Friday, November 2, 2007

Serbs shell civilians in Sarajevo in 1995

Serbs shell civilians in Sarajevo in 1995 .



Many dead and wounded. This was one of hunderds of thousands acts of GENOCIDE serbs committed in order to create the so called "republic of the serbs" on as much of the Republic of Bosnia Herzegovina as they could. TOday they hold half of Bosnia under their occupation where non-serbs are virtually non existant (from being majority before the serb aggression and campaign of GENOCIDE).
The so called "republic of the serbs" must not be allowed to continue it's existance.

1 comment:

acadia said...

Joint Serbian and Bosnian Serb terrorists claimed that "Muslims bombed themselves" in Sarajevo. Of course they were wrong; Serbian propaganda is trully amazing. Here are facts coming from the International Criminal Tribunal, republished from Srebrenica Genocide Blog:

Did Bosniaks bombed themselves to win sympathy of the west and force NATO to strike Bosnian Serb positions around Srebrenica, Gorazde, and Sarajevo - as leftist apologist circles liked to argue?

David Harland, former head of UN Civil Affairs in BH, testified at the International Criminal Tribunal (Dragomir Milosevic Trial) that there is NO SINGLE EVIDENCE that Muslims shelled themselves. Harland admitted he was responsible for the creation of the myth that UNPROFOR was unable to determine who had fired the mortar shells that caused the Markale 2 massacre on 28 August 1995. Forty-three people were killed and seventy-five injured at the entrance to the Town Market in Sarajevo

On the day when the second attack on Markale happened, General Rupert Smith stated “it is unclear who fired the shells, although at that time he already had the technical report of UNPROFOR intelligence section, determining beyond reasonable doubt that they were fired from VRS [Serb] positions at Lukavica”.

Harland’s responsibility lies in the fact that he himself advised General Smith to make “a neutral statement in order not to alarm the Bosnian Serbs who would be alerted to the impending NATO air strikes against their positions had he pointed a finger at them”. That would have jeopardized the safety of UN troops in the territory under VRS [Serb] control or on positions where they might have been vulnerable to retaliatory attacks by Serb forces.

General Rupert Smith confirmed that he had concluded "beyond reasonable doubt" the mortar shell that caused the Markale 2 massacre had come “from the Serb positions around Sarajevo.” He told the court he reached the conclusion by putting together the results of two investigations, undertaken by the UN military observers and the UNPROFOR Sarajevo Sector experts.

In a Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to General Assembly resolution 53/35, "The Fall of Srebrenica", the United Nations concluded:
D. Attack on the Markale Marketplace in Sarajevo:

438. Five mortar rounds landed in a crowded area of downtown Sarajevo shortly after 1100 hours on 28 August [1995]. Four of the rounds caused only minimal material damage; one round, however, landed in the Markale marketplace, the scene of a similar attack on 5 February 1994. Thirty-seven people, most of them civilians, were killed in and around the marketplace, and approximately 90 were injured. A confidential report to the UNPROFOR Commander concluded that the five rounds had been fired from the Serb-held area of Lukavica, to the west of Sarajevo. (The secrecy surrounding the UNPROFOR investigation into this incident gave rise to speculation, fuelled by the Serbs, that there was doubt as to which side had fired the mortar rounds. A review of United Nations documentation, however, confirms that UNPROFOR considered the evidence clear: all five rounds had been fired by the Bosnian Serbs.) [Click here to read full copy of this U.N. Report]

Serb General Stanislav Galic was convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for terrorizing Sarajevo including for responsibility of 1994 Markale Market massacre in Sarajevo. The judge said that prosecutors proved beyond reasonable doubt 18 of the 26 sniping incidents they charged and all five of the shellings. That includes the 1994 Sarajevo marketplace shelling (markale market massacre) in which 68 people were killed and more than 100 injured, read full report here .

During Slobodan Milosevic trial, Berko Zecevic, an expert in designing ammunition who investigated the mortar shell that killed 68 and wounded 144 in Sarajevo's Markale Marketplace on February 5, 1994, also concluded that the shell could only have come from the Bosnian Serb Army (VRS) positions, read full report here.

Read more here:
http://srebrenica-genocide.blogspot.com/2007/07/srebrenica-genocide-questions-answers.html

Daniel