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To: LjubivojeRadosavljevic
Can you tell me where the gas chambers and crematoriums are located in Bosnia?

There weren't any.

The point remains, however, that the Bosnian Serbs set up a system of concentration camps in Bosnia, and that further, said concentration camps were expressly for the purpose of creating a Serbian monoethnic state it Bosnia, that conditions in said concentration camps were inhuman, and any attempts to deny their existence or the execrable conditions prevalent in said camps merely bring discredit upon the parties attempting such idiocy.

Dragan Nikolic: Susica Camp.
Sikirica et al.: Keraterm Camp.

I leave you with part of the statement given by Biljana Plavsic, which goes a long way towards explaining the continuing nonsense of Serbian denial over what they wrought in their various wars under Milosevic:

I have now had time to examine these charges and, together with my
lawyers, conduct our own investigation and evaluation. I have now come to
the belief and accept the fact that many thousands of innocent people were
the victims of an organised, systematic effort to remove Muslims and
Croats from the territory claimed by Serbs. At the time, I easily
convinced myself that this was a matter of survival and self-defence. In
fact, it was more. Our leadership, of which I was a necessary part, led
an effort which victimised countless innocent people.
Explanations of self-defence and survival offer no justification.
By the end, it was said, even among our own people, that in this war we
had lost our nobility of character. The obvious questions become, if this
truth is now self-evident, why did I not see it earlier? And how could
our leaders and those who followed have committed such acts? The answer
to both questions is, I believe, fear, a blinding fear that led to an
obsession, especially for those of us for whom the Second World War was a
living memory, that Serbs would never again allow themselves to become
victims. In this, we in the leadership violated the most basic duty of
every human being, the duty to restrain oneself and to respect the human
dignity of others. We were committed to do whatever was necessary to
prevail.
Although I was repeatedly informed of allegations of cruel and
inhuman conduct against non-Serbs, I refused to accept them or even to
investigate. In fact, I immersed myself in addressing the suffering of
the war's innocent Serb victims. This daily work confirmed in my mind
that we were in a struggle for our very survival and that in this
struggle, the international community was our enemy, and so I simply
denied these charges, making no effort to investigate. I remained secure
in my belief that Serbs were not capable of such acts. In this obsession
of ours to never again become victims, we had allowed ourselves to become
victimisers.

Biljana finally faced the facts.

It's high time the rest of her fellows did the same.

24 posted on 12/30/2006 1:27:39 PM PST by Hoplite
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To: Hoplite

Here's one that I can leave you with:

"The human suffering during the course of the war (in Bosnia) and the atrocities committed were terrible; yet this real suffering was exploited and manipulated for political ends to demonize the Serbian community. Successful attempts were made by Izetbegovic's regime - which employed a US-based PR firm - to give the impression that atrocities were conducted only by the Serbs, whereas all sides were responsible. The scale of atrocities was also massively inflated for political effect during the course of the war. While estmates as high as 200,000 to 300,000 by Izetbegovic's government, most informed estimates now suggest an upper limit of 35,000. Izetbegovic government also suggested that up to 30,000 women had been raped, which rightly caused intense international outcry and condemnation. The Serbs were accused of being primarily responsible for these appalling crimes and of having a systematic policy of mass rape, organizing 'rape camps' for that purpose. Evidence does not seem to bear this out, however. A UN report concluded that a total of approximately 2,400 rapes had taken place, committed by all sides in the conflict."

By: Kate Hudson, Principal Lecturer in Russian and Eastern European Politics at South Bank University.


29 posted on 12/30/2006 5:46:28 PM PST by LjubivojeRadosavljevic
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To: Hoplite; LjubivojeRadosavljevic

HOppie really knows how to pick them...and so gullible!

This broad collaborated with Bosnia’s NATO occupiers and her statement from the Hague show trials sounds like one lifted from the Beria show trials during the 30s.

Your gullibility is really laughable hoppie/helot...


31 posted on 12/31/2006 2:26:03 PM PST by eleni121 ( + En Touto Nika! By this sign conquer! + Constantine the Great))
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