Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports and Siege of Sarajevo: Difference between pages

Coordinates: 43°50′51″N 18°21′23″E / 43.8476°N 18.3564°E / 43.8476; 18.3564 (Sarajevo)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
Reporting iasb.org - No Autoreport created - 0 reports
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Military Conflict
* 12:28:00, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link deathcamps.org (0)
|conflict=Siege of Sarajevo
* 12:28:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link last.fm (3)
|partof=the [[Bosnian War]]
* 12:34:35, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/buick-riviera.pl|Report for buick-riviera.pl]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/buick-riviera.pl|talk]]) - 0 reports.
|image=[[Image:Evstafiev-sarajevo-building-burns.jpg|300px]]
* 12:38:22, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link freeaupair.or (1)
|caption=Bosnian [[parliament]] building burns after being hit by Serbian tank fire. Photo by [[Mikhail Evstafiev]]
* 12:38:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link ipni.org (0)
|date=April 5, 1992<ref>April 5, 1992 was the date of the first attack on Sarajevo by the JNA and Serb paramilitaries and is as such considered the beginning of the siege. However as early as March 1, 1992 barricades and armed gunmen started appearing on the streets of Sarajevo.</ref> - February 29, 1996<ref>February 29, 1996 was the official end to the siege as declared by the Bosnian government. The war ended with the signing of the Dayton Accords on November 21, 1995 and the Paris Protocol on December 14, 1995. The reason that the siege was not declared as over was because the Serbs had not yet implemented the Dayton deal which required them to withdraw from areas north and west of Sarajevo as well as other parts of the city. The Serbs also violated the Dayton peace by firing a rocket propelled grenade at a Sarajevo tram on January 9, 1996 killing 1 and wounding 19.</ref>
* 12:39:36, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link drupaltemplates.ru (1)
|place=[[Sarajevo]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]]
* 12:40:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link rosendahl-design.de (0)
|casus= establishment of [[Republika Srpska]] and its claim o Sarajevo as its capital. Bosnia and Herzegovina's [[declaration of independence]],
* 12:46:03, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link 3decks.pbwiki.com (0)
|territory=
* 12:46:31, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link brandonlee.ucoz.ru (0)
|result=Siege lifted due to the [[Dayton Agreement]]
* 12:47:54, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img90.imageshack.us (0)
|combatant1={{flagicon|Bosnia and Herzegovina|1992}} [[Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina]] (1992-95)<br>[[NATO]] (1995)
* 12:49:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link groups.yahoo.com (0)
|combatant2={{flagicon|Yugoslavia|SFR}} [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (1992)<br>{{flagicon|Republic of Srpska}} [[Army of Republika Srpska]] (1992-95)
* 12:56:37, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link boliviainfoforum.org.uk (4)
|commander1=[[Mustafa Hajrulahović Talijan]]</br>[[Vahid Karavelić]]<br/> [[Nedžad Ajnadžić]]
* 12:56:56, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link timeout.com (5)
|commander2= [[Milutin Kukanjac]] JNA (Mar - Jul 1992)</br>[[Tomislav Šipčić]] (Jul-Sep 1992)<br>[[Stanislav Galić]] (Sep 1992-Aug 1994)<br/>[[Dragomir Milošević]] (Aug 1994- Feb 1996)</br>
* 12:57:06, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mediamatters.org (2)
|strength1=40,000 (1992)
* 12:58:43, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link terraeantiqvae.blogia.com (0)
|strength2=30,000 (1992)
* 13:04:33, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link whizzkidexpress.nl (1)
|casualties1=
* 13:04:48, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link twcsddl.acer.com.tw (0)
|casualties2=
* 13:05:54, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link autoblog.com (0)
|notes=
* 13:07:04, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link blagodir.com (2)
}}
* 13:08:10, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mediatraffic.de (0)

* 13:12:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link roostercountry1061.com (0)
The '''Siege of [[Sarajevo]]''' was conducted by the Serb forces of self-proclaimed [[Republika Srpska]] and [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (later transformed to the [[Army of Serbia and Montenegro]]), lasting from April 5, 1992 to February 29, 1996.
* 13:12:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i237.photobucket.com (0)

* 13:13:13, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link agencekarismatik.com (1)
It was fought during the [[Bosnian War]] between poorly equipped defending forces of the [[Bosnia and Herzegovina|Bosnian]] government, who had declared independence from [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], and the [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (JNA) and [[Bosnian Serb]] forces ([[Army of Republika Srpska]]) (VRS) located in the hills around Sarajevo, who sought to destroy the newly-independent state of [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] and create the Serbian state of [[Republika Srpska]] (RS).
* 13:14:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link pastemagazine.com (0)

* 13:18:03, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link blogs.laweekly.com (0)
It is estimated that of the more than 12,000 people who were killed and 50,000 who were wounded during the siege, 85% were civilians. Because of killing and forced migration, by 1995 the population decreased to 334,663 - 64% of the prewar population.<ref>[http://www.cseecunion.org/HistoryOfCities/Sarajevo.html History of Sarajevo]</ref>
* 13:18:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link cesnav.edu.mx (0)

* 13:19:14, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/vietbao.vn|Report for vietbao.vn]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/vietbao.vn|talk]]) - 18 reports.
In January 2003, the [[ICTY]] Trial Chamber convicted the first commander of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, [[Stanislav Galić]], of the shelling and sniper terror campaign against Sarajevo, including the first [[Markale massacres#First massacreMarkale massacre|Markale massacre]].<ref>[http://www.un.org/icty/galic/trialc/judgement/gal-tj031205-1.htm#IIIC2 Galić verdict- 2. Sniping and Shelling of Civilians in Urban Bosnian Army-held Areas of Sarajevo]</ref> General Galić was sentenced to life imprisonment for the [[crimes against humanity]] during the siege.<ref>[http://www.un.org/icty/cases-e/cis/galic/main-e.htm Galić: Crimes convicted of]</ref> In 2007, a Serb general, [[Dragomir Milošević]], who replaced Stanislav Galić on the commander position of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, was found guilty of the shelling and sniper terror campaign against Sarajevo and its citizens from August 1994 to late 1995 including the [[Markale massacres#Second massacre|second Markale massacre]]. Milošević was sentenced to 33 years in prison. The Trial Chamber concluded that the Markale town market was hit on August 28, 1995 by a 120mm mortar shell fired from the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps positions.<ref>[http://www.sense-agency.com/en/stream.php?sta=3&pid=10670&kat=3 SENSE - DRAGOMIR MILOSEVIC SENTENCED TO 33 YEARS]</ref>
* 13:24:42, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link phobos.apple.com (0)

