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Year 2024, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 134 - 152, 05.02.2025
https://doi.org/10.26650/hupej.2024.1.2.1551576

Abstract

References

  • BIRN, Scores of Srebrenica Gravesites Remain Abondoned and Unmarked, Balkan Insight. https://balkaninsight.com/2021/07/09/ scores-of-srebrenica-gravesites-remain-abondoned-and-unmarked/ google scholar
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  • United Nations Security Council ResoLution, dated June 4, 1993, adopted by the Security Council at its 3228th meeting, http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/836 google scholar

The Genocide in Srebrenica from July 11-19, 1995, and the Aftermath of the Genocide

Year 2024, Volume: 1 Issue: 2, 134 - 152, 05.02.2025
https://doi.org/10.26650/hupej.2024.1.2.1551576

Abstract

In the final quarter of the 20th century, with the end of the Cold War, the conflict that took place in Bosnia between 1992 and 1995 represented one of the final chapters of suffering in the region since 1878 and marked a genocide unprecedented in human history. The world witnessed the genocide, which began in April 1992 with the outbreak of war in Bosnia and Herzegovina over a span of 3.5 years. Yet, much like the situation in Gaza today, nations that define themselves as members of the civilised world remained silent, indirectly supporting this atrocity. The genocide that commenced in Srebrenica on July 11, 1995, culmi7 nating in the massacre of over 8,000 men and boys within a week, was judged by an international judicial body—the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia—as if it were an isolated incident of genocide confined to Srebrenica. Tragically, the tribunal treated these crimes as individual offenses rather than state crimes, convicting those involved on various charges but failing to address the full scope of the atrocity. While the world was introduced to the genocide and crimes against humanity in Bosnia7 Herzegovina under the name of the Srebrenica Genocide, the Bosniak people continue to remember and hold fresh in their memories the inhumane crimes and genocide committed across all of Bosnia7 Herzegovina. The tribunal’s failure to address the extensive genocide perpetrated by Serbs, Montenegrins, and Croats over more than three years, without specifying any country, has left the conscience of the Bosniak people unsettled. Today, as you travel through Bosnia7Herzegovina, you can frequently see the inscription “Don’t Forget Srebrenica, 11 July 1995” on building walls, stones, and everywhere. The purpose of these inscriptions is to ensure that the suffering experienced is never forgotten by younger generations and to prevent such tragedies from occurring again in this region.

References

  • BIRN, Scores of Srebrenica Gravesites Remain Abondoned and Unmarked, Balkan Insight. https://balkaninsight.com/2021/07/09/ scores-of-srebrenica-gravesites-remain-abondoned-and-unmarked/ google scholar
  • Bose, Sumantra Bosnia After Dayton, Nationalist Partition and International Intervention, UK, 2002, google scholar
  • Burg, Steven, P. Shoup, The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina Ethnic Conflict and International Intervention, 2000, USA, google scholar
  • Çekiç, Smail, The Bosniak Genocide Legitimized by the Dayton Peace Agreement, Istanbul, Lutka Press, 2018, google scholar
  • Çikotiç Selmo, Security Prospectives of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo, BEMUST, 2010. google scholar
  • Gallagher Tom, The Balkans After the Cold War, London and New York, Routledge, 2003, google scholar
  • ICMP (2016), Srebrenica 21 Years On: Another 127 Victims Buried. International Commission on Missing Persons. https:/www.icmp.int/ news/srebrenica-21-years-on-another-127-victims-buried/ google scholar
  • ICTY (2021), Prosecuter vs. Radislav Krstiç, IT-98-33-T, Judgement. google scholar
  • International Commission on the Balkans, Unfinished Peace, Carnegie Endowment, New York, 1996, google scholar
  • Karçiç, Hikmet, Srebrenica: From the Siege to the Aftermath of Genocide, Bosnian Genocide Reader, Srebrenica Memorial Center, Potoçari, 2022. google scholar
  • Kempster Norman, Los Angeles Times, https://www.latimes.com/archieves/la-xpm-1995-08-11-mn-33948-story.html. google scholar
  • Krstic, Radislav. Judgement, Prosecutor v., Case No. IT-98-33-T, 2 August 2001, google scholar
  • Öner, N. Aslı Şirin. A Field Study on the Return of Bosnian Refugees After the Drama, IQ Culture and Art Publishing, Istanbul, 2013, google scholar
  • Owen, Robert C., Deliberate Force A Case Study in Effective Air Campaigning, Air University Press Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama-USA, 2000, p.53. google scholar
  • SmaiL Çekiç, The Bosniak Genocide Legitimized by the Dayton Peace Agreement, Istanbul, Lutka Press, 2018, pp.51-53. google scholar
  • Steven Burg, P. Shoup,The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina Ethnic Conflict and International Intervention, 2000, USA, pp. 211-212, google scholar
  • Suljagiç Emir, Srebrenica MCMXCV. Sarejevo: Vrijeme, 2017. google scholar
  • The Mladic Files: Mladic Entering Srebrenica-July 11, 1995, https://youtu.be/QflnjLNoT%204Qsi%20=2qU6%20Sw4uZHw o2-M (dated Sept 5, 2024) google scholar
  • Tom GaLLagher, The Balkans After the Cold War, London and New York, Routledge, 2003,pp.120. google scholar
  • United Nations Security Council ResoLution, dated June 4, 1993, adopted by the Security Council at its 3228th meeting, http://unscr.com/en/resolutions/836 google scholar
There are 20 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Security Studies
Journal Section Reviews
Authors

Alptekin Tartıcı 0000-0002-2864-9528

Publication Date February 5, 2025
Submission Date September 17, 2024
Acceptance Date January 13, 2025
Published in Issue Year 2024 Volume: 1 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Tartıcı, A. (2025). The Genocide in Srebrenica from July 11-19, 1995, and the Aftermath of the Genocide. Journal of Humanity, Peace and Justice, 1(2), 134-152. https://doi.org/10.26650/hupej.2024.1.2.1551576