Our initial foray into Bosnia early in our trip (January
2018), to a town called Banja Luka in the northern part of the country, was
purely coincidental. John made a purchase while we were in Zagreb, Croatia and
wanted to make the most of the tax rebate available to foreigners. To do that
we needed to leave the EU. Bosnia, around 2 hours away, was the closest border.
We would never have considered Bosnia as a destination otherwise. I still had
vivid memories of a country at war featured in the daily news in the 90s. I
wasn’t even quite sure if the war was over. So we hired another rental car from
Zagreb (insurance for the car we had was not covered for travel into Bosnia)
and left our original rental car in the car park while we made the day trip to
Banja Luka, Bosnia.
Crossing the border into Bosnia was like entering another
world. Dilapidated and abandoned homes, occupied homes and buildings that
looked like they were still under construction (by Australian standards),
cigarette smoke everywhere… I mean everywhere – in enclosed cafes, bars, petrol
stations. Bosnians love their cigarettes to a level I hadn’t seen since the
80s. What was palpable just driving through the country side to get to Banja
Luka was the sense that this place had been through a war, a war had hindered
their economic progress. I had read that mines were still prevalent around
Bosnia and wandering through abandoned buildings and uncleared paths was not
advisable. I couldn’t help but wonder how many of the fields and abandoned
buildings we were passing still had mines in them.
It was only a day trip so we didn’t get to see much of the
place except to get the initial impression that this was a completely different
world – different to its neighbouring Zagreb and vastly different to all the
other (mostly Western and Central) European countries we had been to. It was
clear that the prosperity and progress of this country’s European neighbours
didn’t extend across the borders. It was enough to make me want to come back
and learn more about what happened here. We had to come back.
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Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, Banja Luka - Serbian Orthodox Cathedral |
We arrived in Sarajevo, Bosnia towards the end of July –
seven months after our initial visit. We travelled from Split, Croatia and made
our way inland to the Bosnian capital. Driving closer to the capital was a bit
eerie as we passed outlying towns that looked ‘normal’ but had buildings
pock-marked with bullet holes and shrapnel marks. Despite the poorly finished cement
exterior on many of the buildings, the only reason I recognised them as such
was because I had seen them before – on office buildings after a coup de etat
took place in Makati, Philippines when gunfire had been exchanged between
government and rebel troops in the middle of the Central Business District.
That was back in the early 90s, just a few years before the Bosnian War.
We arrived in the centre of Sarajevo late at night and it
looked liked any big city. Bright lights, tall well-constructed glass
buildings, lots of cars. “This place seems to have recovered well”, I thought
to myself. It was a far cry from the abandoned and ruined buildings we had
passed on our way in. I later found out that was the area known as “Sniper
Alley” – a main boulevard running through the city centre that was notorious
for people getting killed by snipers during the Siege of Sarajevo. When we
later went up to the mountains surrounding Sarajevo, it was easy to see why
with a clear line of sight to the area. We also later realised that “Sniper
Alley” is a misnomber. The reality was that any street in Sarajevo at the time
was a sniper alley.
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Walking along Sniper Alley today - the infamous Holiday Inn building housing foreign journalists on the left (yellow building). Sniper Alley is more a Boulevard than an actual alley. |
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View of the previous Holiday Inn - the only building left standing in what was known as Sniper Alley during the Seige of Sarajevo (foreground photo). It was where foreign journalists were housed during the war hence off limits to the bombing all around. |
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The Executive Council Building - the Centre of government for Bosnia and Herzegovina - as it stands today. Photo in foreground shows it burning after it was hit by Serbian tank fire signalling an official act of war against the city. |
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Building on left riddled with shrapnel 'scars' - typical of many old buildings around Sarajevo. New glass building is part of the reconstruction after the war.
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Facade of a building riddled with shrapnel marks and sniper bullet holes. A typical site around Sarajevo. |
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Building on right with rebuilt exposed red brick shows where the shell landed and exploded. Spray of shrapnel marks still visible on the neighbouring building on the left. A typical site around Sarajevo. |
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Sarajevo Memorial for Children killed during the Seige of Sarajevo. The cylinders have names of children who were innocent victims of sniper fire or mortar blasts. Not a a comprehensive list of names. |
Then we met Jasmin (pronounced Yasmin).
Jasmin was part of the Bosnian Army fighting against the
invasion of the Bosnian Serbs during the Siege of Sarajevo. I had stumbled on a
blog online about his son’s business. His son, who goes by the name 01 online,
runs The War Hostel in Sarajevo and offers various tours to share their story
with all those who care to listen and who want to experience what it was like
living in Sarajevo during the war (1992-1995). We had to meet these people!
After a quick exchange of emails we managed to get a booking for the next day.
The next morning, we made our way to the address we had been
given. It was a 15-minute walk from the apartment to an area we were roughly
familiar with having walked around the city the day before. We rang the
doorbell and a voice on the intercom said they would be out soon. Slowly people
started emerging from the door – guests from The War Hostel that had modest
signage and simply looked like someone’s home. First a fellow Australian from
Sydney, who turned out to be a cop, then a newly married English couple on
their honeymoon. Then there was the 5 of us. After a few minutes of getting
acquainted a rickety old van pulled up the driveway and we were introduced to
Jasmin, an older gentleman in his 50s. We were told he would be taking us on
the tour today because 01 had injured himself and couldn’t do the walk.
I had read about Jasmin so I already knew who he was,
silently pleased with our luck. He was going to guide us through the enemy
frontlines on Mount Trebevic and take us to his old frontline bunker.
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Waiting outside The War Hostel - Jasmin's home at the foot of Mount Trebevic where he and his wife and baby (01) lived during the Seige of Sarajevo.
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Inside The War Hostel. News clippings from media coverage about the Seige of Sarajevo decorate the wall. |
We all squeezed into Jasmin’s rickety old van and made our
way backwards down the driveway. We were still getting over the novelty of
squeezing in over capacity and not having to wear seatbelts when Jasmin broke
the jovial mood. He pointed to a “Sarajevo Rose” on the road we had just passed
no further than 200 metres from his house (The War Hostel is the family home).
A mortar shell had landed on that spot killing people as they waited in line to
collect water from the nearby Sarajevski beer factory as all supplies to the
city had been choked off by the Bosnian Serbs. Luckily the beer factory had its
own water source from a natural spring so it became a lifeline for Sarajevans. One
of those killed by the mortar was a 17-year old boy and to this day, Jasmin
tells us, his mother blames herself for his death because she sent him to get
the water.
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One of the 'Sarajevo Roses' around the city. Pavement markings where a mortar shell had landed causing casualties. They are filled with red resin to commemorate the deaths. There are several marked around the streets of Sarajevo. This particular one was the one that landed at the Markale (market) causing the most casualties garnering attention of the international community. |
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The beer factory that served as a lifeline for the people of Sarajevo when Bosnian Serbs had cut off the city from all supplies - including water. The beer factory had it's own source of water - a spring that ran underneath it - so people had access to water to survive during the Seige. |
We quickly started making our way up the winding steep and
narrow roads of the mountains surrounding Sarajevo marvelling at Jasmin’s skill
manoeuvring his old van through and up the streets. We stopped at an abandoned
structure that was clearly destroyed by war and was now overrun by plants and
graffiti. Jasmin motioned for all of us to get out and led us into the
abandoned building that was once a hotel and restaurant with a great view over
Sarajevo. Of course a great view over the city for guests means a great view
for snipers as well. We could see “Sniper Alley” in the distance quite clearly.
Bosnian Serbs had taken over this hotel loading it with machine guns and setting
up several sniper stations on its rooftop. At one point, we were told, they had
even hired a female Olympic sharp shooter from a neighbouring eastern European
country paying 500 German Marks per kill. She wasn’t the only one who was paid.
