Arab Times

Massacre puts focus on woes

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VUKOVAR, Croatia, April 15, (AP): Edin Kapidzic fought in Croatia’s brutal war for independen­ce and came out alive. Carrying on in peace turned out to be harder.

Years after returning from the front lines, the former soldier from eastern Croatia hanged himself in a park in the hometown he defended during the 1991-95 conflict, part of the wider disintegra­tion of the former Yugoslavia. Kapidzic left behind a wife and four children. But no suicide note.

He was among nearly 2,000 Croatian war veterans who have killed themselves since war ended in the Balkan country, which is now slated to join the European Union. The numbers, experts warn, are likely to swell as former fighters grow older and feel even less needed by a society eager to forget the conflict and move on. The crushing stresses faced by veterans of Balkans wars grabbed internatio­nal attention last week when a former Serb soldier killed 13 people in a pre-dawn rampage in central Serbia – a massacre his family linked to haunting memories of war in Croatia.

Such an extreme response to the psychologi­cal trauma brought on by combat is rare. But depression and suicides among Balkan veterans are becoming more prevalent.

Attempt

“I get this feeling that I am no longer wanted in this world and that I should leave it,” said Mato Matijevic, a wartime ambulance driver who has survived one suicide attempt. “Just to leave everything and go.”

Across the Balkans, tens of thousands of war veterans from the ethnic conflicts of the 1990s’ have had trouble fitting back into society upon return from the battlefiel­ds of the former Yugoslavia – the stage of Europe’s worst carnage since World War II. Thousands of former fighters have experience­d symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder – or PTSD – including anger and depression; many have turned to alcohol and drugs; in the worst cases they take their own lives or commit violence against those around them.

In last week’s tragedy, Ljubisa Bogdanovic’s victims included his own son and a 2-year-old cousin. He turned the gun on himself and his wife, who survived; Bogdanovic died two days later. The gunman was described by neighbors as helpful and quiet, but his brother said he was tormented by the war. Balkan veterans often speak of survivor’s guilt.

“You dream of your dead friends, those who died on your hands, or you dream of the people you killed,” said Tomislav Galovic, a 43-year-old veteran from the Croatian capital, Zagreb. “There is no way to explain.”

Croatia’s veterans have committed suicide in public places; some blew themselves up or burned themselves alive. Such acts are often seen as a cry for help from an increasing­ly indifferen­t society or state. One veteran used a Croatian flag to hang himself – an apparent message that he felt betrayed by the country he fought for.

Trauma

Post-combat psychologi­cal trauma is common among soldiers around the world. Ex-fighters in the Balkans often face the further burden of severe financial problems that make a return to normal life even more difficult. Many war veterans find themselves on the margins of society, coping on their own. Matijevic, the former military ambulance driver, said that “the most traumatic moments are when I see on television how we, the defenders suffer, unable to fulfill our rights.”

Dressed in a combat-style green jacket, his head clean-shaven, the tough-looking veteran said he left a constructi­on job in Switzerlan­d in 1991 to fight for his homeland. Matijevic now lives with his wife and daughter in a small house in an ethnically-mixed village in eastern Croatia – bitter over how things turned out for him and his country.

“They told us Croatia would become like Switzerlan­d,” he said, “but it is nowhere close to it.”

Across the border in Serbia, veterans from the 1998-99 war in Kosovo have turned to the European Court of Human Rights to seek back pay from the state for the time they spent fighting, including the 78-day NATO bombardmen­t of the country. US President Barack Obama’s national security advisor, Tom Donilon, levels Russian Foreign Ministry in Moscow on April 15. Donilon held today bruising talks with top Russian officials in Moscow, days after the former foes exchanged Cold War-style blacklists in a row over human rights.

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