Saturday, 16 March, 2002
US Outraged over Detention of American Diplomat in
Belgrade
VOA
News 16
Mar 2002

The United States has
expressed its outrage to the Yugoslav government over the detention Thursday of
a U.S. diplomat by military police in Belgrade.
State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher says the diplomat was having dinner at a Belgrade
restaurant with Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Momcilo Perisic when Yugoslav
military police burst in and detained both men. U.S. Officials in Washington
identified the diplomat as a U.S. embassy first secretary, John David
Neighbor.
Mr. Boucher said the
military police roughed up and pushed around the U.S. diplomat and held him for
about 15 hours without allowing him to contact the embassy before freeing
him.
He said the policemen
were not in uniform and presented no identification when they accosted the U.S.
diplomat and later subjected him to interrogation.
The U.S. spokesman
called the detention of Mr. Perisic an attack on an elected Serbian civilian
government official. He said the United States is forcefully protesting this to
the Yugoslav government.
News reports from
Belgrade quoted Yugoslav security sources as saying Mr. Perisic was detained on
suspicion of espionage. Yugoslav military authorities have not freed Mr.
Perisic, a Yugoslav army general and former Armed Forces Chief of
Staff.
Serbian Prime
Minister Zoran Djindjic called the arrests a first-rate
scandal.
Other top leaders of
the Yugoslav and Serbian governments said the detentions harm the reputation of
Yugoslavia. They said the manner of the detentions has cast doubts on whether
the country's military services are under civilian control. The comments came
in a statement issued after a joint meeting called to review the
situation.
General Perisic
founded an opposition party, the Movement for a Democratic Serbia, which joined
the Yugoslav Republic's coalition government after the ouster of Mr. Milosevic.
He was named a Serbian deputy prime minister in January of last
year.
Some information
for this report provided by AP and AFP.
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