The Hague, Netherlands – Probe Fails To Unravel Mystery Of Croat’s Courtroom Suicide

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    In this photo provided by the ICTY on Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2017, Slobodan Praljak brings a bottle to his lips, during a Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. Praljak yelled, "I am not a war criminal!" and appeared to drink from a small bottle, seconds after judges reconfirmed his 20-year prison sentence for involvement in a campaign to drive Muslims out of a would-be Bosnian Croat ministate in Bosnia in the early 1990s. (ICTY via AP)The Hague, Netherlands – Dutch prosecutors said Friday they have closed their investigation without unravelling the mystery of how a Croatian ex-general managed to smuggle poison into a United Nations courtroom and take his own life, seconds after an appeals judge confirmed his 20-year sentence for war crimes.

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    Slobodan Praljak committed suicide Nov. 29 last year, proclaiming his innocence and then drinking from a small bottle containing potassium cyanide. He collapsed in court and died in a Dutch hospital about two hours later.

    The dramatic scene of the 72-year-old former commander of Bosnian Croat military forces lifting his trembling right hand to his mouth and drinking the liquid was streamed live on the court’s website.

    In a written statement, The Hague Public Prosecution Service said that a months-long investigation failed to establish “in what way and at what point in time Mr. Praljak had obtained the potassium cyanide he used.”

    Police and prosecutors studied surveillance camera footage from the court, interviewed witnesses and searched Praljak’s U.N. cell.

    The prosecutors concluded that no criminal offenses were committed in Praljak’s suicide.

    Prosecutors said that a handwritten “farewell letter” to his family was found in his cell at the United Nations Detention Unit where he had been held for years as his trial and appeal for crimes during the 1992-95 Bosnian war progressed at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

    In the letter, he wrote “that he had already decided to put an end to his life a long time ago, should he be found guilty,” the prosecutors said.

    The probe said that potassium cyanide can be stored as a dry powder and only a tiny amount is fatal.

    “In this context, it isn’t strange that the importation or storage of the substance wasn’t noticed,” prosecutors said.

    An internal inquiry by the U.N. war crimes tribunal found that staff at its detention unit and headquarters followed all relevant procedures.

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    2 Comments
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    Frish
    Frish
    7 years ago

    He should’ve made a le’chaim with his murderer friends there

    hashomer
    hashomer
    7 years ago

    Too bad his compatriot Croat murders didn’t do that 75 years ago for all the atrocities they committed in the Shoah. Bosnian muslims formed their own SS unit back then.