Harsher Sentence Urged for Bosnian Serb Soldier Convicted of Rape

Presenting its appeal at the Bosnian state court on Monday, the prosecution called for a harsher punishment for Sasa Curcic, who was convicted under a first-instance verdict of committing a crime against humanity for raping a woman in July 1992 and sentenced to five years in prison.

Prosecutor Mersudin Pruzan told the state court's appeals chamber that the sentence imposed on Curcic, a wartime member of the Dragan Nikolic Interventions Unit of the Bosnian Serb Army, was below the statutory minimum for crimes against humanity.

"The maximum penalty for the crime for which the defendant was sentenced is 45 years. He was sentenced to a term that is nine times shorter. The minimum punishment is ten years, so his sentence is below the statutory minimum," Pruzan said.

He argued that the court wrongly assessed the defendant's appropriate conduct during the trial as a mitigating circumstance, insisting that this was actually Curcic's obligation.

Pruzan said that it could have been considered a mitigating circumstance had Curcic admitted guilt or expressed remorse.

"The defendant has never done that," he said.

Curcic's defence lawyer urged the court to quash the first-instance verdict and order a retrial.

"The defence's thesis is that the injured party mixed up the events and persons. When it comes to evidence, there were double standards for the prosecution and defence," Prodanovic said.

Curcic also addressed the court, saying that he was not guilty.

"I absolutely did not even touch that person. I do not feel guilty, I feel innocent," he said.

The first-instance verdict said that on an undetermined date between July 3 and 18, 1992, Curcic and another member of the same army unit, Dragan Zelenovic, took...

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