* 13:25:44, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link photos2.hi5.com (0)
==Warfare==
* 13:28:09, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link tecktonick.ucoz.ru (0)
===Build-up===
* 13:32:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link fr.groups.yahoo.com (0)
From its creation following World War II, the government of [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]] kept a close watch on [[nationalism]] among the Yugoslav peoples, as it could have led to chaos and the breakup of the state. With the death of Yugoslavia's longtime leader, Marshal [[Josip Broz Tito|Tito]], in 1980, this policy of containment took a dramatic reversal.
* 13:34:28, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i194.photobucket.com (0)

* 13:41:26, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link cala-ratjada.costasur.com (0)
===Start of the war===
* 13:43:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/bunker-nrw.de|Report for bunker-nrw.de]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/bunker-nrw.de|talk]]) - 6 reports.
[[Image:Evstafiev-bosnia-serbs-boy-gun-to-head.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Serb soldiers in Sarajevo with a boy who is wearing a Serbian uniform as is shown by the coat of arms on his left pocket. Photo by [[Mikhail Evstafiev]]]]
* 13:48:04, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i6.photobucket.com (0)

* 13:48:57, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link f.prosper.free.fr (1)
The first casualty of war is a point of contention between Serbs and Bosniaks. Serbs contend that the first casualty was [[Serb]] Nikola Gardović, a groom's father killed at a Serb wedding procession on the first day of the referendum, March 1, 1992. Bosniaks contend that this was one of a number of politically oriented killings in the first quarter of that year.
* 13:50:17, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link boardgames.lovetoknow.com (0)

* 13:51:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link heraldry-online.org.uk (0)
In early March 1992, [[barricade]]s and checkpoints were erected in Sarajevo. On April 5, the day of the [[declaration of independence]], massive [[anti-war]] marches took place in the city, with the largest group of protesters moving towards the [[parliament]] building. At that point, Serb gunmen fired upon the crowd from the [[Serbian Democratic Party]] headquarters, killing two people. These people, [[Suada Dilberović]] and Olga Sučić, are considered by Bosniaks to be the first casualties of the siege of Sarajevo; today, the bridge where they were killed is named in their honor. Armed conflict broke out after the European Community recognized Bosnia and Herzegovina as a sovereign state on April 6, 1992. The [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (JNA) attacked the Ministry of Training Academy in Vrace (commandering strategic positions in high above the city), the central tramway depot, and the Old Town district with [[mortar (weapon)|mortar]], [[artillery]], and tank fire, and JNA units seized control of [[Sarajevo Airport|Sarajevo's airport]]. The JNA expanded its control of approaches to the city by establishing road blocks along key roads. By the end of April, the contour of Sarajevo's siege was largely established. On April 22, a peace rally in front of the Assembly of the Republic was broken up by shots coming from the Holiday Inn. <ref>Stanislav Galic judgment - (a) April 1992: Armed Conflict Erupts in Sarajevo [http://www.un.org/icty/galic/trialc/judgement/index.htm]</ref>
* 13:56:14, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link march.es (2)

* 13:56:24, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hot100brasil.com (1)
===Early fighting for the city===
* 13:57:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link katcameron.com (1)
[[Image:May21992.JPG|thumb|left|200px|A map of the initial JNA offensive]]
* 14:26:09, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/randomhouse.co.uk|Report for randomhouse.co.uk]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/randomhouse.co.uk|talk]]) - 9 reports.
{{Campaignbox Bosnian War}}
* 14:29:57, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link imageshack.us (0)

* 14:32:16, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img509.imageshack.us (1)
In the months leading up to the war, the [[JNA]] forces in the region began to [[mobilization|mobilize]] in the hills surrounding the city. [[Artillery]] and various other equipment that would prove key in the future besieging of the city was implemented at this time. In April 1992, the Bosnian government demanded that the government of Yugoslavia remove these forces. Milošević, who headed the Serbian government, agreed to withdraw the individuals who originated from outside of Bosnia's borders, an insignificant number.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} Those Bosnian Serb forces in the army were transferred to the VRS, which had declared independence from Bosnia a few days after Bosnia itself seceded from Yugoslavia.
* 14:37:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link g.imageshack.us (0)

* 14:39:20, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link enfacto.com (0)
On May 2, 1992, a complete [[blockade]] of the city was officially established by the Bosnian Serb forces. Major roads leading into the city were blocked, as were shipments of food and medicine. Utilities such as water, electricity, and heating were cut off. The number of Serbian forces around Sarajevo, although better armed, was inferior in number to the Bosnian defenders within the city. Hence, after the failure of initial attempts to take over the city by the attacks of JNA's armored columns, the besieging forces continuously [[bombardment|bombarded]] and weakened the city from the mountains, fortified into at least two hundred reinforced positions and [[bunker]]s.
* 14:40:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img355.imageshack.us (0)

* 14:44:41, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i195.photobucket.com (0)
===The siege of Sarajevo===
* 14:44:51, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i223.photobucket.com (0)
[[Image:Evstafiev-bosnia-sarajevo-un-holds-head.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Norwegian UN soldier at the Sarajevo airport. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev]]
* 14:46:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/yle.fi|Report for yle.fi]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/yle.fi|talk]]) - 505 reports.

* 14:51:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/petitiononline.com|Report for petitiononline.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/petitiononline.com|talk]]) - 158 reports.
The second half of 1992 and first half of 1993 were the height of the siege of Sarajevo. Various atrocities were committed during heavy fighting. Serbian forces from outside the city continuously shelled the government defenders. Most of the major [[military]] positions and arms supplies within the city were in Serbian control. [[Sniper]]s roamed the city all over as ''Pazite, Snajper!'' ("Beware, Sniper!") became a common sign. Some streets were so dangerous to cross or use that they became known as "[[Sniper Alley|sniper alleys]]". Some neighborhoods of the city were taken over by the Serbs, especially in [[Novo Sarajevo]], as Serbian [[offensive]]s into parts of the city were met with success. To counterbalance the siege, the [[Sarajevo International Airport|Sarajevo Airport]] was opened to [[United Nations]] (UN) airlifts in late June 1992; Sarajevo's survival became strongly dependent on them.
* 14:51:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link scribd.com (0)

* 14:52:00, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link orion.math.iastate.edu (0)
The Bosnian government forces had greatly inferior weaponry to the besiegers. Some Bosnian [[black market]] criminals who had joined the army at the outset of the war illegally [[smuggle]]d arms into the city through Serb lines, and the [[Raid (military)|raid]]s on Serb-held positions within the city helped the cause. The [[Sarajevo Tunnel]], completed in mid-1993, allowed supplies to come into the city, and people to get out. The tunnel was one of the major ways of bypassing the international [[arms embargo]] (which was applied to all parties to the Bosnian conflict, including the defenders of Sarajevo) and providing the city defenders with weaponry, and it was said the tunnel saved Sarajevo. However, by April 1995 there were only 20 artillery pieces and five [[tank]]s in the defence of the city. The strength of the First Corps lay in its considerable supplies of [[rocket-propelled grenade]]s, [[anti-aircraft missile]]s, and [[anti-tank missile]]s, but they could not really be used in the offensive actions needed to break out of Sarajevo.<ref>[http://rocchio.syr.edu/data/ORION/balkans.bosnia.warhistory.bosgeneral.html Bosnia War History]</ref>
* 14:53:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link persianfootball.com (4)

