Molim SVE srpske organizacije i pojedince u Kanadi i svetu da na dole navedene 
e-mail adrese posalju protestno pismo (donje sadrzine ili slicno) protiv 
predlozenog zakona kojim se u Kanadi obelzava secanje na "genocid" u 
Srebrenici....

Pisite:

Prime Minister of Canada <[email protected]>; M Harper <[email protected]>; 
[email protected]; [email protected], [email protected], Jason Kenney MP 
<[email protected]>; Ignatieff <[email protected]>; [email protected]; 
Bob Rae MP <[email protected]>; 

APPEAL TO PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA AND THE CANADIAN PARLIAMENT: NO TO THE 
SREBRENICA REMEMBRANCE DAY BILL.  
 
Dear Prime Minister and honorable Members of Parliament,
 
As concerned Canadian citizen, I call on you to seriously reconsider the plan 
to adopt a Bill Calling for a July 11th Srebrenica Remembrance Day .
The execution of Moslem prisoners in July of 1995, after Bosnian Serb forces 
took over Srebrenica, was a war crime, but it is by no means a paradigmatic 
event. Throughout the war period, 1992—1995, Serbian villages around Srebrenica 
were subjected to widespread and systematic attacks by Moslem military forces 
concentrated within the Srebrenica enclave. The fate of Srebrenica Serbs is but 
a microcosm of their wartime fate in Bosnia/Hercegovina as a whole. Serb 
inhabitants in the villages surrounding Srebrenica were murdered in the 
hundreds, abused, expelled, and kidnapped for ransom by Bosnian Muslims . 
 
 There is nothing to set one crime apart from the other, except that its 
commission was more condensed in time. In a vicious civil war, in which all 
sides commit crimes, all innocent victims are entitled to compassion but the 
victims of one ethnic group should have no special moral claim to unique 
recognition. Putting the suffering of one group on a pedestal necessarily 
derogates from the right of the other group – in this case Serbian 
non-combatants in the devastated villages surrounding the enclave of Srebrenica 
– to an equal measure of sympathy.
 
More importantly, what really happened in Srebrenica in July of 1995 is an 
issue that is still not settled, or why it occurred, and who was behind it. The 
accepted version of events, shaped mainly by war propaganda and hyperbolic 
media reports, is becoming increasingly obsolete because it is being vigorously 
questioned and reassessed by critical thinkers in the Western world. Much 
reliable information on these events is still unavailable and needs to be 
researched, but without it responsible conclusions on the nature and scope of 
the Srebrenica massacre cannot be drawn. Both the event’s alleged scope and its 
legal description as “genocide” are intensely in dispute. It would therefore be 
very unwise for Canada and its parliament to formally commit themselves to a 
version of events that is thin on evidence but long on moral and political 
implications that are extremely detrimental to Serbian people.
I am also troubled by the prospect of Canada and its parliament might accept 
the thesis that the massacre in Srebrenica, regrettable as it may be, amounts 
to “genocide.” That would unpardonably diminish genuine genocide as a 
phenomenon of the 20th century, of which the Holocaust of the Jewish people and 
the mass extermination campaigns against Armenians, Pontus Greeks, Assyrians, 
Kurds, Serbs and the Roma are some outstanding examples.
I am concerned that the politicisation of human suffering and the frivolous 
usage of the grave legal category of genocide greatly cheapens these important 
concepts and constitutes an undeserved insult to innocent victims of political 
violence everywhere in the world. 
For these reasons, I appeal to you to refrain from passing the Bill Calling for 
a July 11th Srebrenica Remembrance Day. 
 
[ vas potpis] 
 
Also read:
http://www.srebrenica-project.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=3&Itemid=4
---
http://www.srebrenica-project.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&layout=blog&id=16&Itemid=14

========================================================================= 
 Serbian victims
A chronicle of inhumanity and horror  
Throughout the war period, 1992—1995, Serbian villages around Srebrenica were 
subjected to widespread and systematic attacks by Moslem military forces 
concentrated within the Srebrenica enclave. The fate of Srebrenica Serbs is but 
a microcosm of their wartime fate in Bosnia/Hercegovina as a whole. Serb 
inhabitants in the villages surrounding Srebrenica were murdered in the 
hundreds, abused, expelled, and kidnapped for ransom and exchange. Most of the 
villages were torched after the personal property of their Serbian inhabitants 
had been pillaged. The attacks were indiscriminate and they targeted Serbs as 
such, without any attempt being made to determine the victims’ personal 
position vis-à-vis the ongoing conflict in Bosnia/Hercegovina or the level of 
threat to Muslim armed forces they might have represented. It is important to 
note that the Muslim civilian and military authorities conducting these 
operations out of Srebrenica did not operate
 independently, but were linked in the political and military chain of command 
to the Alija Izetbegovic regime in Sarajevo. That “government” publicly claimed 
to be “multi-ethnic” and “multi-cultural,” and many in the West were misled by 
intense propaganda to accept its claims at face value. But all the while that 
regime’s Srebrenica representatives were conducting a ruthless three-year 
pogrom in complete disregard of the fact that their targeted victims were 
peaceful peasants, indistinguishable from their Moslem neighbors except by the 
fact that they were Serb and Christian. This is probably a unique case where an 
internationally recognized “government” used its military instruments to 
conduct a carnage of inhabitants that, when addressing the international 
community, it duplicitously claimed as its own citizens. These witness 
statements, and others that we will soon add, will make it abundantly clear why 
Serbs in Bosnia/Hercegovina
 uncompromisingly insist on being masters of their own fate and why they are 
entitled to the Republic of Srpska as their safe heaven just as the Jewish 
people are entitled to Israel.   
Serbian witness statements I  [PDF - 1.10 MB]
Serbian witness statements II [PDF - 1.12 MB]   



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