Serb refugees flee from Sarajevo Serbs from Sarajevo who managed to escape from their city by cargo plane at the beginning of the civil war during May and June in 1992. Serbs who remained in Sarajevo until the end of the war survived numerous crimes and tortures throughout the Sarajevo camps, and many of them were brutally killed by local Muslim criminals and members of the Muslim armed forces of ARBiH.
Funeral of two Sarajevo girls Milica Lalovic and Natasa Ucur During the armistice on the Sarajevo battlefield, on March 11, 1995, at around 3:00 PM, girls Milica Učur and Nataša Lalović were killed by sniper shots in Sarajevo's Rave Jankovića Street. The girls were killed at the place where they were playing. According to eyewitnesses and witnesses, the sniper who fired from the right side of Miljacka, from the "Loris" building, was a member of the Sarajevo 101st Brigade of the so-called RBiH Army, Sejo Piskić.
On-site investigation carried out by the police in the Muslim part of Sarajevo Photos from the on-site investigation carried out by the police in the Muslim part of Sarajevo. The victims in the picture are Stana Šehovac, Radomir Gojković, and the famous musician and artist Slobodan Samardžić, who were taken from their apartments, tortured and killed on May 14 or 15, 1992. Despite the fact that the police conducted an on-site investigation, they are still listed as missing. Authorities in Sarajevo, as in other cases, have so far refused to answer to families where the bodies of these war crimes victims are.
The body of Slobodan Samardzic famous musician from Sarajevo Slobodan Samardžić famous Sarajevo musician and artist was taken from his apartment together with Stana Šehovac and Radomir Braco Gojković. They were killed and tortured on May 14th or 15th in 1992. Despite on scene crime investigation by Muslim authorities, their bodies are still missing today.
Serb mother from Sarajevo on the sons grave Serb Melica Saric on 24 December 1995, mourns in Sarajevo while visiting the grave of her son Velimir who was Killed in October 1995 at the Nearby Front Line in Sarajevo Serb held Suburbs.
Kazani pit mass grave site Post-war exhumations of the Kazani killing site and mass graves in the Muslim-controlled part of Sarajevo. From this mass grave were exhumed citizens of Serb nationality who went missing during the war in this part of Sarajevo and certain politically ineligible citizens of other nationalities. Although the site was exhumed by the Muslim authorities in Sarajevo in late 1993, many victims who have been legally proven to have been tortured, killed, and exhumed are still listed as missing.
Serbs exhuming their relatives while leaving Sarajevo After the signing of the Dayton Peace Agreement when Muslims were awarded with most of the territory of the Sarajevo city, Serbs decided to leave the city in fear for their lives. They also decided to dig up their dead and cart away their remains.
Silos in Tarcin - The last concentration camp in Europe Silos was a concentration camp operated by theMuslim Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ARBiH) during the war. It was centered around a windowless grain silo, it was used to detain Serbs, and to a lesser extent Croats, civilians between 1992 and 1996. The camp was located in the village of Tarčin, near the town of Hadžići, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) west of Sarajevo.
Serbs leaving Sarajevo after the Dayton Agreement The emigration of Serbs from Sarajevo began after the signing of the Dayton Agreement, when the five Serbian municipalities of Ilijas, Vogosca, Ilidza, Hadzici and Novo Sarajevo belonged to the Muslim side, and lasted for several weeks. Sarajevo Golgotha is the name for the mass emigration of the Serb population, about 150,000 Serbs, from the eastern parts of Sarajevo, which began in mid-February 1996 and lasted until March 1996.
Sarajevo landfill mass grave The main city landfill in Sarajevo is the largest mass grave of Serbian citizens who disappeared in the part of the city under Muslim control. At the same time, this is probably the most complex exhumation done in BiH. After the skeletal remains of a person who died in December 1994 were found at a depth of 27 meters in 2013, after several months of digging, the exhumation was forcibly stopped. To this day, there is a struggle between the political forces that are trying to stop the exhumation forever and the families of the missing Serbs in the city of Sarajevo.
Lav cemetery mass grave in Sarajevo Post-war exhumations of mass grave Lav in the Muslim-controlled part of Sarajevo. In this grave were exhumed citizens of Serb nationality who went missing during the war in this part of Sarajevo. Politically ineligible citizens of other nationalities were sometimes found in them as well.