Atif Dudaković

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Atif Dudakovic
December 2, 1953 (1953-12-02) (age 54)
Place of birth Flag of Yugoslavia Bosanska Dubica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
Allegiance 1976[1] - 1992 Flag of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia - Yugoslav People's Army
1992 - ????Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina
Service/branch Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Rank Lieutenant General
Commands held Commander of the Fifth Corps
Battles/wars Bosnian War
Operation Tiger
Operation Sana

Atif Dudaković (born December 2, 1953 (1953-12-02) (age 54) in Bosanska Dubica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia) is a former general in the Bosnian army, commanding the army's Fifth Corps before becoming the general commander of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina army. During the war he was in command of the Bihać enclave that was totally surrounded by Serbian, Fikrets, and Serb Krajina forces from 1991-1995.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Dudaković served in the Yugoslav People's Army, teaching in at an artillery school in Zadar and a military academy in Belgrade. After outbreak of the war in Bosnia, he joined the newly established Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Eventually he became the commander of the 5th corps in Bihać.

The situation in Bihać was difficult because Bihać was surrounded on all sides by the VRS (Bosnian Serbs) RSK (Krajina Serbs) and Bosnian Muslim (Bosniak) forces loyal to Fikret Abdić. The 5th Corps successfully defended the enclave and in 1995 broke out from the encirclement and liberated the towns of Bosanski Petrovac, Bosanska Krupa, Ključ, Sanski Most and were on the verge of entering Prijedor and Banja Luka before the United States forced an end to the war. After the war he continued to serve in the army and held several high ranking positions. Today he is retired but lives in fear of being held responsible for war crimes committed against Serbs and followers of Fikret Abdic.

[edit] Controversy

In Sept 2006 the media reported that during Operation Sana ‘95[2], in front of cameras, Dudaković gave an order to burn Serb villages in southern Bosnian Frontier[2]. The media claimed the video meant to set on fire as in burn homes of fleeing, Krajina Serb, refugees[3][4] where as Dudaković's supporters claim that Dudaković, an artillery officer, was simply giving orders to his men to fire solely. After the video was released Dudaković gave a statement saying:

The Army of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina was never ordered to commit crimes. If such things happened, then there should be an investigation and the perpetrators punished.

...The film shows the front line. I was normally engaged on the front line directing the artillery. I am an artillery man. The film with its subtitles are the usual product of Serb propaganda which we came across throughout the war and later too. This is why I do not get excited.

 
— Atif Dudaković [2]

However the video also contains instructions, with Atif shouting kill at unarmed POWs and allegedly civilians.

Bosnian state prosecutors launched an investigation. In 2006 then Chief Prosecutor Marinko Jurcevic was quoted as saying:

We have officially opened the investigation against Atif Dudakovic and other persons based on the grounds of suspicion they committed some criminal acts regarded as war crimes
 
— Marinko Jurcevic [5]

No evidence of war crimes was found and the issue was closed. No ICTY indictment was issued as under the ICTY policy of, "completion strategy": all trials should be concluded by 2010, as such prosecutors in The Hague cannot launch new criminal inquiries[6].

[edit] Military Ranks

JNA

  • 1988 - Major

Bosnian army

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Atif Dudakovic (Dudaković) (HTML). vojska (2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
  2. ^ a b c interview with General Atif Dudakovic (Friday, 15 September, 2006). We needed Operation Storm as much as Croatia did (HTML). Bosnia Report i. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
  3. ^ Serbs see new 'war crimes' tape (HTML). BBC News (Wednesday, 9 August 2006, 05:04 GMT 06:04 UK). Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
  4. ^ Flag of Serbia Serbian - Ratni zločini (8. avgust 2006). Snimak neće biti dokaz u Hagu (HTML). Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
  5. ^ Bosnia says investigating Muslim wartime general (HTML). Reuters (Fri 6 Oct 2006 10:09 AM ET). Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
  6. ^ Ian Traynor in Zagreb (Wednesday August 9, 2006). New Bosnian war footage shows 'crimes' against Serbs (HTML). The Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-10-01. “Belgrade has forwarded the footage to the war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia in The Hague. But under a "completion strategy" that concludes the tribunal by 2010, prosecutors in The Hague cannot launch new criminal inquiries.”