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Ramush Haradinaj
4th Prime Minister of Kosovo

In office
3 December 2004 – March 2005
Preceded by Bajram Rexhepi
Succeeded by Bajram Kosumi
Personal details
Born 3 July 1968(1968-07-03) (age 55)
Glođane, Yugoslavia
Political party AAK

Ramush Haradinaj (born 3 July 1968) is a Kosovo-Albanian politician,[1] a former officer and leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army, and the former prime minister of the Republic of Kosovo[a]. He leads the AAK party.[2]

Following the dissolution of Yugoslavia Haradinaj was the KLA/UÇK commander for western Kosovo.[1] Following the conflict, Haradinaj went into politics but soon resigned after becoming one of the KLA commanders charged by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) with war crimes and crimes against humanity against Serbs, Roma and Albanians between March and September 1998 during the Kosovo War.[2][3] He was acquitted of all charges on 3 April 2008 shortly after the unilateral declaration of independence of Kosovo.[4] The prosecution appealed against the acquittal and argued that it was not given enough time to secure the testimony of two critical witnesses.[5] In 2010 the Appeals Chamber agreed and ordered a partial retrial in The Hague, Netherlands.[6][7] The re-trial took just over two years and on 29 November 2012, Haradinaj and his co-defendant were acquitted for a second time on all charges.[8]

Early life and war years[]

Haradinaj was born on 3 July 1968, as second of nine children, in the village of Glođane, near Dečani, in the Serbian province of Kosovo. He spent his youth in his native village with his parents and siblings, and completed primary school in Rznici and secondary school in Dečani and Đakovica.[citation needed] After graduating from high school in 1987, he did his mandatory military service in the Yugoslav Peoples Army, where he later be promoted to platoon commander. After the Kosovo War, Haradinaj attended law school at the University of Pristina.[9] Haradinaj also earned a Master's degree in business from the American University of Kosovo, which is associated with the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York state.[citation needed]

Interim years[]

In 1989, using a false name, Haradinaj emigrated to Lucerne, Switzerland. He worked there for eight years as a construction worker, security guard, and a bouncer in a nightclub.[9] As the Soviet Union dealt with new internal challenges, movements for independence began to form among many of the ethnicities of the Balkans and other states. In Switzerland, Haradinaj joined the separatist National Movement of Kosovo, from which the UÇK originated. It wanted to leave Yugoslavia to achieve an independent Kosovo. In 1998, Haradinaj returned to his hometown of Glodjane in Kosovo.[10]

Kosovo War[]

After Haradinaj's return to Kosovo in February 1998, the conflict in Kosovo erupted. According to the ICTY indictment against Fatmir Limaj, Haradin Bala and Isak Musliu, between 28 February and 5 March, Serbian and Yugoslav forces launched an offensive against KLA-held villages of Likošane, Cirez, and Prekaze.

Serbian special forces attacked three adjacent villages in Drenice. without warning killing close to 100 civilians in the three villages.[11] In all 83 Kosovar Albanians were killed.[12] Among the dead were elderly people and at least 24 women and children.[13] Many of the victims were shot at close range which suggested summary executions; subsequent reports from eye-witnesses confirmed this.[14] The attacks on these three villages marked a turning point in the war, KLA membership increased as many Albanians began to fear that their village would be targeted next.[15] The next village targeted was Ramush Haradinaj's home village of Gllogjan.

Less than three weeks after the attacks in Drenica,Serbian police and Yugoslav forces surrounded the village of Glodjane and commenced a similar operation targeting the Haradinaj compound.[16][17]<[18] The Haradinaj family, however, was aware of the previous attacks in Drenice and defended the village.[18][19] They utilized their superior knowledge of the terrain and local defenses to good effect and under the leadership of Haradinaj, they successfully repelled the attack.[18] This job was made more difficult because Serbian police forces captured a group of civilians and used them as human shields - marching the group in front of Serb soldiers as the forces took cover behind them and attempted to kill the Haradinajs.[18][19]

