I wish I was surprised:
As explained in this article from the Southeast Europe Times, the political leadership of RS is still willing to play games with the toxic legacy of its nationalist foundations. This is shameful, and yet another sign that the administrative division of Bosnia only strengthens nationalist extremists and institutionalizes ethnic divisions.
4 comments:
"Put your money where your mouth is" is what they say - if in nothing else, Dodik's honest about whose mouth speaks for him.
Hello Kirk
Hope you won't mind me posting about the Dutch Appeal Court announcing its decision tomororrow on the Hasan Nuhanovic and Mustafic family appeal against the District Court decision that the Netherlands wasn’t responsible for failing to protect their relatives when Dutchbat ordered them to leave the base at Potocari and handed them over to Mladic for execution. (The District Court decided that effective command and control of Dutchbat had passed from the Dutch to the UN. Hasan Nuhanovic and the Mustafics maintain that the Dutch were sidestepping the UN chain of command.)
English text of PR
Amsterdam/Sarajevo, 1 July 2011
RESPONSIBILITY FOR FAILURE TO PROTECT VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE AT SREBRENICA
The Dutch Appeal Court is due to deliver its judgment on the appeal filed by survivors of genocide in their civil action against the Dutch State at 10 a.m. on 5 July 2011 (at Paleis van Justitie, Prins Clauslaan 60, 2500 The Hague – 070-3813131)
At 10 a.m. on 5 July 2011 the Dutch Appeal Court will deliver its judgment on the appeal filed by Bosnian survivors of the Srebrenica genocide against a District Court ruling that the Netherlands did not fail in its duty of care to their relatives when they were handed over for execution by the Bosnian Serb Army forces commanded by General Ratko Mladic.
Hasan Nuhanovic, a United Nations interpreter who lost his father, mother and younger brother, and Mehida, Alma and Damir Mustafic, wife, daughter and son of an employee of the United Nations Protection Force, hold the Dutch state responsible for the failure of Dutch troops acting under a UN mandate to protect their family members murdered in July 1995.
They are challenging an initial finding by the District Court in The Hague that the United Nations was in effective command and control of the Dutch Battalion (“Dutchbat”) and responsible for the fate of refugees offered protection on the UN base at Potocari when the so-called UN “safe area” fell to the Bosnian Serb Army.
Dutch soldiers wearing U.N. blue helmets ordered Ibro, Nasiha and Muhamed Nuhanovic and Rizo Mustafic to leave the safety of the base where they were sheltering and watched on as women and young girls were taken away and raped and men and boys were separated from their families before being taken away for execution.
Hasan Nuhanovic and the Mustafic family allege that the Dutch government was responsible for the actions of the Dutchbat contingent. The plaintiffs’ lawyer, the international humanitarian law specialist Liesbeth Zegveld, argues that the Dutch government and the Dutch command within UNPROFOR were aware of the probable fate of the civilians they were handing over to General Mladic but were primarily concerned for the welfare of their own mission.
The District Court decided that Dutchbat were acting under the “command and control” of the United Nations, which claims absolute immunity from legal action. The plaintiffs in the civil action argue that evidence shows that the Dutch took decisions outside the United Nations chain of command.
Ratko Mladic, commander of the Bosnian Serb forces, is currently facing trial before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia on war crimes charges including genocide at Srebrenica.
Liesbeth Zegveld can be contacted by phone on +31 65 338 2877 and by e-mail at lzegveld@bohler.eu
Hasan Nuhanovic can be contacted by mobile phone on +31 62 695 2456 (3-7 July) or +387 61 738 528
Dutch Appeal Court decision today (5 July):
"The ruling said even though the Dutch soldiers were operating under a U.N mandate, they were under the "effective control" of top Dutch military and government officials in The Hague when they ordered hundreds of Muslim men and boys out of their compound.
The ruling said the three men [Ibro and Muhamed Nuhanovic, Rizo Mustafic] were among the last to be expelled and by that time the "Dutchbat" peacekeepers already had seen Bosnian Serb troops abusing Muslim men and boys and should have known they faced the real threat of being killed.
"Dutchbat should not have turned these men over to the Serbs," a summary of the judgment said."
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