* 14:57:43, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link torrentle.altervista.org (0)
[[Image:Evstafiev-bosnia-cello.jpg|thumb|200px|left|[[Vedran Smailović]] playing in the partially destroyed National Library in Sarajevo in 1992. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev]]
* 14:57:58, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hurricanewho.com (1)

* 14:58:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gleonardos.gr|Report for gleonardos.gr]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gleonardos.gr|talk]]) - 22 reports.
Reports indicate an average of approximately 329 shell impacts per day during the course of the siege, with a high of 3,777 shell impacts on July 22, 1993. The shellfire caused extensive damage to the city's structures, including civilian and cultural property. By September 1993, reports concluded that virtually all buildings in Sarajevo had suffered some degree of damage, and 35,000 were completely destroyed. Among these buildings targeted and destroyed were hospitals and medical complexes, media and communication centers, industrial targets, government buildings, and military and UN facilities. Some of the more significant of these were the building of the [[presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina]], and the [[National Library]], which burned to the ground along with thousands of irreplaceable texts.
* 14:59:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link gleonardos.g (1)

* 15:10:07, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link twocircles.net (0)
[[Image:Evstafiev-bosnia-sarajevo-funeral-reaction.jpg|thumb|200px|Funeral of a civilian killed in Sarajevo. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev]]
* 15:14:00, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link enfacto.com (0)

* 15:19:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link spfldcol.edu (0)
The shelling of the city took a tremendous toll on lives. [[Mass killing]]s due primarily to mortar shell impacts made headline news in the West. On June 1, 1993, 15 people were killed and 80 injured during a [[football (soccer)|football]] game. On July 12 of the same year, 12 people were killed while in line for water. The biggest of these however was the first [[Markale massacres|Markale marketplace massacre]] on February 5, 1994, in which 68 civilians were killed and 200 were wounded.
* 15:29:34, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link orion.math.iastate.edu (0)

* 15:39:20, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link bostonist.com (0)
In response to the Markale massacre, the UN issued an [[ultimatum]] to Serb forces to withdraw heavy weaponry beyond a certain point in a given amount of time or face [[air strike]]s. Near the end of the given time, Serb forces complied. City shelling drastically decreased at that point, which could perhaps be seen as the beginning of the end of the siege.
* 15:42:42, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link portland.indymedia.org (0)

* 15:49:54, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hobbycarcorvettes.net (2)
===Ethnic cleansing===
* 15:54:39, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link jorgesaco..es.tl (1)

* 16:02:40, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link zyrist.com (2)
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:Brckic and ismic dead.jpg|thumb|Mixed couple [[Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo|Admira Ismić and Boško Brkić]] shot dead while trying to escape Sarajevo]] -->
* 16:09:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link jorgesaco.es.tl (1)
[[Image:Sarajevo Grbavica.JPG|thumb|Burned apartment buildings in downtown [[Grbavica (Sarajevo)|Grbavica]], a Serb-inhabited suburb of Sarajevo, before being turned in to the government in 1996]]
* 16:14:19, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link pirates-online.bravehost.com (0)

* 16:19:18, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link planetmath.org (4)
The Serb forces were reported to have carried out a vicious campaign of [[ethnic cleansing]] in the parts of the city occupied by them during the siege. In ''The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia'', Michael A. Sells claimed how "non-nationalist Serbs were also targets of violence":
* 16:25:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hot.ee (2)

* 16:28:51, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link colorado.mediamatters.org (0)
<blockquote>
* 16:40:14, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link medicinenet.com (0)
''Serbs who refused to participate in the persecution of Muslims were killed. In a Serb-army occupied area of Sarajevo, Serb militants killed a Serb officer who objected to atrocities against civilians; they left his body on the street for over a week as an object lesson. During one of the 'selections' carried out by Serb militants in Sarajevo, an old Serb named Ljubo objected to being separated out from his Muslim friends and neighbors; they beat him to death on the spot.''
* 16:43:43, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link chabad.org (0)
</blockquote>
* 16:46:12, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gleonardos.gr|Report for gleonardos.gr]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gleonardos.gr|talk]]) - 23 reports.

* 16:49:34, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mediatraffic.de (0)
After several years in the 1990s characterised by denial of the widely held view of the Serb responsibility for the [[Yugoslav wars]], a trend has developed in the 2000s where Serbs, and a number of external publishers and commentators, drew Bosniak and Croat parallels to such infamous examples of atrocities as [[Srebrenica Massacre|Srebrenica]]. For instance, they commonly draw attention to ethnic cleansing of Serb civilians by Bosnian Muslim and Croatian forces during the Balkan conflict. It is alleged that between 1992 and 1995, 150,000 Serbs were ethnically cleansed from Sarajevo, with several thousand killed. The allegations were brought to the media forefront in early 2005 when the [[Prime Minister]] of Republika Srpska, [[Pero Bukejlović]], argued that [[genocide]] was committed against Serbs during the siege of Sarajevo, that he claimed exceeded that of the [[Srebrenica massacre]], denounced widely as an act of genocide against Bosnian Muslims.
* 16:51:44, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link accountancyage.com (4)

* 16:57:15, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link celebrity.lovetoknow.com (0)
Today, Sarajevo citizens of all nationalities generally take accusations of ethnic cleansing by the government forces in Sarajevo during the war as a highly offensive insult. In response to premier Bukejlović's statement, many have demanded a public apology to all Sarajevo citizens. The [[president]] of the Serb Citizens Council, Dr. Mirko Pejanović (a wartime member of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Presidency, and the 2007–2011 Dean of the Faculty of Political Sciences at the University of Sarajevo), stated:
* 16:59:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link kanikkonna.com (1)

* 17:02:34, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link buizaenelcamino.creatuforo.com (0)
:''Nobody, not even Bukejlović, can change or cover up the truth for the sake of current political needs. In Sarajevo, during the four year siege carried out by Karadžić's military forces and the SDS, there were deaths of Sarayevians of all ethnicities. The people were both suffering and dying from hunger, cold, they were being killed by mortar shells... among the 12,000 killed Sarayevians recorded in the war, at least one fourth were members of the Serb nation or had Serb ethnic ancestry. Thus, we can not talk of an extermination or genocide of Serbs, but of a responsibility of the SDS and Karadžić's military forces for the overall extermination of Sarajevo and Sarayevians, and within that of the Serb people.''
* 17:04:37, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link gresham.ac.uk (0)

