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Summary
TAPE: EF02/0172 IN_TIME: 00:47:40 DURATION: 3:17 SOURCES: APTN RESTRICTIONS: DATELINE: Various, 1 March 2002 SHOTLIST: Celebici, Bosnia 1. Wide shot of village 2. Various shots of SFOR check point outside village and SFOR troops 4. Various shots of SFOR military convoy, including French and German armoured vehicles 4. SOUNDBITE (English) Captain Darryl Morrel, SFOR spokesman: "SFOR has detained persons indicted for war crimes in the past. Since 1997 we've detained 23. In fact, we've detained more war criminals than any of the signatories to the Dayton Peace Accords. I think our record speaks for itself. We're keeping up the pressure, we're continuing the hunt. Eventually Radovan Karadzic will be brought to justice." 5. General view of hills near Celebici 6. General view of Borje, an village adjacent to Celebici that was searched by SFOR Brussels, Belgium 7. Two-shot of NATO Secretary General Robertson and Ukraine Prime Minister Anatoly Kinakh 8. SOUNDBITE (English) George Robertson, NATO Secretary General: "So I have a solemn message to Karadzic and others who are indicted for war crimes. Time is running out. One day, whether it is tomorrow or next week or next month, SFOR will come for you. The only way the hunt will end is if you hand yourself in. So surrender now, with some dignity, or justice will be brought to you." Sarajevo, Bosnia 9. Various shots of war veterans rally on the anniversary of Bosnia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia 10. SOUNDBITE (Bosnian) voxpop Bosnian war veteran and amputee: "We need to arrest Karadzic. Until all of them are in the Hague, there will be no peace in Bosnia." 11. Various of veterans at rally demanding better pensions for war victims STORYLINE: NATO troops failed on Friday for the second time in 24 hours to hunt down Radovan Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb leader and the UN war crimes tribunal's most wanted suspect. New efforts appeared to be in the making, however, even after NATO called off its raid in a section of eastern Bosnia thought to harbor Karadzic. A statement by SFOR, the NATO-led Stabilization Force in Bosnia, said that while Karadzic "was not seized, SFOR continues efforts to apprehend him." NATO troops moved into a remote region of eastern Bosnia after receiving a tip that Karadzic was hiding out in Celebici, a village in the region near the border with the Yugoslav republics of Serbia and Montenegro. Friday's operation came on the 10th anniversary of Bosnia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia -- a move which sparked the ethnic conflict that degenerated into Europe's worst bloodshed since World War II. Acting on tribunal warrants, NATO peacekeepers in Bosnia have arrested dozens of war crimes suspects -- most of them Bosnian Serbs -- since the end of the war. But they have been faced with prolonged criticism for their failure to apprehend Karadzic and his top general, Ratko Mladic. In Sarajevo on the anniversary of the declaration of independence, veterans of the war and the families of war victims called for better treatment from the government.
Footage Information
Source | ABCNEWS VideoSource |
---|---|
Title: | Bosnia Search 2 - WRAP Area of Karadzic search, vets demo plus comment |
Date: | 03/01/2002 |
Library: | APTN |
Tape Number: | VSAP330950 |
Content: | TAPE: EF02/0172 IN_TIME: 00:47:40 DURATION: 3:17 SOURCES: APTN RESTRICTIONS: DATELINE: Various, 1 March 2002 SHOTLIST: Celebici, Bosnia 1. Wide shot of village 2. Various shots of SFOR check point outside village and SFOR troops 4. Various shots of SFOR military convoy, including French and German armoured vehicles 4. SOUNDBITE (English) Captain Darryl Morrel, SFOR spokesman: "SFOR has detained persons indicted for war crimes in the past. Since 1997 we've detained 23. In fact, we've detained more war criminals than any of the signatories to the Dayton Peace Accords. I think our record speaks for itself. We're keeping up the pressure, we're continuing the hunt. Eventually Radovan Karadzic will be brought to justice." 5. General view of hills near Celebici 6. General view of Borje, an village adjacent to Celebici that was searched by SFOR Brussels, Belgium 7. Two-shot of NATO Secretary General Robertson and Ukraine Prime Minister Anatoly Kinakh 8. SOUNDBITE (English) George Robertson, NATO Secretary General: "So I have a solemn message to Karadzic and others who are indicted for war crimes. Time is running out. One day, whether it is tomorrow or next week or next month, SFOR will come for you. The only way the hunt will end is if you hand yourself in. So surrender now, with some dignity, or justice will be brought to you." Sarajevo, Bosnia 9. Various shots of war veterans rally on the anniversary of Bosnia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia 10. SOUNDBITE (Bosnian) voxpop Bosnian war veteran and amputee: "We need to arrest Karadzic. Until all of them are in the Hague, there will be no peace in Bosnia." 11. Various of veterans at rally demanding better pensions for war victims STORYLINE: NATO troops failed on Friday for the second time in 24 hours to hunt down Radovan Karadzic, the former Bosnian Serb leader and the UN war crimes tribunal's most wanted suspect. New efforts appeared to be in the making, however, even after NATO called off its raid in a section of eastern Bosnia thought to harbor Karadzic. A statement by SFOR, the NATO-led Stabilization Force in Bosnia, said that while Karadzic "was not seized, SFOR continues efforts to apprehend him." NATO troops moved into a remote region of eastern Bosnia after receiving a tip that Karadzic was hiding out in Celebici, a village in the region near the border with the Yugoslav republics of Serbia and Montenegro. Friday's operation came on the 10th anniversary of Bosnia's declaration of independence from Yugoslavia -- a move which sparked the ethnic conflict that degenerated into Europe's worst bloodshed since World War II. Acting on tribunal warrants, NATO peacekeepers in Bosnia have arrested dozens of war crimes suspects -- most of them Bosnian Serbs -- since the end of the war. But they have been faced with prolonged criticism for their failure to apprehend Karadzic and his top general, Ratko Mladic. In Sarajevo on the anniversary of the declaration of independence, veterans of the war and the families of war victims called for better treatment from the government. |
Media Type: | Summary |