Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Introduction -- After Nuremberg… -- The Background to Srebrenica -- United Nations War Crimes Tribunal: at The Hague July 1996 -- Rule 61: The Voice of the victims -- Ex-Yugoslavia: The Facts --...
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Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Introduction -- After Nuremberg… -- The Background to Srebrenica -- United Nations War Crimes Tribunal: at The Hague July 1996 -- Rule 61: The Voice of the victims -- Ex-Yugoslavia: The Facts -- Ex-Yugoslavia: The People and organisations -- Biographical notes (as at July 1996) -- Srebrenica -- Characters -- Ruez -- Karremans -- Groenewegen -- Drazen Erdemovic -- Appendix: From the evidence of Witness A -- The Reactions to Srebrenica -- A 'Parish-pump holocaust' -- Two eye-witness accounts of mass graves in Brcko, Bosnia -- A Conflict of interest -- Who cares as judgement falls on Serb hell camp? -- 'To bury my brothers' bones' -- Bosnia war crimes judge condemns half-hearted West -- The sentencing of Drazen Erdemovic -- The Srebrenica question -- Bosnian Serb panel links 17,000 to roles in Srebrenica massacre
In July 1995, Bosnian-Serb forces took over the UN-protected enclave of Srebrenica. The atrocities against Bosnian Muslims that followed have been compared to those of the Second World War. The next July in the Hague, as part of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic -- Bosnian-Serb President and Army Commander respectively -- were accused of war crimes. Drawing on the verbatim text of the hearings, Nicolas Kent has produced an account of the events in Srebrenica which is gripping and horrifying in equal measure