Chronicles
27
Bosnia-Herzegovina: The Core of the Greater
Serbia Project
Prepared and edited by Sonja Biserko
"The international community's recognition of
Bosnia-Herzegovina on April 6, 1991 set into motion the formidably
brutal policy of extinction of the Muslim population. From April to
August 1991, the Serbs have actually occupied 70 percent of Bosnia's
territory. Numerous cases that have been or are still processed by the
tribunal in The Hague testify of that. Many have not even been
investigated so far, particularly those related to Eastern Bosnia and
the Drina River valley. The Serbian troop's blitzkrieg besieged Sarajevo
in couple of days only.
"The siege of Sarajevo begun earlier in 1991. The fact
that the Army entrenched itself all round Sarajevo as early as in autumn
1991 and distributed arms to the Serbian population also testifies that
the aggression against Bosnia was planned way back. It was in October
1991 that Radovan Karadzic, preparing the Serbian population in
Bosnia-Herzegovina for a plebiscite, said, "You must take over the power
energetically and totally. Regardless of what will come out of Bosnia,
no foundation for a Muslim house shall be laid in Serbian lands or in a
Serbian village. Any foundation laid will be blown to pieces. The world
will understand our opposition to any change in demographic structure be
it natural or artificial. Our territories belong to us alone. We may be
hungry, but we'll stick to those territories. This will be a battle for
life or death, the battle for living space." Referring to possible
difficulties with the international community, Karadzic said, "Foreign
observers will come for sure, they'll keep everything under
surveillance. They'll be malevolent. All of them will be malevolent
except for those we'll acquire from England - only they will be
objective," says the editor in Chapter I - "Destruction of Bosnia."
Chapter II presents a chronology of the Bosnian war,
Chapter III carries testimonies before the tribunal in The Hague, mostly
expert testimonies, Chapter IV stands for a Sarajevo "dossier," Chapter
V deals with the media presentation of the war in Bosnia, while Chapter
VI carries integral sentences in Galic and Plavsic cases.
Acrobat PDF (4.71mb) >>> |