Dr. 'Biljana Plavšić' (
Serbian Cyrillic:Биљана Плавшић) (b.
7 July 1930,
Tuzla,
Kingdom of Yugoslavia, now
Bosnia and Herzegovina) is a former
Bosnian Serb politician and university professor currently serving a sentence in
Sweden as a result of a conviction of the
ICTY for war crimes. She was the president of
Republika Srpska for two years from 1996 through 1998.
She was indicted by the
ICTY for war crimes committed during the
war in Bosnia in 2001. She
plea bargained with the
ICTY. Before her political engagements, she taught biology at the
University of Sarajevo and acted as Head of Department of Biology. She is a
Fulbright Scholar, and as such she had spent two years at
Boyce-Thompson institute at
Cornell University in
New York doing botany research. She then specialized electronic microscopy in London, and plant virology in Prague and Bari. A highly accomplished scientist, she published over one hundred scientific works and papers which have been widely cited in scholarly literature and textbooks.
[1]
Besides being the highest-ranking
Bosnian Serb politician to be sentenced, she was also known for her fiery nationalist statements during the
War in Bosnia, against the SDS, and, later, her remorse for the crimes against humanity she admitted to have been responsible for as a high-level politician.
Biljana Plavšić was renowned throughout the 1990s as an uncompromising apologist for ethnic cleansing. The self-styled "Serbian Iron Lady" once defended the purge of Bosnian non-Serbs as "a natural phenomenon" not a war crime.
Political career
Plavšić was a member of the
Serb Democratic Party (SDS). She was the first female member of the
Presidency of the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, serving from
18 November 1990 until April 1992 after having been elected in the first multy-party elections in 1990 in
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From
28 February 1992 to
12 May 1992, Plavšić became one of the two
acting Presidents of the
Serb Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Thereafter she became one of two Vice-president the
Republika Srpska and from circa
30 November 1992 she was a member of the Supreme Command of the armed forces of the
Republika Srpska.
The
Dayton Agreement, signed in
1995, banned the then
President of the Republika Srpska Radovan Karadžić from office and Plavšić was chosen to run as the SDS candidate for President of the Republika Srpska for a two-year mandate.
Due to a growing isolation of the Republika Srpska after the peace was signed, she severed her ties with the SDS and formed ''
Srpski narodni savez'' (Serbian Popular Alliance), and nominated
Milorad Dodik, the then member of the
National Assembly of the Republika Srpska whose
SNSD party had only two MPs, for Prime Minister.
This marked the beginning of political reform in the Republika Srpska and the cooperation with the
International Community. She lost the 1998 election to the joint candidate of the SDS and the
Serb Radical Party of the Republika Srpska Nikola Poplašen. She was a candidate of the reform "Sloga" coalition. Her political career was in decline until the release of the indictment by the
ICTY, after which it was completely terminated.
During her time in prison, she released a book called "Witnessings" (Svjedočenja), revealing many aspects of the political life of the war-time Republika Srpska and casting an especially dark shadow on the then
President of the Republika Srpska Karadžić, another
ICTY indictee.
ICTY indictment and sentence
She was indicted by the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia together with
Momčilo Krajišnik and
Radovan Karadžić for the "creation of impossible conditions of life,
persecution and
terror tactics in order to encourage non-Serbs to leave the area,
deportation of those reluctant to leave, and the
liquidation of others".
The Indictment charged Biljana Plavšić as follows:
★ Two counts of genocide (Article 4 of the Statute of the Tribunal - genocide; and/or, complicity to commit genocide)
★ Five counts of crimes against humanity (Article 5 thereof - extermination; murder; persecutions on political, racial and religious grounds; deportation; alternatively, inhumane acts)
★ One count of violations of the laws or customs of war (Article 3 thereof - murder)
She voluntarily surrendered to the ICTY on
January 10,
2001, and was provisionally released on
September 6.
On
16 December,
2002 she plea bargained with the ICTY to enter a guilty plea to one count of
crimes against humanity for her part in directing the war and targeting civilians and expressed "full remorse" in exchange for prosecutors dropping seven other war crimes charges, including two counts of genocide.
Plavšić's statement, read in her native
Serbian language, repeated her admission of guilt. It said she had refused to believe stories of atrocities against
Bosniaks and
Croats and accepted without question the claims that Serbs were fighting for survival.
However, in an
interview she gave in March 2005 to the '
Banja Luka Alternativna Television', she admitted to having lied because she couldn't prove her innocence, as she was unable to find witnesses who would testify on her behalf.
[2][3]
She was later sentenced to 11 years in prison. She is currently serving her sentence at the women's prison 'Hinseberg' in
Örebro,
Sweden (since
26 June 2003).
References
1. Scholarly accomplishments
2. [1]
3. [2]
General references
★
Bosnian Ex-Leader Sentenced To 11 Years for Her War Role (article preview) Marlise Simons
★
Biljana Plavsic: Serbian iron lady
★
It Isn't Easy Being Biljana Patrick FitzPatrick
★
ICTY's page on Plavšić case
★
Article in Serbian in
Glas Javnosti
★
BBC Profile On Biljana Plavšić
★
686971&from=rss Article and video in Swedish on
Sveriges Television's website.