Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Telling the truth about a massacre

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Telling the truth about a massacre

    Ottawa Citizen
    November 15, 2004 Monday
    Final Edition

    Telling the truth about a massacre

    The Ottawa Citizen

    It is depressing enough that human beings are capable of mass murder,
    but the tendency of perpetrators to then deny their crimes is doubly
    sickening. So the Bosnian Serb government's decision last week to
    acknowledge the Srebrenica massacre is an important victory for
    historical truth.

    Genocide scholars have long been troubled by the phenomenon of
    denial. Turkey continues to deny the Armenian genocide during the
    First World War, even though Turkish soldiers shot tens of thousand
    of Armenian Christians and displaced tens of thousands more, the
    latter dying of privation in the desert. Turkey so much wants to see
    itself as a modern, civilized country that it has erased from
    collective memory this episode of barbarism. Meanwhile, Holocaust
    denial, the best known expression of this disease, represents a
    campaign to rehabilitate Hitler's reputation and to "expose" the
    perfidy of world Jewry for orchestrating such a hoax.

    The 1995 massacre by Bosnian Serbs of nearly 8,000 Muslim civilians
    in Srebrenica was the greatest war crime on European soil since the
    Nazi era. Yet ever since, many Serbs and their leaders have engaged
    in denial. Journalist Timothy Garton Ash once recounted how a major
    in the Yugoslav army said with a straight face that Serbian forces
    were merely "driving the Muslims out and the Muslims got frightened,
    so they started killing each other."

    The fiction that there was no massacre has now been laid to rest. The
    Bosnian Serb government now promises to "take decisive steps to force
    all persons who committed war crimes to face justice." This last part
    is crucial, for there can be no true peace in the Balkans until
    fugitives such as Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, the wartime
    leaders of the Bosnian Serbs, answer for their crimes.
Working...
X