This was the incentive that was being offered to get the best snipers,
especially during the early years of the Siege, and when money ran out snipers
would do the job voluntarily. Serbs from neighbouring Montenegro and Serbia were
said to be coming into Sarajevo on weekends to help their ‘brothers’ in the war
for a Greater Serbia returning to their day jobs during the week.
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View over Sarajevo from what was once a hotel and restaurant. Bosnian Serbs took over this building to set up snipers on the rooftop. |
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Walking through the ruins of the bombed out hotel and restaurant. One of the many sniper posts used by Bosnian Serbs surrounding Sarajevo. |
We piled back in the van and made our way up the winding
mountain roads until we were stopped by road work. Jasmin turned to us asking
if we were willing to walk the rest of the way. “How far?”, the Aussie cop
asked. “Oh far… yes far”, replied Jasmin as he mentally envisioned where he
planned to take us. What the heck. We were here. Of course we were willing to
walk. Besides, walking gives us more opportunity to talk.
Jasmin told us stories of how his commanding officer would
order them to keep advancing the front line to push the invading Bosnian Serbs
back, all from the safety and comfort of his party den surrounded by alcohol
and women. Jasmin wasn’t fond of him and while his English wasn’t very good, it
was certainly good enough to call this guy a few names in the English
vernacular.
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Walking and talking with Jasmin about his experience during the Seige of Sarajevo. |
Jasmin is a funny guy. He had been through a lot but
managed to keep his sense of humour making us laugh at things that really
shouldn’t have been funny at all. He told us about a running joke they had
about NATO officers coming in (when they finally decided to intervene) giving
the Bosnian Serbs one hour to pack up and get out. He said one hour was way too
long. All they would’ve needed was a minute. Then there was the time when he
and his senior officer, a good friend, decided to go out and climb cherry trees
and pick cherries to take home to their families. They were both high up in the
tree when Jasmin heard sniper bullets hitting the ground and trees around him.
Realising they had been spotted by a sniper from a neighbouring bunker, he slid
down the tree as fast as he could getting his arms scraped and bloodied in the
process. Meanwhile, his friend, who had damaged hearing, did not hear the
sniper fire and continued to happily pick cherries at the top. In a panic, Jasmin
tried to get his friend’s attention. His friend finally looked down and saw
Jasmin on the ground frantically motioning for him to get down. “Jasmin!
Someone’s shooting at us??!”, his friend asks. “Yes!!”, Jasmin confirms. “Oh my
god. Someone just shoot him already!”, he thinks to himself jokingly.
Then
there was the time during a supposed ceasefire when Jasmin was out walking on a
riverbank in Sarajevo. To his right was a 6-metre high wall, and to his left
was an equally high drop. As he walked along this path, a sniper started
shooting at the path in front of him. As he retreated, the sniper would shoot
behind him, teasing him and taunting him but not actually shooting him. Jasmin
ran to safety and managed to find cover, sticking his hand out one last time to
give the sniper the middle finger. Silently, he thanked the sniper who could’ve
easily killed him in that moment.
Jasmin was not a fighter but he was forced to fight. He
fought to keep his city safe, to keep his family safe. He fought, they fought,
for their lives. He didn’t like what was happening. He hated that he had to
fight with people who were once his friends. Neighbours who had suddenly turned
on each other. He told us about someone he knew from school who fought for the
Serbs and whom he managed to see several years after the war. This person
apologised and blamed the government for making them turn on their fellow
Sarajevans then held out his hand in peace which Jasmin accepted. Then there
was Jasmin’s good friend, someone who he went through primary school with, sat
next to in school for many years. He hasn’t spoken to him. He doesn’t quite
have the energy to call him yet, says Jasmin. Understandably, the wound still
runs deep on that one. He told us how nights spent in the trenches were so
filled with fear that the simple sound of rustling in the scrub would set off
an exchange of gunfire in case it was the enemy creeping up on them. He showed
us how they would fire their guns holding it above their heads blindly aiming
it at the direction of the Bosnian Serbs, while they stayed ducked below in the
trenches. “Everybody’s scared”, he told us. “If you aren’t scared, you’re
crazy. You get killed.” He went on to tell us about his cousin who grabbed a
machine gun and ran up the hill shooting at the Bosnian Serbs in anger. He
ended up with a rocket through his chest. All that was left of him for the
family to bury was 10 kilos of his remains.
