Essay On The Bosnian Genocide

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Brenda Katten who is the chairman of the Zionist Federation said that, “As Jews, we are quite horrified at what is going on: we lost a lot of our people in the 1930s because the gates were closed on us- What is sad, is that we don’t learn from our history.” (3) This seems to be the recurring theme about genocides: They happen and are an immense tragedy but yet they continue to happen throughout time and all over the world. In the Bosnian genocide in 1992-1998, another group was was exterminate by a group for specific reasons. In this case, an estimated 200,000 Bosnian civilians were killed (2) by Serbians. But all of this conflict can be traced back to the resolutions which transpired at the end of the second world war. (1) After Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia, and Croatia became apart of Federal People’s Republic of Yugoslavia, when the Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito died in 1980, the union between the several countries under the Yugoslav power seemed to be threatened to separate. When a Serbian leader, Slobodan Milosevic provoked a dissatisfaction between Serbians in Bosnia and Croatia and their Bosnian and Croatian neighbors, lead to an insuming war. When Milosevic was elected president of the republic of Serbia in 1989, an oncoming movement violent uprisings of several Serb nationalist political parties in neighboring Croatia. These events frightened the other members of Federal People’s Republic of Yugoslavia, which lead to their uncertainty towards the future of the republic that had just recently been established. As fears engulfed many civilians, a large population of non Bosnian Serbians began to not only boycott the voting of Milosevic, but urge others to take similar measures in March of 1992. These actions lead to the sec... ... middle of paper ... ...riminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) charged more than 160 people who committed crimes in the former country of Yugoslavia. Milosevic was charged and was his own lawyer but due to his deteriorating health levels, the trials were continuously delayed until he was found head in his prison cell in 2006, which was 4 years after he was first charged with one count of genocide, one count of complicity with genocide, and an additional 27 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity (5) There were some convictions to people who took part in the crimes, but the leader of the movement never actually faced repercussions for his illegal acts. Also, the political leader of the Bosnian Serbs, Karadzic, and the general of the Army, Mladic, have been under indictment for their affiliation with the war crimes but have yet to be arrested for these same acts. (4,5)

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