Ratko Mladic: profile of the ‘Butcher of Bosnia’

When he first faced the judges last June, Mladic insisted he was only “defending
my country”, a show of bravado typical for the man, showing his
defiance was undimmed by 16 years on the run.

He may be markedly older and thinner since the days when, dressed in fatigues,
he commanded his forces, but his military salute to the judges and his
combative responses showed undimmed conviction.

Born on March 12, 1942 at Bozinovici in eastern Bosnia, Mladic was two years
old when his father was killed by Croatia’s World War II fascist
authorities, the Ustasha.

In June 1991, as Yugoslavia crumbled and war broke out, Mladic, then a colonel
in the Yugoslav National Army, was given the task of organising the
Serb-dominated army from the Serb rebels’ stronghold Knin in Croatia.

The following year, Mladic, now a general, was made commander of Bosnian Serb
forces and fought to link up Serb-held lands in Bosnia’s east and west.

Mladic was indicted for war crimes after his troops overran the UN-declared
safe area of Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia on July 11, 1995. He was present
as some 8,000 Muslim men and boys were led away to their deaths.

The stocky warrior was the epitome of Serb defiance – at the start of the war,
he accused Muslims of the worst horrors and was quoted as saying they “impale
Serbs, burn them alive, crucify them and put out their eyes”.

Chillingly, he is also alleged to have said: “Borders are always drawn in
blood and states marked out with graves.”

His message – that he and his men were fighting in the name of “Greater
Serbia” – made him a hero to many of his people and a one-time
favourite of late Serbian and Yugoslavian president Slobodan Milosevic.

When he refused to bow to Western demands to withdraw his heavy weapons from
around Sarajevo in September 1995, after a three and a half years long
siege, it took the combined might of NATO warplanes and cruise missiles to
blow apart his military advantage.

Karadzic sacked Mladic but was forced to reinstate him. However, Mladic
finally became too much of a liability and was sacked by the Bosnian Serb
government in 1997 following growing international pressure over his war
crimes indictment.

He became a reclusive figure in post-war Bosnia.

For a long time he was holed up in his main command bunker at Han Pijesak,
calmly defying NATO attempts to arrest him as he regularly threatened to
bathe in the blood any soldiers who attempted to detain him.

He also often came to Belgrade, where his family lived, until he moved to the
Serbian capital. Until Milosevic’s ouster in October 2000, Mladic lived
openly in Belgrade, visiting cafes, restaurants and football matches.

But his popularity was waning among politicians in Serbia, increasingly
concerned that failure to transfer Mladic to the UN war crimes court would
mean further delay in the country’s joining the European Union.

Instead of roaming freely around Belgrade in a disguise, like Karadzic had
done, Mladic then vanished, finding refuge in army barracks.

As the Serbian authorities cracked down on Mladic’s support network, he became
more and more reliant on his extended family to hide him, which eventually
spelled his downfall.

Mladic was arrested in a village in northeastern Serbia in May 2011 where he
was hiding in a relative’s house.

Since his transfer to the tribunal’s detention unit, Mladic has complained of
health problems at each of his court appearances.

His lawyer Branko Lukic was quoted as saying that the former general’s health
is “very bad”, and that he needed a wheelchair to get around.

Married to Bosiljka, Mladic has a son, Darko, and two grandchildren.

His daughter Ana committed suicide in Belgrade in 1994 at age 23, reportedly
with her father’s favourite pistol, having been unable to cope with the
burden of accusations over Mladic’s wartime crimes.

Source: AFP

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