Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Bosnians decry genocide ruling
Bosnians decry genocide ruling
Nov 17, 2024 10:59 AM

  Bosnian Muslim and Croat leaders have voiced disappointment at the International Court of Justice's decision to clear Serbia of genocide in Bosnia, while Serbs have expressed relief at the verdict.

  The highest UN court said Serbia had not planned or carried out in the 1995 Bosnian Serb massacre of 8,000 Muslims at Srebrenica.

  But it said Serbia had violated its obligation to prevent and punish genocide.

  Haris Silajdzic, a Bosnian Muslim leader, said: "It turns out there was genocide in Bosnia but it is not known who committed it."

  A guilty verdict may have meant compensation claims in the billions.

  Bosnians who had long hoped for the truth about the 1992-95 war to be acknowledged felt cheated. Zeljko Komsic, a Bosnian Croat leader, said: "We who were in Bosnia know what happened here right from the beginning of the war and I know what I will teach my kids."

  Serb human rights campaigners said ultranationalists who deny war crimes, or claim all were equally guilty, would gloat.

  Vojislav Kostunica, Serbia's caretaker prime minister, issued a statement which did not acknowledge any Serb guilt.

  "The ruling ... is particularly important because it has freed Serbia of the serious accusation that it committed genocide," he said. "Light must be shed on all war crimes and their perpetrators, and must be punished in a court of law."

  At least 200,000 people died in the fighting, three quarters of them Muslims and Croats.

  Bosnian Serbs using the might of the Yugoslav Army against their lighter-armed adversaries swept swathes of land clean of non-Serbs, culminating in Europe's worst atrocity since World War II, at Srebrenica.

  Symbolic slap

  Aleksandar Popov of the Igman Initiative group for normalising Serbia-Bosnia relations called the verdict a "symbolic slap" and predicted "gloating" by nationalists.

  For Bosnian Serbs who opposed the lawsuit filed by Bosnia's Muslim-led government in 1993, the ICJ ruling established that their republic was not founded on genocide, as Silajdzic argues, and should not be dissolved.

  Igor Radojicic, the speaker of the Serb Republic parliament, said: "This ruling sends a message that the survival of the Serb Republic is unquestionable."

  For Fatija Suljic, 60, who lost her husband and three sons at Srebrenica, the ICJ's ruling was "a disaster for our people".

  Nenad Canak, of Serbia's new Social Democrat-Liberal Democratic coalition, said of the ruling: "The only thing I can say is to remind you of the words of Primo Levi written on a wall in Dachau. 'The man who denies Auschwitz is the same one who is ready to repeat it'."

  Source: Al-Jazeera & News Agencies

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Gaza residents 'live in despair'
  The International Committee of the Red Cross has described the 1.5 million Palestinians living in Gaza as people "trapped in despair".   In a report, it said that a main cause was the continuing Israeli blockade.   The report comes six months after the end of Israel's military offensive in Gaza in...
Outcry over Silwan demolition plan
  The Palestinian village of Silwan clings to a steep hillside facing the southern walls of Jerusalem's Old City.   In the valley below, Al Bustan neighborhood stretches out in the shadow of Haram al-Sharif, also known as the Temple Mount. It is a setting rich in meaning for Muslims, Jews and...
On a mission to 'reclaim' Jerusalem
  Arye King is an Israeli settler on a self-appointed "mission from God": to extend Jewish ownership over the whole of Jerusalem.   Armed only with a crash helmet and a list of properties which, he says, belong to Jewish owners, he travels by motor scooter around the Jerusalem area, posting eviction...
Israeli troops 'ill-treat kids'
  Israel arrested 9,000 Palestinians last year, 700 of them children.   A former Israeli military commander has told the BBC that Palestinian youngsters are routinely ill-treated by Israeli soldiers while in custody, reports the BBC' s Katya Adler from Jerusalem and the West Bank.   "You take the kid, you blindfold him,...
The Uyghurs: A history of persecution
  The Uyghur people of East Turkestan, an area known by the Chinese authorities as Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, have long been victims of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s sixty-year authoritarian rule. In the years since the CCP gained control of East Turkestan in 1949 and before Deng Xiaoping launched his...
Israel troops speak out on Gaza war
  Troops fighting in Israel's war on Gaza were urged by their commanders to shoot first rather than worry about killing civilians, a document from an Israeli activist group shows.   Published on Wednesday, the document also gives an insight into Israel's policy of house demolitions and its use of white phosphorus...
Militant Jewish settlers set up 11 outposts in the occupied West Bank
  Israeli settler groups have set up 11 new outposts in the occupied West Bank, in a direct rebuttal of mounting US calls to freeze settlement activity.   Young Jewish groups are reported to have set up the structures – mostly tents and huts on hilltops – in the West Bank over...
Israel to erase Arabic from all signs in Jerusalem
  Israel ordered original Arabic names of all signs on Palestinian areas under occupation since 1948 to be turn into Hebrew language in an attempt to erase Palestinian identity in the region.   The Israeli transport ministry Yisrael Katz said on Monday that it will "get rid of Arabic and English names"...
As Iraq runs dry, a plague of snakes is unleashed
  An unprecedented fall in the water levels of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers has exposed the rural population to dangers of heat, drought – and displaced wildlife.   Swarms of snakes are attacking people and cattle in southern Iraq as the Euphrates and Tigris rivers dry up and the reptiles lose...
Pakistanis see US as biggest threat
  The polling was conducted by Gallup Pakistan, an affiliate of the Gallup International polling group, and more than 2,600 people took part.   Interviews were conducted across the political spectrum in all four of the country's provinces, and represented men and women of every economic and ethnic background.   When respondents were...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved