thepavlovictoday.com 
<https://thepavlovictoday.com/serbian-victims-of-bosnian-war-deliver-haunting-testimonies-at-the-un/>
  


Serbian Victims Of Bosnian War Deliver Haunting Testimonies At The UN


Ksenija Pavlovic McAteer

11–14 minutes

  _____  

On the eve of the United Nations General Assembly vote on the resolution 
addressing the Srebrenica genocide 
<https://thepavlovictoday.com/ambassador-marko-djuric-un-resolution-on-srebrenica-threatens-to-derail-essential-reconciliation-efforts-in-the-region/>
 , a panel presented testimonies from Serbian victims and witnesses of the 
Bosnian war. 

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, leading the diplomatic delegation in New 
York City, entered the room and greeted the guests. The event, organized by the 
Serbian mission to the UN, underscored the necessity of considering the 
perspective of the Serbian victims of war—a significant population in Bosnia 
and Herzegovina—regarding the draft UN resolution on Srebrenica that is slated 
for the vote on Thursday morning. 

🔺Special Report: Good morning from the UN where @predsednikrs 
<https://twitter.com/predsednikrs?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>  Vucic and the members 
of Serbian delegation host a panel featuring testimonies of victims and 
witnesses of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina 

—“We speak because they can not” pic.twitter.com/QkFyOZl9eh 
<https://t.co/QkFyOZl9eh> 

— Ksenija Pavlovic McAteer (@ksenijapavlovic) May 22, 2024 
<https://twitter.com/ksenijapavlovic/status/1793281861269045415?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw>
 

The one-and-a-half-hour event featured harrowing personal accounts, including 
two sisters choking back tears as they recounted how their childhoods were 
shattered by the war’s horrors in the 1990s. The Serbian victims of Bosnian war 
spoke on behalf of those who lost their families, the victims who, the panel 
said, were “ignored” by the resolution’s drafters.

Consul General of Chicago Damjan Jovic opened the event by asking all present 
to join in a moment of silence for the fallen Serbian victims who could not 
share their stories. Jovic noted that the UN resolution set for a vote on 
Thursday is “dividing us, instead of uniting us.”

The lineup included the Serbs now American citizens, living far from the 
suffering they endured during the civil war. Twenty-nine years after the fact, 
the UN Resolution on Srebrenica genocide according to those Serbs who spoke on 
the panel threatens to divide not only the people in the region, but also the 
international community.


Witness Dusanka Stanic: Why don’t we rape her, just for fun


Dusanka Stanic and her sister, survivors of a war camp in Bosnia, recounted 
their harrowing experiences from the war. Dusanka, then just eight years old, 
spent her formative years in the tranquility of Duvno village before the 
eruption of conflict in the former Yugoslavia. She painted an idyllic image of 
her village as a “magical place” where families of all ethnic backgrounds lived 
together in peace in the years leading up to the Bosnian war.

Everything changed on a gloom April morning when her school was abruptly 
canceled, and her mother stopped her from going outside to play with the 
Bosnian neighbor. The new rules were drawn overnight, marking a new normal, she 
recalled, plunging them in home confinement. 

Then one day, Dusanka recalled, a group of soldiers drove by in a black van 
showing up at their doors. She choked up with tears as she recounted the 
traumatic event of soldiers in black uniforms pointing a gun at her. As Dusanka 
was finding strength to continue speaking, members of press, and some of the UN 
diplomats were tearing up. 

Dusanka recalled how she and the members of her family were forcibly taken away 
to a war camp where some other Serbs they knew from the village were also held. 
“You too?” a member of the Serb family from their village asked them when he 
saw them. The food was scarce forcing the family to share one egg, a small 
slice of bread, and a piece of chicken among three people.

President of Serbia and the members of his delegation hold a moment of silence 
for the Serbian victims of war in Bosnia. 

Dusanka recalled that they were again taken away and separated from the men, 
saying their last goodbyes without knowing if they would ever meet again.

Dusanka’s recollections talk about being “hungry” and “scared” on a daily 
basis, accepting this as the state of play in her childhood, without knowing 
that other children elsewhere were not going through the horrors of war. Young 
Dusanka prayed every night for her family to survive.

She remembered one day in the village where she lived, facing two men coming in 
her direction and one of them saying, “Why don’t we rape her, just for fun.” 
She managed to run away and said she lived in fear “every day” since. 

In October 1995, her abode was attacked again, and her family escaped to open 
fields without food and shelter. “I was homeless and scared again,” she 
recounted.

Dusanka was eventually taken to safety by a Greek family. “Only later did I 
realize that this is not a normal way to grow up,” she shared. 

