Arkan
Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy datesTemplate:Use British English
Template:Infobox officeholder Template:Lang (Template:Lang-sr-Cyrl, Template:IPA; 17 April 1952 – 15 January 2000), better known as Template:Lang (Template:Lang-sr-Cyrl), was a Serbian warlord, mobster and head of the Serb paramilitary force called the Serb Volunteer Guard during the Yugoslav Wars, considered one of the most feared and effective paramilitary forces during the wars.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> His paramilitary unit was responsible for numerous crimes in Eastern Bosnia, including murder, pillaging, rape and ethnic cleansings.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Lang was one of the most feared, celebrated and iconic figures in Serbia during his time.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Template:Lang was on Interpol's top 10 most wanted list in the 1970s and 1980s for robberies and murders committed in countries across Europe,<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> he escaped jail twice,<ref name=":2" /> and was later indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia for crimes against humanity. Up until his assassination in January 2000, Template:Lang was the most powerful organised crime figure in the Balkans,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> as well as the most powerful state-sponsored gangster in Serbia. Template:Lang had links to Avraham Golan, an infamous security contractor.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Early life
Template:Lang was born in Template:Lang, a small border town in Lower Styria, PR Slovenia, FPR Yugoslavia. His father, Template:Lang a Montenegrin Serb served as a decorated officer in the SFR-Yugoslav Air Force, being highly ranked for his notable involvement in World War II. Template:Lang was stationed in Slovenian Styria at the time when his fourth child Template:Lang was born.<ref>Miloš Milikić Mido – Za naše nebo — Monografija prve klase letača Vazduhoplovnog učilišta 1945-1947. Belgrade 1995.</ref>
Infant Template:Lang spent part of his childhood in Zagreb and Pančevo before his father's job eventually took the family to the Yugoslav capital of Belgrade, which is considered his hometown.<ref name=svedok70322>Template:Cite web</ref> He grew up with three older sisters in a strict, militaristic patriarchal household with regular physical abuse from his father. In a 1991 interview, he recalled: "He didn't really hit me in a classical sense, he'd basically grab me and slam me against the floor."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As a child, Template:Lang was considered to be a "problem child" by his teachers who regularly complained of his unruly behavior.Template:Sfn
In his youth, Template:Lang aspired to become a pilot as his father had been. Due to the highly demanding and significant positions of his parents, there appeared to be very little time in which a bond was able to be established between parents and children. Template:Lang's parents eventually divorced during his teenage years.<ref name=svedok70322/>
Template:Lang was arrested for the first time in 1966 for snatching women's purses around Tašmajdan Park,<ref name="Arkanova ostavština">Template:Cite web</ref> spending a year at a juvenile detention centre not far from Belgrade. His father then sent him to the seaside town of Kotor in order to join the Yugoslav Navy, but Template:Lang had other plans (ending up in Paris at the age of 15). In 1969, Template:Lang was arrested by French police and deported home, where he was sentenced to three years at the detention centre in Valjevo for several burglaries. During this time, he organised his own gang in the prison.<ref name=svedok70322/>
In his youth, Template:Lang was a ward of his father's friend,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> the Slovenian politician and Federal Minister of the Interior, Template:Lang.<ref name=PIC/> Template:Lang was chief of the Directorate for State Security (UDBA) and a close associate of President Josip Broz Tito. Whenever Template:Lang was in trouble, Template:Lang helped him, allegedly as a reward for his services to the UDBA, as seen in the escape from the Lugano prison in 1981. Template:Lang is quoted as having said: "One Template:Lang is worth more than the whole UDBA."<ref name=PIC>Template:Cite book</ref>
Criminal career
Western Europe
In 1972, aged 20, Template:Lang migrated to Western Europe.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština"/> Abroad, he was introduced to and kept contact with many well-known criminals from Yugoslavia, such as Template:Lang, Template:Lang, Template:Lang, and Template:Lang, all of whom were also occasionally contracted by the UDBA, and all of whom have since been assassinated or otherwise died. Template:Lang took the nickname "Template:Lang" from one of his forged passports. On 28 December 1973, he was arrested in Belgium following a bank robbery, and was sentenced to ten years in prison.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština"/> In 1974, Template:Lang was active in Sweden and among other crimes robbed a bank in Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Template:Lang managed to escape from the Verviers prison on 4 July 1979.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština"/> Although he was apprehended in the Netherlands on 24 October 1979, the few months he was free were enough for at least two more armed robberies in Sweden and three more in the Netherlands. Serving a seven-year sentence at a prison in Amsterdam, Template:Lang pulled off another escape on 8 May 1981 after someone slipped him a gun. Wasting no time, more robberies followed, this time in West Germany, where after less than a month of freedom he was arrested in Frankfurt on 5 June 1981 following a jewellery store stickup. In the ensuing shootout with police he was lightly wounded, resulting in his placement in the prison hospital ward. Looser security allowed Template:Lang to escape again only four days later, on 9 June, supposedly by jumping from the window, beating up the first passerby and stealing his clothing before disappearing.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština"/> His final Western European arrest occurred in Basel, Switzerland, during a routine traffic check on 15 February 1983. However, he managed to escape again within months, this time from Thorberg Prison on 27 April.
It is widely speculated that Template:Lang was closely affiliated with the UDBA throughout his criminal career abroad.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština"/> He had convictions or warrants in Belgium (bank robberies, prison escape), the Netherlands (armed robberies, prison escape), Sweden (twenty burglaries, seven bank robberies, prison escape, attempted murder),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> West Germany (armed robberies, prison escape), Austria, Switzerland (armed robberies, prison escape), and Italy.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang had achieved the status in the Belgrade underworld of earning "Template:Lang", a Serbo-Croatian phrase that roughly translates as being "respected for fear".Template:Sfn Template:Lang was generally achieved in the Yugoslav underworld by committing violent crimes in Western Europe, being arrested and convicted, serving a sentence in a Western European prison, and terrorising the other inmates to such an extent that the said criminal became the most feared inmate in the prison.Template:Sfn In the macho world of the Yugoslav underworld, having Template:Lang status was seen as proof of a criminal's toughness and masculinity.Template:Sfn
Return to Yugoslavia
Template:Lang returned to Belgrade in May 1983, continuing his criminal career by managing a number of illegal activities. In November of that year, six months after his return, a bank in Zagreb was robbed with the thieves leaving a rose on the counter (allegedly Template:Lang's signature from his robberies in Western Europe).<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" /> Looking to question Template:Lang about his whereabouts during the robbery, two policemen, members of the Secretariat of Internal Affairs' (SUP) Tenth department from the Belgradian municipality of Palilula, showed up in civilian clothing at his mother's flat on 27 March Street in Belgrade.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" /> Template:Lang happened to not be home at the moment, so the policemen introduced themselves to his mother as "friends of her son looking to return a cash debt they owed him" and asked the woman if they could wait for him to return to the flat. Template:Lang's mother phoned him to say that two unknown males waited for him.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" /> Template:Lang showed up with a revolver and proceeded to shoot and wound both policemen. He was detained immediately; however, barely 48 hours later, he was released. The occurrence made it clear to all observers, especially his criminal rivals, that he enjoyed protection from the highest echelons of the Yugoslav state security establishment.
