The good of the community before the good of the individual.
The programme consisted of a list of 25 points. It was the continuation of the Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (DAP), but Hitler had its name changed. Read the summary of the United Nations tribunal judgement below.The Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP) was founded in 1920. "Speech that incites hatred, discrimination and violence is an inflammable force," he added. "It is time now to ensure that his poisonous legacy does not continue to burden the people of the former Yugoslavia with deeply-felt grievances, secrecy and lies," he said. "This historic verdict should be a turning-point," said Zeid Raad al-Hussein. The U.N.'s top human rights official said in a statement that Karadzic's conviction is "hugely significant" and should warn other leaders against seeking to "scapegoat minorities for broader social ills." Karadzic's lawyer Peter Robinson said he was shocked by the verdict. One of his legal advisers said he will file an appeal. "Speech that incites hatred, discrimination and violence is an inflammable force." Retiree Bosko Solic told The Associated Press: "This is a fascist decision!" He added that "there is no justice and was convicted for nothing." Some residents of Belgrade criticized it, saying they did not trust the U.N.
Some of those who lost loved ones in Sarajevo and Srebrenica told journalists after the sentencing that the trial brought back dark memories and that they were still angry about the atrocities. Reactions to Thursday's verdict by those who lived through the war were mixed. He disguised himself by wearing a thick beard and shaggy hair. Dragan Dabic, The Guardian reported at the time. Law enforcement tracked him down after they discovered him posing as a New Age healer named Dr. Karadzic was indicted in 1995, but evaded authorities until being captured in Belgrade, Serbia, in 2008. Credit: AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File 4, 1996 file photo, skeletal remains of victims of the 1995 massacre at Srebrenica lie on a hilltop just west of Srebrenica, Bosnia. They show the brutality of Karadzic's deadly campaign. The following images are graphic and some people might find them disturbing. Judah said he was pleased to see it recognized. indictment among those in which Karadzic conducted his brutal campaign. One of those shot to death was a 7-year-old girl, he remembered. "We stopped, and all these Bosnian soldiers came down who'd shot people day before," he said. "People were in flight, they were bussed out, columns were being ethnically cleansed," he told Mashable by phone from the UK.Īt the start of war, he said, he was with another journalist driving through the village of Hranca en route to Sarajevo when he saw smoke rising. The tribunal said he set out to kill "every able-bodied male" and systematically exterminate the Bosnian Muslim.Īt least 100,000 people died during the fighting before a U.S.-brokered peace deal brought it to an end in 1995. His soldiers dumped most of the bodies in a mass grave.īritish journalist Tim Judah, who covered the war for The Times and The Economist, recalled on Thursday some of what he witnessed in 1992. The judgment of the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal said Karadzic was "instrumental" in the bombardment by Bosnian Serb forces. Kwon said Karadzic used a campaign of sniping and shelling in targeting civilians as a way of furthering his political goals.Presiding Judge O-Gon Kwon on Thursday said Karadzic is criminally responsible for murder, extermination, attacking civilians and terror for overseeing the deadly 44-month siege of the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo during the country's brutal war from 1992 to 1995. "People were in flight, they were bussed out, columns were being ethnically cleansed." In this photo taken on Sunday, March 20, 2016, senior forensic anthropologist Dragana Vucetic walks inside a facility where are more than 4,500 body-bags containing mortal remains recovered from mass graves wait to be identified, in Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina.