Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| Vlastimir Đorđević | |
|---|---|
| Name | Vlastimir Đorđević |
| Birth date | 1948 |
| Birth place | Čačak, PR Serbia, FPR Yugoslavia |
| Nationality | Serbian |
| Occupation | Police general |
| Known for | Senior official in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Serbia during the Kosovo War |
| Criminal charge | War crimes, crimes against humanity |
| Criminal penalty | 18 years' imprisonment |
| Criminal status | Served sentence, released 2023 |
Vlastimir Đorđević. He was a senior Serbian police official who served as Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Serbia and head of its Public Security Department during the late 1990s. Đorđević was a key figure in the state security apparatus under the administration of Slobodan Milošević and was subsequently convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for his role in atrocities committed during the Kosovo War. His trial established his criminal responsibility for campaigns of deportation, murder, and persecution targeting the Albanian civilian population in Kosovo.
Vlastimir Đorđević was born in 1948 in the city of Čačak, then part of the Socialist Republic of Serbia within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He pursued a career in law enforcement, rising through the ranks of the militia and later the reformed police forces following the breakup of Yugoslavia. By the mid-1990s, he had attained a prominent position within the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Serbia (MUP), the powerful interior ministry controlling both regular police and special forces units. His ascent coincided with the political dominance of Slobodan Milošević and the Socialist Party of Serbia. In 1997, Đorđević was appointed Assistant Minister of the MUP and head of the critical Public Security Department, placing him in command of all uniformed police throughout Serbia, including the province of Kosovo and Metohija.
During the Kosovo War in 1998 and 1999, Đorđević occupied a central role in the chain of command overseeing Serbian police and military operations in Kosovo. As the conflict between the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and Yugoslav forces intensified, the MUP, under figures including Đorđević and Minister Vlajko Stojiljković, implemented a coordinated campaign against areas deemed supportive of the insurgency. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) found that Đorđević participated in a joint criminal enterprise aimed at modifying the ethnic balance in Kosovo to ensure continued Serbian control. This involved the large-scale forcible displacement of Albanian civilians, alongside widespread acts of murder, persecution, and destruction of property. Operations in municipalities such as Orahovac, Peć, and Prizren were directly linked to units under his command.
Following the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević, Đorđević was initially indicted in secrecy by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in 2003, alongside senior officials like Nebojša Pavković and Vladimir Lazarević. He fled to Russia but was eventually arrested in Montenegro in 2007 and transferred to the tribunal's detention unit in The Hague. His trial, which began in 2009, was notable for being joined with the case against Milan Lukić. The prosecution, led by attorneys including Dermot Groome, presented extensive evidence linking Đorđević to the planning and execution of operations that resulted in crimes across Kosovo. The trial chamber heard testimony from numerous witnesses, including survivors and former members of the Yugoslav Army and Ministry of Internal Affairs of Serbia.
In February 2011, the Trial Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia found Vlastimir Đorđević guilty on multiple counts, including murder, persecution, and deportation as crimes against humanity and war crimes. The judgment detailed his superior responsibility for the actions of police forces under his control and his integral role in the joint criminal enterprise. He was acquitted on one count of extermination. In 2014, the ICTY Appeals Chamber largely upheld the conviction but reduced his sentence from 27 to 18 years' imprisonment, citing errors in the trial chamber's sentencing reasoning. The final verdict cemented his legal status as one of the highest-ranking Serbian officials convicted for atrocities in Kosovo.
Vlastimir Đorđević began serving his sentence in 2014. He was granted early release in January 2023, having served two-thirds of his term, and was transferred to Serbia. His conviction remains a significant legal precedent in international law, particularly regarding the doctrine of command responsibility for police officials in a chain of command that included the Yugoslav Army. The evidence presented in his case contributed to the historical record of the Kosovo War, detailing the systematic nature of the campaign against Albanian civilians. Alongside convictions of figures like Radovan Karadžić and Ratko Mladić, the Đorđević judgment underscored the ICTY's focus on holding senior political and police architects of the Yugoslav wars accountable, though his early release was met with criticism from victims' groups and the Kosovo Specialist Chambers.
Category:Serbian police officers Category:People convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia Category:1948 births