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A SURVIVOR FACES HER TORMENTOR
by Sandro Contenta
July 2004 - (Bosnia Report) A few days ago, Nusreta
Sivac came face to face with the man who ran the concentration camp
where she was raped and others were killed.
It's not uncommon in today's Bosnia for victims
and perpetrators of a war that ended in 1995 to cross paths. And
nowhere is this more likely than in the Prijedor area, where Muslim
victims of ethnic cleansing by Bosnian Serbs are returning
in force. For Sivac, a pre-war civil court judge who returned in
1999, the chance encounter was especially charged with emotion.
Walking towards her was Miroslav Kvocka, a Bosnian Serb she testified
against at the war crimes tribunal in The Hague. He was released
two months ago, after serving two thirds of a seven-year sentence
for war crimes.
Human dignity prevails
Sivac screwed up her courage. I hadn't seen
him since the trial, she says, and suddenly there he
was, walking arm-in-arm with his wife, a Bosniak (Muslim) who was
my childhood friend. They looked so proud. Maybe they
thought I would be afraid. But I looked him right in the eyes, and
he lowered his head, says Sivac, 52. It was a moment of personal
triumph for the survivor of Omarska camp, where 3,000 Bosnian Muslims
and Bosnian Croats were tortured and starved. On one of Prijedor's
bleak streets, human dignity had prevailed.
Sivac's personal moment is part of a larger success
story in the Prijedor area, where international pressure and the
will of victims to return has gone a long way to reversing the forced
evacuation of Muslims during the war. Prijedor's transformation,
however, is also the exception. In many parts of Bosnia, wartime
ethnic cleansing has become a legally enshrined reality.
Eight years after a gruesome war that turned neighbours
into enemies, Bosnia sits in a precarious position. It has made
strides to repair the damage, but forces are blocking its progress
and stoking its demons. Its stable currency, common passport, and
internal freedom of movement are significant achievements. But its
economy is near ruin, organized crime and corruption are rampant,
and leading suspected war criminals roam free.
And among its three communities - Bosnian Muslims,
Croats (Catholic) and Serbs (Orthodox) - talk of reconciliation
is drowned out by still powerful fears and hatreds from a war that
left 200,000 dead or missing.
Ask a Bosnian Serb about the 1995 massacre of at
least 7,700 Muslims in Srebrenica, and he'll respond by talking
of a massacre of Serbs at some other place and some other time.
Last September, after years of denial, Bosnian Serb authorities
finally acknowledged the extent of the Srebrenica slaughter. But
they've done little to help international officials find either
the mass graves or their wartime leaders, Radovan Karadzþic´
and Gen. Ratko Mladic´, who are wanted for genocide.
Insecure peace
Renewed ethnic conflict is kept at bay not by a
sense that justice was done, but by war fatigue and the presence
of 12,000 NATO troops. The Dayton accords stopped the fighting,
but have yet to secure the peace. Adding to the uncertain future
is an international community suffering from Bosnia fatigue,
and sharply reducing its financial backing after pumping more than
$6 billion (U.S.) in reconstruction funds into the country.
High Representative Paddy Ashdown, akin to the international
community's viceroy in Bosnia, warns: All I would say to my
colleagues in the West, gently, is have a look and have a care because
the speed at which you are withdrawing international aid from this
country could - I don't say will - but could put your investment
at risk.
Ashdown doesn't believe the country will again explode
into ethnic conflict. But he doesn't fully rule it out. The greatest
danger, he says, is fallout from further economic collapse. He adds:
Everybody can go back to war: If we are stupid enough over
a long enough period of time - yeah.
With such troubles, Bosnians ooze nostalgia for
their communist past. For 35 years after World War II, Bosnia-Herzegovina
was one of six republics enjoying relative peace and prosperity
in the federal state of Yugoslavia, headed by Marshal Josip Broz
Tito. The fall of the Soviet Union saw Yugoslavia begin to unravel.
Tito's successor, Slobodan Milosþevic´, now on trial for war
crimes, hastened its demise by unleashing competing nationalisms
that engulfed the Balkans in a decade of conflict. In Bosnia, Muslims
and Croats voted for independence in 1992, sparking a civil war
with Bosnian Serbs. When fighting stopped three years later, mass
graves dotted the country and 2.2 million people - more than half
the population - were refugees.
The Dayton peace deal divided Bosnia into two entities,
each with its regional governments: the Republika Srpska, a boomerang-shaped
strip of land hugging the Serbian and Croatian borders, and the
Muslim-Croat federation. A third level of government represents
all of Bosnia-Herzegovina, but ultimate authority rests with the
international community's Office of the High Representative (OHR),
whose mandate is to implement the peace accord.
With so much government, opportunities for corruption
weren't lacking. We audit different large segments of the
economy, and each one reveals mismanagement, misallocation of funds,
and out and out corruption, says Jason Taylor, senior legal
adviser for the OHR, referring to audits of governments and state-owned
firms. It has been a tough slog, Taylor says.
Lawless space
The international community, which didn't start
seriously pushing for reforms until 18 months ago, is partly to
blame. By then, the bureaucratic weight of a Soviet-style economy
had left 42 per cent of people officially unemployed, and 50 per
cent living at or below the poverty line. Bosnia had also developed
into what Ashdown calls a lawless space, where organized
gangs traffic people and drugs. He describes crime as deeply
engrained in the cell structure of the body politic.