Template:Lang spent the mid-1980s running the Amadeus discothèque together with Template:Lang and Template:Lang. Located in the Template:Lang neighbourhood, the nightclub was reportedly another perk of their contractual work for the UDBA.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" /> Moreover, Template:Lang could be seen driving around Belgrade in a pink Cadillac and gambling on roulette in casinos all over the country, from Belgrade (Hotel Template:Lang) and nearby Pančevo to Sveti Stefan (Hotel Maestral on the Miločer beach) and Portorož (Hotel Metropol).<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" />
An avid gambler, following a private game of poker in a flat at Template:Lang Street in Belgrade, Template:Lang got into an lift altercation with a tenant from the flat building, reportedly breaking the man's arm after beating him with a gun. Template:Lang could not avoid being charged this time and the trial saw a notable exchange between him and the judge; during the pre-session identification, Template:Lang stated he was an employee of the Secretariat of Internal Affairs (SUP). When this was challenged by the prosecutor, Template:Lang produced a document summarising a mortgage loan he obtained from the UDBA for his house at Template:Lang Street. He ended up receiving a six-month sentence, which he served at the Belgrade Central Prison.<ref name="Arkanova ostavština" /> In the late 1980s, a football hooligan subculture had emerged in Yugoslavia and the unruly and rowdy fans of the Red Star Belgrade football team were seen as a major social problem.Template:Sfn At the request of the Ministry of the Interior, Template:Lang took over the Template:Lang (Template:Translation) fan club of Red Star Belgrade in an attempt to impose some control on the hooligans.Template:Sfn Template:Lang quickly became a hero to the Template:Lang club by his ability to arrange for them to go to Western Europe whenever Red Star Belgrade played a game in a Western European city.Template:Sfn
Yugoslav Wars
Early
Only days after the 1990 Croatian multi-party election, Template:Lang, who was the leader of the Template:Lang (hooligan supporters of the football club Red Star Belgrade), was present at the away game against Croatian side Dinamo Zagreb at Stadion Maksimir on 13 May, a match that ended in the infamous Dinamo–Red Star riot.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang and the Template:Lang, consisting of 1,500 people, were involved in a massive fight with the home team's football hooligans, the Bad Blue Boys.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On 11 October 1990, as the political situation in Yugoslavia became tense, Template:Lang created a paramilitary group named the Serb Volunteer Guard. Template:Lang was the supreme commander of the unit, which was primarily made up of members of the Template:Lang and his personal friends.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Nebojsa Popov, Drinka Gojkovic; (1999) The Road to War in Serbia: Trauma and Catharsis p. 388; Central European University Press, Template:ISBN</ref><ref>Michael A. Innes; (2006) Bosnian Security after Dayton: New Perspectives (Contemporary Security Studies) p. 75; Routledge, Template:ISBN</ref>
In late October 1990, Template:Lang traveled to Knin to meet representatives of the SAO Krajina, a Serb break-away region that sought to remain in FR Yugoslavia, as opposed to the Croatian government that seceded. On 29 November, Croatian police arrested him at the Croatian-Bosnian border crossing Dvor na Uni along with local Template:Lang and Belgraders Template:Lang and Template:Lang. Template:Lang's entourage was sent to Sisak and was charged with conspiracy to overthrow the newly formed Croatian state. Template:Lang was sentenced to twenty months in jail. He was released from Zagreb's Remetinec prison on 14 June 1991. It has been claimed that the Croatian and Serbian governments agreed on a DM1 million settlement for his release.<ref>Template:Cite web (in Serbian)</ref>
In July 1991, Template:Lang stayed for some time at the Cetinje Monastery, with Metropolitan of Montenegro Template:Lang. His group of men, fully armed, were allowed to enter the monastery, where they served as security.<ref name=ENOVINE>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang's group traveled from Template:Lang to the Siege of Dubrovnik. On his return from Template:Lang, he was again a guest at Template:Lang.<ref name=ENOVINE/>
War
The Serb Volunteer Guard, also known as "Template:Lang's Tigers", was organised as an elite paramilitary force supporting the Serb armies, set up in a former military facility in Erdut. The force, led by Template:Lang and Template:Lang,<ref name="BI">Template:Cite news</ref> consisted of a core of 600 men and perhaps totaled more than 5,000 soldiers,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and it was much feared by the public.<ref>Vasic, "Yugoslav Army" p. 134; UN experts Final Report par. 92, 139</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite news</ref> Under Template:Lang's command the SDG massacred hundreds of people in eastern Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.<ref>Tony Judt; (2006) Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945, chapter XXI; Penguin Books, Template:ISBN</ref> It saw action from mid-1991 until late 1995, and was supplied and equipped privately, by the reserves of the Serbian police force or through capturing enemy arms.
When the Croatian War of Independence broke out in 1991, the SDG was active in the Vukovar region, committing crimes against Croat and Hungarian civilians in Dalj, Erdut, Tenja and other areas. After the Bosnian War broke out in April 1992, the unit moved between the Croatian and Bosnian fronts, engaging in multiple instances of ethnic cleansing by killing and forcefully deporting mostly Bosniak civilians. In Croatia, it fought in various areas in SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia. Template:Lang, reportedly, had a dispute over military operations with Template:Lang leader Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In Bosnia, the SDG notably fought in battles in and around Zvornik, Bijeljina and Brčko, mostly against Bosniak and Bosnian Croat paramilitary groups, including killings of civilians.