* 17:10:09, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link laist.com (0)
During the war, Serb forces systematically raped and sexually abused Muslim Bosnian women in rape camps after being separated from men. There are claims the rapes occurred with the knowledge and approval of Serbian officials. In 2001, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) officially indicted Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovac, and Zoran Vukovic for the crimes of rape.
* 17:12:24, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link danielitagal.es.tl (2)

* 17:17:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link musiccityscions.com (3)

* 17:19:26, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link crash.net (2)

* 17:24:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link jriver.com (1)
===NATO intervention===
* 17:30:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/news.runescape.com|Report for news.runescape.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/news.runescape.com|talk]]) - 52 reports.
{{seealso|1995 NATO bombing in Bosnia and Herzegovina}}
* 17:31:35, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link marca.com (2)
[[Image:Dmitry Rogozin and Ratko Mladić in Sarajevo - January 1996.png|thumb|200px|right|[[Russia]]n soldier and politician [[Dmitry Rogozin]] discussing the role of Russian volunteers with [[Bosnian Serb Army]] leader [[Ratko Mladić]] in besieged Sarajevo, January 1996]]
* 17:38:07, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link eerietube.com (1)
In 1995, after the second Markale massacre, in which 37 people were killed and 90 were wounded, the international forces firmly turned against the besiegers. When the Serb forces raided a UN-monitored weapons collection site, [[NATO]] jets attacked Bosnian Serb [[ammunition depot]]s and other strategic military targets. On the ground fighting escalated, this time with the joint Bosnian and [[Croatia]]n forces on the offensive, and the Serbs slowly lost more and more ground both in Sarajevo area and elsewhere. Heating, electricity, and water would eventually come back to the city as well.
* 17:43:02, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img520.imageshack.us (0)

* 17:46:34, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link albogdan.club.fr (1)
A [[cease fire]] was reached in October 1995, and the [[Dayton Agreement]] was reached later that year bringing peace to the country. A period of stabilization and return to normalcy followed, with the Bosnian government not officially declaring the siege of Sarajevo over until February 29, 1996, when Serbian forces left positions in and around Sarajevo. Over 200,000 Serbian civilians and Sarajevo's citizens left Serbian suburbs.
* 17:53:15, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link chickswithdicks.com (0)

* 17:56:57, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img515.imageshack.us (0)
==Aftermath==
* 17:57:54, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i195.photobucket.com (0)
[[Image:Bloodpave.jpg|thumb|Scars called [[Sarajevo Rose]]s remain across the city, serving as poignant reminders of the destruction]]
* 18:01:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i124.photobucket.com (0)

* 18:02:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link s124.photobucket.com (0)
Sarajevo was heavily damaged during those four years. The manuscript collection of the [[Oriental Institute in Sarajevo]], one of the richest collections of Oriental manuscripts in the world, was deliberately destroyed by Serb nationalist forces. The siege of Sarajevo was undoubtedly the worst and most catastrophic period in the city's history since World War I. After the glory of the [[1984 Winter Olympics]], the city had been experiencing tremendous growth and development, which was entirely reversed by the siege.{{Facts|date=April 2008}}
* 18:07:14, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link music.lt (0)

* 18:08:26, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link sfist.com (0)
The city had been a model for inter-ethnic relations, but the siege of Sarajevo inspired dramatic population shifts. Aside from the thousands of refugees who left the city, an immense number of Sarajevo Serbs left for the Republika Srpska as well. The percentage of Serbs in Sarajevo decreased from more than 30% in 1991 to slightly over 10% in 2002. Regions of [[Novo Sarajevo]] that are now part of the Republika Srpska have formed [[East Sarajevo]] (Istocno Sarajevo), where much of the pre-war Serbian population lives today.
* 18:15:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link austinmohr.com (1)

* 18:23:17, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i295.photobucket.com (0)
Since the gloomy and desolate years of the early 1990s, Sarajevo has made a substantial recovery. By 2004, most of the damage done to buildings during the siege had been fixed. New construction projects have made Sarajevo perhaps the fastest growing city in former Yugoslavia. Sarajevo's metro-area population in 2002 was around 401,000, which was 20,000 less than the population of the city itself in 1991.
* 18:45:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link planetmath.org (4)

* 18:51:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link applevacations.com (1)
== Siege of Sarajevo in documentaries and art ==
* 18:56:45, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i151.photobucket.com (0)
[[Image:SarajevoSiege2.JPG|thumb|200px|The former building of Sarajevo newspaper ''[[Oslobođenje]]''. For years after the siege it remained as a memorial]]
* 18:57:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link dailykos.com (0)

