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FORGOTTEN SREBRENICA SURVIVORS
By Nerma Jelacic in Srebrenica
Recent opening of memorial to those who died in one of Europe's
worst massacres has not eased the pain of those left behind.
September 25, 2003 (IWPR Balkan Crisis Report
No. 461) The survivors of Srebrenica fear that the international
community and some Bosnian politicians are trying to wash their
hands of them.
A visit by former United States president Bill Clinton to open a
memorial centre - which cost 6 million US dollars to build - put
the media spotlight back on the eastern Bosnian town.
But press coverage of the September 20 inauguration at Potocari,
on the outskirts of Srebrenica, angered many local political representatives,
who believe that not enough is being done by the West and the Sarajevo
government to help survivors.
Hakija Meholjic, a board member of the local Socialist Democratic
Party, argued that the attention came at the expense of the grief-stricken
mourners saying their last goodbyes to sons, fathers and brothers.
"I was in Potocari on Saturday and I was very disappointed
to see the discrepancy in the treatment of Clinton and of those
who came to bury their dead. His visit was given more attention
than the event itself," said Meholjic.
The first United Nations safe haven to be established in the Bosnian
conflict, Srebrenica became the site of the worst genocide since
the Second World War when Serb forces overran it on July 11, 1995,
executing thousands of Muslim men and boys.
Many here believe the UN should have done more to protect the enclave
and prevent the subsequent massacres.
The bodies of victims were thrown into mass graves, which are still
being exhumed. Only around 1,000 of the 6,500 so far uncovered have
been identified.
Upon the request of the survivors, most of these remains have been
buried at the Potocari centre with 107 newly-identified bodies interned
on September 20.
While the memorial will bring some comfort to those who lost their
menfolk, it will do little to address the problems facing survivors,
many of whom are living in appalling
conditions, and are too scared to go home.
Women whose menfolk were killed are not deemed a high priority for
social benefits as most of them are alone, and family units take
precedence when it comes to government aid.
Sabra Mujic - who lost her husband and two sons in the massacres
- lives a hand-to-mouth existence in a Sarajevo suburb.
"I live alone, in a basement of an abandoned house which has
no lavatory, in shameful conditions," she told IWPR on the
eve of the memorial service.
Her speech is often interrupted by gasps, as if she is crying, but
no tears flow. "I am all cried out," said Sabra, who's
still searching for the remains of her loved ones.
Sabra suffers from a number of serious health problems, and can
barely afford to buy the numerous medications she needs out of the
tiny state handout she receives.
As is the case with other survivors, her house and land back home
remain listed in her name, but she's fearful of returning and her
property is often vandalised. "Even if I went to the police,
nothing would get done, as they still employ people who were in
the army that killed so many in 1995," she said.
Many Srebrenica survivors, like tens of thousands of other people
across Bosnia who were forced out of their homes, are not prepared
to risk going back to villages and towns run by the very people
who expelled them in the first place.
Munira Subasic who lost 22 members of her family in the massacres,
and also lives in a Sarajevo suburb, says she would return when
there's sufficient protection and adequate services.
"I do want to go back to Srebrenica, but only when all the
conditions for safe return, such as setting up of multiethnic police
force in the town, reform of health and education, are met,"
she said.
In the case of Srebrenica, a significant number of those brave enough
to return have faced hostility from their Serb neighbours, according
to non-governmental organisations, NGOs, working in the area.
The Mothers of Srebrenica and Zepa, which has been helping returnees,
has also been threatened. "I received a letter stating that
'they' were waiting for more of 'us' to come back - and that those
of us who lived through 1995 would then be killed," its vice-president
Kada Hotic told IWPR.
In April, the women of Srebrenica appealed to the UN for compensation
for the suffering they have endured.
"Those that killed and looted seem to have got away with it,"
said Sabra. "They have their homes, their freedom and are still
controlling areas in which they were active during the war. It is
time that somebody helped people like me rebuild what is left of
our lives."
Senad Slatina, a Sarajevo-based political analyst, says that more
needs to be done to help displaced people.
"The return of refugees in Bosnia-Hercegovina is a key issue
which will decide if reintegration in this country is sustainable
or not. Srebrenica is a prime example here and more should be done
to help those people in their post-war survival," he said.
Meholjic believes the West and some Bosnian politicians just want
the Srebrenica issue to disappear, " The international community
and the politicians here would be the happiest if there was no more
Srebrenica. They would all like their mistakes to be forgotten."
Nerma Jelacic is IWPR project manager in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr3/bcr3_200309_461_4_eng.txt
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