THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Serbian police catch convicted assassin

Associated Press / June 11, 2010

E-mail this article

Invalid E-mail address
Invalid E-mail address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

  • E-mail|
  • Print|
  • Reprints|
  • |
Text size +

BELGRADE — Serbia’s police yesterday caught a fugitive convicted of taking part in the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic seven years ago.

Milos Simovic, 31, was arrested in a forest area west of Belgrade early in the morning as he tried to illegally enter Serbia from Croatia, the police said in a statement.

Simovic had been on the run since March 2003 when Djindjic was killed by a sniper bullet in front of the government headquarters in Belgrade.

In 2007, Simovic was sentenced in absentia to 30 years in prison with 10 other former gang members and paramilitaries for a planning role in the assassination.

Djindjic had led a popular uprising that toppled President Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. He became Serbia’s prime minister in 2001, extraditing Milosevic to the United Nations war crimes tribunal in the Netherlands, where he died of a heart attack in 2006.

In 2008, Simovic was separately sentenced to 40 years in prison for taking part in a series of mobster-style killings conducted by the so-called “Zemun clan’’ that operated from a Belgrade suburb in the 1990s and early 2000.

After his arrest yesterday, Simovic was “immediately’’ sent to a Serbian prison facility to serve out his sentences, police said. Serbian Interior Minister Ivica Dacic praised the cooperation between the police forces of Serbia and Croatia — two former wartime foes — which he said led to Simovic’s arrest.

Croatia’s police said Simovic is suspected in an attempted murder of another former Zemun clan member, Sretko Kalinic, near the Croatian capital, Zagreb, earlier this week.

Boston.com top stories on Twitter

    waiting for twitterWaiting for Twitter to feed in the latest...