https://rightsinfo.
org/bosnian-genocide-the-creation-of-a-new-normal/
Human Rights News, Views & Info
The Bosnian Genocide Created a Terrifying
New Normal That Must Never Happen
Again
By Laura McDonald
15th November 2017
In July 1995 there was a massacre. In the small mountain town of Srebrenica in Eastern
Bosnia Serb forces killed more than 8,000 Muslim men in just a few days.
The atrocity prompted international action to stop the ongoing war – but genocide never
happens overnight. In fact, the violence against the Bosnian Muslim community had been
underway since the start of the war in 1992.
It was part of a strategic plan of the Bosnian Serb leadership, who were determined to create
an ‘ethnically pure’ Greater Serbia. The final, shocking, culmination should not have come as
any surprise. In order to prevent genocide, we need to protect rights for everyone, at all times.
Disquiet Running Back to the First World War
Image
Credit: Public Domain / Wikimedia
Yugoslavia was created in 1918, at the end of the First World War, made up of what we now
know as Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro and
Macedonia. There were also two autonomous regions in Serbia: Kosovo and Vojvodina.
During World War II, Croatia was essentially a Nazi puppet state, ruled by a fascist militia
called the Ustaša. From 1941-1945 the Ustaša regime murdered hundreds of thousands of
Serbs, Roma and Jews. Bosnian Muslims were members of both the Ustaša and the resistance,
led by Marshal Tito.
Tito died in 1980. He had been the strongman holding the federation together. In the power
vacuum left by his death, elites scrambled to seize control, falling back on nationalist tropes to
bolster their positions and to distance themselves from the communist regime.
Bosnia and Herzegovina Before the Genocide
Image Credit:
Dennis Jarvis / Flickr
Unlike the other republics in Yugoslavia, Bosnia was not dominated by a single ethnic group.
In 1991, the population of Bosnia was 43.7 percent Muslim, 31.4 percent Serb and 17.3
percent Croat. Intermarriage between groups was common, and, especially in cities, people
from different ethnic groups lived closely together.
In June 1991, Slovenia and Croatia had declared independence from the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia. This was both a reaction to increasingly aggressive Serb nationalism and a
reflection of increasing nationalism in both Slovenia and Croatia since the mid-1980s. Bosnia
and Herzegovina also declared independence in April 1992. The war in Bosnia (1992-1995)
was part of the break up of Yugoslavia.
The Road to Genocide
Image
Credit: Tamas Varga / Flickr
As early as the 1980s, the Serbian leadership led an increasingly aggressive propaganda
campaign against Kosovar Albanians. It demonised them as an internal enemy, in pursuit of a
so-called ‘Greater Serbia’. By 1991, Serbian propaganda also begun to demonise other
groups.
In Bosnia, Bosnian Serbs were portrayed as victims, endangered by Bosnian Croats and
Bosnian Muslims. Bosnian Muslims were portrayed as violent fundamentalists, and stories
were spread of the extreme violence Bosnian Muslims were planning against Serbs.
In August 1991, a Serb paramilitary group took over a TV transmitter in Northern Bosnia.
From this time onwards, Bosnian Serbs living in many of the Serbian majority parts of Bosnia
no longer received TV or radio from Sarajevo. They were exclusively fed propaganda from
Serbian media.
At the same time, Bosnian Muslims and Croats were discriminated against in the workplace
and were removed from public office. In the army, for example, everyone had to swear an
oath of allegiance to the Serbian nationalists. This also removed moderate Serbs, unless they
swore allegiance too.
Bosnian Serbs established a parallel state within Bosnia and Herzegovina, with its own police
force. The army and police targeted Bosnian Muslims in predominantly Serb areas, and set up
checkpoints to harass and violate Bosnian Muslims.
Concentration Camps and Death
The Omarska
camp today. Image Credit: Lee Byrant / Flickr
From 1992 onwards, the Bosnian Serb leadership established concentration camps. Most of
the prisoners were Bosnian Muslims. They were routinely tortured and raped, and many were
killed. Outside the camps, Muslim Bosnians’ homes and villages were destroyed.
The massacre at Srebrenica, where 8,000 men were slaughtered, is the most infamous event of
the genocide in Bosnia. But this was the culmination of years of mass killing and degrading
treatment by Serbian forces of Bosnian Muslims.
By the end of the Bosnian War, more than 100,000 people had died, 20,000 were missing and
there were 2 million refugees.
Bosnia and Herzegovina today
Image
Credit: Tamas Varga / Flickr
Today, Bosnia, though at peace, remains divided along ethnic lines. Ethnic division was the
basis for the Dayton Agreement that ended the war.
Roy Gutman, the journalist who exposed the genocide, said that “no one could have imagined
… the atrocities against Muslims and Croat civilians for which the Serbs invented the
euphemism ‘ethnic cleansing’.”
But though the descent into killing was rapid, it was the result of the chipping away of
normality and safety, until a new normal was in place.
This piece is part of our #FightHateWithRights series and made possible by you through our
crowd funder. The documentary, which will be launched on November 16, tells the story of
three survivors of genocide.