During the firefight Ramush Haradinaj was seriously wounded during this assault after being shot in the hip by a Serbian policeman.[18][19] He survived by packing his wound with cheese he found in the room where he took cover.[18][19] During the fire fight three young Kosovar Albanian boys under the age of 18 were killed by Serbian forces which further galvanized the Albanian population to support the KLA.[18][19] It is not known how many Serbian policemen or Yugoslav army forces were killed.[18][19]

After successfully repelling the Serbian attack Haradinaj gained a leadership position in the UÇK in Western Kosovo.[18][19] By May 1998 he was regarded as commander of Glodjane and surrounding villages, and by June 1998 he became commander of the Dukagjin Operational Zone (in Metohija).[citation needed] Western Kosovo's proximity to Albania provided a corridor through which the UÇK could procure weapons. Haradinaj established himself as a commander during heavy fighting in his area.[citation needed] As war broke out in Western Kosovo during the Spring of 1998 Serbian and Albanian families fled the area for fear of getting caught up in the intense hostilities breaking out.[20]

In September 1998, some months later, the bodies of 39 people were found near Glodjane. The victims were local people,of both Albanian and Serbian ethnicities. The discovery of their bodies led to public accusations of war crimes against Haradinaj and his group.[21]

From soldier to politician[]

File:Haradinaj.jpg

Haradinaj's poster at the headquarters of AAK

After demilitarization of the UÇK following NATO's entry into Kosovo in 1999, the UÇK was transformed into the Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC). In this new force, Haradinaj was appointed as a deputy commander, under Agim Çeku.

He retired from the KPC on 11 April 2000, and announced that he was entering politics. With support from the former communist leader Mahmut Bakalli, Haradinaj founded the Alliance for the Future of Kosovo (AAK), on 29 April 2000. He was elected president of the party.

Some former UÇK supporters had hoped to see Haradinaj enter a political alliance with Hashim Thaçi, the political leader of the UÇK. By 2000 Thaçi led the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK). They formed the chief opposition to the Ibrahim Rugova-led Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK), which had been opposed to the UÇK. Haradinaj said he had formed a new party to create a new paradigm for the future of democratic politics in Kosovo, to leave wartime divisions behind.[citation needed]

Haradinaj enjoyed limited electoral success up to and including the elections of 2004.[citation needed] Following the Kosovo elections of October 2004, he entered into coalition talks with the LDK, led by Dr. Rugova, then President of Kosovo. Rugova formed a government and nominated Haradinaj as Prime Minister. In the Kosovo Assembly, Haradinaj’s candidacy for Prime Minister won the support of 72 members out of 120, with only three opposing.

Some observers considered Haradinaj’s coalition with the Rugova-led LDK to be a reconciliation of the animosities of the war and immediate post-war periods.[citation needed] The PDK opposed the coalition. Haradinaj appeared to form a close and productive working relationship with Ibrahim Rugova and other senior figures in the LDK.

In February 2009 the Ugandan Rebel Group "Allied Democratic Forces," a Muslim group, asked Haradinaj to mediate peace talks with the central government in Kampala.[22]

On 10 November 2012 Albanian President, Bujar Nishani decorated Haradinaj with the Skanderbeg's Order.[23]

Trial for war crimes at ICTY[]

First trial[]

Haradinaj served 100 days as Prime Minister in 2005 before being indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), at The Hague. The indictment alleges that Haradinaj, as a commander of the UÇK, committed crimes against humanity and violations of the laws or customs of war between March and September 1998, the alleged purpose of which was to exert control over territory, targeting both Serb, Albanian, and Romani civilians.[24] He was acquitted on 3 April 2008, because of lack of convincing evidence.

When the ICTY indictment was issued in March 2005, Haradinaj chose to step down immediately from his position as Prime Minister. The following day he travelled voluntarily to The Hague where he submitted himself to the custody of the court and remained for two months until he was granted provisional release pending trial. The head of the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) during this time, Søren Jessen-Petersen, welcomed the decision Haradinaj to face the tribunal voluntarily, praised his work and described Haradinaj as a "close partner and friend", regardless Western intelligence reports that Haradinaj was a key figure in the range between organized crime and politics.[25] Citing Mr. Haradinaj's compliance with the ICTY and the fact that he posed no risk of flight and no risk towards witnesses, the Trial Chamber of the ICTY extended his provisional release and allowed him to wait for trial in his hometown of Prishtina.[26] Further, the Appeals Chamber later granted Haradinaj the unprecedented right for an indictee to engage in public political activity. Such activity was, however, subject to the approval of UNMIK.[27] This step was unprecedented in the history of international criminal law and seen as a reflection of the fact that Mr. Haradinaj voluntarily submitted himself to the court. Critics (and the prosecution) however, argued that this went too far. The Prosecution argued that although Mr. Haradinaj posed no threat to witnesses, his mere presence in Kosovo could have a “chilling” effect on whether witnesses would testify.[26]

