The Commercial Appeal

Srebrenica survivor dedicates life to search for victims’ bones

- By Aida Cerkez

Associated Press

Day after day, Ramiz Nukic goes into the woods around Srebrenica in search of a tragic quarry: human bones.

There’s rarely a day in which he does not find the remains of at least one murdered boy or man, even 20 years after Europe’s worst massacre since World War II. Srebrenica’s killing fields swallowed up 8,000 bodies, and the murderers took pains to hide evidence of the genocide.

Nukic’s quest started in 1999 after he returned to his empty hometown of Kamenice and began looking for the remains of his murdered father and younger brother. As the family’s only male massacre survivor, he became obsessed with bringing closure to their loss. Every day he discovered bones that gave other families the gift of mourning, but not his own. Every day he kept trying, and quietly he built up an astonishin­g record: Nukic’s discoverie­s have allowed Bosnia’s Institute for Missing Persons to identify nearly 300 Srebrenica victims.

But his father and brother eluded him.

Srebrenica was a Muslim town besieged by Serb forces in Bosnia’s 1992-95 ethnic war, in which Serbs tried to wrest away territory from Bosnian Muslims and Croats to form their own state. Serb troops led by Gen. Ratko Mladic — on trial in The Hague on genocide charges — overran the enclave in July 1995 and some 15,000 Srebrenica men fled into the mountains.

The rest of the population, some 25,000 people, sought protection from Dutch U.N. peacekeepe­rs stationed at the suburb of Potocari. But the outnumbere­d Blue Helmets could only watch as Serb troops occupied their base and separated men and boys from women, and loaded the males on buses and trucks. They slaughtere­d some 2,000 men and boys straightaw­ay on July 11, 1995. Then they hunted down and killed 6,000 more who fled into the forests.

Over 7,000 bodies of victims have been found in 93 mass graves and 314 surface sites throughout northeaste­rn Bosnia. Another 1,000 people are still missing.

As the massacre unfolded, Nukic said goodbye to his wife and children in front of the U.N. base, and disappeare­d into the woods with his father and brother, joining other fleeing Srebrenica men.

But the Serbs set ambushes along their path. As the Bosnian Muslim men sat down to rest on a hill just above Nukic’s village, Serb guns and tanks suddenly fired on the group. About a thousand were killed on the spot — including Nukic’s father and brother.

Nukic survived because he hid in the fern until the shooting was over. Knowing the terrain, he managed to sneak away and eventually find his wife and children in a refugee camp.

After returning to his village, Nukic gathered courage to climb up the hill where his loved ones died. The sight that greeted him froze his blood.

“When I saw those clothes and shoes scattered around the site,” he said, “I went numb.”

From then on, Nukic searched the woods every day. This year, Nukic’s dream of finding his father and brother came true, but he wasn’t the one who made the discovery: The incomplete remains were found in a mass grave.

 ??  ?? A local villager leads cows to graze in the forests where Nukic searches for remains from the July 25, 1995, massacre by Serb nationalis­ts. Nukic was lucky to survive the killing; his father and brother were killed by Serb shells.
A local villager leads cows to graze in the forests where Nukic searches for remains from the July 25, 1995, massacre by Serb nationalis­ts. Nukic was lucky to survive the killing; his father and brother were killed by Serb shells.

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