Conveniently timed illness
The interrogation of alleged Serbian war criminal Ratko Mladic was suspended yesterday because of the suspect’s poor health condition. Mladic has reportedly been in poor health for a while and was brought into custody with "bagful of medications," but it does seem awfully convenient that after years in hiding, his condition suddenly deteriorated when it ...
The interrogation of alleged Serbian war criminal Ratko Mladic was suspended yesterday because of the suspect's poor health condition. Mladic has reportedly been in poor health for a while and was brought into custody with "bagful of medications," but it does seem awfully convenient that after years in hiding, his condition suddenly deteriorated when it was time to face questioning. (Mladic has since been deemed fit for extradition and the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal at The Hague insists it is more than capable of taking care of sick inmates, despite Slobodan Milosevic's death while in custody. ) Mladic is hardly the first major international suspect to suddenly take ill when it's time for trial.
The interrogation of alleged Serbian war criminal Ratko Mladic was suspended yesterday because of the suspect’s poor health condition. Mladic has reportedly been in poor health for a while and was brought into custody with "bagful of medications," but it does seem awfully convenient that after years in hiding, his condition suddenly deteriorated when it was time to face questioning. (Mladic has since been deemed fit for extradition and the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal at The Hague insists it is more than capable of taking care of sick inmates, despite Slobodan Milosevic’s death while in custody. ) Mladic is hardly the first major international suspect to suddenly take ill when it’s time for trial.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who had tried to portray himself as being in robust health for years while he was president, suffered an unspecified "heart crisis" while under questioning in April. His wife, Suzanne, also developed a heart condition while being interroagted. The Mubaraks may be following in the footsteps of former Chilean strongman Augosto Pinochet, who was widely suspected by Chileans of exaggerating his illness to escape prosection.
Granted, arrest and interrogation are stressful experiences that can exacerbate existing medical conditions, but miraculous recoveries make it a little harder to believe. Convicted Lockerbie bomber Abdel Baset Al-Megrahi was released from a Scottish prison in August 2009 and sent home to Libya with the justification that he was suffering from prostate cancer and had only three months to live. He’s still alive, though, and it now seems unclear that his doctors ever signed off on the diagnosis.
Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating
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