Template:Lang was favored by the Serbian authorities because as a gangster and a football hooligan he seemed to have no political ambitions and hence posed no threat to the regime of Template:Lang.Template:Sfn However, he started to show signs of wanting to move beyond organised crime, founding his own political party, the Party for Serbian Unity, in 1992.Template:Sfn He also became the owner of the casino in the Hotel Jugoslavija along with a radio station, a shipping company and a brand of wine named Erdut after the base of the Tiger militia.Template:Sfn The SDG served as much of a criminal organisation as a para-military group, and was involved in smuggling petrol into Serbia from Romania and Bulgaria in defiance of the United Nations sanctions imposed on Serbia in May 1992.Template:Sfn Template:Lang's petrol smuggling brought him into conflict with Template:Lang, the son of Slobodan, who from 1994 onwards was said to be trying to monopolise the petrol smuggling.Template:Sfn In the summer of 1995, the Serbian state curtailed the supply of arms to the SDG, which was said to have been a punishment for competing with Template:Lang.Template:Sfn
In late 1995, Template:Lang's troops fought in the area of Template:Lang, Template:Lang and Template:Lang. In October 1995, he left Template:Lang as the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina reclaimed the city.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang personally led most of the operations, and rewarded his most efficient officers and soldiers with ranks, medals and eventually looted goods. Several younger soldiers were rewarded for their actions in and around Template:Lang and Template:Lang. Template:Lang reportedly sent one of his most trusted men, Template:Lang, to Italy to start a relationship with Template:Lang boss Template:Lang. According to Template:Lang, Template:Lang eased arms smuggling to Serbia by stopping the Albanian mobsters' blocking of weapons routes, and helped money transfer into Serbia in the form of humanitarian aid amid the international sanctions. In exchange, the Template:Lang acquired companies, enterprises, shops and farms in Serbia at optimal prices.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Template:Lang has been accused of kidnapping Serb refugees who had fled to Serbia from Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina and forcing them into conscription.<ref name="Grihovic">Template:Cite web</ref> After Operation Storm in Croatia resulted in the collapse of the Republic of Serbian Template:Lang and exodus of Serb refugees fleeing to Serbia, the Serbian Interior Ministry rounded up over 5,000 refugees to conscript into the SDG.<ref name="RUS">Template:Cite web</ref> Military-aged men were forcibly rounded up after arriving in Serbia by local police and then sent to detention camp in Erdut against their will and without informing their families.<ref name="detektor">Template:Cite web</ref> Once in Erdut, the refugees' heads were shaved and all valuables were confiscated. The men were then subjected to days of physical and psychological torture from the SDG guards, which included extreme physical exercises, routine beatings, and often being subjected to humiliating acts.<ref name="HLC">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang had been giving speeches accusing the refugees of being cowards and traitors, blaming them for the loss of RSK.<ref name="HLC" /> Belgrade's Humanitarian Law Centre has represented over 100 people suing the state of Serbia for forced mobilisation.<ref name="Stojanovic">Template:Cite web</ref>
Post-war fame
Template:Lang came to serve as a popular icon for both Serbs and their enemies. For some Serbs he was a patriot and folk hero, while serving as an object of hatred and fear to Croats and Bosniaks. In the postwar period after the Dayton Agreement was signed,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Template:Lang returned to his interests in sport and private business. The SDG was officially disbanded in April 1996, with the threat of being reactivated in case of war. In June of that year he took over a second division football team, Template:Lang, which he soon turned into a top caliber club, even winning the 1997–98 FR Yugoslav League championship.
