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REPORT ABOUT THE STANDING OF WOMEN
IN BLACK, BELGRADE, ON THE OCCASION OF THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY OF
THE MASSACRE IN POTOCARI, SREBRENICA
July 18, 2004 - (Women in Black) Every year since
1995, we have been standing on the Republic Square on the occasion
of marking the massacre in Srebrenica. (Women in Black Belgrade)
The vigil and performance Map of Forbidden
Remembrance, performed by Maja Mitic (Dah theater) were registered
for July 10th from 19h-20h.
At the same time on the Square was being held a
celebration and manifestation with the name Belgrade Peace
Festival, as well as a promotion for the Russian ice cream
Holodj, about which we had not been informed by the
police when we had registered our vigil. As it was impossible in
the same space to simultaneously hold both events, we were forced
to improvise. Following unsuccessful negotiations with the organizers
of the manifestation that was in progress on Republic Square to
temporarily discontinue the program, we held the performance and
vigil in black and silence in the area beneath the Square clock.
Before the beginning of the vigil, a group of citizens
that was gathered began to approach activists of Women in Black
screaming provocations such as: For whom are you wearing black?,
Who are you mourning?, Balinke, whores,
junkies, and then some of them began to physically attack
the activists. Branislava Jeftic slapped Stanislavka Zajovic and
Slavica Stojanovic, and Ljiljana Radovanovic was kicked and hit
in the head. At that moment the police reacted a few police
officers formed themselves in a line between the activists and attackers.
Despite the fact that we had been physically attacked, the police
didnt remove nor arrest anyone, but we decided to hold the
vigil and performance regardless of the existing conditions. We
formed our circle, the formation we judged to be most secure, inside
of which the performance was presented.
During the performance Maja Mitic spoke the following
text: Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1995, A. Ademovici,
subsequently listing every name with this family-name
Aganovici
Ahmetovici
,
pulling out bread, putting in on the concrete, and on the bread
placing pictures of the victims of the Srebrenica massacre; all
while endlessly speaking their names, which were over 7000. In the
end she spoke a sentence that was written by Carlos Fuentes: How
long does grief last that is imposed by historical violence; and
where is the limit of my personal responsibility for crimes that
I didnt commit?
In the meantime, the women who verbally and physically
attacked us were joined by a group of men, who together began to
mobilize in the surrounding area in order to further provoke and
obstruct the vigil. While we were silently standing in a circle
and extending nonverbal support to one another, we held banners
with the following contents: Amnesty for all who refused to participate
in war, Women in Black against war, To forget and be silent about
crimes is a crime, excerpts from letters of women from Srebrenica:
We are searching for them! We are searching for the truth about
them! For every victim of war, truth and not revenge, There is no
peace without truth about the missing, Solidarity with the women
from Srebrenica, Why is the government still silent, and We are
searching for punishment for everyone responsible for the crimes
in Srebrenica. We also had a row of eight banners that marked every
past anniversary of the massacre, and this year we added the ninth:
Nine years since the crimes in Srebrenica, July 11th, 1995
July 11th, 2004. At the same time, the radical nationalists who
were surrounding us were singing the Serbian nationalistic and Chetnik
songs: Who says that Serbia is small is lying; Prepare, prepare
Chetniks, and shouting the slogans: Mladic lives! Seselj lives!
Karadzic lives! You are a shame to Serbia! Cult! Lesbians! Barren
women! Whores! Bring weapons; we will skin you at your next vigil!
We know where you live and we have your pictures! Betraying the
fatherland is a criminal act! Traitors to the court! Foreign payees!
Soros is paying you with drug needles! We know that you are Serbian;
Admit that you are Serbian and that Serbian blood flows through
your veins! Not one of you is wearing a cross, anyone can tell that
you are not Serbian! We will hang you on this lamppost! We didnt
kill enough of you! Through hand movements they showed us that they
would cut our throats, and they were throwing stones and dirt at
us. At one moment, they reappeared with a banner, copying the form
of those that we held, with the writing Mladic lives!
The whole time, the police were between the activists
and radical nationalists and tried to prevent them from entering
our circle. Some of our activists began to distribute leaflets but
the police announced that they could not guarantee their safety
if they left the circle. At one moment, we decided to widen the
circle so that we would be seen by more people, but again from the
reason of insecurity it was impractical, so we turned around and
faced outward. This proved to be more effective, because more people
were able to see our banners, in some way we confronted our attackers
and we felt more secure knowing that no one would be able to attack
us from behind.
When the protest was over, we agreed to sit in a
near-by café and wait for the attackers to leave but they
surrounded us, continuously observing us and demonstratively walking
through us, using the classical methods of intimidation. In the
meantime the police sent back up: two police cars and special forces.
When we were leaving, the police stopped the attackers who were
coming after us and accompanied us to taxis. We can presume that
the police intervention had been so efficient in order to prevent
a scandal of international implications on the eve of the inauguration
of the president of Serbia. In view of the fact that our activists
were physically attacked, Women in Black, Belgrade is going to sue
the attackers, whose information was taken by the police.
We consider that the reaction of the citizens was
influenced by various factors. Above all, the ideology of the regime
of Slobodan Milosevic and the result of Decembers parliamentary
election which signified the restoration of that regime, but also
the mutual decision of Boris Tadic and the current government that
his inauguration be held regardless and simultaneously with the
commemoration in Potocari, scheduled for July 11th, 2004, which
we consider as showing an ignorant attitude towards the dignity
of the victims. On one hand we think that this kind of attitude
makes more difficult the confronting with the crimes done
by ones own nation (from the inauguration speech of
Boris Tadic) as well as reconciliation, and encourages radical nationalists.
On the other hand it is obvious that nervousness is growing among
extremists, not only because their favorite candidate did not win
the recent presidential election, but also because they are expecting
the impending extradition to the Hague Tribunal of four generals
accused of war crimes.
Once again we are calling on the public to face
the responsibility for crimes committed by the Serbian military
and paramilitary forces in the area of the former Yugoslavia. Also,
we demand that the government clearly and unwaveringly declare cooperation
with Hague Tribunal and extradite all suspected war criminals.
Women in Black, Belgrade
July 14th 2004.
From: http://www.wluml.org/english/newsfulltxt.shtml?cmd[157]=x-157-60807%20&cmd[189]=x-189-60807
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