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Yet another October 22

Photo: Predrag Trokicic

I’m supposed to write about October 22, 1992, and I don’t know how to begin. On that day the paramilitary group Avengers, led by Milan Lukic, abducted sixteen people. They abducted one man the night before. The Avengers, a paramilitary unit that operated in southeastern Bosnia and terrorized the Muslim population there, was made up of volunteers, Bosnian Serbs, and among them members of the Visegrad Brigade of the Army of Republika Srpska. In addition to cooperating with the Army of Republika Srpska, the Avengers also had the support of the local police. I have to write about the citizens of Sjeverin, a place in Serbia, who went to work in Priboj on October 22, 1992, on the Raketa (“Rocket”) bus, through Bosnia and Herzegovina because that’s where the road went, and I don’t know how to begin because they never arrived. They were abducted by the Avengers near the bridge on the river Lim, in the town of Mioce, which is located in Bosnia and Herzegovina, near the Amfora tavern. They abducted one man the night before.

The Avengers entered the bus and ID’d the passengers, after which they ordered one woman and fifteen men off of the bus. A 12-year-old boy, Admir Dzihic, remained on the bus because Ilija Krstic, the passenger sitting next to him, lied to the Avengers that he was the boy’s father. Seventeen people were taken to Visegrad and tortured in the Vilina vlas hotel. Even if I knew how to, I wouldn’t begin writing about all the ways in which they were tortured by Milan Lukic, who was convicted, among other things, of burning alive civilians barricaded in houses in Visegrad. All seventeen of the abducted people were later killed on the banks of the river Drina. I’m supposed to write about them, but I don’t know how to begin. I don’t know how to begin because after thirty years only one of those seventeen was ever found.

I’m supposed to write about how Milan Lukic and Dragutin Dragicevic were arrested several days after the abduction in Sjeverin, and then released only ten days later, which was enough for the Ministry of Internal Affairs to establish that they were “members of the army of Republika Srpska who were found with weapons in Sjeverin because they are in charge of armaments in another country.”1 Dobrica Cosic, the president of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia at the time, appointed a special commission to determine the facts regarding the  abduction in Sjeverin. The commission never shared those facts with the public. In 2005, Lukic and Dragicevic were found guilty for abducting, torturing and murdering civilians together with Oliver Krsmanovic, Djordje Sevic, and five other unknown persons, thus committing a war crime against the civilian population. On that occasion, in a repeated trial, the District Court in Belgrade sentenced Lukic and Krsmanovic to twenty years in prison, and Dragicevic and Sevic to fifteen years in prison. The verdict directed the families of the victims to file a lawsuit in order to exercise their right to compensation.

I am supposed to write about how, in 2007, the Humanitarian Law Center filed a claim for damages, which was rejected after more than six years in court because the abduction, torture and killing of civilians did not take place in Serbia, but in a neighboring country – Bosnia and Herzegovina. After that, I’m supposed to also mention the Constitutional appeal of the victims’ families, which was rejected by the Constitutional Court in 2016. I am then supposed to write about the petition that the Humanitarian Law Center submitted to the European Court of Human Rights in 2019, which the Court rejected, stating that at the time of the abduction, on October 22, 1992, the European Convention on Human Rights was not binding for Serbia. And I don’t know how to begin.

I’m supposed to write about an event that happened thirty years ago, and the remains of the victims have not yet been found. Only the remains of one victim were ever found, in Lake Perucac. I have to write about an event that happened thirty years ago, and the families have not yet buried the remains of their loved ones, loved ones they should have had more time with, for laughing, fighting, growing up, for love, for who knows what. I’m supposed to write, but I don’t know how to begin, because I don’t even know how to explain to myself that the families of the victims of the abduction in Sjeverin have not yet been granted the status of civilian victims of war and thus, above all, received recognition for the crime which took their family members from them, and for the suffering they themselves went through in the years that followed. The years that keep passing. The families of the victims cannot exercise their rights because it is considered that their loved ones were not murdered by an enemy army. And they were not murdered on the territory of Serbia, a country that, at that time, was not officially at war.

Twenty-three years after their abduction, torture and murder, a monument to the victims was erected in 2015. The construction of the monument, which is located on the private property of the family of one of the seventeen murdered people, was supported by the Municipality of Priboj. Representatives of local, municipal authorities, together with representatives of the Islamic community and NGOs, mark the anniversary of the crime every year by throwing flowers from the bridge in Mioce into the river Lim. Government representatives are usually not seen at commemorations of crimes that the official state wants (us) to forget. And they should be. Then we would know how to begin.

At the same time, on October 22 in Belgrade, NGOs such as Women in Black, the Humanitarian Law Center and the Youth Initiative for Human Rights pay tribute to the victims with a silent street performance and remind fellow citizens of that crime… A crime which they might have forgotten, but also a crime they might have never heard of. The majority of crimes committed during the 1990s, including the abduction in Sjeverin, is not spoken of much or often, although those who know how important it is speak loudly and unequivocally about it. Survivors, victims and their families should be the first ones who get to speak about the crimes committed during the nineties, but also about the different types of violence that still happen today, behind closed doors or in the open, because criminals and bullies already take up enough space.

I’m supposed to write about Melvida Koldzic, Mehmed Sebo, Zafer Hadzic, Medo Hodzic, Medredin Hodzic, Ramiz Begovic, Dervis Softic, Mithad Softic, Mujo Alihodzic, Alija Mandal, Sead Pecikoza, Mustafa Bajramovic, Hajrudin Sajtarevic, Esad Dzihic, Idriz Gibovic and Ramahudin Catovic, people who were abducted, tortured and murdered because of their nationality, and I don’t know how to begin.

Andjela Savic (1993, Belgrade) is researching and writing about the war crimes committed during the nineties in the Balkans.

DwP, 31.10.2022.

Translated by Luna Djordjevic

Peščanik.net, 31.10.2022.


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  1. Priboj: Discrimination, abduction and intimidation of Muslims in Serbia; Under the microscope no. 2, Humanitarian Law Fund, February 1993.