According to Franklin Foer, in his book How Soccer Explains the World, Template:Lang threatened players on opposing teams if they scored against Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> This threat was underlined by the thousands of SDG veterans that filled his team's home field, chanting threats, and on occasion pointing pistols at opposing players during matches. One player told the British football magazine FourFourTwo that he was locked in a garage when his team played Template:Lang. Europe's football governing body, the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), considered prohibiting Template:Lang from participation in continental competitions because of its connections to Template:Lang. In response to this, Template:Lang stepped away from the position of president and gave his seat to his wife Template:Lang. In a 2006 interview, Template:Lang (who was coach of Template:Lang while Template:Lang was with the club) said claims that Template:Lang verbally and physically assaulted Template:Lang players were false.<ref name="Sekularac UBC interview">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang was a chairman of the Yugoslav Kickboxing Association.<ref name=":1" />
Many of the former members of "Template:Lang's Tigers" are prominent figures in Serbia, maintaining close ties between each other and with Russian nationalist organisations. Template:Lang and Template:Lang posed with Russian Night Wolves, Template:Lang performed for Vladimir Putin during his visit in Serbia, Template:Lang is a popular trance performer known as "DJ Max" and was identified by Rolling Stone as the SDG soldier kicking dead bodies of a Bosniak family in Bijeljina on a photo from 1992.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang came to take on the attributes of a Template:Lang (the term for a Serb bandit during the Ottoman empire), and he was celebrated in "militaristic nationalist circles" for his criminal-military exploits.Template:Sfn The German political writer Klaus Schlichte wrote that Template:Lang was the "most military" of the various Serb para-military leaders in the Bosnian war, and that his primary motive in the war was greed as he seemed all too interested in looting.Template:Sfn However, Schlichte noted that Template:Lang's attempts at political career and his frequent appearances to the Serb media suggest he had wider ambitions beyond greed.Template:Sfn
Kosovo War and NATO bombing
According to chief judge Richard May from the United Kingdom, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia issued an indictment against Template:Lang on 30 September 1997 for war crimes of genocide or massacre against the Bosniak population, crimes against humanity and grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The warrant was not made public until 31 March 1999, a week after the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia had begun, as intervention in the Kosovo War. Template:Lang's indictment was made public by the UN court's chief prosecutor Louise Arbour.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the week before the start of NATO bombing, as the Rambouillet talks collapsed, Template:Lang appeared at the Hyatt hotel in Belgrade, where most Western journalists were staying, and ordered all of them to leave Serbia.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
During the NATO bombing, Template:Lang denied the war crime charges against him in interviews he gave to foreign reporters. Template:Lang accused NATO of bombing civilians and creating refugees of all ethnicities, and stated that he would deploy his troops only in the case of a direct NATO ground invasion. After the United States bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, which killed three journalists and led to a diplomatic row between the United States and China, The Observer and Politiken newspapers claimed the building might have been targeted because the office of the Chinese military attaché was being used by Template:Lang to communicate and transmit messages to his paramilitary group in Kosovo. As neither paper offered any proof for this claim it was largely ignored by the media.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
During an interview with Western journalists, while the three-month period of the NATO bombing was ongoing, Template:Lang showed a small rubber part of the F-117A downed by the Yugoslav army (one of only five NATO aircraft destroyed on 38,000 sorties),<ref>Template:Cite report</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> which he had taken as "a souvenir"; Yugoslav media falsely proclaimed that Template:Lang had downed the stealth fighter.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
ICTY indictment and proceedings
In March 1999, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) announced that Template:Lang had been indicted by the Tribunal, although the indictment was only made public after his assassination. According to the indictment, Template:Lang was to have been prosecuted on 24 charges of crimes against humanity (Art. 5 ICTY Statute), grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions (Art. 2 ICTY Statute) and violations of the laws of war (Art. 3 ICTY Statute), for the following acts:<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Forcibly detaining approximately thirty non-Serb men and one woman, without food or water, in an inadequately ventilated boiler room of approximately Template:Convert in size.
- Transporting twelve non-Serb men from Template:Lang to an isolated location in the village of Template:Lang and shooting them, where they shot and killed eleven of the men and critically wounded the twelfth.
- Transporting approximately sixty-seven Bosniak men from Template:Lang, Template:Lang, and Template:Lang to an isolated location in the village of Template:Lang, and shooting them, killing sixty-five of the captives and wounding two survivors.
- Forcibly detaining approximately thirty-five Muslim Bosnian men in an inadequately ventilated room of about Template:Convert in size, withholding from them food and water, resulting in the deaths of two men.<ref name=":0" />
- The rape of a Muslim woman on a bus outside the Hotel Sanus in Template:Lang.
