Milica StojanovicBelgradeBIRNMarch 6, 202315:00The Belgrade Court of Appeal opened the retrial for the 1999 murder of the journalist Slavko Curuvija, questioning four defendants and the only eye witness in the case.

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Belgrade Appeals Court Starts Trial in Murdered Journalist Case

Slavko Curuvija. Photo: cenzolovka/Predrag Mitic

Former head of Serbian State Security Radomir Markovic repeated to the appeal court that he is not guilty for the 1999 murder of the Serbian journalist and editor Slavko Curuvija.

Markovic claimed that Curuvija was only put under state surveillance “due to his contacts with foreign intelligence agencies …The task of every state security is to establish the nature of these contacts”.

Curuvija was shot in front of his home in Belgrade in April 1999 during the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, allegedly because of his outspoken criticism of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.

Marković was brought to the court building from prison, where he is serving a sentence for involvement in the attempted killing of then opposition leader Vuk Draskovic in 1999, when four people died.

Branka Prpa, Curuvija’s partner at the time, and who was with him at the moment of his murder, also testified again.

“That murder was an epilogue to the permanent persecution of Slavko Curuvija and it cannot be said that he was ‘under [surveillance] measures’ because he had contacts with foreign intelligence – he had contacts with journalists, both foreign and domestic,” Prpa told the court.

Markovic, security service officer Milan Radonjic and secret service agents Ratko Romic and Miroslav Kurak launched challenges in December 2022 at the Appeals Court in Belgrade to the 2021 verdict convicting them of involvement in the murder of the prominent journalist and editor.

In the second first-instance verdict in December 2021, Markovic and Radonjic were each sentenced to 30 years in prison for the crime, while Romic and Kurak were each given 20 years in prison.

The court found that Markovic told Radonjic of the plan to assassinate the journalist, and Radonjic then made an agreement with Romic and Kurak to kill him.

In September 2020, the Belgrade Court of Appeals overturned the initial judgment that convicted four Serbian State Security officers of involvement in the Curuvija assassination.

It quashed the 2019 first-instance verdict “due to significant violations of the provisions of the criminal procedure”.

The appeals decision said that the first court had added facts to the charges that were not in the original indictment, and so the defendants were found guilty of violations “which were not contained in the indictment, and about which no evidence was presented during the proceedings”.

This trial will continue on Wednesday.

Source link: balkaninsight.com