Judges at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal Thursday granted a prosecution appeal against the 20-year sentence handed to a Bosnian Serb general convicted of sowing terror among Muslim civilians in the early 1990s, sentencing him to life instead, according to AP. Between September 1992 and August 1994, Stanislav Galic was commander of the Romanija Corps of the Bosnian Serb Army that laid siege to Sarajevo and terrorized the city's Muslim population with a campaign of shelling and sniping that killed hundreds of civilians.