A United Nations war crimes tribunal has acquitted Serbian leader Vojislav Seselj of mass murder, deportation and more.
Seselj was accused of nine counts of war crimes and crimes against humanities for his actions during the Balkans wars in the 1990s. The judges ruled that the prosecution "had failed to prove beyond all reasonable doubt" and did not present enough evidence to show that Seselj was responsible.
Now that he is a free man, Seselj is allowed to run in Serbia's general election next month. He heads the Serbian Radical Party.