NATO Launches Massive Hunt for Bosnian Serb Wartime Leader
VOA News
28 Feb 2002 13:16 UTC
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AP Photo
AP
Radovan Karadzic
NATO-led peacekeepers have launched a major operation in eastern Bosnia-Herzegovina but failed to locate Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic.

Officials say helicopters, armored vehicles and troops from the NATO-led Stabilization Force blocked all entry to a village near the town of Foca, east of Sarajevo, in a search for Mr. Karadzic. But alliance officials say they failed to find the former Bosnian Serb leader. Bosnian Serb media reports say NATO troops entered houses, schools, churches and other facilities. Telephone and radio communications also reportedly were blocked and electricity cut off.

The United Nations tribunal in The Hague has indicted Mr. Karadzic and his military chief General Ratko Mladic for war crimes in connection with the shelling of civilians in Sarajevo during the Bosnian conflict. The tribunal also indicted both men for their role in the disappearance of as many as 8,000 Muslim men and boys after Serb forces captured the enclave of Srebrenica in July, 1995.

International humanitarian organizations say the Serbs massacred those missing, though only about four thousand bodies have been recovered from mass graves so far. More than 20 war crimes suspects - most Bosnian Serbs - are still at large including Mr. Karadzic and Mr. Mladic.

The Bosnian Serb government earlier this month gave war crimes suspects a 30-day deadline to surrender or lose their chance of being provisionally released on bail if detained.

Some information for this report provided by AFP and Reuters.

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