Sveta Vujacic, his lawyer, says an
appeal will be lodged on Friday, after a Serbian judge ruled
that Karadzic has three days to challenge his extradition
order.
Should the appeal fail, Karadzic will
face 11 charges at the international tribunal, including
genocide, murder and inhumane acts, committed during the
Bosnian war in the mid-1990s.
Karadzic was indicted on genocide
charges in 1995 by the UN tribunal, and he topped its
most-wanted list for more than a decade.
Capture details
Serbia released on Tuesday details of
its capture of Karadzic, saying he had been living in
Belgrade, the capital, posing as a doctor of alternative
medicine.
Officials said Karadzic had been working
in Belgrade as a doctor of alternative medicine.
Serbian officials said he had been
walking freely around town and had earned money from
practising medicine.
Nick Clark, Al Jazeera's correspondent
in Belgrade, said: "He evaded capture with a number of
disguises ... in the real coup de grace, he came to Belgrade
and spent the last five years here."
A picture revealed at the conference
showed an unrecognisable Karadzic, markedly thin, with a long
white beard, glasses and flowing hair.
Officials gave no further details,
saying it might jeopardise efforts to arrest two other war
crime suspects on the run.
False identity
Rasim Ljajic, chairman of the national
committee for co-operation with The Hague war crimes tribunal,
said: "Radovan Karadzic was using false documents and identity
under the name of Dragan Dabic, who is not citizen of Serbia."
Speaking about the arrest, Zalmay
Khalilzad, the US ambassador to the United Nations, said:
"Well, it's very positive... it shows you can hide for a long
time but ultimately what you've done catches up with you.
"He was responsible for some of the
worst crimes on the continent of Europe since World War Two.
So we rejoice in his arrest and hope that Mr Mladic [also
wanted by the UN war crimes tribunal] will have a similar fate
very soon."
In Sarajevo, which during the Balkan war
was under seige by Serb forces for 43-months, hundreds of
people celebrated Karadzic's capture.
But in Belgrade, dozens of Karadzic
supporters gathered near the war crimes court on Tuesday
evening, protesting his arrest and led by Karadzic's brother,
Luka.
Serbian authorities, fearing a possible
backlash from nationalists who consider Kradzic a hero,
deployed special forces near the court building and throughout
central Belgrade.
Arrest disputed
Vujacic, Karadzic's lawyer, has disputed
the official story of the war crimes suspect's arrest, saying
he was captured as early as July 18 while on a public bus and
had been held in secret until he was brought to the court on
Monday.
"[Karadzic] just said that these people
showed him a police badge and then he was taken to some place
and kept in the room. And that is absolutely against the law
what they did," Karadzic said.
He said the incident was to be
investigated.
European Union ministers on Tuesday
heralded Serbia's capture of Karadzic, calling it a milestone
in Belgrade's bid to join the EU.
Javier Solana, the EU foreign policy chief, said the arrest of
Karadzic showed Belgrade was willing to co-operate with the UN
war crimes court in The Hague - a precondition for
implementing a deal on closer ties with Serbia.
Olli Rehn, the EU enlargement commissioner, called on EU
members to allow Serbia to enjoy improved trading conditions,
insisting Belgrade must have something to show for the step.
Olga Kravan, of the International
Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia, told Al Jazeera that
Karadzic's initial appearance in front of the judges should
occur in the "near future".
He will have to answer to all the
charges against him, "including genocide, complicity in
genocide, exterminations, murders, and many other crimes", she
said.
Serbia has been under heavy pressure
from the EU to turn over those suspected of involvement in war
crimes committed during the 1992-1995 Bosnian war to the UN
tribunal in The Hague.
Ratko Mladic, Karadzic military leader
during the Balkans war from 1992 to 1995, is still at large.
"The hope must be for those who are
seeking justice that Mladic will soon join Karadzic," Mark
Seddon, Al Jazeera's correspondent in The Hague, said.