Cape Argus

Srebrenica still an open wound

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HANOI: A 45-metre statue of Buddha in Vietnam suddenly collapsed in the final phase of a three-year constructi­on project, authoritie­s said yesterday.

The towering statue, temporaril­y the tallest in northern Vietnam, depicted a young, slender Buddha sitting in the lotus position at the popular Sac Thien Vuong Quan Am pagoda in Thai Binh province.

The statue was in the last stage of constructi­on when it crashed down late on Tuesday, said Pham Hong Thai, deputy chairman of the district. No one was injured.

The artwork was funded by tens of millions of dollars worth of contributi­ons by Buddhists, said local news reports.

A rash of constructi­on accidents in Vietnam has prompted authoritie­s to tighten safety rules. GLOGOVA, Bosnia: Some bodies lay in plain sight on the floor of the forest when Dr Vedo Tuco, a forensic pathologis­t, entered Srebrenica at the end of the Bosnian war. Others he’s still digging for – 20 years later.

“It was so quiet, there wasn’t even the sound of the birds,” Tuco, 48, said last month as a digger probed for bones in the yard of an empty house. “Once I started, I never stopped.”

On Saturday, Bosnia marks the 20th anniversar­y of Europe’s worst mass killing since World War II – the slaughter of some 8 000 Muslim men and boys by Bosnian Serb forces during five July days in 1995.

Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend the commemorat­ion, when the remains of 136 victims recently identified will be interred beneath white marble headstones.

Even now, the forests and farmland around Srebrenica are yielding bones; over 1 000 victims are missing, tossed into pits then dug up months later and scattered in smaller graves by Bosnian Serb forces trying to conceal the crime.

Investigat­ors believe at least one more big grave eludes them, while the accused architects – Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic and military commander Ratko Mladic – are still standing trial at the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague, fiercely unrepentan­t.

As such, Srebrenica remains an open wound, the lack of closure a dark shadow over Bosnia, where many Serbs still dispute what went on.

“I found and buried my husband, but have yet to reach my son,” said Hajra Catic, whose son Nino was 26 years old when Dutch UN peacekeepe­rs abandoned the “safe haven” of Srebrenica to Mladic on July 11, 1995.

“If I don’t find him, if I don’t have his grave… they deny, they deny so many were killed, they can say tomorrow that I never even had him.”

For Muslim Bosniaks, Srebrenica has become a symbol of collective suffering. Serbs see it as a stick for the world to beat them with; many dispute the death toll and deny it was genocide, as the UN tribunal has ruled.

Milorad Dodik, president of Bosnia’s autonomous Serb Republic, last month called the massacre “the greatest deception of the 20th century”.

He and Serbia have enlisted big-power ally Russia to block a British-drafted UN Security Council resolution condemning any denial of Srebrenica as genocide. The Council vote was due this week, but was postponed under threat of a Russian veto.

Insisting the resolution would not pass, Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic announced on Tuesday that he would attend the anniversar­y commemorat­ion.

“An entire generation has come of age with the denial of accountabi­lity often presented as the only ‘truth’, and that is disconcert­ing,” said Dijana Jelaca of St John’s University in New York.

Jelaca, whose research includes “critical ethnic studies” and trauma studies, said Srebrenica had become a tool by which political leaders on all sides whip up tensions, score political points and divert attention from the political and economic stagnation that has characteri­sed the last decade in Bosnia.

This year, preparatio­ns were overshadow­ed by the arrest in Switzerlan­d in June of Naser Oric, who commanded Muslim Bosniak troops in the Srebrenica region and who was acquitted in 2008 in The Hague of killing Serbs earlier in the war. He was arrested on a Serbian warrant.

Organisers threatened to postpone the burials if he were not extradited to Bosnia rather than Serbia, which he eventually was. – Reuters

 ??  ?? DARK SHADOW: The Memorial Centre in Potocari near Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a.
DARK SHADOW: The Memorial Centre in Potocari near Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a.

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