Institute for Research on Suffering of the Serbs in XX c.

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At least 7,432 Serbs were killed in Sarajevo between 1992 and 1995. This is the number of victims with known names, surnames, dates of birth and death, plus 856 who are missing. These are not the final figures.

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Serbian Villages of the Srebrenica Region Reduced to Ashes Print E-mail
Monday, 14 March 2011
by Milivoje Ivanisevic
 
This presentation of the crimes committed by the Muslims against the Serbian people of Central Podrinje is just a fraction of the entire pogrom of the Serbian population in that region throughout the war. The destruction of Serb settlements and their cultural and religious institutions in that region bear wounds, which have evidently not yet been healed.

According to one of the several hundred important documents of the BiH Army in our possession, the following has been stated: “ At the end of January or beginning of February in 1993, within the Zone of Responsibility  of the 8th OG (Operating Group, author’s remark), a vast, linked, free territory had been formed, with its centre in Srebrenica, covering 95% of the Srebrenica municipality, 90%  of the Bratunac municipality, 60% of the Vlasenica municipality, and 50 % of the territory of the Zvornik municipality. Furthermore, a direct physical link with the liberated villages of the Zepa region was established.” [1]
 
Complete publication
 
 

By that time (at the end of January or the beginning of February in 1993), according to the same document, in the above listed municipalities, the Muslims had occupied an area of more than 850 km [2] of the entire territory. Their undisputed military success had nearly resulted in the complete extermination of the many Serb settlements in the aforementioned municipalities and had also produced much tribulation amongst the inhabitants of Serb nationality.
 
Based on the following facts, it is possible to determine the concrete effects of Muslim armed activity, which lasted for a period of several months. Only in the municipalities of Srebrenica and Bratunac, which were comprised of 93 settlements (which, according to the BiH census taken in April in 1991[3], the Serbs had had also inhabited), were 81 of those settlements destroyed. The only villages which had not been destroyed by the Muslims were: Crvica, Lijesce, Petrica and Skelani in the Srebrenica municipality; in the Bratunac municipality, neighboring the urban part of the town, the Serbs had also survived in the villages of: Dubravice, Jelah, Krasanovici, Pobrdje, Polom, Repovac, Rakovac and Slapasnica (the Bratunac municipality consists of 48 villages). Another 30 destroyed Serbian villages and hamlets in the municipalities of Milici, Vlasenica and Zvornik should be added to that number.
 
After this Muslim campaign, only 860 out of the 9, 390 local residents of Serb nationality had remained in their homes and in their villages in the Srebrenica municipality3, or, just merely 9%. By the first months of the war, fear had struck within the Serb settlements, as well as along the roads, by which they had tried to escape from their villages, in order to avoid the terror which had blazed all over the place.
 
That Serbian tragedy was not a mystery to the world. Even the State Department’s spokesperson, Richard Boucher, had stated at a press conference, on January 26th, 1993, that the Bosnian Muslim forces had killed at least 60 Serbs, mainly civilians, in the villages surrounding Bratunac. Following that, the same American official also mentioned the following: “As a result of the hostility, as many as 5,000 people, primarily women, children, the elderly and the wounded, had fled to Ljubovija”.

After this statement, no similar public remarks have been made in the US, which would also have depicted atrocities against the Serbs as well.  Soon after, the American administration and the American ambassador Madeleine Albright had imposed the most rigorous information blockade measures, filtering anything related to the slaughtering of the Serbian population. At about the same time, the President of FR Yugoslavia, Dobrica Cosic, and the Yugoslav government, had submitted a “Memorandum on the war crimes and crimes of genocide in Eastern Bosnia (municipalities of Bratunac, Skelani, and Srebrenica), carried out against the Serbian population between April  1992 and April 1993”, to the UN General Assembly, as well as the Security Council.
 
The pogrom of the Serbs in that region is no exception, and it is difficult to prove that it exceeds the suffering of the Serbs in other parts of this former Yugoslav republic. Unfortunately, regardless of which of the warring parties is of interest, the overall magnitude of the tragedy, caused by the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, has still not been documented thoroughly enough, nor has it been objectively acknowledged, estimated, and publicized.
 
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1  Headquarters of the Eighth Operating Group of Srebrenica, 07.03.1994. Republic Defense, Military Secret, strictly confidential, to the Sector for the Morale of the Second Corps, Supplement for the Chronicle Guide of the BiH Army, submitted. Link: File, strictly conf. No. 04-1-364-2

2   The national composition of population of Bosnia and Herzegovina – Census of 1991, the Federal Statistics Institution, Belgrade, 1992.
 
3   Ibid.  Yugoslav ambassador, Dragomir Djokic, had submitted the Memorandum on June 2nd, 1993, to the Security Council office.[4 ]However, that document had never been placed on the agenda, nor had it been taken into consideration by the Security Council.
 
4  Memorandum on war crimes and crimes genocide in Eastern Bosnia (communes of Bratunac, Skelani, and Srebrenica) committed against the Serbian population from April 1992 to April 1993, Continual Mission of the FRY to the UN, June 2, 1993.
 
 
 
 
 
 

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