Bravery on the battlefield is also something you could not
predict according to Jasmin. “You can never tell”, he reflected. The biggest,
fittest men sometimes ended up in tears consumed by fear and mental anguish.
Then he told us about a 17-year old Sarajevan girl who took control of one of
the main machine guns in their section of the mountain. Perched on a hill it
would’ve been quite exposed yet she got behind it and continued firing towards
the Bosnian Serbs and didn’t stop. She controlled the gun while another person
was with her loading the ammunition. Everyone else took cover fearful of
Bosnian Serb retaliation. She was later awarded a medal for her bravery. A
medal which she reportedly ‘threw on the ground’ when they refused to admit her
into the frontline because she was female.
We stuck to paved roads for most of the way until Jasmin led
us through an unmarked path through the scrub. I knew about the dangers of
venturing out on these ‘unmarked paths’ due to unexploded mines… “Jasmin, are
you sure about this??”, I asked nervously. “Stay in one line kids! Make sure
you follow in his footsteps (literally) and don’t veer off the path!”, I
instruct the kids. Further ahead Jasmin stops and turns to face us indicating
for us not to go beyond the rock behind him. Around 2 metres in front of us was
a sign warning of the dangers of uncleared mines below. It was a bit surreal
standing there, imagining that just 2 metres beyond where we stood, we could
get blown up by a land mine. I thought back to bushwalking in Australia. Land
mines would not even be a consideration. Getting bitten by a deadly snake or
spider? Sure… but getting blown up by a landmine?? Yet here we were, on a
mountainside overlooking Sarajevo, where many people seem to wander around on
their own, where the Winter Olympics were held in 1984, and there are still
landmines. Early in the war, many Sarajevans and members of the Bosnian Army
were killed with landmines as they advanced on the Serbs unaware of them. Later
on, they would advance in single file with one person checking the path for
mines and the rest to follow using the cleared path.
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Red sign warns not to proceed further due to active land mines still prevalent in the mountains surrounding Sarajevo. |
Back on the paved road Jasmin would occasionally stop and
point out Serbian trenches that were barely visible under the overgrown grass
and shrubs. We were walking in what was the Bosnian Serb front line territory.
He then stopped at a particular spot on the road and pointed out where he and
his group had managed to penetrate the Serbian front line. His friend, who was
the ‘front man’ leading the group through the minefields had been shot and
killed there. He had led the group safely up the side of the mountain through
the 1st and 2nd frontlines up to the side of the road only
to be shot by a sniper from up above as he emerged.
We continued on and followed Jasmin into the scrub, this
time having to climb up the steep embankment, grabbing on tree branches for
leverage. Every time we would leave the road onto one of these ‘unmarked paths’
my nerves would start up. We met this man less than 2 hours ago and we were now
following him through minefields. “Jasmin, our lives are in your hands”, I said
a bit over dramatically. Meanwhile the kids seemed to enjoy this adventure,
walking through shrubs and overgrown grass. The prospect of stepping on a
landmine didn’t seem to faze them. We were now standing over what was a Serbian
bunker – rotted planks of wood collapsed into the hole. An old Yugoslav army
uniform was left strewn over the top. I was dubious about the authenticity of
that uniform having lasted in that spot for over 25 years but was assured that
it had been left there as is.