* 19:01:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link pspfrance.org (1)
*''Sarajevo, Exodus of a City'', a book by Dzevad Karahasan
* 19:14:07, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/stuffmagazine.com|Report for stuffmagazine.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/stuffmagazine.com|talk]]) - 10 reports.
*''[[Sarajevo Blues]]'', a book of poetry by [[Semezdin Mehmedinović]]
* 19:18:19, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link consultant.ru (0)
*''Sarajevo Roses'', a book by South African UN Peacekeeper Anne-Marie Du Preez Bedroz
* 19:18:42, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mediamatters.org (2)
*''[[Sarajevo Tango]]'', a comic-art by [[Hermann Huppen]]
* 19:20:22, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img217.imageshack.us (0)
*''Caído en Sarajevo (Fallen at Sarajevo)'', a song by Chilean rock band Arka [http://www.arka.cl/noticias/2003_eng.htm#1]
* 19:25:42, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/islam.ru|Report for islam.ru]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/islam.ru|talk]]) - 6 reports.
*''[[Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24]]'', a song by [[Savatage]] and the [[Trans-Siberian Orchestra]]
* 19:25:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link userserve-ak.last.fm (0)
*''Đavo u Sarajevu (Devil in Sarajevo)'', a book by Nenad Veličković
* 19:26:18, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link sv-sidonie.webnode.cz (1)
*''[[Dead Winter Dead]]'', a rock-opera by [[Savatage]], 1995
* 19:27:03, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link universe30.blogfa.com (1)
*''[[Diários da Bósnia]] (Bosnian Diaries)'', a film by Joaquim Sapinho
* 19:33:04, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link amphibolia.3dn.ru (0)
*''[[Fax from Sarajevo|Fax From Sarajevo]]'', a comic-art by [[Joe Kubert]] [http://www.kubertsworld.com/bios/sarajevo.html]
* 19:33:48, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/almenrausch.at|Report for almenrausch.at]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/almenrausch.at|talk]]) - 8 reports.
*''Fools Rush In: A True Story of Love, War, and Redemption'', by [[Bill Carter]] [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1932958509/]
* 19:34:38, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/citypopulation.de|Report for citypopulation.de]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/citypopulation.de|talk]]) - 128 reports.
*''[[Miss Sarajevo]],'' a song by [[U2]] and [[Brian Eno]] under the pseudonym "Passengers"
* 19:35:38, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link crash.net (2)
*''[[Mladí muži poznávají svět]]'' (''Young Men Discovering The World''), a movie by [[Radim Špaček (film director)|Radim Špaček]] [http://www.filmcenter.cz/index.php?PG=FLA&IDFL=94&LANG=EN]
* 19:41:07, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hot100brasil.com (1)
*''My Childhood Under Fire: A Sarajevo Diary'' by Nadja Halilbegovich
* 19:41:24, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link carlsberggroup.com (0)
*''[[Natasha's Story]]'', a book by [[Michael Nicholson]]
* 19:41:58, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link freewebs.com (1)
*''Pretty Birds'', by Scott Simon, 2005 ISBN 1-4000-6310-8
* 19:43:04, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link religioustolerance.org (0)
*''Regarding The Pain Of Others'', by [[Susan Sontag]]
* 19:50:03, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link brian-krause.ucoz.ru (0)
* ''Remember Sarajevo'', a book by Roger Richards [http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0302/rr_index.html]
* 19:50:13, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link aviles.bubok.com (1)
*''[[Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo]]'', a [[PBS]] [[Frontline (PBS)|Frontline]] documentary
* 19:50:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/pedroaviles.com|Report for pedroaviles.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/pedroaviles.com|talk]]) - 10 reports.
*''Savršeni krug'' (''The Perfect Circle''), a film by Ademir Kenović
* 19:51:21, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link planetmath.org (4)
*''[[Shot Through the Heart]]'', a TV film by David Attwood
* 19:56:02, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link s42.photobucket.com (0)
*''[[The Fixer (Sacco comic)|The Fixer]]'', a [[graphic novel]] by [[Joe Sacco]]
* 19:56:22, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i42.photobucket.com (0)
*''The Question of Bruno'', stories by Aleksandar Hemon
* 19:56:43, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link louis.sander.com (2)
*''[[Welcome To Sarajevo]]'', a war movie by [[Michael Winterbottom]]
* 19:57:35, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i141.photobucket.com (0)
*''Witness from Sarajevo'', by Boris Jug [http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/finsbury/37/id18.htm]
* 20:02:37, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link marc.edouard.nabe.free.fr (0)
*''[[Zlata's Diary]]'', a book by Zlata Filipovic
* 20:02:53, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link s124.photobucket.com (0)
*''[[Le Sommeil du monstre]], a [[comic book]] by [[Enki Bilal]].
* 20:03:13, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i124.photobucket.com (0)
*''Veilles d'Armes, a documentary by [[Marcel Ophuls]]
* 20:03:48, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link apunkachoice.com (0)
*''The Cellist of Sarajevo'', by Steven Galloway
* 20:04:59, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/almenrausch.at|Report for almenrausch.at]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/almenrausch.at|talk]]) - 13 reports.

* 20:09:50, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link yourdictionary.com (0)
==Notes==
* 20:10:15, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/rapidshare.com|Report for rapidshare.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/rapidshare.com|talk]]) - 12 reports.
{{History of Bosnia}}
* 20:10:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link todomundotemproblemassexuais.zip.net (0)
{{reflist}}
* 20:11:43, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link freewebs.com (1)

* 20:15:40, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link schwarzenegger.com (0)
==External links==
* 20:15:51, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img377.imageshack.us (0)
{{commonscat-inline}}
* 20:16:10, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link readwriteweb.com (0)
* [http://www.sense-agency.com/en/stream.php?sta=3&pid=10670&kat=3 SENSE Tribunal: DRAGOMIR MILOSEVIC SENTENCED TO 33 YEARS]
* 20:16:58, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img411.imageshack.us (0)
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/yugo/article/0,,2226269,00.html The Guardian: General who led Sarajevo siege jailed for war crimes]
* 20:21:35, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img101.imageshack.us (0)
* [http://www.slobodnaevropa.org/content/Article/867646.html Radio Free Europe: The verdicts for the Siege of Sarajevo] {{bs icon}}
* 20:27:01, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link toonopedia.com (0)
* [http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/comexpert/ANX/VI-01.htm Final report of the United Nations Commission of Experts on the Siege of Sarajevo]
* 20:28:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link kecelilerkoyu.tr.gg (1)
* [http://www.bhdani.com/arhiva/251/spiskovi.shtml An incomplete list of persons killed during the siege.]
* 20:34:11, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link whatrecords.co.uk (0)
* [http://www.famainternational.com/survival/survival-ff.htm Survival Map of Sarajevo]
* 20:35:09, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link endeavour.zapto.org (0)
* [http://www.sarajevo-x.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22009&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0&sid=b95778266a37a647c93bd2c04354068d Photos of Siege of Sarajevo]
* 20:39:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link planetmath.org (4)
* [http://www.rewardsforjustice.net/english/warcrimes/index.cfm?page=Karadzic Radovan Karadzicc $5 million Reward] - The U.S. Government is offering $5 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Radovan Karadzic
* 20:40:27, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mediatraffic.de (0)
* [http://www.rewardsforjustice.net/english/warcrimes/index.cfm?page=Mladic Ratko Mladic $5 million Reward] - The U.S. Government is offering $5 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Ratko Mladic
* 20:51:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i320.photobucket.com (0)
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article332794.ece Bosnia's rape babies: abandoned by their families, forgotten by the state]
* 20:57:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link crash.net (2)
* [http://www.haverford.edu/relg/sells/rape2.html Systematic Rape in Bosnia: a Tool of Genocide- Evidence Serb leaders in Bosnia OKd attacks]
* 20:58:38, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link mxracing.dk (1)
* [http://www.peacewomen.org/news/BosniaHerzegovina/newsarchive/massrape.html Mass Rape in Bosnia: 20,000 Women, Mostly Muslims, Have Been Abused By Serb Soldiers]
* 21:06:51, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link wargs.com (0)
* [http://www.newint.org/issue244/rape.htm Rape: weapon of war]
* 21:07:19, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link literatur-tv.com (0)
* [http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/02/22/bosher256.htm Bosnia: Landmark Verdicts for Rape, Torture, and Sexual Enslavement]
* 21:13:19, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link getback.com (0)
* [http://www.uri.edu/artsci/wms/hughes/bosnia.htm Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation Bosnia and Herzegovina]
* 21:13:47, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link wpedroaviles.com (1)

* 21:14:47, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link enfacto.com (0)
{{Yugoslav wars}}
* 21:19:09, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i125.photobucket.com (0)
{{coord|43.8476|N|18.3564|E|type:city|display=title|name=Sarajevo}}
* 21:19:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link outandauthentic.com (1)

* 21:20:22, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/harriers-online.co.uk|Report for harriers-online.co.uk]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/harriers-online.co.uk|talk]]) - 95 reports.
[[Category:Siege of Sarajevo| ]]
* 21:21:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i192.photobucket.com (0)
[[Category:Battles involving Serbia]]
* 21:25:49, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link hjem.get2net.dk (0)
[[Category:Sieges involving Serbia]]
* 21:26:06, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link s192.photobucket.com (0)

