Oroville Mercury-Register

Bosnians warn Ukrainians: It’s a long journey to justice

- By Sabina Niksic

SARAJEVO, BOSNIA » Regardless of how the Russian war in Ukraine ends, getting justice for human rights abuses suffered during the conflict will inevitably be a long and painful process for those who survive to tell of the atrocities they witnessed.

That’s the message from survivors of Bosnia’s 199295 internecin­e war, who have dedicated the ensuing years to the re-telling and re-living of their trauma in hope of bringing those responsibl­e to justice and setting the historical record straight.

“For me, it is personal. I am still searching for the remains of my brother. I cannot move on. I cannot focus on something else and leave that behind,” said Edin Ramulic from the northweste­rn Bosnian town of Prijedor.

Ramulic was 22-year-old university graduate when, in April 1992, he and his male relatives, including his older brother and father, were rounded up by Bosnian Serbs, along with thousands of other nonSerb civilians from Prijedor and surroundin­g villages, to be deported from the area, imprisoned, tortured or killed.

More than 3,000 nonSerbs — including 102 children — were killed in Prijedor. Some were executed in their homes or in the streets, others in three prison camps where prisoners were subjected to including beatings, rape, sexual assaults and torture. Ramulic’s brother, uncle and four cousins did not survive the camps.

Much like the graphic evidence of killings and torture in Bucha, outside Kyiv, that emerged earlier this month after Russian forces withdrew from the area, the discovery by internatio­nal journalist­s of the camps in Prijedor in August 1992 provoked global outrage and calls by world leaders for those responsibl­e to be held to account.

A process was put in motion by the United Nations Security Council to establish a special U.N. war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. When it was set up in The Hague in 1993, it was the first internatio­nal court to investigat­e and prosecute allegation­s of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide since the tribunals in Nuremberg and Tokyo after World War II.

At first nobody thought it would work, the investigat­ors’ access to crime scenes in Prijedor and elsewhere in Bosnia was blocked for years, and political leaders of the Bosnian Serbs and neighborin­g Serbia continued to deny human right abuses and hide documents and those indicted.

Justice was slow to come. Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic and his military commander Ratko Mladic were fugitives from internatio­nal justice until the late 2000s when they were tracked down in Serbia.

But by the time it shut down in 2017, the tribunal had convicted 83 highrankin­g wartime political and military officials, most of them from Bosnia. It also transferre­d a mountain of evidence and cases against lower-ranking suspects to their home countries in the Balkans.

Desperate to find informatio­n about the fate of their loved ones and force the world to acknowledg­e their suffering, survivors like Ramulic changed their lives, setting up support groups for potential witnesses, collecting informatio­n about missing persons and commemorat­ing the victims.

“I’ve spent countless months of my life in different courtrooms (as a witness), listening to defense counsels trying to deny the evidence,” Ramulic said.

“It sometimes happens that the people you know are guilty are set free because of the lack of evidence, but it is worth it,” he added.

Ramulic still does not know where his brother’s remains are or exactly who killed him and how, but the court sentences, some of which he had helped bring about, “are the most valuable thing that we have, because the evidence-based truth contained in them cannot be forever ignored and denied.”

In Munira Subasic’s former life, before the war, she was a shopkeeper, wife and the mother of two sons. Nothing prepared her for what she would become after losing her husband and a son in the 1995 Srebrenica massacre in which 8,000 men and boys died. It was the only episode of Bosnia’s war to be legally defined as genocide.

Amid their frantic search for their missing loved ones, Subasic and a number of other women created an organizati­on, Mothers of Srebrenica, and engaged in street protests and other direct action to stay in the public eye and demand that mass graves be found, remains identified and those responsibl­e for the massacre brought to justice. To date, almost 90 percent of those reported missing from the fall of Srebrenica have been accounted for.

“We knew the names of the killers, we collected them and shared the informatio­n with prosecutor­s, we visited every mass grave site, we searched for informatio­n about where others might be. We have been breathing down everyone’s neck, demanding justice,” Subasic said.

“Mothers of Ukraine will have to do the same,” she added.

Subasic, along with dozens of others, testified before the U.N. war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia, helping put behind bars close to 50 Bosnian Serb wartime officials, collective­ly sentenced to over 700 years in prison.

 ?? AMEL EMRIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A gravestone in memory of victims of the Srebrenica massacre is seen at the Potocari memorial center near Srebrenica, Bosnia, Thursday.
AMEL EMRIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A gravestone in memory of victims of the Srebrenica massacre is seen at the Potocari memorial center near Srebrenica, Bosnia, Thursday.

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