(FILES) This file picture taken 10 May 2004 shows the alleged mastermind of the March 12, 2003 assassination of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, Milorad Lukovic Ulemek alias Legija, at the beginning of his trial at the Special Court for Trials Against Organized Crime in Belgrade. Lukovic, serving a 40-year jail term for the assassinations of Djindjic in 2003 and former Serbian president Ivan Stambolic in 2000, saw his sentence increase for the plot to kill former foreign minister Vuk Draskovic in 1999 to 40 years from 15 years previously, Beta news agency reported.,Image: 25906011, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: , Model Release: no
The prime suspect in the 12 March 2003 assassination of Serbian PM Zoran Djindjic, Zvezdan Jovanovic, awaits the pursuit of his trial behind a bulletproof glass in the new buliding of the Special Court for Trials Against Organized Crime in Belgrade 13 April, 2004. The trial of 13 alleged assassins of PM Djindjic opened 22 December 2003. PHOTO AFP / KOCA SULEJMANOVIC,Image: 72795284, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: , Model Release: no
Former deputy commander of the secret service elite "Red Berrets" Zvezdan Jovanovic (C) sits between to jail security officers at the trial of 36 gangsters and police officers charged with the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic 09 February 2004 in Belgrade, Serbia. Jovanovic is accused of firing the bullets that killed Serbia's prime minister Zoran Djindjic and wounding his bodyguard on March 12 2003. The trial of a criminal gang accused of assassination reformist Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic resumed 09 February with defence lawyers demanding the dismissal of the presiding judge. Four lawyers for the defence called for the dismissal of judge Marko Klajajevic, alleging he was in the pocket of another mafia gang operating in the Belgrade area. PHOTO AFP / KOCA SULEJMANOVIC,Image: 72628429, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: , Model Release: no