gotovina

Dalmazia, guerra ai tonni di Gotovina
L’ex generale Gotovina denuncia gli Usa
Gotovina si dà all’allevamento di tonni
Gotovina tifa Ue, patto con Milanovic
Niente politica, Gotovina si dà agli affari
Ante Gotovina (R), who was commander in the Split district of the Croatian army, talks in the courtroom of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) before his appeal judgement in The Hague November 16, 2012. The appeals court overturned on Friday the conviction of Gotovina, the most senior Croatian military officer charged with war crimes during the Balkan conflict of the 1990s. Gotovina had been jailed for 24 years. The conviction of Mladen Markac, a Croatian police commander who had been serving an 18-year sentence, was also overturned. REUTERS/Bas Czerwinski/Pool (NETHERLANDS - Tags: CRIME LAW CONFLICT POLITICS)
«Io l’ho arrestato: Gotovina è colpevole»
epa03473877 Croatian General Ante Gotovina (C) waves to onlookers as he disembarks from a plane at the airport in Zagreb, Croatia, 16 November 2012. The appeals chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) earlier on 16 November 2012 overturned guilty verdicts against Croatian generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac. The generals, who had been sentenced by the ICTY to 24 and 18 years respectively on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity, were to be released immediately. The verdict is important for Croatia, because the country rejects accusations that its military embarked on a campaign to ethnically cleanse Serbs from its territory during the Yugoslav conflict. EPA/ANTONIO BAT
Crimini di guerra, il Tribunale dell’Aja assolve in appello l’ex generale croato Gotovina
epa03472967 Former Croatian Army Generals Ante Gotovina (L) and Mladen Markac (R) enter the courtroom of the Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal (ICTY) for their appeal judgement, in The Hague, Netherlands, 16 November 2012. The ICTY is delivering its decision in the appeal of the two Croatian generals convicted for their roles in a 1995 military offensive to drive Serb rebels out of land they had occupied for years along part of Croatia's border with Bosnia. Gotovina and Markac, were sentenced to 24 and 18 years respectively in 2011 for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Latest media reports state that two generals were acquitted and ordered to be released. EPA/BAS CZERWINSKI