New York, December 13, 2005—The War Crimes Chamber of the district
court in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, convicted 14 former soldiers
Monday on charges of torturing and executing Croatian civilians, including
at least two journalists, in neighboring Croatia in 1991, according
to international press reports.
The defendants were given prison sentences ranging from five to 20 years
for the massacre of more than 200 prisoners of war at an abandoned farm
outside the eastern Croatian city of Vukovar. Two other defendants were
acquitted.
The massacre occurred at a time when the Serbian-controlled Yugoslav
army had seized control of eastern and central portions of the newly
independent Croatia.
Among the victims were Radio Vukovar Editor-in-Chief Sinisa Glavasevic
and technician Branko Polovina, who along with other journalists had
kept the radio station running during an 86-day artillery siege of the
city by Serbian forces.
As Serbian forces entered the city, Glavasevic and Polivina fled to
the Vukovar hospital on November 18 in the hopes of being evacuated
from the city by officials from the Geneva-based International Committee
for the Red Cross.
On November 19, Serbian forces rounded up hundreds of medical patients,
hospital staff, and civilians who had taken shelter in the building,
transported them to the Ovcara pig farm some 4 miles (6.5 kilometers)
southeast of Vukovar, and summarily executed them the following day.
Survivors said that Serbian forces had singled out and brutally beaten
the journalists for their work.
Radio Vukovar—broadcasting to a small audience of city residents trapped
in their basements—reported on casualties, bombing raids, and damage
to the city. The station strongly criticized politicians in the Croatian
capital, Zagreb, for not sending adequate assistance.
Investigators from the Hague-based United Nations International Criminal
Tribunal exhumed the corpses of Galvasevic and Polovina in 1997 and
they were reburied by their families, according to international press
reports.
