Photo: AP Bosnian women
walk among the tombstones during a funeral ceremony at the memorial center in
Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia, Thursday, July 11,
2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have begun arriving in Srebrenica
Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995 massacre and rebury
recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The victims’ bodies are
still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where Serbs had dumped them
in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims are buried each year on
the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near Srebrenica.
Mid.East NEWS
- SREBRENICA, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Hava Muhic stood Thursday above the
smallest pit in the cemetery, near her husband's grave. It was dug for her baby
girl - who was born and died here 18 years ago on the day of the worst massacre
Europe has seen since World War II.
Muhic's
baby is among the remains of 409 people recently identified after being found
in mass graves, who were reburied at the Potocari Memorial Center on the
anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre. This year's commemorations bring the
total of identified victims to 6,066. Another 2,306 remain missing.
Muhic
is burying the daughter she never had a chance to see or call by name. A simple
wooden marker above the little green coffin says: Newborn Muhic (father
Hajrudin) 11.07.1995 - the single date marking both birth and death.
Muhic
blames her child's death on the frantic rush to seek safety among U.N.
peacekeepers as Bosnian Serbs overran the town. A woman who helped her give
birth in the U.N. compound told her the girl was born with the umbilical cord
wrapped around her neck and that she was dead.
There
is no way to know whether the chaos of the day had anything to do with the
baby's death. One thing's certain, however: Muhic spent 18 years living with
the pain of not knowing where her baby girl was buried.
Back
then, Srebrenica was a U.N.-protected Muslim town in Bosnia besieged by Serb
forces throughout the country's 1992-95 war. Serb troops led by Gen. Ratko
Mladic broke into the enclave on July 11, 1995. That morning, some 30,000
Bosnian Muslims flocked to the U.N. military base in the town's Potocari suburb
seeking refuge.
Among
them was Muhic, then 24 - and nine months pregnant with her second child. Labor
pains took her breath away as she passed the gate of the U.N. base. One of the
peacekeepers told her she could enter the base's main building but said the
others would have to stay outside in the courtyard.
Muhic
recalled the moment after she learned her baby's fate. "Two men in uniform
came . . . They took my baby and put it in a box. They asked me for my personal
information and I gave it to them. They said they were taking the baby to bury
it."
Meanwhile,
Serb forces had also entered the U.N. compound unopposed by any of the hundreds
of frightened U.N Dutch soldiers. They began separating men from women. Over
the course of 5 days, they executed 8,372 men and boys.
A half
hour after she delivered the baby, Hava Muhic was told to get up and leave the
building. Still covered in blood, she climbed with other women into a truck
that drove them to safety. She did not know where her 5 year-old son or husband
were.
Years
later, she discovered that her husband Hajrudin, his two brothers and her
brother were among the thousands killed in the massacre, which the
International Court of Justice later defined as genocide. Mladic and former
Bosnian Serb president Radovan Karadzic are both now standing trial in front of
the U.N. war crimes tribunal for the Srebrenica genocide in Srebrenica and
other war crimes.
Muhic's
son survived. Now 23, he lives with her in southern France. Authorities spent
years trying to find a mass grave that Dutch soldiers reported digging inside
the base for Bosnian Muslims who died of natural causes during the carnage,
according to Amor Masovic, one of the directors of Bosnia's Missing Persons
Institute.
Forensic
experts searched several locations the soldiers pointed out, but could not find
any skeletons. "Eventually we obtained a photo the soldiers have taken of
the open grave with the little body in it," Masovic said. "By the
position of the light poles on the photo and some shades, we found the location
last year. There were five other bodies in the grave besides the baby's."
Srebrenica's
mayor Camil Durakovic believes the baby would have been alive today had Muhic
received normal medical care. "But it died because it was born under
unbearable circumstances and therefore it is a victim of genocide," he
said.
Hava
had a name for her daughter but she never had the chance to give it to her. She
has asked that it be engraved on the tiny white marble headstone that is to
replace the wooden one. "I will do all I can to have the name the mother
wanted for her child engraved on the baby's tombstone," said Durakovic.
"That is the least we can do for the mother."
So soon, Hava is likely to have the comfort of visiting a
grave where - instead of "Newborn" - the headstone reads:
"Fatima".
Photo: AP A Bosnian woman
cries near the coffin of her relative during a funeral ceremony at the memorial
center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia,
Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have begun
arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995
massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The
victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where
Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims
are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near
Srebrenica.
Photo: AP A Bosnian woman
cries during a funeral ceremony at the memorial center in Potocari, near
Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia, Thursday, July 11, 2013. People
from around Bosnia and abroad have begun arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to
commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995 massacre and rebury recently
identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The victims’ bodies are still
being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where Serbs had dumped them in an
attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims are buried each year on the
massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near Srebrenica.
Photo: AP A Bosnian woman
cries near the coffin of her relative during a funeral ceremony at the memorial
center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia,
Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have begun
arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995
massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The
victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where
Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims
are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near
Srebrenica.
Photo: AP A Bosnian woman
says prayers next to the coffin of a child during a funeral ceremony at the
memorial center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia,
Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have begun
arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995
massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The
victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where
Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims
are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near
Srebrenica.
Photo: AP Bosnian woman
Merima Nukic prays at the grave of her father during a funeral ceremony at the
memorial center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia,
Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have begun
arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the 1995
massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves. The
victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where
Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims
are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near
Srebrenica.
Photo: AP A Bosnian family
comfort a woman who cries over the coffin of her son during a funeral ceremony
at the memorial center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of Sarajevo,
Bosnia, Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad have
begun arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of the
1995 massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass graves.
The victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the area, where
Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime. Identified victims
are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a memorial cemetery near
Srebrenica.
Photo: AP A Bosnian woman
prays during a funeral ceremony at the memorial center in Potocari, near Srebrenica,
160 kms east of Sarajevo, Bosnia, Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around
Bosnia and abroad have begun arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate
18th anniversary of the 1995 massacre and rebury recently identified victims
exhumed from mass graves. The victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass
graves in the area, where Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the
crime. Identified victims are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at
a memorial cemetery near Srebrenica.
Photo: AP Bosnian woman
Merima Nukic searches for her father's grave among gravestones during a funeral
ceremony at the memorial center in Potocari, near Srebrenica, 160 kms east of
Sarajevo, Bosnia, Thursday, July 11, 2013. People from around Bosnia and abroad
have begun arriving in Srebrenica Thursday to commemorate 18th anniversary of
the 1995 massacre and rebury recently identified victims exhumed from mass
graves. The victims’ bodies are still being exhumed from mass graves in the
area, where Serbs had dumped them in an attempt to cover up the crime.
Identified victims are buried each year on the massacre’s anniversary at a
memorial cemetery near Srebrenica.
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