Sunday, May 10, 2009

17TH ANNIVERSARY SINCE MAY 1992 WAR CRIMES AGAINST BOSNIAKS IN SREBRENICA

Surrounding Serb villages around Srebrenica were used as terrorist bases from which Serbs attacked and killed thousands of Bosniak civilians in Srebrenica.
DID YOU KNOW? IN 1992 (three years before the Srebrenica genocide), Serbs killed and burned scores of Bosniaks in downtown Srebrenica. The youngest victim: 1 year old baby Nezir Suljic.



By: Dnevni Avaz (via Students of Srebrenica)

In May 1992, Serbs from heavily militarized villages around Srebrenica committed horrendous crimes against the Bosniak (Muslim) population of Srebrenica.

On May 8th, 1992, in downtown Srebrenica, Serbs killed 23 Bosniak civilians - men, women, children, and elderly. Most victims were burned in their homes in Srebrenica. The youngest victims was 1 year old Nezir Suljic.

Other victims killed on May 8 1992: Avdo Jelkic, Behka Jelkić, Esed Fazlić, Izeta Fazlić, Avdo Dautbašić, Salko Jusić, Mehmed Salimović, Meva Salimović, Hamed Gušić, Asim Redžić, Safet Kulaglić, Muharem Dizdarević, Meho Vejzović, Muša Vejzović, Redžep Redžepović, Bejta Redžepović, Huso Suljić, Muška Suljić, Nisvet Suljić, Nezir Suljić, Omer Murathodžić, Ohran Mujić and Jakub Abdurahmanović.

Between April 18 and May 8 1992, Sabira Cvrk and Rahman Kaljević had also lost their lives as a result of Serb attacks from surrounding Serb villages around Srebrenica.

By the end of May, Serbs had killed 15 Bosniaks in Skelani, and another 51 Bosniaks in Srebrenica.

Bosniaks held commemorated of the 17th anniversary of Serb terror in and around Srebrenica in Zabokvica village. The manifestation was titled "Day of Rememberance." Participants prayed for innocent Muslim victims in a White Mosque in Srebrenica and they also visited Mosque's cemetery where most victims were laid to rest.

MONUMENT TO 1600 SARAJEVO CHILDREN KILLED BY SERBIAN TERRORISTS

PHOTO: Bosnian girls lay flowers at a newly inaugurated memorial to children of Sarajevo, Saturday, May 9, 2009. The memorial is dedicated to the children of Sarajevo who were killed by the Bosnian Serb troops during the 43-months siege of Bosnia's capital during which more than 12,000 people, including more than 1,600 children, were killed.

Several thousand residents in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo have turned out to the unveiling of a commemoration monument for children. During the three-year siege of Sarajevo in the 1990s, Serb terrorists under the command of Gen. Stanislav Galic and Dragomir Milosevic killed almost 1600 children in Sarajevo. Most of Sarajevo children were killed by snipers fired from the mountains surrounding the city.

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) convicted two Serb generals of numerous crimes against humanity, including on terror charges, in their conduct of the siege. Serb Gen. Stanislav Galic and Gen. Dragomir Milosevic were found guilty on terrorist charges and sentenced to life imprisonment and 33 years imprisonment, respectively.

The monument consists of a glass unfinished sand castle in the shape of a pyramid. It symbolises the play of children being cut short by death. The pyramid has partially been made from the spent cartridges that were found in the city after the war.

The Siege of Sarajevo is the longest siege of a capital city in the history of modern warfare. Serb forces of the self-proclaimed Republika Srpska and the Yugoslav People's Army (later to become the Army of Serbia and Montenegro) besieged Sarajevo, the capital city of Bosnia and Herzegovina, from April 5, 1992 to February 29, 1996 during the Bosnian War.

PHOTO: Bosnian children throw flowers into the Miljacka river from a bridge where the first civilian victim of Sarajevo's 1992-1995 siege was killed April 6, 2009. The Bosnian capital marks each April 6 as the anniversary date of the beginning of its devastating siege.
After Bosnia and Herzegovina had declared independence from Yugoslavia the Serbs - whose strategic goal was to create a new Serbian State of Republika Srpska (RS) that would include the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina - encircled Sarajevo with a siege force of 18,000 stationed in the surrounding hills, from which they assaulted the city with weapons that included artillery, mortars, tanks, anti-aircraft guns, heavy machine-guns, multiple rocket launchers, rocket-launched aircraft bombs, and sniper rifles. From May 2, 1992, the Serbs blockaded the city.

The Bosnian government defence forces were poorly equipped and unable to break the siege. More than 12,000 civilians were killed during the Sarajevo siege. The three-and-a-half year war claimed at least 100,000 lives, and 2.2 million people were forced to flee.


DON'T MISS - Editor's Picks:

(1.) General Lewis MacKenzie:
Sarajevo Concentration Camp Rapist with Diplomatic Immunity

(2.) Translated Transcript of Genocide Prevention Ceremony in Sarajevo (2009)

(3.) VIDEO:
Genocide Prevention Month in Sarajevo (2009)

(4.)
United Nations Report: Serbs Responsible for 1995 Sarajevo Markale Market Massacre
(5.) VIDEO:
Upcoming Genocide Conference in Sarajevo, Kathleen Young (2007)
(6.
Serb Gen Stanislav Galic guilty of Sarajevo terrorism & markale massacre

(7.)
U.N. Court rules Serbs responsible for 1994 Sarajevo's markale massacre

(8.)
U.N. Conclussions: Serbs responsible for 1995 Sarajevo's markale massacre

(9.)
Life Imprisonment for Sarajevo Terror: Serb Gen. Stanislav Galic Transfered to Germany

(10.)
Milorad Trbic transfered to Sarajevo to stand Genocide Trial

(11.) Rupert Smith Markale Massacre Testimony in Front of the U.N Court: "No evidence Muslims shelled themselves"

(12.)
David Harland Markale Massacre Testimony in Front of the U.N. Court: Witness Admits Responsibility for Neutral Statement Leading to Serbian Myths and Propaganda About Markale Massacre in Sarajevo

(13.) VIDEO:
Christmas Eve in Sarajevo (2007)

(14.)
Pictures of Beautiful Sarajevo, photo tour (2005)

(15.) Use Search Box in the left-hand top corner to find more in-depth research by Srebrenica Genocide Blog Team.