Tihomir Blaškić

Tihomir Blaškić (born November 2, 1960) is a Bosnian Croat army officer who was sentenced in 2000 to 45 years imprisonment at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia for war crimes as part of the Lašva valley ethnic cleansing. In 2004, his command responsibility for most of the charges was found non-existent on appeal, and his sentence was commuted to 9 years imprisonment.

Early life
Tihomir Blaškić was born on 2 November 1960 in the village of Brestovsko in the Kiseljak municipality of PR Bosnia - Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia. Blaskic was a career military officer and graduated from the Belgrade Military Academy in 1983, having been beforehand a Captain in the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA).

During the period referred to in the indictment, he held the rank of Colonel in the HVO (Croatian Defence Council) and, from 27 June 1992, he was appointed Commander of the Regional Headquarters of the Armed Forces in central Bosnia. Subsequently, in August 1994, he was promoted to the rank of General and appointed Commander of the HVO, which had its headquarters in Mostar.

In November 1995, he was given the post of Inspector in the General Inspectorate of the Army of the Republic of Croatia.

Bosnian War
Following international recognition of Bosnia on 6 April 1992, armed conflict erupted between the different communities. As a result, on 8 April 1992, the Bosnian Croats created the HVO, backed by the Croatian Army (HV). The zones which they had control over were contained within the Croatian Community of Bosnia-Herzegovina (HZBH).

Tihomir Blaskic was in command of the HVO troops in the Lašva valley in central Bosnia, which was inhabited, in the majority, by Muslims and Croats.

Between May 1992 and January 1993, relations between the two communities became increasingly strained. The first destructions of mosques and Muslim houses, the first civilian murders and the first looting of property began to be witnessed.

On 2 January 1993, the Vance-Owen plan was put forward. This peace plan, amongst other elements, gave definition to a decentralised Bosnia-Herzegovina, organised into ten provinces, each benefiting from substantial autonomy and each being administered by a democratically elected local government.

Under this plan, the Lasva valley was attached, for the greater part, to a province where the principal responsibilities were attributed to the Croats.

The latter, and in particular the Bosnian Croats, in anticipation of the adoption of the Vance-Owen plan, resolved to implement it unilaterally, set about provoking open conflict between Croats and Muslims in central Bosnia.

On expiration of two ultimatums given to the Muslims in January and April 1993 requiring them to lay down their arms, the Croatian forces, whose hierarchical leader was General Blaskic, attacked various municipalities in the valley.

The Croatian forces, the HVO and independent units ran amok pillaging, burning down houses and farm buildings, murdering civilians without distinction as to age or sex, putting down livestock, destroying or damaging mosques, arresting certain civilians, forcibly transferring them to detention centres where living conditions were deplorable, and forcing them to dig trenches at various locations. On occasion, these same civilians were used as hostages or human shields.

War crimes
In 1996 the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) indicted him for crimes committed by troops under his command against Bosniaks in central Bosnia, particularly the Lašva valley, including grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, violations of the laws or customs of war and crimes against humanity.

At first, Franjo Tuđman reacted to this indictment defiantly and named Blaškić Inspector General of the Croatian Army. Later in the year Blaškić was told by his military superiors that it was his duty to voluntarily surrender and he reluctantly did so; his trial began in 1997. On 3 March 2000, The First Trial Chamber of the ICTY handed down its verdict, which condemned Blaskic to 45 years in prison.

The First Trial Chamber charged Tihomir Blaskic, based on his individual personal responsibility (Art. 7 § 1 ICTY Statute) and on his responsibility as hierarchical superior (Art. 7 § 3 ICTY Statute), on the following counts:
 * serious breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 (Art. 2 ICTY Statute: wilful murder, wilfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body or health; widespread destruction of property; inhumane treatment, taking of civilian hostages);
 * violations of the laws and customs of war (Art. 3 ICTY Statute: devastation not justified by military necessity; illegal attacks on civilians; illegal attacks on civilian property, murder; infliction of grievous bodily harm; looting of public or private property; destruction or wilful damage to institutions dedicated to religion or education; cruel treatment; hostage taking;
 * crimes against humanity (Art. 5 ICTY Statutes: persecutions on political, racial or religious grounds; murder; inhumane acts).

The case was in appeal until July 2004 when the ICTY appeals panel dismissed 16 of 19 counts in the initial indictment, notably the claim that Blaškić had command responsibility for the massacre in Ahmići and that Ahmići were not a legitimate military target. The decision has left some dubieties which will have to be resolved: it did not assess the nature of Croat-Muslim war in Bosnia in 1993–1994; it accepted the defense claim that there existed a "double chain of command".

The appeals panel did not completely dismiss him of all charges, as it reaffirmed the less serious charges of responsibility for the inhumane treatment of POWs (for example).

It reduced Blaškić's sentence to nine years of imprisonment, because of his good behavior, clear prior record, poor health, voluntary surrender and his young children. His defense applied for an early release because he served eight years and four months already, and the request was granted.

On July 29, 2005 chief ICTY prosecutor Carla Del Ponte filed motion for new trial, citing new evidence about Tihomir Blaškić's guilt. The Appeals Chamber dismissed this motion on November 23, 2006.