- Associated Press - Monday, July 4, 2011

THE HAGUE (AP) — A defiant Ratko Mladic plunged his Yugoslav war crimes tribunal arraignment into chaos Monday, repeatedly shouting at judges, defying their orders and refusing to enter pleas to 11 charges before the presiding judge threw him out of the hearing.

After a brief adjournment to have Mladic removed, Presiding Judge Alphons Orie of the U.N.’s International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia resumed the hearing and formally entered not-guilty pleas on Mr. Mladic’s behalf, in line with court rules for suspects who refuse to plead.

Shortly before guards escorted Mr. Mladic from court, he shouted at Judge Orie: “You want to impose my defense. What kind of a court are you?”

Mr. Mladic, 69, is accused of masterminding the worst Serb atrocities of Bosnia’s 1992-95 war that cost 100,000 lives. He is accused of genocide as the top military official overseeing the 1995 killing of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica, Europe’s worst mass killing since World War II.

Mr. Mladic was disruptive and argumentative from the outset Monday at only his second appearance before the U.N. court since being extradited by Serbia just over a month ago. He was arrested in a village outside Belgrade after nearly 16 years as one of Europe’s most-wanted fugitives from justice.

He put on a cap and gestured to members of the public, in open defiance of orders from Judge Orie. Speaking out of turn, he complained of being “an old man” and told Judge Orie he wanted to wear the cap because his head was cold.

Mr. Mladic threatened to boycott the hearing because court officials have not yet appointed the Serbian and Russian lawyers he wants to represent him at his trial. He is being represented for the moment by court-appointed lawyer Aleksander Aleksic.

“You are trying to impose impossible conditions on me — a lawyer I do not want,” he said at the start of the hearing.

Judge Orie told Mr. Mladic it was up to the court’s registry, not judges, to approve the two lawyers.

One of the two lawyers Mr. Mladic wants to represent him, Milos Saljic, said the former general’s behavior in court demonstrated that he is not mentally fit to stand trial.

“Let them now see for themselves his behavior and let them decide accordingly,” Mr. Saljic told the Associated Press in Belgrade.

Mr. Saljic added that he does not believe he could represent Mr. Mladic at the U.N. court.

“I’m not a real candidate. I don’t speak English,” Mr. Saljic said. “He’s insisting on me because I have been his lawyer all of his life.”

When Judge Orie asked Mr. Mladic whether he was ready to hear the charges, Mr. Mladic responded, “You can do whatever you want.”

But when Judge Orie began speaking, Mr. Mladic said: “No, no, no! Don’t read it to me. Not another word,” and pulled off his earphones, slumping back in his seat with a frown. After Judge Orie warned him to be quiet or he would be removed, Mr. Mladic shot back, “Remove me.”

Hundreds of people gathered in the main square of the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, to watch a live broadcast of the hearing, cheering and shouting, “The monster is gone,” as Mr. Mladic was escorted out of the courtroom.

Victims who traveled to The Hague were not surprised by Mr. Mladic’s behavior in court.

“He showed who he is and what he is like. He displayed no regret and doesn’t want justice for the victims,” said Hatidia Mehmedovic, a survivor of the Srebrenica massacre.

In Srebrenica itself, survivor Fadila Efendic said Mr. Mladic’s behavior was like salt in her wounds.

“We are made to suffer, to mourn our children. We are forced to watch him make a circus in the court,” she said. “This should be a short trial. He should be treated the way he treated our children, how he treated thousands of innocent people … killed at his orders.”

At his first hearing in June, Mr. Mladic enraged war survivors in the public gallery by looking at them and drawing his finger across his throat.

After entering the pleas, Judge Orie adjourned the hearing without setting a date for trial or scheduling another hearing. It is likely any lawyers Mr. Mladic requests that meet the registry’s requirements will be approved quickly, and then judges can set a date for the next pretrial hearing.

Judge Orie told Mr. Aleksic, court-appointed lawyer, that if he is able to communicate with Mr. Mladic, he should inform him of his not-guilty pleas and that he has the option of changing them at any time.

If convicted, Mr. Mladic could face a sentence of up to life in prison.

Associated Press writers Dusan Stojanovic in Belgrade, Serbia, and Toby Sterling in Amsterdam contributed to this report.

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