Tag Archives: Bosnian Serb

New Srebrenica church sows discord

On a forest-covered hill near Srebrenica, a white bell tower rises into the sky, giving the first glimpse of a new church being built near the scarred Bosnian town, which this week marked the 18th anniversary of the worst massacre in post-war Europe.

But instead of bringing peace and calm, the Orthodox Christian church has sown fresh discord in the ethnically mixed town, which still bears the deep scars of the 1992-1995 Bosnian war.

For the local Bosnian Serb population, the church, built just a few hundred metres above a memorial centre for the victims of a genocide, is a necessity.

For the victims’ families and the international community, the new church is pure provocation.

According to Hatidza Mehmedovic, a Bosnian Muslim and head of an association grouping Srebrenica women who lost loved ones in the 1995 massacre, the “mere fact that the church is being built does not bother us”.

But the church “is at a spot where there are no believers and just near the site of a mass grave” where victims of the massacre were found, she said.

Mehmedovic’s husband and two sons, killed in the atrocity, are buried at the memorial cemetery at Potocari, just outside Srebrenica.

Aleksandar Mladjenovic, a local Orthodox priest who has been supervising the construction work, told AFP that the builders had reduced their work at the site ahead of the July 11 anniversary of the massacre “to avoid tension”.

On a warm July evening, only the chirping of birds and the fluttering of a Serbian flag on the bell tower break the silence around the church, in the small village of Budak.

Nearby is a flat, freshly mown field surrounded with a barbed-wire fence: this is the site where in 2007 forensic experts exhumed the remains of some 130 victims of the Srebrenica massacre.

“They are building (the church) at this spot as a provocation to the dead and the victims’ families,” said Mehmedovic.

Her head covered with a white veil, Mehmedovic points to thousands of white grave stones at the Potocari memorial centre.

Among them are the graves of some 409 massacre victims, identified since the last anniversary, that were buried on Thursday.

The dead were laid to rest alongside the 5,657 other victims found in several mass graves in the Srebrenica region who were already buried there.

A few months before the end of the Bosnian war, Bosnian Serb forces captured Srebrenica, a UN-protected Muslim enclave, and loaded thousands of men and boys on to trucks.

Over several days in July 1995, they executed some 8,000 of them and then threw their bodies into mass graves.

Two international courts have ruled the massacre, the worst atrocity in Europe since World War II, a genocide.

Before the war, Srebrenica was a sleepy mining town home to some 37,000 people — 80 percent of them Muslims.

Nowadays, only 6,000 people live in the town, around half of them ethnic Serbs, while for Muslims, the town has remained a gruesome symbol of their wartime suffering.

Mehmedovic insists that the first Serb-populated hamlet is between two and three kilometres (1.2-1.9 miles) from …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bosnian widows: Police beatings near Srebrenica

A group of women broke through a police cordon and entered a former warehouse to lay flowers where their beloved ones were killed during the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.

Bosnian Serb police said Saturday they didn’t use force, but the women claim police beat them, injuring eight from the group.

Munira Subasic, who led the women, said she got bruises when police beat “us with elbows and feet.”

On July 11, 1995, Serb forces overran the eastern town of Srebrenica and executed more than 8,000 Muslim Bosniak men and boys in what became known as the worst massacre in Europe after the Nazi era. About 1,000 of them were locked in the Kravice warehouse and gunned down on July 13. Families have never been allowed to visit the place.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bosnian Serb President testifies for Karadzic

One Bosnian Serb leader testified in defense of another at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal Tuesday, blaming Muslims’ wishes for an Islamic state in Bosnia for fueling the country’s ethnic war.

Radovan Karadzic, accused by United Nations prosecutors of orchestrating Serb atrocities throughout the 1992-95 Bosnian war, called one of his successors, Milorad Dodik, as a defense witness at the long-running genocide trial.

Dodik, like Karadzic, blamed Muslims for the war in Bosnia that left some 100,000 dead, accusing the Muslims’ wartime leader Alia Izetbegovic of seeking to turn Bosnia into an Islamic state.

Dodik, now president of the Serb entity in Bosnia, Republika Srpska, said Izetbegovic tried to push his plan for an Islamic state under Sharia law despite not having a majority in Bosnia in the months before war broke out.

“I recognized his activities at the time and how he was carrying out his political plan,” Dodik said. “It has elements of fanaticism.”

He said elements of Izetbegovic’s political party began arming Muslims before the war and that the first victims of the conflict were Serbs shot by Muslims.

“Izetbegovic laid the foundations of the conflict,” Dodik said.

One of Karadzic’s key defense arguments is that Serbs took up arms only as a last resort to protect themselves from Muslim aggression as the former Yugoslavia crumbled in the early 1990s.

However, most cases at the U.N. court involve allegations of Serbs persecuting and expelling Muslims and Croats from territory they considered part of a greater Serbia.

Karadzic faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment if he is convicted.

Dodik, a Serb politician at the time of the war, has dominated the Bosnian Serb political scene since the end of the conflict. He has opposed international efforts to unite the country after the war partitioned it, and continues to advocate independence or at least greater autonomy for the Bosnian territory the Serbs gained during the war – one of Karadzic’s wartime goals.

Dodik has repeatedly denied the genocide in Srebrenica, where Bosnian Serb forces massacred some 8,000 Muslim men and boys in 1995, and is a very vocal critic of the Hague tribunal or …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bosnian Serbs guilty of Bosnia war persecution

The Yugoslav war crimes tribunal has convicted two senior Bosnian Serbs of playing important roles in a campaign of murder, torture and persecution targeting Muslims and Croats during the 1992-95 Bosnian war and sentenced them both to 22 years imprisonment.

Mico Stanisic was interior minister in the breakaway Bosnian Serb republic set up during his country’s bitter war, while Stojan Zupljanin was a senior security official in charge of police.

Presiding Judge Burton Hall said Wednesday both men were in a position to prevent or punish crimes and did neither.

Prosecutors charged them both with involvement in a criminal conspiracy led by Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadzic and his military chief, Gen. Ratko Mladic, to force Muslims and Croats out of what they considered to be Serb territory in Bosnia.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bosnian court: 20 years for Srebrenica killer

Bosnia’s top war crimes court has jailed a former Bosnian Serb policeman for 20 years after judges found he took part in the 1995 Srebrenica executions — the worst massacre in Europe since World War II, in which over 8,000 Muslim Bosniak men were killed.

After the eastern Bosnian town fell, prosecutors told the court Bozidar Kuvelja, now 42, searched houses for Muslims to take to a collection point where men were separated from women for execution. He also was found to have taken part in the killing of several hundred of them and even finished off with a pistol those in the pile who showed signs of life.

The prosecution said it would appeal the sentence, saying 20 years is not enough.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News