There are still 1,654 missing persons from the Kosovo War, of whom 1,092 are Albanians and 562 are Serbs and Roma. Some mass graves have never been found.
Vlastimir Djordjevic knows where additional mass graves are and should not be released until he discloses their location and substantially cooperates with prosecutors.
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Dear Respected Leaders,
On 17 June 2019, Vlastimir Ðorðević, former Assistant Minister of the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs (MUP) and Chief of the Public Security Department (RJB) of the MUP, will be eligible for early release from his sentence for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the Kosovo war, imposed by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).
We, the undersigned, have family members who have been missing for the past twenty years. Others among us have family members that were murdered and dumped in mass graves organized by Ðorðević.
Ðorðević is responsible for our pain. He was primarily responsible for the cover-up operations at the end of the war. During his trial, it was revealed that Ðorðević insisted that bodies be buried at certain sites. When the infamous refrigerator trucks were full, he ordered extra ones. He also ordered at least one truck to be destroyed (eventually in Petrovo Selo). As the ICTY Appeals Chamber stated, "Dordevic was the initial, and primary, point of contact for both the respective [regional PJP] chiefs [that carried out the cover-up operations]." In large part, the cover-up operations were his idea and the ICTY held him criminally responsible for all cover-up operations and mass graves that were known at the time of his indictment.
There are still 1,654 missing persons from the war, of whom 1,092 are Albanians and 562 are Serbs and Roma. Common sense dictates that additional mass graves exist.
We are confident that Ðorðević knows where many of our loved ones are buried.
Until he discloses such evidence, he should not be granted an early release. "Demonstration of rehabilitation" and "substantial cooperation" with the Office of the Prosecutor are important considerations when making this determination under Rule 151 of the Rule of Procedure and Evidence of the Mechanism.
We have desperately searched for our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons, and daughters. Vlastimir Ðorðević is preventing us from finding peace. Prosecutor Brammertz and the Office of the Prosecutor have taken a number of steps to prioritize the search for missing persons and to hold those responsible for the cover-up operations accountable through national institutions. As a chief orchestrator of the cover-up operations, Ðorðević owes the Office of the Prosecutor full cooperation in these efforts. Additionally, he can only demonstrate true rehabilitation by helping locate other mass graves.
Until such steps are taken, Vlastimir Ðorðević should not be released.