Kosta Čavoški

Kosta Cavoski ( Serbian Cyrillic Коста Чавошки; born October 26, 1941 in Banatsko Novo Selo / Neudorf in the Banat, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a Serbian professor of the theory of law at the University of Belgrade. He's a Serbian nationalist and an open critic of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.

Life

Čavosški put 1969 his master's degree in Law at the University of Belgrade from. He obtained in 1973 the title of Dr. phil. at Harvard University in the United States. Since the 1970s, he was considered by the ruling Communist Party of Yugoslavia as deviants ( dissident ). He was succeeded in 1973 by his post as assistant professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Belgrade, after a critical article entitled What values ​​are protected by our laws? had published and sentenced to imprisonment.

Cavoski one of the initiators of the Demokratska Stranka in December 1989 and worked on the founding charter of the party with in January 1990. After the fall of 1990, he was admitted to his university again and appointed associate professor. He left within the next year the party to form his own, the Serbian Liberal Party. 1996, the President of the Bosnian Republika Srpska Radovan Karadžić appointed him senator of the Serb Republic in Bosnia - Herzegovina. The following year he published in Belgrade in English a book about the elections in the divided country.

Since October 30, 2003 Cavoski is a corresponding member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

In 2007 he visited the family of the now accused because of various war crimes during the Bosnian war, volatile Karadžić and was then questioned by the police of Republika Srpska. 2008 Cavoski of Bosnia - Herzegovina persona non grata was explained and documented by an entry ban.

Publications

  • The Hague against Justice. Center for Serbian Studies, Belgrade 1996.
  • The Hague against Justice: International Criminal Tribunal Fiasco in the Case Tribunal Prosecutor vs. Djordje Djukić, Centre for Serbian Studies, Belgrade 1996.
  • The Bosnian Elections. Center for Serbian Studies, Belgrade 1997.
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