The China Mail - Relatives struggle to find last 1,000 Srebrenica victims 30 years on

USD -
AED 3.6725
AFN 68.999911
ALL 85.874972
AMD 383.539887
ANG 1.789679
AOA 917.000153
ARS 1187.750211
AUD 1.53311
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.701971
BAM 1.711149
BBD 2.017979
BDT 122.137405
BGN 1.71144
BHD 0.377075
BIF 2941
BMD 1
BND 1.285505
BOB 6.906538
BRL 5.575803
BSD 0.999409
BTN 85.547803
BWP 13.352873
BYN 3.27085
BYR 19600
BZD 2.007568
CAD 1.367099
CDF 2876.999755
CHF 0.822235
CLF 0.024448
CLP 938.190213
CNY 7.180703
CNH 7.188095
COP 4203
CRC 508.060106
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.874984
CZK 21.677005
DJF 177.720317
DKK 6.527375
DOP 59.349656
DZD 131.43012
EGP 49.535395
ERN 15
ETB 134.501353
EUR 0.875085
FJD 2.243196
FKP 0.737275
GBP 0.740698
GEL 2.73503
GGP 0.737275
GHS 10.250056
GIP 0.737275
GMD 70.99998
GNF 8655.999717
GTQ 7.680833
GYD 209.72554
HKD 7.84892
HNL 25.999471
HRK 6.590499
HTG 131.078982
HUF 350.851501
IDR 16140.85
ILS 3.49471
IMP 0.737275
INR 85.65325
IQD 1310
IRR 42100.000173
ISK 125.630006
JEP 0.737275
JMD 159.723529
JOD 0.708965
JPY 144.917977
KES 129.503518
KGS 87.449813
KHR 4074.999996
KMF 430.49908
KPW 900.025961
KRW 1365.789711
KWD 0.306032
KYD 0.832914
KZT 507.963866
LAK 21585.000023
LBP 89599.99999
LKR 298.939172
LRD 198.498687
LSL 17.719895
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.43989
MAD 9.164989
MDL 17.235723
MGA 4487.000527
MKD 53.827919
MMK 2099.419292
MNT 3577.313731
MOP 8.080142
MRU 39.644999
MUR 45.859576
MVR 15.405026
MWK 1736.000071
MXN 19.061535
MYR 4.232971
MZN 63.950011
NAD 17.720131
NGN 1545.969793
NIO 36.780303
NOK 10.109099
NPR 136.876135
NZD 1.651473
OMR 0.384496
PAB 0.999409
PEN 3.633975
PGK 4.10704
PHP 55.869778
PKR 282.19579
PLN 3.724108
PYG 7972.177869
QAR 3.64075
RON 4.403405
RSD 102.580994
RUB 78.478114
RWF 1420
SAR 3.750459
SBD 8.354365
SCR 14.319565
SDG 600.506157
SEK 9.594435
SGD 1.286401
SHP 0.785843
SLE 21.999843
SLL 20969.500214
SOS 571.496993
SRD 37.303498
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.745598
SYP 13001.876551
SZL 17.719684
THB 32.605956
TJS 9.969509
TMT 3.51
TND 2.951501
TOP 2.342101
TRY 39.20162
TTD 6.781426
TWD 29.898799
TZS 2620.00004
UAH 41.514819
UGX 3606.378092
UYU 41.523218
UZS 12737.496673
VES 98.967865
VND 26012.5
VUV 120.119505
WST 2.75251
XAF 573.903191
XAG 0.027336
XAU 0.0003
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.715394
XOF 572.500534
XPF 104.749937
YER 243.325008
ZAR 17.705215
ZMK 9001.197033
ZMW 25.066165
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.25

    +0.22%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.28

    +0.22%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.09

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    1.5800

    90.23

    +1.75%

  • SCS

    0.1300

    10.7

    +1.21%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    22.5

    +1.78%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    11.9

    -1.34%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    71.21

    +0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.0600

    52.97

    -0.11%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    59.47

    +0.27%

  • GSK

    0.4400

    41.3

    +1.07%

  • BP

    0.7700

    30.23

    +2.55%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    9.84

    -0.71%

  • AZN

    0.8200

    73.83

    +1.11%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    47.5

    -0.82%

Relatives struggle to find last 1,000 Srebrenica victims 30 years on
Relatives struggle to find last 1,000 Srebrenica victims 30 years on / Photo: © AFP

Relatives struggle to find last 1,000 Srebrenica victims 30 years on

Sadik Selimovic's relief at surviving the Srebrenica massacres 30 years ago did not last long.

