Dienstag, 20. September 2011

Zemun Clan, Zoran Djindjic und akutelle Ermittlungen in Serbien

BLIC

Srdja Popovic, Djindjic family lawyer, has said that the man mentioned by Milos Simovic, convicted of assassinating then Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, under the nickname 'Coki' as allegedly ordering the assassination of Djindjic was then deputy prime minister Nebojsa Covic.

Such a statement represents Simovic's attempt to gain the status of protected witness, though the Prosecution for organised crime believes that he is doing so through claims already heard earlier during the original trial.

Simovic would to become prosecution’s witness via Covic and thin proofs

Simovic would to become prosecution’s witness via Covic and thin proofs
Statement by Milos Simovic that Nebojsa Covic ordered assassination of Premier Zoran Djindjic is his attempt to get the status...»

Slovenians arrested and then released tripled murderer

Slovenians arrested and then released tripled murderer Organizer of one of the most horrible crimes in Serbia, a triple murder in Belgrade in 1993, Aleksandar Zlender (35) was arrested in Slovenia last Friday and then released. He is Slovenian citizen and...»

As ‘Blic’ learns Zlender replied with ‘I have no idea’ to all questions regarding a triple murder committed in Belgrade as his lawyer instructed him.
 
Aleksandar Zlender
According to our source Slovenian citizenship is protecting Zlender from extradition to Serbia. However, it is not clear to anyone why during sixteen years since issuance of the wanted list no agreement has been reached between Serbia and Slovenia so that charges are raised against Zlender by a criminal court in Ljubljana.

On October 9, 1993 during robbery of a flat in Belgrade Zlender killed a businessman Nebojsa Salatic, his girlfriend Slavica Kovacevic and Salatic’s underage nephew.

Statements about political conspiracy offered by Simovic not important in investigation

Statements about political conspiracy offered by Simovic not important in investigation Statements given by Milos Simovic (32) the last arrested member of the Zemun gang, that he gave yesterday at the beginning of repeated trial for assassination of Premier Zoran Djindjic referring to political...»

Gold confiscated from criminals to be turned into bullion bars

Gold confiscated from criminals to be turned into bullion bars Serbian Government shall have gold confiscated from criminals cast into bullion bars, ‘Blic’ learns. The Ministry of Justice is to decide how big bars are going to be, how they shall be sold and what the...»

Serbia to lose EUR 9 millions each year because of fuel smuggling

Serbia to lose EUR 9 millions each year because of fuel smuggling Serbs in the Kosovo north might become again hostages of petrol, wood and similar goods smugglers who thanks to no control of tax collection were smuggling or carrying out faked export to Kosovo. As ‘Blic’...»

Wikileaks: werden neue Details über Mladic und zum Tod von Zoran Djindjic bekannt? 

Cedomir Jovanovic - Djingic und der Ausverkauf von Serbien an die NATO Mafia 


20 Sep 2011 / 12:45

Murdered Serbian PM's Deputy Blamed for Death
Controversy has revived over Zoran Djindjic's assassination in 2003 following a top lawyer's claim that the the former premier's vice-president was behind his killing.

1 Kommentar:

  1. More Red Beret arrests in Serbia

    26/09/2011

    A probe into activities of a special ops unit could shed new light on the Djindjic assassination.

    By Igor Jovanovic for Southeast European Times in Belgrade -- 26/09/11
    photo

    Former Red Berets commander Milorad "Legija" Ulemek was convicted in 2007 for his role in the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic. [Reuters]

    Serbian police on September 20th arrested four former members of a special operations unit that organised a November 2001 rebellion against the government. The fifth suspect, belonging to a unit known as the Red Berets, avoided arrest as he is out of the country.

    Deputy Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic said after the arrests that it was "of state importance" to reveal the possible political background of their rebellion. "I expect the investigation to provide answers, as does Zoran Djindjic's family and all Serbian citizens," Djelic said.

    The Red Berets were a special unit of the Serbian secret police, formed during the former Yugoslav conflicts. The unit's former commander, Milorad "Legija" Ulemek, was sentenced to 40 years in prison for the 2003 assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic in Belgrade.

    For some Belgrade politicians and analysts, the latest arrests show that light is finally being shed on the political connections behind Djindjic's murder. Others, though, see it as part of the pre-election campaign in Serbia, and doubt that it will deliver results.

    All agree on the necessity of finding those who ordered the killing. There is widespread doubt among the Serbian public that it was organised solely by Ulemek and his "Zemun Clan".

    Lawyer Bozo Prelevic, who was the assistant interior minister in Djindjic's cabinet, said it is good that such an investigation is taking place. However, he said, the probe should have been launched much earlier. ...

    http://setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/features/2011/09/26/feature-01

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