What happened to slobodan milosevic wife

Borislav Milošević, former ambassador of Serbia in Moscow and brother of Serbian President Slobodan Milošević, died in the night between Monday and Tuesday (January 28), at the Dedinja Clinical Hospital Center at the age of 79.

A few months ago, Milošević was transferred from Montenegro to Belgrade in a critical condition to the "Dedinje" Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases. He had heart problems from which he suffered for a long time.

He was born in 1934 in Nikšić. Father Svetozar and mother Stanislava moved at the beginning of World War II to Požarevac, where his brother Slobodan was born in 1941. Both father and mother later committed suicide.

He started his career in the international sector of the Central Committee of the SKJ, and the diplomatic service during the seventies in Russia, to which he remained attached throughout his life.

He was also the director of Interexport, the then Yugoslav export giant.

As a trusted translator of Josip Broz Tito, he was also present during sensitive conversations with Brezhnev in private.

He was the ambassador of Yug

Death of Slobodan Milošević

2006 death during war crimes trial

Date11 March 2006 (2006-03-11)
LocationICTY, The Hague, Netherlands
CauseHeart attack
OutcomeWar crime trial unfinished

On 11 March 2006, former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milošević died in his prison cell of a heart attack[1] at age 64 while being tried for war crimes at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague. Milošević's four-year trial had been a major international news story, and he died a few months before its verdict was due. His death occurred shortly after the Tribunal rejected his request to seek specialized medical treatment at a cardiology clinic in Moscow.[2] A report published on 30 May 2006 confirmed that he had died of natural causes and that there was "no poison or other chemical substance found in his body that contributed to the death".[1]

Establishment of death

Milošević was found dead in his cell on 11 March 2006 in the UN war crimes tribunal's detention centre in the Schev

MILOSEVIC CLOSES OPENING STATEMENT BEFORE WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL

THE HAGUE, Feb 18 (Hina) - Former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic closed his opening statement at the UN war crimes tribunal at The Hague on Monday by saying he felt the "moral victor" as he had told the public "the truth" about the war on the territory of the former Yugoslav federation. Milosevic used the last hour of his speech to show a documentary in English by unknown authors which gives an interpretation of the outbreak of conflicts in the ex-Yugoslavia compatible to what he said over the past three days. In depicting the circumstances surrounding the outbreak of the "civil war" in the former Yugoslavia, Milosevic paid a lot of attention to material on crimes committed by the Ustasha during World War Two. Armed by data on the suffering of hundreds of thousands of Serbs in Croatia during WWII, Milosevic placed the arrival of the new authorities in Croatia in the early 1990s in the context of an

THE HAGUE, Feb 18 (Hina) - Former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic closed his opening statement at the UN wa

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