SARAJEVO

B&H Court upholds crimes against humanity sentence for ex-policeman Simo Stupar

The defendant was originally tried alongside Zoran Tešić, who was acquitted of all charges

Simo Stupar and Zoran Tešić. Archive

H. J. I. / Fena

The B&H Court upheld the verdict convicting former reservist policeman Simo Stupar for involvement in illegally detaining, beating and killing Bosniaks in the Vlasenica area in 1992.

The appeals chamber of the B&H state court on Thursday confirmed the verdict sentencing Simo Stupar, a former reservist policeman at the Public Safety Station in Vlasenica, to 12 years in prison for crimes against humanity, BIRN reports.

The state court said it had "rejected as unfounded an appeal filed by the defendant’s defense lawyer".

The verdict was handed down in Stupar’s absence as he left Bosnia and Herzegovina in October this year and is currently a fugitive.

He was initially found guilty in May this year of participating in a widespread and systematic attack on the Bosniak population in the Vlasenica area from April 1992 to the end of September that year, as a member of the reservist police force of the Public Safety Station in Vlasenica.

The verdict said that Stupar took part in an assault on the village of Džamdžici in the Vlasenica area on May 18, 1992, when five people were killed and several houses were set on fire. He and three others also participated in the murder of a disabled civilian.

The verdict found that Stupar further participated in the beating of a Bosniak civilian at the police station in Vlasenica in the first half of June 1992 and in the inhumane treatment of another man.

The second man was hit on his back with chains and ordered to get down on all fours, and Stupar and others carved a cross and a Serb symbol onto his back. They then poured salt on his wounds.

Stupar was also found guilty of having participated in the arrest of two men on July 10, 1992. After their arrest, the two men disappeared and their bodies were only found in 2007.

The defendant was originally tried alongside Zoran Tešić, who was acquitted of all charges.