About 50 metres away through more scrub was another Serbian
bunker. Jasmin showed us these bunkers so we could get a sense of how
entrenched the Serbs were in the mountains surrounding Sarajevo. Every 50
metres or so were bunkers with machine guns and snipers overlooking the land
below them… all around Sarajevo. This was the 3rd Serbian frontline
Jasmin explained to us. Beyond this further up the mountain was the Serbian
base. Further down the mountain towards Sarajevo were the 1st and 2nd
frontlines.
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Following Jasmin as he led us through the scrub single file towards the land mines and former Bosnian Serb bunkers. |
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Going "off road" and climbing up the embankment to get to former Bosnian Serb bunkers. |
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One of several Bosnian Serb bunkers dug well into the mountainside. This one had a former Yugoslav military jacket strewn over the top. |
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Another Bosnian Serb bunker. |
Back on the paved road walking and talking. Jasmin told us
about the difficulties they had at the start of the war with people in the
front line with no weapons. People were arming themselves with improvised
cocktail bombs, knives, hunting rifles, hand guns and whatever else they could
find to defend their city. The Bosnian Army was ill-equipped and no match for the resources of
virtually the entire Yugoslav army backed by the Serbs. When the ‘Tunnel of
Hope’ was opened in the 2nd year of the war, more guns made it to
the frontline. Apparently ‘aid packs’ that were air dropped also contained few
arms so the Sarajevans could defend themselves – until an aid pack accidentally
landed behind the Bosnian Serb frontline causing international tension when Bosnian Serbs accused the international community of interfering with a 'domestic' matter.
Shortly we found ourselves approaching the abandoned 1984 Winter
Olympics Bob Sled track. “Do you want to walk on the track?” It’s about 1.5
kms.”, Jasmin asked. No one seemed to be sure what they wanted to do. “C’mon.
Let’s walk on the track.”, Jasmin declared jumping down onto the concrete
surface below. We all followed. I walked along the track taking my time,
marvelling at what once would’ve been an Olympic track that was now decaying
and covered in graffiti. I wish I had known to look out for the holes in the
concrete made by Serbian troops who used that track as a natural bunker and
stuck machine guns through the holes. Jasmin only told us this after we walked
through the tracks when we were looking at it from the outside – from what
would have been the point of view of the Bosnian Army. He doesn’t normally like
walking on the track he told us. This was the 2nd Serbian frontline.
Perhaps it was the thought that these tracks were used as shelter to kill many
of his friends. Perhaps something happened here that he wasn’t ready to share.
Looking at this huge, sturdy concrete structure in front of us it was easy to
see how this place could bring back bad memories. I bet the Olympic Committee
never thought their bob sled track would be used that way.
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Walking along the abandoned Olympic Bob Sled track |
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Looking at the Bob Sled track from the outside - a concrete wall that Bosnian Serbs used as protection. Holes were drilled into the concrete so machine guns could be slotted through and they could fire at advancing Bosnian troops.
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We had now walked down the mountainside through the bob sled
track and continued walking down through scrub until we reached a point which
Jasmin identified as the 1st Serbian frontline. The closest point
the Bosnian Serbs had made to Sarajevo in the valley down below. Further ahead,
he explained, was what was known as ‘no man’s land’ – the gap between the two
opposing forces, between the invading Bosnian Serbs and the Sarajevans protecting
their homes. ‘No man’s land’ was riddled with land mines and fraught with
danger, Jasmin explained, followed immediately by “C’mon. Let’s walk through no
man’s land”.
As we made it through the clearing Jasmin pointed to what
was then part of the Bosnian Army frontline protecting Sarajevo – two high
points in the landscape ahead of us. Further along he took us to his frontline
position, his bunker where he had spent many nights on end through heat, rain,
and snow. This was his ‘home’. He knew this area well. He explained how the
bunker was set up with remnants of United Nations marked tarps still visible.