On 26 February 2007 Haradinaj was flown back to Hague so that the trial could proceed. In the previous days he held meetings with Kosovo's President Fatmir Sejdiu, Prime Minister Agim Çeku, the head of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo, Joachim Rücker, and various diplomatic offices. At a news conference he urged the public to remain calm and was steadfast in his belief that the trial would result in a full acquittal.[28][29][30]

The longtime Chief Prosecutor of International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Carla Del Ponte, has remained steadfastly unimpressed by the international support for Haradinaj, continuing to make strongly negative statements about him. She told the German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung that "according to the decision to provisionally release him, he is a stability factor for Kosovo. I never understood this. For me he is a war criminal."[31]

The trial, which was enforced by Carla Del Ponte,[32] began on 5 March 2007 and Haradinaj’s defence team was led by Queen's Counsel Ben Emmerson, an international human rights lawyer, who had supporting counsel in Rodney Dixon, also of Matrix Chambers of London. The legal defence team as a whole was coordinated by Irish political consultant and financier Michael O'Reilly. At the opening of proceedings, Carla Del Ponte pointed to the problems of the accuser. The intimidation of witnesses was a major problem in the investigation. She claimed that it was difficult to find witnesses who were willing to testify not just to the prosecutors, but also for the tribunal. "The difficulty in Kosovo was that no one helped us, neither the UN administration nor NATO."[33]

On 20 July 2007, Ramush Haradinaj's application for provisional release during the summer court recess was denied. He was granted a second exceptional provisional release over the Christmas court recess. The trial chamber rendered its decision on 3 April 2008; not guilty. Defenders of Haradinaj, Balaj and Brahimaj have not taken a single witness of the defence to the stand considering that unnecessary. The prosecution was unable to bring to the courtroom three planned witnesses. One of them was committed to a mental health institution at the time he was called to testify. Another, Shefqet Kabashi, refused to testify citing the OTP's failure to live up to the conditions set for his testimony.[34] Haradinaj's full acquittal, however, was palled by whispers that witnesses had been intimidated. In fact, during the first trial two witnesses failed to attend and it was feared their evidence could have been determinative to the outcome.

The judges addressed the atmosphere of intimidation that surrounded the trial directly and noted: "the Chamber encountered significant difficulties in securing the testimony of a large number of these witnesses. Many cited fear as a prominent reason for not wishing to appear before the Chamber to give evidence. In this regard, the Chamber gained a strong impression that the trial was being held in an atmosphere where witnesses felt unsafe, due to a number of factors set out in the Judgement.[35]

Witness Intimidation[]

Because witness intimidation had been such an important issue during the initial trial, witness protection was a prominent feature in both trials. During both trial the Prosecution took great pains to protect the identity of witnesses called to testify. This often included, voice modification, pseudonyms, and in some cases witness relocation. During the retrial,the Court took the extraordinary measure of moving the entire court to an undisclosed secret location in order to secure the testimony of a protected witness.[36][37] These efforts paid off.

