World leaders united in hailing Serbia Tuesday for the arrest of indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic, with only Russia sounding a contrary note over whether he would receive a fair trial.
Karadzic's arrest after a decade-long hunt is the equivalent of catching Europe's Osama bin Laden, US diplomat Richard Holbrooke, who negotiated the 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement, said.
He led the chorus of congratulations from around the globe telling reporters it was "a historic day".
"One of the worst men in the world, the Osama bin Laden of Europe, has finally been captured. A major, major thug has been removed from the public scene."
"He was at large because the Yugoslav army was protecting him. But this guy in my view was worse than Milosevic [Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic]... he was the intellectual leader," Holbrooke told CNN.
David Miliband, Britain's Foreign Secretary, said it would "pave the way for a brighter, European future for Serbia and the region."
The White House released a statement congratulating the government of Serbia, and thanked the people who arrested Karadzic on a bus in Belgrade for their "professionalism and courage." Paddy Ashdown, the former international administrator in Bosnia, told the BBC that it was a "longed hoped for day."
"The four years that I was working with Nato to try and catch him were peppered by rumours of where he was - in this cafe, on that mountain, in this valley." Video Watch Karadzic's lawyer slam arrest "
Ashdown also told Britain's Daily Telegraph newspaper that it was a "major breakthrough for the Balkans region."
In Brussels, the European Union's foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, sounded hopeful that the arrest would unblock Serbia's EU accession talks, which had been made conditional on Belgrade's cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
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