Joining the European Union and the NATO military
alliance is seen by all sides as their economic and political salvation.
But Bosnian Serb authorities are balking at reforms needed to meet
a June 2004 deadline triggering the membership process for both
organizations. To join NATO, a key criterion is the fusing of Serb
and Muslim-Croat armies into a joint command, under the authority
of a single minister of defence. There's still not enough
trust in this country for the citizens to say "We will have
a unified army", says Zoran Zþuzþa, chief aide to Dragan
Kalinic´, leader of the Republika Srpska's ruling Serbian
Democratic Party (SDS), which used to have Karadzþic´ as its
leader. He says his party has already lost grassroot support from
Serbs who believe it has gone too far in giving up regional powers.
The alternative to the SDS is radical nationalism,
says Zþuzþa, whose party campaigned 16 months ago with the slogan,
Vote Serbian. I don't think these radical forces
should be awakened or encouraged. That's why I'm saying the European
Union should loosen things up and let us join as we are, he
says.
Igor Radojicþic´, a member of the RS parliament
and secretary of the opposition Alliance of Independent Social Democrats,
sees a chilling future ahead. Older Bosnian Serbs, he says, have
the experience of inter-ethnic friendships in pre-war Yugoslavia.
But adolescents who lived the ethnic hatreds of the war continue
to have that experience stoked in segregated schools, while facing
the frustrations of a dead-end economy. This is the generation
that will be coming to power in the next 10 or 15 years. It could
be frightening, Radojicþic´ says.
Says Jakob Finci, head of the Truth and Reconciliation
citizens' group: We have a divided education system teaching
our children that our neighbours are our enemies. So in 20 or 30
years, we can expect a new war. Finci, a prominent member
of Sarajevo's Jewish community of 700 people, says the idea of holding
a post-apartheid, South African-style truth and reconciliation commission
was first proposed by leaders of Bosnia's main religious groups.
Draft legislation to set up the commission is before the state parliament.
It won't provide amnesties to war criminals who confess. But it
will, Finci argues, play a cathartic role for a still traumatized
population. Testifying in front of the commission will be
part of the healing process, he says, insisting Bosnians must
recognize the war created victims and criminals on all sides.
Reality of return
Observers looking for a bright spot point to the
1999 property law imposed by the international community, which
allows refugees to reclaim their homes. Since then, one million
refugees have registered their return, almost half the total displaced.
Ashdown calls it a miracle. But those who got their
homes back didn't all return to live in them.
Kada Hotic´ and Munira Subasþcþic´ are
typical examples. Both lost a son and husband in the Srebrenica
massacre. Muslims used to make up about 75 per cent of the town's
pre-war population, but only about 220 of its 27,000 Muslims have
reportedly returned. The apartments Hotic´ and Subasþcþic´
left were immediately occupied by Bosnian Serbs. When they tried
to reclaim them under the property law, Republika Srpska authorities
dragged out legal proceedings as long as possible. They finally
got them back last year, both emptied of all their furniture. Hotic´'s
was also trashed. It's completely ruined. Without big renovations,
I can't live in it, says Hotic´, 58. Adds Subasþcþic´,
55: I could have forgiven them taking all the furniture if
only they had left me one photograph of my husband and son.
To finalize the reclaiming process, both had to
register their return with local Bosnian Serb authorities.
But the women continue to live in Sarajevo. When they visit their
Srebrenica flats, they say they encounter verbal harassment and
men who took part in the ethnic cleansing. One
man said, `We raped you, we killed you, we deported you - and still
you return. What do we have to do to get rid of you?' Subasþcþic´
says.
In similar circumstances, many refugees end up selling
their homes fast and cheap, often to the person illegally occupying
it. Those who do return are often seniors hoping to live out the
final years of their lives in familiar surroundings. The younger
generation tends to remain in adopted countries abroad. In the Banja
Luka area, Catholic bishop Franjo Komarica insists that only 2,000
of an estimated 80,000 Bosnian Croats who left the area returned.
But two examples tell a striking story of success.
In 1995, Serb residents of Dvar, who made up 95 per cent of the
population, were driven out by Bosnian Croat and Croatian troops.
Today, at least 8,000 Serbs have returned and fewer than 800 Bosnian
Croats remain.
In the Prijedor region, the entire Muslim population
of 49,500 - about 44 per cent of residents - was driven out. In
the Muslim town of Kozarac, Bosnian Serb forces in 1992 levelled
all the homes residents had left behind. Today, about 22,000 Muslims
have returned to the area, many to Kozarac, where international
funds have rebuilt the homes. We used to live together before,
there's no reason we can't live together again, says Husnija
Mujkanovic´, 40, while building his house.
Anel Alisþic´, 27, was one of the first to
return in 1999. He left his refugee family in the United States,
got his apartment back in Prijedor, and then joined a non-governmental
organization working to facilitate returns. Last December, he organized
a seminar that brought together Muslims and Serbs. They toured one
of three prison camps Serb forces ran in the area during the war.
It's the first time the Serbs went to visit the camps,
he says. I try to provoke them to think about what happened
in the war because otherwise they just don't talk about it. You
have young people growing up not even knowing there were camps.
Unfortunately, the people are looking at their future without knowing
their past.
From: http://www.bosnia.org.uk/bosrep/report_format.cfm?articleid=1095&reportid=164
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