Despite claims[38] from several media outlets, and although it was difficult to prove, the ICTY stated that no witnesses were murdered during either trial.[36] The judgments of each trial chamber can be found on the ICTY's website: www.icty.org. There was some confusion over this point because during the first trial, 97 witnesses were called by the Prosecution to testify against Mr. Haradinaj; however,two did not testify. and one witness died shortly before trial.[39] His name was Kujtim Berisha and his death has been used as evidence that witnesses were killed.[38]

Kujtim Berisha, was killed on 18 February 2007 in a drunk driving car accident in Podgorica, Montenegro. This accident was thoroughly investigated by Monetnegrin authorities who found that the perpetrator was a 67-year old Montenegrin Serb named Aleksandar Ristović. Ristović drove his car into Berisha and two other men while under the influence of alcohol. The Montenegrin daily Vijesti states that police 'confirmed that at the moment of accident Ristović was drunk—driving at a very high speed'.[40]

The ICTY Tribunal confirmed this noting: "The (ICTY) tribunal noted that Kujtim Berisha was "'the only person [who died] who was planned to be called as a witness in the Haradinaj et al. trial.' He died in a 2007 car accident in Podgorica. Montenegrin investigators found 'no evidence that the accident was staged'".[41]

Various media outlets from several different countries have written that as many as nineteen people who were supposed to be witnesses in the trial against Haradinaj were murdered[42] The ICTY disputed these reports.

The first time the ICTY formally refuted this rumor was shortly after the initial trial. Serbian media claimed that Mr. Haradinaj's acquittal was based on the 'mafia style killing of witnesses.' The ICTY Spokeswoman in Serbia, Nerma Jelačić stated that these allegations were untrue and served only to politicize the work of the court.[43] Her statement was later echoed and reaffirmed by the ICTY Trial Chamber itself which commented that no witnesses in the protected witness program were killed during the initial trial.[41]

The Serbian war crimes Prosecutor disagreed with the ICTY. He claimed that potential ICTY witnesses had been murdered. In 2011.[44] The Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor, however, is not connected with the ICTY in any capacity whatsoever.[45] Instead, he is a Serbian political appointee elected by the Serbian National Assembly who is charged with prosecuting war crimes in Serbia.[46]

The ICTY, refuted his statement and shortly thereafter the ICTY War Crimes Prosecutor responded to these allegations and claimed again that no ICTY witnesses had been murdered.[47] Two of the individuals listed by the Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor(Sadik and Vesel Muriqi) turned out to still be alive.[48][49]

Second Trial[]

The second trial began in 2011 in front of a second Trial Chamber made up of three different judges. Mr. Haradinaj was represented again by Ben Emmerson Q.C, Mr. Rodney Dixon. The Prosecution called 56 witnesses against Mr. Haradinaj and again Mr. Haradinaj called no defence witness.

On November 29, 2012 Ramush Haradinaj was acquitted a second time.[50] This time, due to the extreme diligence of the court and of the parties there was no allegation of witness intimidation. Instead the judges found that not only was there no evidence to convict Mr. Haradinaj, the Court held that the evidence established that he had acted to prevent criminal behaviour where he could.[51]

The central allegation against Mr. Haradinaj was that he participated in a criminal plan to persecute civilians. The Court directly addressed this allegation and stated in its summary of the judgment that:

"Even if the existence of such common plan were established, which is not the finding of the Chamber, there is nothing in the evidence to indicate that Ramush Haradinaj or Idriz Balaj may have been involved in any such common plan. On the contrary, the evidence establishes that when Ramush Haradinaj found out about the detention and mistreatment of Skender Kuçi, he went to Jabllanicë/Jablanica to speak to Nazmi Brahimaj regarding Skender Kuçi’s release, telling him that “no such thing should happen anymore because this is damaging our cause”. When Witness 3 was brought to Ramush Haradinaj after his escape from Jabllanicë/Jablanica and subsequent apprehension by Lahi Brahimaj, Ramush Haradinaj offered food and accommodation to Witness 3 and released him to his family. No credible evidence has been presented by the Prosecution to establish that Ramush Haradinaj was even aware of the crimes committed at the KLA compound in Jabllanicë/Jablanica."

