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Streets looked like battlefields, with smashed shop windows and overturned garbage cans. Ambulance sirens blared through downtown. Police Chief Milorad Veljovic said the area was "under control" by midnight. Legal experts consider Karadzic the most important figure in the war crimes committed in Bosnia, exceeding the role played by the late Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, whose own trial ended inconclusively when he died in 2006 in the same U.N. jail. Karadzic's top commander, Ratko Mladic, also accused of genocide, remains at large. Serbian authorities say they arrested Karadzic July 21 in Belgrade, where he had been living under a false identity and practicing alternative medicine. His bouffant mane of salt and pepper hair
-- his trademark during the Bosnian war -- had gone, replaced by flowing white hair and a beard that drew comparisons with Santa Claus and Russian mystic Rasputin. Since his capture Karadzic has asked for and gotten a shave and a haircut and his lawyer says he looks like an older version of the Bosnian Serb leader who regularly met with top Western officials, diplomats and military commanders during the 1992-95 Bosnian war. During the war, he was known as the urbane, intellectual face of a monstrous regime blamed for the worst atrocities in Europe since World War II. Prosecutors allege that the one-time psychiatrist and poet transformed himself into an ultranationalist Serb warlord before and during the war. According to his indictment, Karadzic and other senior Bosnian Serb leaders unleashed a reign of terror that began with vicious campaigns of ethnic cleansing to drive Muslims and Croats out of land he considered part of a "Greater Serbia" and reached its bloody climax in the Srebrenica killings. Serbia's new, pro-Western government hopes Karadzic's arrest will strengthen the country's bid for membership in the European Union. Serbia had been accused of not searching for war crimes fugitives sought by the U.N. tribunal. Brammertz said Wednesday that Serbian authorities "deserve full credit" for arresting Karadzic and he hopes Serb authorities will soon arrest Mladic.
[Associated
Press;
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