Bosnian Muslims in Sarajevo celebrate news of the arrest
The news has not yet filtered through to everyone in Srebrenica, the village where 8000 Muslim men and boys fell victim to genocide in 1995. Avdo Purkovic works at the only hotel in Srebrenica. He says he could not believe his ears when he heard on Tuesday morning that Radovan Karadzic had been caught.
"Has he been arrested? Really? I didn't know that, I just woke up. That's good, excellent. It comes to me as a little bit of a shock. I'd be more happy if he [former general Ratko Mladic] was arrested than Karadzic, but both of them have done horrible things."
Mladic
Most Bosnians see Ratko Mladic as the one who was responsible for the siege and taking of Srebrenica.
"It would be good if Mladic also had to stand trial, but if that does not happen he will receive his punishment anyway, whether in this life or the next."
Avdo Purkovic is not afraid that the arrest of Karadzic will lead to unrest in Srebrenica. There are about as many Serbians in the village as Muslims. He thinks that many Serbians will be angry now that Mr Karadzic has been arrested; they still see him as a hero, but they will not go into the road and cause trouble.
Better to leave
Inesa Jasarevic's mother is less certain of that. Inesa lives in the Netherlands, but she is on holiday with her grandparents in Bratunac, a village not far from Srebrenica. She heard the news about Radovan Karadzic's arrest late at night, through a text message on her telephone. She first thought someone was having her on. But when she came downstairs to breakfast with her grandparents, she heard that it was really true.
|
|
"My grandfather and grandmother are talking about this in a very low voice, so the neighbours won't hear anything,"
Inesa says. Her mother called from the Netherlands, imploring her to leave the village, in case of angry reactions from Serbians in the village. But Inesa says there is no trace of any outbursts, and it is actually very quiet outside. Yet she and her grandparents will be leaving Bratunac soon.
Too late
Someone who hardly reacts to the news about Radovan Karadzic is Hasan Nuhanovic. When the mass murder in Srebrenica happened, he was working as an interpreter for the Dutchbat forces who had to protect the enclave against the the Bosnian Serbs. He has taken the Dutch state to court. His father and brother were sent away from Srebrenica by Dutch Major Franken when the enclave fell. It has never become clear what happened to them after that.
Mr Nuhanovic says the Dutch state has offered insufficient protection. Radovan Karadzic, he thinks, is only part of the problem.
"There are literally thousands of war crirminals still at large in Bosnia. They live in our neighbourhood and they also have to be arrested. This arrest came thirteen years late! Listen, this man means nothing to me to be honest. There will never be satisfaction for me or other Srebrenica genocide survivors. We will have to live with our pain until the end of our lives."
* RNW translation (rk)
|
Do you want to react to this report? |
| More... |
| • about the ICTY |
| • about International Justice |
Tags: Boris Tadic, Bosnia, ICTY, Radovan Karadzic, Ratko Mladic, Serbia, Srebrenica, The Hague, war crimes