Despite the passage of time, her trauma remains palpable. Dusanka still suffers 
from night terrors. She has authored a book to share her story, hoping to 
ensure that the suffering of Serbian victims is not forgotten.

After Dusanka’s gripping testimony, a weighty silence settled over the room. 
The succeeding testimonies, delivered by individuals who bore witness of 
Bosnian war firsthand, painted a vivid and haunting portrait of their wartime 
ordeals. Some recounted tales of those who were raped and killed, while others 
shared the ongoing struggles of survivors grappling with profound health 
challenges, rendering them unable to walk. Svetlana Stanic, Dijana Ivanovic and 
Ranko Ristic gave their perspectives by taking about their wounds of war. 


Gregory Tosi: Equal justice for All


Attorney Gregory Tosi, upon the conclusion of the testimonies, addressed the 
members of the UN permanent missions. He said that the best way to determine 
the truth is “cross-examination” urging all present to scrutinize the 
testimonies of Serbian war victims until they are satisfied that their stories 
are not fabricated but truthful. 

Tosi implored UN members to uphold the principle of “equal justice” for all 
victims, cautioning against the resolution’s partial acknowledgment of a single 
ethnic group amidst Bosnia’s diverse stakeholders.

The resolution that will address “all victims,” Tosi maintained merits 
thoughtful consideration. He emphasized that there are 30,000 Serbian victims 
of war we never quite hear about. He told the UN member states that the draft 
of the UN resolution up for the vote on Thursday will “never make” the Serbian 
victims “part of the equation.” Tosi said that such oversight runs counter to 
the UN’s core principles, as this organization is supposed to stand for justice 
for all.

He said that the major stakeholders in Bosnia should have been consulted, 
including Serbs, Bosnians, and Croatians. However, the Serbs, as a major 
stakeholder, were not consulted, and this cannot assure the success of the 
resolution.

“How can you have success in a resolution when you are leaving out the major 
stakeholder?” he posed the question in front of the UN diplomatic corps.


Vucic: Serbia will never be silenced 


President Vucic spoke at the end. “The truth is not one-sided and has never 
been,” he said. On the eve of the possible adoption of the draft resolution, he 
reiterated that “Serbia will never be silenced,” or as he put it, “never be 
silent.” Speaking of the massacre that took place in Srebrenica, he noted that 
all who committed this war crime were indicted and prosecuted. The President of 
Serbia spoke of “individual responsibility” for the crimes committed and that 
the UN resolution on the Srebrenica genocide will create collective 
responsibility for all Serbs and all victims, including those who gave their 
testimonies.

Vučić spoke of all the Serbian population that lost their lives in the First 
and Second World Wars against Nazi Germany, underscoring the historical fact 
that no UN resolution on genocide was passed for Germany under Hitler.

He warned of “resentment, sorrow, and anger” that a resolution ignoring Serbian 
victims of war can bring to the region.

“Is this resolution going to unite people in Bosnia and the region? No,” he 
said.

Vučić said that he cannot “threaten and blackmail” the UN members not to vote 
like some “co-sponsors are doing,” but what he can do is call upon the UN “not 
to vote on this resolution and to create the conditions of inclusiveness and 
dialogue.”

Expressing grave concern over the potential repercussions of a resolution that 
disregards Serbian victims, Vucic warned of the resentment and division it 
could sow in the region. He called upon the UN to reconsider, urging 
inclusiveness and dialogue in the resolution process.

Revealing some details behind the scenes regarding the drafting of the UN 
resolution, Vucic said that the Serbian Permanent Representative to the UN 
wanted to discuss their concerns with Germany, but got no response. “You are 
going to face the resolution in a way that was going to be given to you,” the 
Serbian Permanent Representative to the UN was told.

He said that Serbia indeed is “small” but should be included in the process of 
bringing such important resolutions.

“Are you going to say that it was not genocide, the killing of millions of 
Serbs in the First and Second World Wars by the Nazis? What are you going to 
say about the different issues all around the world?” Vucic posed questions.

“Are you going to deny it when it does not suit you well?”

Concluding his remarks, Vucic said that Serbia will be paying once again “the 
biggest price” and asked for the UN to “reconsider” as it can “influence the 
future” not only in the region but in the rest of the world.

“We are not going to be silent. We will fight for the truth and no one will 
stop us,” he said. 

Serbia’s advocacy, coupled by the poignant testimonies of war victims, rests on 
a call for a “balanced approach” and the pursuit of equal justice for all 
affected by the war in Bosnia. 

The vote at the UN General Assembly is scheduled for 10 a.m. Thursday morning, 
heralding a historic moment for the Western Balkans region, scarred by civil 
strife three decades ago.

 

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