Milosevic's letter detected: How the Russians let him die in The Hague prison

It is the Serbian weekly Nedelnjik that has published the text by one of the best Serbian lawyers to assist the former Serbian president, while facing charges of “crimes against humanity”. According to the Serbian weekly Slobodan Milosevic wrote a letter to Russian diplomacy chief Sergey Lavrov, just for abandoning Moscow [...]
According to the Serbian weekly Slobodan Milosevic has written a letter to Russian diplomacy chief Sergey Lavrov, precisely for abandoning that Moscow had done to him, citing” to Westerners according to Slobos.
Lawyer Zdenko Tomanovic, speaking of the new number of Serbian weekly magazine, reveals the latest meeting with the man who took over the role of the butcher of Croats, Muslims and Albanians living in Yugoslavia's space.
A day before he was found dead in a cell, Milosevic asked me to get there earlier, took a pencil and paper, and wrote it by hand. He then asked me to hand him over to the Russian Embassy in the Netherlands, at the request that he surrender to Russian Minister Sergei Lavrov. On paper, he complained that he was being poisoned at The Hague Tribunal and asked Russia to protect him and save him”, the lawyer.
The following day, Milosevic was found dead. Tomanovic was the only citizen of Serbia to see Milosevic dead in his cell
“Nedelnjik” interviewed Tomanovic just after his colleague's murder, lawyer Dragoslav Ognjanovic ão Misa.
Tomanovic was clearly disappointed and resigned.
“Misa was only killed because he was a lawyer. And right now, this is the only important thing. Unfortunately, our political and media elites are criminalized.
This creates an atmosphere that contributes to the importance of this murder.
Killing a lawyer only because he was doing his job goes beyond the force of all the numbers that are offered to us.
The equality and security of each citizen is not secured by transferring responsibility in some time past”, Milosevic's former officer said, sharply accusing Belgrade of having hands not only in today's killings that are occurring in the Serbian capital, but also in washing accounts in the past.
In a broad interview, Tomanovic also spoke of the judiciary in Serbia and all its shortcomings, the influence of politics and media on the law, Milosevic's defence, the mafia's connection to politics, but even with figures known as Aleksandar Tijanic and Bogdan Trinanic, Miroslav Miskovic, Milan Becko, or even Emir Kosturica.
Former Slobodan Milosevic's attorney has not spoken much, but did he say enough to cause a stir right on the eve of major events such as the agreement on Kosovo?
“Slovenias killed”? Who? “I don't know, but Russia didn't protect”, he says...