Following Template:Lang's assassination in 2000, ICTY Prosecutor Template:Lang said she was "confident, however, that other persons who shared responsibility with [him] for his crimes will ultimately be brought to justice."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Assassination

In the late 1990s, Template:Lang became an isolated figure in Belgrade who rarely went outside without his bodyguards.Template:Sfn Between 1995–2000, there were over 500 gangland murders in Belgrade, virtually none of which were solved by the police.Template:Sfn A number of the gangsters killed were associates of Template:Lang, which was seen as a sign that he had lost his political protection.Template:Sfn Together with his wife, Template:Lang virtually lived in the lounges of international hotels in Belgrade, apparently out of the hope he would not be killed in a place where so many foreign journalists were present.Template:Sfn
Template:Lang was assassinated, 15 January 2000, 17:05 GMT, in the lobby of the Hotel InterContinental in New Belgrade,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in a location where he was surrounded by other hotel guests. The killer, Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang, a 23-year-old junior police mobile brigade member, had ties to the underworld and was on sick leave at the time.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He walked up alone toward his target from behind. Template:Lang was sitting and chatting with two friends and, according to BBC Radio, was filling out a betting slip. Template:Lang waited for a few minutes, calmly walked up behind the party, and rapidly fired a succession of bullets from his CZ99 pistol. Template:Lang was hit in his left eye and became unconscious on the spot.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=bbc>Template:Cite news</ref> His bodyguard Template:Lang put him into a car, and rushed him to a hospital; he died on the way.<ref name="npr.org">Template:Cite web</ref>
According to his widow Template:Lang, Template:Lang died in her arms as they were driving to hospital. His companions Template:Lang, a business manager, and Template:Lang, a police inspector, were also shot dead by Template:Lang, who in turn was shot and wounded by Template:Lang. A female bystander was also seriously wounded in the shootout. After complicated surgery, Template:Lang survived, but was disabled from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

A memorial ceremony in Template:Lang's honour was held on 19 January 2000, with writer Template:Lang, Yugoslav Left official Template:Lang, singers Template:Lang, Toni Montano, and Template:Lang, along with the entire first team of Template:Lang, including club director Template:Lang, in attendance.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang was buried at the Belgrade New Cemetery with military honours by his volunteers<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and with funeral rites on 20 January 2000. Sources dispute the number of people that attended, but most sources state between 2,000<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> to 10,000 people attended the funeral.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Trials
Template:Lang pleaded not guilty but was convicted and sentenced to nineteen years in prison. His accomplices received from three to fifteen years each, after a year-long trial in 2002. However, the district court verdict was overturned by the Supreme Court because of "lack of evidence and vagueness of the first trial process". A new trial was conducted in 2006, ending on 9 October 2006 with guilty verdicts upheld for Template:Lang as well as his accomplices, Template:Lang and Template:Lang. Template:Lang was sentenced to thirty years in prison, as well as Template:Lang and Template:Lang, for murder in complicity.<ref>Sedam godina od ubistva Arkana; mondo.rs, 15 January 2007.</ref>
Prior to carrying out his sentence, however, Template:Lang obtained a passport from Bosnia and Herzegovina under the name Template:Lang and fled Serbia. In March 2011, he was driving a crime boss, Cyril Beeka, in Cape Town, South Africa when a gunman on a motorcycle opened fire on them, killing Beeka and wounding Template:Lang. Cocaine was found in the vehicle they were in, leading to Template:Lang being fingerprinted and his true identity discovered. Since that time, he has been incarcerated in South Africa and fighting his extradition to Serbia where his 2006 sentence awaits him. Template:As of, he is still fighting his extradition to Serbia in South African courts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Personal life
Family
