UN’s highest court absolves Croatia, Serbia of genocide
More than 130,000 people died during breakup of Yugoslavia

The United Nations’ highest court ruled on Tuesday that neither Croatia nor Serbia had committed genocide against each other’s populations during the wars that accompanied the violent breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
Peter Tomka, president of the International Court of Justice, said the forces of both countries had committed crimes during the conflict, but that the intent to commit genocide – by “destroying a population in whole or in part” – had not been proven against either country.
Finding that neither side had violated the 1948 Genocide Convention, he called on the erstwhile Balkan foes to continue their cooperation in compensating victims with a view to “consolidating peace and stability in the region”.
The cases were part of the long legal fall-out from the break-up of Yugoslavia into seven states in wars that lasted eight years and left more than 130,000 dead in Europe’s worst conflagration since the second world war.
Croatia filed its case against Belgrade in 1999 and Serbia its counter-case against Zagreb only in 2010.