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“The Potential Adoption of the Srebrenica Resolution Continues the Policy of The Hague Tribunal”

“The Potential Adoption of the Srebrenica Resolution Continues the Policy of The Hague Tribunal”

The potential adoption of the resolution on Srebrenica represents a continuation of the policy of the Hague Tribunal, which aims to marginalize the entire Serbian nation, stated Viktor Nuždić, acting director of the Republican Center for Research of War, War Crimes and Missing Persons, during the morning program RTRS.

“The scene is the pinnacle of hypocrisy,” added Nuždić.

He pointed out that it is about the caprice of the BiH Ambassador to the UN, Zlatko Lagumdžija.

“As far as I know, last night closed consultations on the Srebrenica draft were held, attended by Željko Komšić and Denis Bećirović, while the Serb member of the Presidency, Željka Cvijanović, did not attend. Thus, it happens again that the Serb people are outvoted,” said Nuždić.

He emphasized that the Serbian people are once again being subjected to severe strictness.

“Interference in the internal affairs of BiH is happening again, and I really do not know how reconciliation can occur in BiH if you again ignore the will of the Serbian people,” Nuždić conveyed.

He believes that this is not only an attack on Republika Srpska but also on Serbia, especially concerning the resolution of the Kosovo and Metohija issue.

Branimir Kojić, president of the Assembly of the Republic Organization of Families of Captured and Killed Fighters and Missing Civilians, stated that they only ask for someone to listen to the Serb people.

“We ask someone to listen to us and understand our pain,” added Kojić.

He believes that the Bosniaks are only interested in what they have decided.

“And that is to be victims and to trample over us Serbs, our victims, and graves,” says Kojić, adding that living in Srebrenica is not easy.

Branо Vučetić was only nine years old when his family home in Srebrenica was attacked by Muslims from the area.

“In a brutal massacre, I lost my mother, my 17-year-old brother, and my father,” says Vučetić, a witness to the events in Srebrenica in 1992.

He stated that he was wounded on December 14 and that he was taken to a camp alone with a baby, a three-year-old girl, their mother, and grandmother.

“So wounded, I spent 56 days without medical assistance,” says Vučetić, adding, “we were only defending ourselves, our home, and our threshold.”

Reminder: Today, the National Assembly is discussing the report of the International Commission on Srebrenica, and afterwards, a large public rally will be held in Krajina Square in Banja Luka, from which it will be declared that the Serbs are committed to their freedom and the defense of their future.

Source: RTRS

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