Template:Lang fathered nine children by five different women.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His eldest son Template:Lang was born in Gothenburg, in 1975, from a relationship with a Swedish woman. In 1992, 17-year-old Template:Lang decided to move to Serbia to live with his father. During this time the teenager was photographed wearing the uniform of his father's paramilitary unit during the Yugoslav Wars and according to a Swedish tabloid report the youngster participated in combat operations in Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang has since lived in Belgrade where he played for the Red Star Belgrade ice-hockey club off and on between 2000 and 2009, also representing Serbia-Montenegro on the national team level between 2002 and 2004.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> During this time he also ran a sushi restaurant in Belgrade called Iki Bar and dated Macedonian pop singer Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He left Serbia after that. In 2013 he was in the news in Serbia again following the conclusion of a court case that had dragged on since 2005 over Template:Lang's failure to meet the repayment terms on a RSD1.1 million car loan he took out in 2002 from Template:Lang. After continually failing to meet his monthly payments, the bank wanted the loan paid off in full in August 2005, and two years later took him to court. In June 2010 he was ordered to pay RSD3.3 million based upon the interest on the original loan.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the end, the verdict stated he owed the bank RSD2.9 million.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In June 1994, sometime after her separation from Template:Lang, Template:Lang and their four children left Serbia and moved to Athens, where he bought them a flat in the suburb of Glyfada. After his assassination, Template:Lang disputed his will,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> claiming that Template:Lang doctored it. In May 2000, she sued Template:Lang over Template:Lang's assets, including the villa at Template:Lang Street in which he and Template:Lang lived, claiming it was built with funds from a bank loan Template:Lang and Template:Lang took out in 1985.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The court eventually ruled against Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The court agreed with her assertions that the villa was built with money from a 1985 bank loan taken out by her and Template:Lang, but ruled she had forfeited any rights in future division of that asset when she signed the property over to Template:Lang in 1994 before moving to Greece.Template:Citation needed
In 2012, Template:Lang's son Template:Lang again accused Template:Lang of falsifying his father's will.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In response, Template:Lang's former associate Template:Lang said that the villa at Template:Lang Street was not mentioned in the will as he had already signed it over to his second wife.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Lang and Template:Lang have a daughter and a son. Their daughter Template:Lang sings on her mother's record label, and publishes the songs on YouTube.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Religion
Template:Lang was a professed Serbian Orthodox Christian<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and "paid great homage to the Serbian Orthodox Church".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In popular culture
- In October 1992, Template:Lang was confronted by Roger Cook for a special edition of ITV's The Cook Report.
- The History Channel's 2003 documentary Targeted includes a part on Template:Lang, Baby Face Psycho.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- In the 2008 Serbian film The Tour, a group of Serbian actors go on a tour in war-torn Bosnia. Among other factions, they meet an unnamed paramilitary unit wearing insignia similar to those of the Serb Volunteer Guard. The unit's commander, played by Template:Lang, is possibly based on Template:Lang.Template:Citation needed
- In the 2012 Japanese anime Jormungand, one of the antagonists is Dragan Nikolaevich, commander of the Balkan Dragons. His looks and even his biography bear resounding resemblance to those of Template:Lang.
- In the 2014 Serbian docu-drama series Template:Lang, one of the episodes tells the story of Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>
References
Biographies
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
Interviews
- Interview with Jim Laurie, 23 December 1991. Template:YouTube
- Interview with local Bosnian Serb TV after takeover of Bijeljina, 1992. Template:YouTube Template:In lang
- Interview with RTV BK, 20 July 1997. Template:YouTube Template:In lang
- Interview with BBC, 1999. Template:YouTube Template:In lang
- Interview with ABC, 6 April 1999.
- Interview with British reporter John Simpson, March 1999. Template:YouTube
- Interview during NATO bombings, 1999. Template:YouTube Template:In lang
- Interview with B92, April 1999. Template:YouTube Template:In lang
Further reading
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- Todorovic, Alex, and Kevin Whitelaw. "A mobster, a robber, a Serbian hero." U.S. News & World Report 31 January 2000.
External links
- 'Arkan's Paramilitaries: Tigers Who Escaped Justice' – Balkan Insight, 8 December 2014
- 'Gangster's life of Serb warlord' – BBC News, 15 January 2000
- 'Arkan: Underworld boss of Milošević's murder squad' – The Guardian, 19 January 2000
- 'Blood and Honey – A Balkan War Journal' – NPR, February 2001
- 'Dosije Arkan' Template:Webarchive – Vreme, November 2008
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