Serbian politicians mourn the death of Dick Marty, suggest appointing a street in Belgrade by his name

Several Serbian politicians have announced yesterday the death of former Swiss Senator and prosecutor Dick Marty, who as special rapporteur of the Council of Europe has investigated Kosovo Liberation Army crimes (UÇK). Zavetnici party leader Milica Djurdjevic Stamekovski, on the social X network has written that Marty was the prosecutor who made a statement [...]
Several Serbian politicians have announced yesterday the death of former Swiss Senator and prosecutor Dick Marty, who as special rapporteur of the Council of Europe has investigated Kosovo Liberation Army crimes (UÇK).
Zavetnici party leader Milica Djurdevic Stamekovski, on the social network X has written that Marty has been the prosecutor who has made a statement about KLA crimes, kidnappings, murders and organ trafficking at “Verde 11x1>.
In Serbia his name and last name will be synonymous with justice and truth. I propose that a road in Belgrade be named under his name”, Djurdjevich Stamkovski said.
The last president of the People's Party, Vuk Jeremic, wrote briefly “Rest in peace Dick Marty (1945-2023)”.
People's Party official Stefan Jovanovic also wrote that Marty was author of a Kosovo organ trafficking report “that was included terrorist KLA”
“Once he discovered a report on the involvement of KLA members in kidnappings, murder and trafficking of Serb organs in Kosovo and on the Verde “Verde” house in Albania”, Jovanovic said.
Former Minister for Family Care and Demography Ratko Dmitrovic estimated that Europe has no “no more honorable and no more courageous “to solve Kosovo's “problem than Dick Marty.
“To him be eternal glory” Serbs are entitled to remember it, as their memory serves”, Dmitrovic said.
Former Swiss Senator and prosecutor Dick Marty, who as special rapporteur of the Council of Europe has investigated the crimes of the Kosovo Liberation Army (UÇK), has died today at the age of 79, Swiss media reports.
Marty's 2010 report was the starting point for the investigation that led to the formation of a special KLA war crimes court in The Hague, which indicts key commanders of the formation, including Hashim Thaci, former president and prime minister of Kosovo.