After this ruling, there were serious questions raised as to why Mr. Haradinaj was ever indicted in the first place. Indeed, a former Director of Public Prosecutions, Lord Madonald of River Glaven QC, said yesterday: "This prosecution was a stupid attempt to equate resistance with aggression. It was an embarrassment to the international community."[52] The governments of both Albania and Kosovo have demanded a public inquiry into the behavior of the Chief Prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte over her conduct to bring this indictment forward.[53] Geoffrey Nice, the ICTY prosecutor in the Milošević case, wrote in a column in Koha Ditore that at least three experienced prosecution lawyers advised Del Ponte against indicting Ramush Haradinaj since it could not be proved he was guilty.[54] One of those lawyers was Andrew T Cayley Q.C. one of the most esteemed lawyers at the Tribunal and currently the Chief Prosecutor at the Cambodian Tribunal. He stated that he felt increasing pressure to bring the case despite an acute lack of evidence.[52] Sir Geoffrey Nice Q.C. commented that the pressure to bring the case against Ramush Haradinaj stemmed from the lead Prosecutor at the time, Carla Del Ponte and he speculated that she wanted to use the indictment against Haradinaj as a "coin" to trade with Belgrade in order to convince the Serbian Government to hand over its high profile war criminal fugitives, Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadic.[52][55][56]

After a thorough review of the initial evidence, Andrew T. Cayley Q.C. wrote to the Chief Prosecutor at the time in which he told her that the prosecution could not proceed on the evidence it had.[52] That report was immediately discarded and Cayley was reprimanded for his views.[52] As a result of the manner in which the chief prosecutor ignored Cayley's advice and pursued the indictment against Mr. Haradinaj, three senior prosecutors Geoffery Nice Q.C., Andrew T Cayley Q.C. and Mark Harmon left the office of the Prosecutor.[52]

On 25 April 2008, the ICTY officially opened indictments against Astrit Haraqija and his councilor Bajrush Morina for contempt of court in Haradinaj's case. On July 23, 2009 Astrit Haraqija was acquitted of all charges by the Appeals Chamber.[57] The Court sentenced Bajrush Morina to three months imprisonment for attempting to obstruct a witness from testifying. In rendering its sentence the court acknowledged that there were no aggravating factors that should increase the sentence,[57] The sentence did have mitigating factors, however. These included the fact that the witness Morina was convicted of intimidating stated that the conversation occurred in a "friendly atmosphere", that he never felt intimidated once felt threatened or intimidated, and that Bajrush Morina apologized to the witness immediately after speaking to him and before he was arrested.[57]

In 2009, The Trial, a feature-length documentary on Haradinaj's trial at the ICTY was produced and released.[58] The film premiered at the Galway Film Fleadh in 2009.[59]

Controversies[]

Organized Crime and scandals[]

In 2000, Ramush Haradinaj gave a fist fight with Russian soldiers at a KFOR checkpoint and was injured.[60] According to a report of German newspaper Tagesspiegel, the soldiers had discovered a Swiss assault rifle in Haradinaj's trunk.

Family and personal life[]

He was formerly married to a Finnish woman with whom he has a minor son, Shkëlzen. Ramush Haradinaj is currently married to the RTK news reporter Anita Haradinaj, they have three young children, two boys and one girl.

Haradinaj has five brothers. Two of them, Luan and Shkelzën, were killed as members of the UÇK during the fights with the Serbian security forces. In December 2002, Haradinaj's brother Daut sentenced by a UN court in Kosovo for his involvement in the kidnapping and murder of four Kosovo Albanians, who belonged to the FARK, an armed formation of Kosovo Albanians and rivals of the UÇK, to five years in prison. Enver Haradinaj, an another brother of Ramush, was assassinated in April 2005 in a drive-by shootout in Kosovo. According to the UN security forces, there was a confrontation between rival Kosovo-Albanian clans.[61] The youngest brother Frashër was still a student as of 2007 and worked in the service of the now former Provisional Institutions of Self-Government.

His father, mother and remaining family member still reside in the family home in the community of Glodjane.

Note on Kosovo status[]

a.   ^ Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Serbia and the Republic of Kosovo. The latter declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. Kosovo's independence has been recognised by 108 out of 193 United Nations member states.

References[]

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Further reading[]

  • Bardh Hamzaj, A Narrative about War and Freedom, Pristina: Zëri Biblioteka Publicistike, 2000, in Albanian
  • Bardh Hamzaj, The Peace of the General: The End of War, 2007, in English
Preceded by
Bajram Rexhepi
Prime Minister of Kosovo
2004–2005
Succeeded by
Bajram Kosumi
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Ramush Haradinaj and the edit history here.
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