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Dawn
Newspaper: “Athens faces shame over role at Srebrenica”(6.1.03)
By Helena Smith
ATHENS: It is what
the Greeks have long feared: the shattering of a conspiracy of silence that
has surrounded the role of Greek volunteers who proudly flew their flag at
Srebrenica , after participating in Europe's worst massacre since the Second
World War, when 7,000 men, women and children died.
Next week, as Greece
settles into the presidency of the European Union, Milan Milutinovic, Serbia's
recently retired president, will be brought before the war crimes tribunal at
The Hague. Greek involvement in the atrocity, as well as other secrets Athens
would prefer buried, could be revealed when the 60-year-old testifies.
No one, it is said,
played such a pivotal role in the alliance between Athens and Belgrade during
the Nineties Balkan conflicts. As Yugoslavia's ambassador to Greece,
Milutinovic was Slobodan Milosevic's most trusted lieutenant.
His links with
Greece's political, religious and business elites were allegedly crucial to
Serbia's secret economic infrastructure. They allowed the country to evade
United Nations sanctions and, according to the International Criminal
Tribunal, contributed considerably towards Milosevic's war machine.
When the diplomat
was promoted to Foreign Minister in 1994, he retained his Athens post for
several months when, EU diplomats say, he stashed away funds to buy villas and
other prime properties in Athens and Crete at the behest of his boss.
With Greece's
admiring public, pro-Serbian church, tolerant media and governments that
supported Milosevic, Athens was seen as a bolt-hole by the now disgraced
president. As Bosnian Serb ethnic cleansers torched villages, it was here
Milosevic would escape to enjoy the hospitality of Greek politicians. Marko
Milosevic, his lascivious smuggler son, declared Greece "my first
home".
"This is our
best-kept secret, the subject no politician of any persuasion has ever wanted
to broach," said Takis Michas, author of Unholy Alliance: Greece and
Milosevic's Serbia. "In an era where everyone is saying sorry, in Greece
at least no one has shown remorse for the crimes in Bosnia when undoubtedly a
significant proportion of the political establishment bear some
responsibility."
The US-published
book, yet to be printed in Greek, records in shocking detail the relationship
between the two Orthodox nations, including the leaking of Nato military
intelligence under socialist leader Andreas Papandreou.
The Greeks know
their past may be catching up with them. After last month's long statement of
contrition before the Hague tribunal by the former Bosnian Serb leader,
Biljana Plavsic, many believe it is only a matter of time before others open
up too.
A Dutch documentary investigating Greek complicity in the Serb wars was aired
on local television in which a director of the semi-official Athens News
Agency, Nikolas Voulelis, admitted to widespread censorship. During the wars
the Greek media was fanatically pro-Serb, portraying Yugoslav Muslims as
"infidel Turks" bent on destroying their Orthodox brethren.
"Editorial interference was a given," he said.
But it was not only
hospitality or money that the Greeks offered. Spiritual succour was provided
by the Greek Orthodox church which sent priests to the front line (several
clerics received bravery medals from Plavsic).
In a step repeated
in no other country, Archbishop Serafeim invited the Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic to visit Athens in 1993. At a mass rally attended by
prominent politicians, the indicted war criminal proclaimed: "We have
only God and the Greeks on our side." Last year, in a 7,000-page report
that the Dutch authorities commissioned into the 1995 Srebrenica massacre,
Greece was revealed to have sent shipments of light arms and ammunition to the
Bosnian Serb army between 1994 and 1995.
The report describes
how Greek volunteers were implored, in intercepted army telephone
conversations, to raise the Greek flag after the town fell. In one, General
Ratko Mladic asked that they record the scene on video for propaganda
purposes.
Around 100 soldiers
are believed to have joined the Greek Volunteer Guard, formed at Mladic's
request. The unit, which fought alongside Russians and Ukrainians, was led by
Serb officers and had its own insignia - the double-headed eagle of Byzantium.
At least four of its members were awarded the White Eagle medal of honour by
Karadzic.
Although their
"heroic" exploits were widely reported in the Greek press, the
volunteers have gone to ground since the creation of the war crimes tribunal.
No government or party has ever sought an inquiry into their activities.
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