AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - The death in detention of Slobodan Milosevic before judges reached a verdict in his war crimes trial is a major blow to the U.N. tribunal and international justice, but not a fatal one, legal experts say.
The main lessons of the abrupt end to Europe's most important war crimes case since Nuremberg are that judges must be stricter and prosecutors must focus on securing a conviction rather than trying to create a full historical record.
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