This is where he was stationed, as a 29-year old, throughout the war making his
way through the trenches installing and repairing communication cables
providing communications capability between bunkers and the base in Sarajevo below.
There were 700 men in his group, all working in rotation day and night, keeping
the Bosnian Serbs away from Sarajevo. Men, women and children who couldn’t be
in the front line, helped with preparing and delivering meals and supplies to
those who were in the front line. All around the mountains surrounding Sarajevo
were similar set-ups. They functioned like this for 3 years, all while Bosnian
Serbs continued to shell Sarajevo dropping hundreds, if not thousands, of
mortar shells onto the city daily – a city that simply wouldn’t give up the
fight.
It was at his old bunker where Jasmin shared his parting
message with us – make love, not war. No more. For someone who fought during
the war and would’ve had every reason to stay angry and bitter, he had a quiet
and sensitive nature about him.
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Descending the mountain towards the Bosnian front line where Jasmin was positioned. From here they protected Sarajevo in the valley below from the Bosnian Serbs positioned in the mountains up above. |
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Bosnian frontline where they positioned themselves protecting Sarajevo in the valley behind them. Mountains surrounding the city all had a similar set-up with Bosnian forces protecting Sarajevo from the advancing Bosnian Serbs positioned higher up in the mountains. The city sits at the base of a 'bowl' making it easy to be surrounded by invading forces and cut-off from supplies. |
This was the end of our tour as we made our way back to his
van parked at the top of the mountain. I walked back quietly trying to absorb
everything I had just seen and heard. My
head was spinning and I was exhausted – physically and mentally. What was supposed
to be a 2.5-hour walking tour had pushed out to 5 hours because of the extra
walk due to road work. It was an intense 5 hours hearing first-hand about
someone’s traumatic experience of war. I have no doubt that for Jasmin to be
able to tell his story is a benefit to him and his healing as it was to us.
We made our way back to Jasmin’s home stopping by the
supermarket to buy bags of sugar. “My wife needs it for her lemonade stall”, he
explains. Jasmin’s wife is an intelligent and talented woman who used to write
books for blind children. This was her old life. Today she owns and runs an ice
cream and lemonade stall outside their family home which is strategically
located along the path of the newly opened cable cars heading up to Mount Trebevic.
She’s happier now, Jasmin tells me, but I sense a tinge of sadness and regret
when he says this. As if he feels she’s not living her true potential.
We all ordered a lemonade from her happy to quench our
thirst after the long walk and support their newly opened business. We said our
goodbyes thanking Jasmin’s family for sharing their story. As we were doing so
01, who would’ve been a baby during the war, turns to the kids and tells them
“For me, Australia is the dream. Never take what you have for granted.”
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Stopping for refreshments at Jasmin's wife's lemonade and ice cream stall outside their home. It sits along the walk way of the newly opened cable car up Mount Trebevic. Sarajevo City Hall visible in the background. |
The whole experience with Jasmin and his family and the
story of Sarajevo stayed with me for days. Not often do you get to meet someone
who has been through what they have been through, let alone get them to share
their story. And, despite all that, they are some of the warmest, most humble,
and optimistic people I’ve met. There’s definitely something to be learned from
people like them – people who have faced death, seen death, escaped death and now
know how to appreciate the simple things in life; who have seen the worst in
humanity yet continue to have faith in it; who know how to laugh when they
would rather cry; and who have lost everything except hope for a better
tomorrow.
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Recommended reading about the war in Bosnia |
PS. If you want to know more about the Bosnian War, The War is Dead, Long Live the War, Bosnia: the Reckoning by Ed Vulliamy is a great
read. He is a British journalist who was assigned to cover Bosnia in the early
90s and was part of the team that first exposed the presence of ethnic
cleansing Concentration Camps to the rest of the world - many of which were located within what is now known as Republika Srpska (unknown to us at the time, Banja Luka is its capital). He later testified at The
Hague resulting in imprisonment of high ranking officials responsible for war
crimes.
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