic , a professor of law at the University of Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina, will deliver a lecture on Islam and modernity tonight at Boise State. Karcic has been on campus this month as a visiting specialist through the Fulbright Program’s “Direct Access to the Muslim World” initiative. Karcic is a legal historian with a particular ...
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The Washington Times - Mon Oct 26, 5:16 am ET
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA Karadzic trial to start without him THE HAGUE | The trial of Radovan Karadzic - one of the most significant war crimes cases to emerge from Europe's bloodiest conflict since World War II - is to start Monday without the defendant present. The Bosnian Serb leader's boycott of the opening is a blow to survivors who hold him responsible for tens of thousands of deaths during ...
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NPR - Tue Oct 27, 5:03 pm ET
Prosecutors allege the former Bosnian Serb leader, who boycotted his war crimes trial for the second day, was the driving force behind atrocities throughout Bosnia's brutal four-year war. The U.N. tribunal's presiding judge warned that Karadzic could be stripped of his right to defend himself if he continues to refuse to show up.
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The Christian Science Monitor via Yahoo! News - Tue Oct 27, 5:00 am ET
The Bosnia genocide case against Radovan Karadzic opened Tuesday in what may be the most important remaining case tried by the 13-year old special tribunal on the former Yugoslavia, according to many jurists.
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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette - Wed Oct 28, 4:48 am ET
Even in his absence, Radovan Karadzic’s words urging the destruction of Bosnia’s non-Serbs rang out in a courtroom Tuesday from speeches and intercepted phone calls as U.N. prosecutors opened their genocide and war-crimes case against him.
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Bloomberg - Tue Oct 27, 1:09 pm ET
Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Radovan Karadzic , accused of genocide against Bosnia’s Muslim population, stayed away from the second day of his UN trial in The Hague as the prosecution made its opening statements.
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AFP via Yahoo! News - Sat Oct 24, 8:37 am ET
Some 160 survivors of Bosnia's 1992-1995 war left Sarajevo on Saturday to attend the start of Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic's genocide trial in The Hague, a news agency reported.
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ABC News - Mon Oct 26, 5:30 am ET
Judges adjourn Radovan Karadzic's genocide trial as he boycotts opening.
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The Huffington Post - Mon Oct 26, 5:11 pm ET
What's Your Reaction? People light candles in the northern Bosnian village of Donja Gradina April 17, 2005, as they pay their respect to the tens of thousands of victims who had been killed in the concentration camp of Jasenovac.
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NBC26 Green Bay - Mon Oct 26, 1:21 am ET
- June 19, 1945: Born in Savnik, Yugoslavia, in what is now the Republic of Montenegro. - July 12, 1990: A founding member of the Serbian Democratic Party in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
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CBS 2 Los Angeles - Tue Oct 27, 5:22 pm ET
Radovan Karadzic's words urging the destruction of Bosnia's non-Serbs rang out in a courtroom Tuesday from speeches and intercepted phone calls as U.N. prosecutors opened their genocide and war crimes case against him. The former Bosnian Serb leader boycotted his trial for the second day, despite warnings from the war crimes tribunal's presiding judge that he could be stripped of his right to ...
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AP via Yahoo! News - Mon Oct 26, 2:49 pm ET
His chair was empty, his headphones lay idle on the desk. In Courtroom One at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal, outraged survivors of Bosnia's bloody war gasped in disbelief Monday as judges adjourned the opening day of Radovan Karadzic's trial after just 15 minutes.
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Arizona Daily Star - Tue Oct 27, 3:18 am ET
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — On the first day of his trial on Monday, Radovan Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb leader who stands accused of genocide against Bosnia's Muslim population, refused to appear in court and sent word once again that he wanted more time to prepare his defense. The proceedings aim to cover three years of warfare and widespread brutality against civilians.
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The Spokesman-Review - Tue Oct 27, 3:11 am ET
THE HAGUE, Netherlands – His chair was empty; his headphones lay idle on the desk. In Courtroom One at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal, outraged survivors of Bosnia’s bloody war gasped in disbelief Monday as judges adjourned the opening day of Radovan Karadzic’s trial after just 15 minutes. The former Bosnian Serb leader boycotted his war crimes trial, claiming he did not have enough time to ...