* 21:26:18, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img525.imageshack.us (0)
[[bs:Opsada Sarajeva]]
* 21:27:05, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/sporvognsrejser.dk|Report for sporvognsrejser.dk]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/sporvognsrejser.dk|talk]]) - 7 reports.
[[cs:Obléhání Sarajeva]]
* 21:27:44, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link redtube.com (0)
[[de:Belagerung von Sarajevo]]
* 21:33:24, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link troyforster.com (1)
[[es:Sitio de Sarajevo]]
* 21:33:38, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link troyforster.com, (1)
[[fr:Siège de Sarajevo]]
* 21:33:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link tforster.com (1)
[[hr:Opsada Sarajeva]]
* 21:34:57, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link viewmorepics.myspace.com (0)
[[it:Assedio di Sarajevo]]
* 21:39:28, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link lokomotive-online.de (1)
[[no:Beleiringen av Sarajevo]]
* 21:39:39, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link uk.intruders.tv (0)
[[sl:Obleganje Sarajeva]]
* 21:39:52, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link crash.net (2)
[[sr:Опсада Сарајева]]
* 21:40:51, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link timeout.com (5)
[[sh:Opsada Sarajeva]]
* 21:45:18, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link smnnews.com (3)
[[fi:Sarajevon piiritys]]
* 21:45:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link last.fm (3)
[[sv:Belägringen av Sarajevo]]
* 21:46:06, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link torrentle.altervista.org (5)
* 21:52:37, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link skistar.com (5)
* 21:58:56, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link fazzinocollectors.com (1)
* 22:04:27, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link thedraftreview.com (0)
* 22:13:02, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/torrentle.altervista.org|Report for torrentle.altervista.org]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/torrentle.altervista.org|talk]]) - 6 reports.
* 22:19:04, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link editthis.info (0)
* 22:24:41, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link dirtybourbonband.com (1)
* 22:32:16, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link scribd.com (0)
* 22:37:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link idealgarve.com (0)
* 22:44:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/alivenotdead.com|Report for alivenotdead.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/alivenotdead.com|talk]]) - 18 reports.
* 22:51:53, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img408.imageshack.us (0)
* 23:00:20, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link citystylefurniture.com (2)
* 23:04:41, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link img530.imageshack.us (0)
* 23:05:54, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/epl.ee|Report for epl.ee]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/epl.ee|talk]]) - 34 reports.
* 23:12:01, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link freewebs.com (1)
* 23:13:32, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link thelostartmusic.com (1)
* 23:17:22, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link s5.gladiatus.com (0)
* 23:18:20, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link last.fm (3)
* 23:22:55, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link i152.photobucket.com (0)
* 23:29:23, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link paultoscano.com (3)
* 23:31:00, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link uk.groups.yahoo.com (0)
* 23:36:03, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link grassington-festival.org.uk (1)
* 23:37:02, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link ngilozi.com (1)
* 23:41:06, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link awfy.me (1)
* 23:41:50, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link zip.com.au (0)
* 23:47:01, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link schwarzenegger.com (0)
* 23:49:30, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/alaivani.com|Report for alaivani.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/alaivani.com|talk]]) - 11 reports.
* 23:53:57, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link evertonfc.com (0)
* 23:54:25, Sun Oct 12, 2008 - Link religioustolerance.org (0)
* 00:00:43, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/rapidshare.com|Report for rapidshare.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/rapidshare.com|talk]]) - 12 reports.
* 00:01:18, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link myweb.tiscali.co.uk (0)
* 00:08:03, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link petsathome.com (1)
* 00:09:48, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link mapsofindia.com (0)
* 00:13:58, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link vialentis.com (2)
* 00:14:49, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link freewebs.com (1)
* 00:20:34, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link i54.photobucket.com (0)
* 00:26:18, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link chabad.org (0)
* 00:27:44, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link enfacto.com (0)
* 00:31:29, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link nl.wikisage.org (0)
* 00:32:28, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link grafar.multiply.com (0)
* 00:36:49, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/simonfieldhouse.com|Report for simonfieldhouse.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/simonfieldhouse.com|talk]]) - 7 reports.
* 00:37:38, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link laist.com (0)
* 00:42:23, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link worldcastrahsfers.com (1)
* 00:47:15, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/tampabay.rays.mlb.com|Report for tampabay.rays.mlb.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/tampabay.rays.mlb.com|talk]]) - 18 reports.
* 00:51:13, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link forex.easy-forex.com.au (0)
* 00:52:40, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link i94.photobucket.com (0)
* 00:56:40, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link 4shared.com (0)
* 00:57:14, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link almacastelhana.com.br (3)
* 01:03:20, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link imageshack.us (0)
* 01:04:49, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link img296.imageshack.us (0)
* 01:08:51, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gizmodo.com|Report for gizmodo.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/gizmodo.com|talk]]) - 53 reports.
* 01:09:57, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/henrydoktorski.com|Report for henrydoktorski.com]] ([[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam/LinkReports/henrydoktorski.com|talk]]) - 7 reports.
* 01:14:01, Mon Oct 13, 2008 - Link iasb.org (0)

Revision as of 01:21, 13 October 2008

Siege of Sarajevo
Part of the Bosnian War

Bosnian parliament building burns after being hit by Serbian tank fire. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev
DateApril 5, 1992[1] - February 29, 1996[2]
Location
Result Siege lifted due to the Dayton Agreement
Belligerents
Bosnia and Herzegovina Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992-95)
NATO (1995)
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslav People's Army (1992)
Republika Srpska Army of Republika Srpska (1992-95)
Commanders and leaders
Mustafa Hajrulahović Talijan
Vahid Karavelić
Nedžad Ajnadžić
Milutin Kukanjac JNA (Mar - Jul 1992)
Tomislav Šipčić (Jul-Sep 1992)
Stanislav Galić (Sep 1992-Aug 1994)
Dragomir Milošević (Aug 1994- Feb 1996)
Strength
40,000 (1992) 30,000 (1992)

The Siege of Sarajevo was conducted by the Serb forces of self-proclaimed Republika Srpska and Yugoslav People's Army (later transformed to the Army of Serbia and Montenegro), lasting from April 5, 1992 to February 29, 1996.

It was fought during the Bosnian War between poorly equipped defending forces of the Bosnian government, who had declared independence from Yugoslavia, and the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and Bosnian Serb forces (Army of Republika Srpska) (VRS) located in the hills around Sarajevo, who sought to destroy the newly-independent state of Bosnia and Herzegovina and create the Serbian state of Republika Srpska (RS).