Text size:

When he found out that his father and three brothers had not been so lucky, his life took the "only possible turn" -- to find them.

Three decades on, the 62-year-old, who was driven to become an investigator at the Bosnian Institute for Missing Persons, cannot hide his anguish that the remains of around 1,000 of the victims have yet to be found.

More than 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed within a matter of days in July 1995 after Bosnian Serb forces captured Srebrenica, which was supposed to have been a UN "protected zone" watched over by Dutch peacekeepers.

"Over the past three years, we have searched 62 locations" hoping to discover mass graves from the slaughter -- since declared a genocide under international law -- "but we have not found a single body," Selimovic told AFP.

"Those who know (where the graves are) do not want to say," he said.

Selimovic spends his time searching for witnesses among the Serbs living in and around Srebrenica, often his neighbours, school friends or those he worked with before the war at the Potocari battery factory, now a genocide memorial centre.

"How can they live with what they know?" he said. "I can't understand it. But it has to be said, there are people who have talked."

- Mass graves -

The last mass grave of Srebrenica victims, which held 10 bodies, was discovered in 2021 in the Dobro Polje area, 180 kilometres (111 miles) southwest of the town.

More than 6,800 of the dead, some 80 percent, have been identified, said Dragana Vucetic, a forensic anthropologist at the International Commission for Missing Persons (ICMP).

But that work has been complicated by the gruesome way the perpetrators tried to cover up their crimes.

The ICMP morgue and the Bosnian Missing Persons Commission in Tuzla hold the remains of "90 cases whose genetic fingerprint has been isolated" but who have not yet been identified.

There are also about 50 identified victims whose "families do not wish to validate the identification and bury them, most often because skeletal remains are incomplete", said the expert, who has worked investigating the genocide for more than two decades.

Initially, the victims' bodies were thrown into mass graves near the "five mass execution sites".

"A few months later, these graves were opened, and the corpses, already in the early stages of decomposition, were transported to other locations, sometimes hundreds of kilometres (miles) away," said Vucetic.

- Hiding the evidence -

The bodies were then "torn to pieces" by mechanical shovels and bulldozers and transported, often to two or three different locations, in an attempt to conceal the crime.

"Only 10 percent of bodies found during exhumations were complete," said Vucetic. DNA testing has allowed some skeletons to be reconstructed, sometimes from parts found in four different mass graves.

About 6,000 people were identified between 2012 and 2022, but since then the process has slowed, with only three this year so far.

Mevlida Omerovic, 69, has been hoping since 2013 that more of her husband Hasib's skeleton would be found so she could lay him to rest.

He was killed aged 33 with his brother Hasan.

"There's just his jaw, but I have now decided to bury him" at the Srebrenica memorial centre during the commemoration of the genocide's 30th anniversary on July 11, she said.

"We will know where his grave is and we will be able to go there and pray."

Her brother Senad, who was 17 when he was killed, has never been found.

The investigator Selimovic found the remains of his brothers and father. The last, his younger brother Sabahudin, was buried in 2023.

But he has no intention of stopping looking for the others. "That's what keeps me alive. I know what it feels like when you're told your loved one has been found," he said.

So he reads and re-reads testimonies and criss-crosses the area, revisiting the same places dozens of times. "We will find some (more) people," he insisted. "If other mass graves exist -- and I think they do -- we will find them."

But he fears the Drina River, which flows near Srebrenica forming the border between Bosnia and Serbia, "is the biggest mass grave of all", he said.

"No one will ever find those who ended up there."

O.Tse--ThChM