The mechanism in The Hague allowed the president of the Serbian Radical Party, Vojislav Šešelj, and his associates to be tried by courts in Serbia.
Šešelj told Tanjug that the radicals had received the Hague decision, but that they had not yet received anything from the domestic court.
An indictment was filed against Radical President Vojislav Šešelj and five of his associates in The Hague for contempt of court.
In 2018, Šešelj was sentenced to 10 years in prison for inciting persecution, deportation and forced displacement and relocation of Croats in Hrtkovci, where he gave a speech in 1992. He served his sentence while in custody in The Hague from 2003 to 2014.
The Hague prisoner and leader of the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), Vojislav Šešelj, and four other SRS officials, were charged before the International Residual Mechanism in The Hague (MICT), a follower of the ICTY, for contempt of court, an SRS official confirmed to the Belgrade media.
Seselj was sentenced to 10 years in prison by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for crimes against Croats and other non-Serb population in Vojvodina during the 90s.
The appeals panel of the Mechanism convicted him of incitement to persecution, deportation, inhumane acts, crimes against humanity and the persecution of Croats in 1992, after he was previously acquitted on all counts of the indictment by a first-instance verdict in June 2016. Seselj spent 12 years in custody.
The new Hague indictment includes Šešelj and SRS members Miljan Damjanović, Ljiljana and Ognjen Mihajlović and Miroljub Ignjatović, the party’s deputy president Aleksandar Šešelj told the agency.
“This is a new indictment for contempt of court,” said Aleksandar Šešelj, asserting that it is “a fictitious offense that the Hague Tribunal has given itself the right to introduce as a criminal offense”, and that according to the judgment of that court, “whatever they judge I can accuse someone of contempt of court”.
That indictment, explains Sešelj’s son, was brought because the radicals published books and other printed materials, as well as video and audio materials “that reveal how the prosecution witnesses were instructed and bribed to testify against Vojislav Šešelj” in his main trial.
Aleksandar Šešelj maintains that the filing of a new indictment in the pre-election period is not accidental and sees the Hague Tribunal as a “political instrument of interest and at the expense of the USA”, in accordance with the political situation.
Hina news agency reminds that extraordinary parliamentary elections in Serbia are scheduled for December 17, and at the same time elections will be held in Vojvodina, Belgrade, and 64 other cities and municipalities throughout Serbia. Seselj’s Radicals are an extra-parliamentary party and have submitted an electoral list, and in the elections in Belgrade they will support the ruling Serbian Progressive Party, which was created by separating from the SRS.
Aleksandar Šešelj sees the new indictment as a “persecution of the SRS” by which the Hague court, “as an instrument of the USA”, has been trying to destroy that party for more than 20 years “as the main opponent for achieving the goals of the USA in Serbia”.
He is convinced that the government in Serbia “will not extradite anyone” to the Hague Tribunal. “I think that within the ruling party and the coalition there is no readiness for that to happen,” said Aleksandar Šešelj.