It is estimated that of the more than 12,000 people who were killed and 50,000 who were wounded during the siege, 85% were civilians. Because of killing and forced migration, by 1995 the population decreased to 334,663 - 64% of the prewar population.[3]

In January 2003, the ICTY Trial Chamber convicted the first commander of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, Stanislav Galić, of the shelling and sniper terror campaign against Sarajevo, including the first Markale massacre.[4] General Galić was sentenced to life imprisonment for the crimes against humanity during the siege.[5] In 2007, a Serb general, Dragomir Milošević, who replaced Stanislav Galić on the commander position of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, was found guilty of the shelling and sniper terror campaign against Sarajevo and its citizens from August 1994 to late 1995 including the second Markale massacre. Milošević was sentenced to 33 years in prison. The Trial Chamber concluded that the Markale town market was hit on August 28, 1995 by a 120mm mortar shell fired from the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps positions.[6]

Warfare

Build-up

From its creation following World War II, the government of Yugoslavia kept a close watch on nationalism among the Yugoslav peoples, as it could have led to chaos and the breakup of the state. With the death of Yugoslavia's longtime leader, Marshal Tito, in 1980, this policy of containment took a dramatic reversal.

Start of the war

Serb soldiers in Sarajevo with a boy who is wearing a Serbian uniform as is shown by the coat of arms on his left pocket. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

The first casualty of war is a point of contention between Serbs and Bosniaks. Serbs contend that the first casualty was Serb Nikola Gardović, a groom's father killed at a Serb wedding procession on the first day of the referendum, March 1, 1992. Bosniaks contend that this was one of a number of politically oriented killings in the first quarter of that year.

In early March 1992, barricades and checkpoints were erected in Sarajevo. On April 5, the day of the declaration of independence, massive anti-war marches took place in the city, with the largest group of protesters moving towards the parliament building. At that point, Serb gunmen fired upon the crowd from the Serbian Democratic Party headquarters, killing two people. These people, Suada Dilberović and Olga Sučić, are considered by Bosniaks to be the first casualties of the siege of Sarajevo; today, the bridge where they were killed is named in their honor. Armed conflict broke out after the European Community recognized Bosnia and Herzegovina as a sovereign state on April 6, 1992. The Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) attacked the Ministry of Training Academy in Vrace (commandering strategic positions in high above the city), the central tramway depot, and the Old Town district with mortar, artillery, and tank fire, and JNA units seized control of Sarajevo's airport. The JNA expanded its control of approaches to the city by establishing road blocks along key roads. By the end of April, the contour of Sarajevo's siege was largely established. On April 22, a peace rally in front of the Assembly of the Republic was broken up by shots coming from the Holiday Inn. [7]

Early fighting for the city

File:May21992.JPG
A map of the initial JNA offensive

In the months leading up to the war, the JNA forces in the region began to mobilize in the hills surrounding the city. Artillery and various other equipment that would prove key in the future besieging of the city was implemented at this time. In April 1992, the Bosnian government demanded that the government of Yugoslavia remove these forces. Milošević, who headed the Serbian government, agreed to withdraw the individuals who originated from outside of Bosnia's borders, an insignificant number.[citation needed] Those Bosnian Serb forces in the army were transferred to the VRS, which had declared independence from Bosnia a few days after Bosnia itself seceded from Yugoslavia.

On May 2, 1992, a complete blockade of the city was officially established by the Bosnian Serb forces. Major roads leading into the city were blocked, as were shipments of food and medicine. Utilities such as water, electricity, and heating were cut off. The number of Serbian forces around Sarajevo, although better armed, was inferior in number to the Bosnian defenders within the city. Hence, after the failure of initial attempts to take over the city by the attacks of JNA's armored columns, the besieging forces continuously bombarded and weakened the city from the mountains, fortified into at least two hundred reinforced positions and bunkers.

The siege of Sarajevo

Norwegian UN soldier at the Sarajevo airport. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

The second half of 1992 and first half of 1993 were the height of the siege of Sarajevo. Various atrocities were committed during heavy fighting. Serbian forces from outside the city continuously shelled the government defenders. Most of the major military positions and arms supplies within the city were in Serbian control. Snipers roamed the city all over as Pazite, Snajper! ("Beware, Sniper!") became a common sign. Some streets were so dangerous to cross or use that they became known as "sniper alleys". Some neighborhoods of the city were taken over by the Serbs, especially in Novo Sarajevo, as Serbian offensives into parts of the city were met with success. To counterbalance the siege, the Sarajevo Airport was opened to United Nations (UN) airlifts in late June 1992; Sarajevo's survival became strongly dependent on them.

The Bosnian government forces had greatly inferior weaponry to the besiegers. Some Bosnian black market criminals who had joined the army at the outset of the war illegally smuggled arms into the city through Serb lines, and the raids on Serb-held positions within the city helped the cause. The Sarajevo Tunnel, completed in mid-1993, allowed supplies to come into the city, and people to get out. The tunnel was one of the major ways of bypassing the international arms embargo (which was applied to all parties to the Bosnian conflict, including the defenders of Sarajevo) and providing the city defenders with weaponry, and it was said the tunnel saved Sarajevo. However, by April 1995 there were only 20 artillery pieces and five tanks in the defence of the city. The strength of the First Corps lay in its considerable supplies of rocket-propelled grenades, anti-aircraft missiles, and anti-tank missiles, but they could not really be used in the offensive actions needed to break out of Sarajevo.[8]

Vedran Smailović playing in the partially destroyed National Library in Sarajevo in 1992. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

Reports indicate an average of approximately 329 shell impacts per day during the course of the siege, with a high of 3,777 shell impacts on July 22, 1993. The shellfire caused extensive damage to the city's structures, including civilian and cultural property. By September 1993, reports concluded that virtually all buildings in Sarajevo had suffered some degree of damage, and 35,000 were completely destroyed. Among these buildings targeted and destroyed were hospitals and medical complexes, media and communication centers, industrial targets, government buildings, and military and UN facilities. Some of the more significant of these were the building of the presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the National Library, which burned to the ground along with thousands of irreplaceable texts.

Funeral of a civilian killed in Sarajevo. Photo by Mikhail Evstafiev

The shelling of the city took a tremendous toll on lives. Mass killings due primarily to mortar shell impacts made headline news in the West. On June 1, 1993, 15 people were killed and 80 injured during a football game. On July 12 of the same year, 12 people were killed while in line for water. The biggest of these however was the first Markale marketplace massacre on February 5, 1994, in which 68 civilians were killed and 200 were wounded.

In response to the Markale massacre, the UN issued an ultimatum to Serb forces to withdraw heavy weaponry beyond a certain point in a given amount of time or face air strikes. Near the end of the given time, Serb forces complied. City shelling drastically decreased at that point, which could perhaps be seen as the beginning of the end of the siege.

