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Timeline: U.N. tribunal to give verdict in genocide trial of Ratko Mladic

SARAJEVO (Reuters) - The U.N. war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia delivers its verdict on Wednesday in the trial of Ratko Mladic, the ex-Bosnian Serb military commander charged with genocide and crimes against humanity in Bosnia's 1992-95 war.

Here is a timeline of events leading to his arrest as well as important aspects of his trial:
1995
July 25 - The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) indicts Mladic and wartime Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic on charges of genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of the laws and customs of wars.
Nov. 21 - The United States brokers the Dayton Accords that formally end Europe's worst conflict since World War Two, with 100,000 dead and 2 million homeless. A NATO-led force deploys in the shattered country to secure implementation of the deal.
Late 1990s - Mladic is believed to move to neighboring Serbia to avoid possible capture by international forces in Bosnia. Occasional reports surface of Mladic appearing in public in Belgrade. Karadzic also moves secretly to Serbia.
2000 - Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic is toppled by a pro-democracy uprising and successor authorities hand the former strongman over to the ICTY in 2001 for trial. ICTY Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte renews demand for arrest of Mladic and Karadzic.
2006 - A Serbian military intelligence report discloses that Mladic was using army premises until mid-2002. The European Union suspends talks on relations with Serbia over its failure to arrest war crimes fugitives including Mladic and Karadzic.
March 11, 2006 - Milosevic dies in his prison cell before his trial can be completed.
2008 - Serbian authorities arrest a disguised Karadzic and extradite him to the ICTY in The Hague.
2010
June 16 - Mladic's family launch court proceedings in Serbia to declare him dead, saying he had been in poor health and they had had no contact with him for over five years.
Oct. 28 - Serbia raises reward for information leading to the arrest of Mladic to 10 million euros.
2011
May 26 - Mladic is arrested at the farmhouse of a relative in a small town in northern Serbia.
May 29 - Serbian nationalists assault police at a Belgrade rally where about 10,000 people demand the fall of the government over Mladic's arrest.
May 31 - Serbia extradites Mladic to the ICTY.
June 3 - Mladic appears at an ICTY hearing, calling the charges against him "obnoxious" and "monstrous words". He declines to enter a plea, saying he needs more time to study the charges. Judge Alphons Orie schedules a new hearing for July 4.
July 4 - Judge Alphons Orie removes Mladic from the courtroom after he refuses to listen to the charges against him. Orie enters a not-guilty plea on Mladic's behalf on all 11 charges against him.
2012
May 16 - Mladic's trial begins.
July 9 - The first witness, a survivor of a 1992 massacre, confronts Mladic and breaks down in tears as he tells the court about the last time he saw his father, one of 150 Muslim men killed by Bosnian Serb forces in the village of Grabovica.
2013
April 10 - Mladic gets removed from court for challenging harrowing testimony from a survivor of the July 1995 massacre in Srebrenica of 8,000 Muslim men and boys by Bosnian Serb forces.
2014
Jan. 28 - Mladic appears as a witness against his will in the trial of Karadzic and sidesteps questions from his old ally.
April 5 - The ICTY upholds a life sentence against Zdravko Tolimir, the former head of Bosnian Serb military intelligence who reported directly to Mladic, for genocide over his role in the Srebrenica massacre.
2016
March 24 - The ICTY convicts Karadzic of genocide for the Srebrenica massacre, the worst atrocity in Europe since World War Two, and sentences him to 40 years.
2016
December - Prosecution and defence teams deliver closing arguments in Mladic's trial. Prosecutors demand life in prison for Mladic for the execution-style killings of Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica and their burial in mass graves, the long siege and bombardment of the Bosnian capital Sarajevo, and "ethnic cleansing" of Muslims and Croats in other areas. Defense lawyers argue that Mladic never ordered the Srebrenica killings and say the case against him was systematically biased.
2017
March - Mladic's lawyers seek his provisional release, arguing he is not getting adequate medical treatment at the U.N. detention center in The Hague. Prosecutors argue against this.
May 11 - Judges reject Mladic's requests for provisional release. They will reject his appeals and similar requests for release on medical grounds regularly through November.
Nov. 22 - Verdict and potential sentencing.

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(Reporting by Maja Zuvela in Sarajevo and Toby Sterling in The Hague; editing by Mark Heinrich)