The United Nations creates a day of commemoration of the Srebrenica genocide, castigated by the Serbs

The United Nations created, Thursday, May 23, an International Day of Commemoration of the Srebrenica Genocide, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, in 1995. Belgrade and the leader of the Bosnian Serbs, who still refuse to recognize it, expressed their anger. The resolution, prepared by Germany and Rwanda, two countries marked by other genocides of the 20the century, received 84 votes for, 19 votes against and 68 abstentions.

“This resolution seeks to encourage reconciliation, today and for the future”justified Germany’s permanent representative to the United Nations in New York, Ante Leendertse, assuring that the initiative was not directed against Serbia. “The United Nations was founded in the ashes of World War II, a war launched by Nazi Germany that left more than 60 million people dead”she added, stressing that the UN was there to ensure that such crimes were not repeated.

On July 11, 1995, a few months before the end of the intercommunal conflict that had raged in Bosnia for three years, Bosnian Serb forces, commanded by General Ratko Mladic, took the town of Srebrenica. In the following days, around 8,000 Muslim men and teenagers were executed.

Read also | Article reserved for our subscribers “He is a war criminal”: Ratko Mladic’s crimes amount to genocide, according to the prosecution in The Hague

An indisputable “fact”

The massacre, the worst killing perpetrated in Europe since the Second World War, was described as genocide by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ). It is therefore a ” do “ indisputable, insist the supporters of the resolution.

Yet it is contested. “There was no genocide”Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik hammered in Srebrenica on Thursday, warning the international community in advance that he would reject the resolution. “We are telling you right now that we will not accept it. It will not be included in school curricula and we will not commemorate July 11. »

One year from the 30e anniversary of the massacre, the resolution proclaims July 11 “International day of reflection and commemoration of the genocide committed in Srebrenica in 1995”. The text also condemns “without reservation any denial of the historicity of the genocide committed in Srebrenica” And “acts that glorify those who have been found guilty” of these crimes.

Faced with criticism, the co-authors of the text added, at the request of Montenegro – the former Yugoslav Republic where part of the population identifies as Serbian – a sentence which specifies that the guilt of certain individuals cannot be attributed “to an ethnic, religious or other group as a whole”. A modification which did not convince Belgrade and its allies.

A “highly politicized resolution”, believes Belgrade

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, who came to New York to fight this initiative, denounced just before the vote a “highly politicized resolution”. This resolution “will open old wounds and cause political havoc, not only in our region, but also here”he said, ensuring that he was paying tribute to “all victims of the conflicts in Bosnia, Serbs and Bosniaks [musulmans] ».

The World Application

The Morning of the World

Every morning, find our selection of 20 articles not to be missed

Download the app

Russia, which in 2015 vetoed a Security Council resolution condemning the Srebrenica genocide, also denounced “a sad chapter in UN history”. The text aimed to “demonize” the Serbs, denounced the Russian permanent representative, Vassili Nebenzia. “If the authors of the text wanted to divide the General Assembly (…)they succeeded brilliantly »he quipped.

If all the countries of the former Yugoslavia, with the exception of Serbia, voted in favor, many countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America abstained. And the European Union exposed its divisions, with Hungary voting against, and several of its members abstaining (Greece, Cyprus, Slovakia). In this tense context, the EU had stressed before the vote that “anyone who attempts to question [le génocide de Srebrenica] has no place in Europe ».

Also read (2023) | Article reserved for our subscribers In 1995, the former Yugoslavia and the impossible equation of the Dayton agreements

The World with AFP

Reuse this content

source site-29