Archive for Srebrenica
The Srebrenica Massacre of 1995: still counting…
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bosnian War, commemoration, cultural memory, genocide, massacre, Srebrenica, war crimes on 11 July 2013 by delclem“Murdered, buried, denied”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Austria, Bosnia-Herzegovina, film, genocide, interview, Lukas Sturm, Srebrenica on 26 January 2013 by delclem
If “writing poem about Auschwitz is barbaric, as German philosopher Theodor W. Adorno claimed: what about feature films on genocide? In this case Body Complete (about the Srebrenica massacre) by Austrian director Lukas Sturm >interview (c) wieninternational.at 2013
PS. Srebrenica revisionism – who pays?
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Bosnia-Herzegovina, genocide denial, Republika Srpska, Srebrenica on 12 July 2012 by delclem“It turns out that genocide denial has a price tag – and a hefty one at that. Financial records from the Bosnian Serb entity known as Republika Srpska reveal that a Hague-based group of pseudo-experts that calls itself the “Srebrenica Historical Project” has received more than $1 million from the cash-strapped mini-state over the past five years.” >full text (c) FOREIGN POLICY, 2012
Plus, on the same page: article on General Mladic in The Hague
Srebrenica: A town still divided
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bosnian War, Europe, genocide, memorial, Serbia, Srebrenica on 11 July 2012 by delclem“Ethnic divisions continue to plague this town, where more than 8,000 people were slaughtered in July 1995.” >Full report (c) AL JAZEERA, 2012; photo (c) AFP.
Britain also responsible for Srebrenica?
Posted in Uncategorized with tags bosnia-hercegovina, genocide, Srebrenica on 3 September 2011 by delclem“Srebrenica Health Spa”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Bosnia-Hercegovcina, cultures of memory, genocide, Potočari, Ratko Mladić, Srebrenica, yugoslavia on 18 July 2011 by delclemThe Unbearable Lightness of Being Dead
There are many crime scenes where the idea of Europe was murdered in the “short” 20th century. One of them certainly is Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia, the place where the largest massacre after the Second World War executed by military personnel took its course.


