JOVAN MIRILO FACES DEPORTATION
"I am sure I will have no chance to survive
if I have to return to Serbia."
if I have to return to Serbia."
Serbian writer Jovan Mirilo -- who earned respect for his role in uncovering the lost tape of the 1995 Srebrenica Genocide -- is facing deportation from Austria to Serbia.
According to Austrian Independent, Jovan stated that "his family and he had come to Austria after he had received death threats in Serbia." The reason he faces death threats is because "he had copied a video documenting the massacre and ensured it had reached the war-crimes tribunal in The Hague."
"I am sure I will have no chance to survive if I have to return to Serbia," he said.
According to Austrian Independent, Jovan stated that "his family and he had come to Austria after he had received death threats in Serbia." The reason he faces death threats is because "he had copied a video documenting the massacre and ensured it had reached the war-crimes tribunal in The Hague."
"I am sure I will have no chance to survive if I have to return to Serbia," he said.
How it all started? In April 1992 (more than three years before the Srebrenica massacre), Serb forces -- with logistical and military help from Serbia -- began a widespread campaign of brutal "ethnic cleansing" of the Bosniak [Bosnian Muslim] population of Eastern Bosnia. Thousands of Bosniak refugees flocked to Srebrenica. They were forced to live in the besieged enclave with little or no means of survival and under brutal Serb attacks. Many starved to death.
Serb Army stationed around Srebrenica never demilitarized, even though they were required to do so under the 1993 demilitarization agreement. In 1992 alone, approximately 100,000 Bosniaks had been expelled from their homes and at least 11,391 Bosniaks were killed by Serb forces in eastern Bosnia (source: Research & Documentation Centre in Sarajevo), while hundreds of Bosnian Muslim villages were destroyed around Srebrenica.
Serb forces stationed around Srebrenica constantly attacked neighbouring Bosniak villages and Srebrenica itself. They also bombarded Srebrenica from air with Serbian airplanes.
In July 1995 the Bosnian Serb army staged a brutal takeover of Srebrenica and its surrounding area, where they proceeded to perpetrate genocide. Bosnian Serb soldiers -- with military and logistical help from Serbia -- separated families, committed brutal rapes of many women and girls, and then forcibly expelled at least 20,000, while summarily executing 8,372 Bosniak men and teenage boys. Srebrenica genocide is remembered the worst atrocity in Europe since World War II.
Serb forces stationed around Srebrenica constantly attacked neighbouring Bosniak villages and Srebrenica itself. They also bombarded Srebrenica from air with Serbian airplanes.
In July 1995 the Bosnian Serb army staged a brutal takeover of Srebrenica and its surrounding area, where they proceeded to perpetrate genocide. Bosnian Serb soldiers -- with military and logistical help from Serbia -- separated families, committed brutal rapes of many women and girls, and then forcibly expelled at least 20,000, while summarily executing 8,372 Bosniak men and teenage boys. Srebrenica genocide is remembered the worst atrocity in Europe since World War II.
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