When Vlajko Stojiljkovic shot himself in front of Yugoslavia's parliament on Thursday evening, it was a violent protest against the law on co-operation with the war crimes tribunal.
He and two of his co-accused, Nikola Sainovic and Dragoljub Ojdanic, were widely rumoured to be at the top of the list for rapid handover to The Hague.
However, it is a long list.
Around 20 publicly indicted war crimes suspects are believed to be in Yugoslavia.
There are also the Vukovar Three, former military officers accused of atrocities during the fall of the Croatian town of Vukovar in November 1991 - Veselin Sljivancanin, Mile Mrksic and Miroslav Radic.
Death wish
And the Belgrade authorities are also under pressure to give up Ratko Mladic, the wartime commander of the Bosnian Serbs.
Until October 2000, when former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic was removed from power, General Mladic was living openly in Belgrade. He went to ground for a few months, but then resurfaced.
General Mladic, like Vlajko Stojiljkovic, has said he would prefer death to extradition, and has ordered his bodyguards to shoot him if he fails to commit suicide during arrest.
Colonel Sljivancanin, meanwhile, is reportedly walking around with a grenade in his pocket.
"I'll blow myself up if they approach me," he was quoted as saying in a recent interview.
In hiding
None of the main candidates for extradition shows any sign of preparing to go quietly to The Hague.
Former Deputy Prime Minister Nikola Sainovic and former army chief of staff Dragoljub Ojdanic are reported to have gone into hiding as the new law was about to be passed.
The whereabouts of two of the Vukovar Three are also unknown.
General Mladic has been able to defy the Hague Tribunal by appearing in public because he has been under protection from the Yugoslav army.
However, on 14 February, an official from the Serbian Government, speaking on condition of anonymity, let it be known that his protection had now been withdrawn.
One recent report says he is now in the area around Niksic, near Montenegro's border with Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The terrain there is inhospitable in the extreme, as the Nato-led peacekeeping force S-For found to its cost when it tried to arrest General Mladic's co-accused Radovan Karadzic last month.
Both Mr Karadzic and General Mladic enjoy widespread public support, despite their indictments for genocide and crimes against humanity.
None of this is likely to impress chief war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte when she visits Belgrade next week.
Mrs Del Ponte has repeatedly decried the Belgrade authorities for their failure to co-operate.
In October, she said the government's failure to grant the tribunal access to its records only fostered the impression that some people were not interested in establishing the truth.