Ethnic cleansing

Burned apartment buildings in downtown Grbavica, a Serb-inhabited suburb of Sarajevo, before being turned in to the government in 1996

The Serb forces were reported to have carried out a vicious campaign of ethnic cleansing in the parts of the city occupied by them during the siege. In The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia, Michael A. Sells claimed how "non-nationalist Serbs were also targets of violence":

Serbs who refused to participate in the persecution of Muslims were killed. In a Serb-army occupied area of Sarajevo, Serb militants killed a Serb officer who objected to atrocities against civilians; they left his body on the street for over a week as an object lesson. During one of the 'selections' carried out by Serb militants in Sarajevo, an old Serb named Ljubo objected to being separated out from his Muslim friends and neighbors; they beat him to death on the spot.

After several years in the 1990s characterised by denial of the widely held view of the Serb responsibility for the Yugoslav wars, a trend has developed in the 2000s where Serbs, and a number of external publishers and commentators, drew Bosniak and Croat parallels to such infamous examples of atrocities as Srebrenica. For instance, they commonly draw attention to ethnic cleansing of Serb civilians by Bosnian Muslim and Croatian forces during the Balkan conflict. It is alleged that between 1992 and 1995, 150,000 Serbs were ethnically cleansed from Sarajevo, with several thousand killed. The allegations were brought to the media forefront in early 2005 when the Prime Minister of Republika Srpska, Pero Bukejlović, argued that genocide was committed against Serbs during the siege of Sarajevo, that he claimed exceeded that of the Srebrenica massacre, denounced widely as an act of genocide against Bosnian Muslims.

Today, Sarajevo citizens of all nationalities generally take accusations of ethnic cleansing by the government forces in Sarajevo during the war as a highly offensive insult. In response to premier Bukejlović's statement, many have demanded a public apology to all Sarajevo citizens. The president of the Serb Citizens Council, Dr. Mirko Pejanović (a wartime member of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Presidency, and the 2007–2011 Dean of the Faculty of Political Sciences at the University of Sarajevo), stated:

Nobody, not even Bukejlović, can change or cover up the truth for the sake of current political needs. In Sarajevo, during the four year siege carried out by Karadžić's military forces and the SDS, there were deaths of Sarayevians of all ethnicities. The people were both suffering and dying from hunger, cold, they were being killed by mortar shells... among the 12,000 killed Sarayevians recorded in the war, at least one fourth were members of the Serb nation or had Serb ethnic ancestry. Thus, we can not talk of an extermination or genocide of Serbs, but of a responsibility of the SDS and Karadžić's military forces for the overall extermination of Sarajevo and Sarayevians, and within that of the Serb people.

During the war, Serb forces systematically raped and sexually abused Muslim Bosnian women in rape camps after being separated from men. There are claims the rapes occurred with the knowledge and approval of Serbian officials. In 2001, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) officially indicted Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovac, and Zoran Vukovic for the crimes of rape.


NATO intervention

File:Dmitry Rogozin and Ratko Mladić in Sarajevo - January 1996.png
Russian soldier and politician Dmitry Rogozin discussing the role of Russian volunteers with Bosnian Serb Army leader Ratko Mladić in besieged Sarajevo, January 1996

In 1995, after the second Markale massacre, in which 37 people were killed and 90 were wounded, the international forces firmly turned against the besiegers. When the Serb forces raided a UN-monitored weapons collection site, NATO jets attacked Bosnian Serb ammunition depots and other strategic military targets. On the ground fighting escalated, this time with the joint Bosnian and Croatian forces on the offensive, and the Serbs slowly lost more and more ground both in Sarajevo area and elsewhere. Heating, electricity, and water would eventually come back to the city as well.

A cease fire was reached in October 1995, and the Dayton Agreement was reached later that year bringing peace to the country. A period of stabilization and return to normalcy followed, with the Bosnian government not officially declaring the siege of Sarajevo over until February 29, 1996, when Serbian forces left positions in and around Sarajevo. Over 200,000 Serbian civilians and Sarajevo's citizens left Serbian suburbs.

Aftermath

File:Bloodpave.jpg
Scars called Sarajevo Roses remain across the city, serving as poignant reminders of the destruction

Sarajevo was heavily damaged during those four years. The manuscript collection of the Oriental Institute in Sarajevo, one of the richest collections of Oriental manuscripts in the world, was deliberately destroyed by Serb nationalist forces. The siege of Sarajevo was undoubtedly the worst and most catastrophic period in the city's history since World War I. After the glory of the 1984 Winter Olympics, the city had been experiencing tremendous growth and development, which was entirely reversed by the siege.[citation needed]

The city had been a model for inter-ethnic relations, but the siege of Sarajevo inspired dramatic population shifts. Aside from the thousands of refugees who left the city, an immense number of Sarajevo Serbs left for the Republika Srpska as well. The percentage of Serbs in Sarajevo decreased from more than 30% in 1991 to slightly over 10% in 2002. Regions of Novo Sarajevo that are now part of the Republika Srpska have formed East Sarajevo (Istocno Sarajevo), where much of the pre-war Serbian population lives today.

Since the gloomy and desolate years of the early 1990s, Sarajevo has made a substantial recovery. By 2004, most of the damage done to buildings during the siege had been fixed. New construction projects have made Sarajevo perhaps the fastest growing city in former Yugoslavia. Sarajevo's metro-area population in 2002 was around 401,000, which was 20,000 less than the population of the city itself in 1991.

Siege of Sarajevo in documentaries and art

The former building of Sarajevo newspaper Oslobođenje. For years after the siege it remained as a memorial

Notes

  1. ^ April 5, 1992 was the date of the first attack on Sarajevo by the JNA and Serb paramilitaries and is as such considered the beginning of the siege. However as early as March 1, 1992 barricades and armed gunmen started appearing on the streets of Sarajevo.
  2. ^ February 29, 1996 was the official end to the siege as declared by the Bosnian government. The war ended with the signing of the Dayton Accords on November 21, 1995 and the Paris Protocol on December 14, 1995. The reason that the siege was not declared as over was because the Serbs had not yet implemented the Dayton deal which required them to withdraw from areas north and west of Sarajevo as well as other parts of the city. The Serbs also violated the Dayton peace by firing a rocket propelled grenade at a Sarajevo tram on January 9, 1996 killing 1 and wounding 19.
  3. ^ History of Sarajevo
  4. ^ Galić verdict- 2. Sniping and Shelling of Civilians in Urban Bosnian Army-held Areas of Sarajevo
  5. ^ Galić: Crimes convicted of
  6. ^ SENSE - DRAGOMIR MILOSEVIC SENTENCED TO 33 YEARS
  7. ^ Stanislav Galic judgment - (a) April 1992: Armed Conflict Erupts in Sarajevo [1]
  8. ^ Bosnia War History

External links

Media related to Siege of Sarajevo at Wikimedia Commons

43°50′51″N 18°21′23″E / 43.8476°N 18.3564°E / 43.8476; 18.3564 (Sarajevo)