“This percentage of victims corresponds to the demographic proportion according to the 1991 census,” Kovacevic said, adding that there are no convictions for the killed Serbs.

He reminded of the commemoration of the Day of Missing Persons of Serb nationality in the Sarajevo and Sarajevo-Romanija region, emphasizing that the remains of more than 150 of them have not yet been found.

Kovacevic mentioned that of the eight young men killed in 1992 in a park in the center of Sarajevo, the remains of only two have been found, and that too in a landfill, stressing that these are notorious facts.

“These young men were tortured and ultimately murdered in the park in the most brutal manner. Some were thrown into the Miljacka river, others burned, and later their remains were found, and you call this fabrication,” Kovacevic stated, questioning if this is considered fabrication.

Kovacevic also referred to an article by Efraim Zuroff, the director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, in the Jerusalem Post about Srebrenica, in which it is argued that not every crime is genocide.

He noted that a UN General Assembly resolution does not bind anyone, unlike a UN Security Council resolution, which is binding for all UN members, adding that he personally respects all victims in Srebrenica and sincerely mourns them.

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