LATEST FEATURES "AFTERMATH" : BOSNIA'S LONG ROAD TO PEACE

> "AFTERMATH" : BOSNIA'S LONG ROAD TO PEACE
Photographs and text by SARA TERRY / TAÏGA (REF: 287_50082)

"Aftermath" seeks to explore and illumine the incredibly challenging period that follows the end of war, with its difficult tasks of rebuilding lives and communities.
Bosnia's brutal war, marked by ethnic cleansing and genocide, began in 1992 and finally ended in 1995. Today, Bosnians are still struggling to rebuild a multicultural civil society that will be free from future conflict. They cannot do it alone.
"Aftermath" explores five areas in which critical issues of reconciliation and rebuilding are being played out : the exhumation and identification of victims of ethnic cleansing; the widows of Srebrenica; the youth of Sarajevo; hardline ethnic communities; and the ongoing return of refugees to villages they fled during the war.
This project began in July, 2000, when I read a newspaper article about the record number of Bosnians trying to return their homes - while at the same time international aid for these people was decreasing. I was astounded by this news, because these so-called "minority returns" are one of the fundamental goals of Dayton Peace Accord, which finally ended the war in 1995. The reason for the decrease in financial aid - at such a crucial time in the rebuilding of Bosnia - was widely attributed to "Bosnia fatigue". Donors were simply growing tired of Bosnia and were turning their attention elsewhere.
The west, particularly the United States, played a critical role in the war in Bosnia - mainly through inaction, thereby allowing Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic to pursue his goals of creating a Greater Serbia, which included slaughtering thousands of Bosnian Muslims. Only after the massacre of some 7,000 Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica in 1995 did the West finally step in with military force and help bring the war to an end. I felt, and still feel, that the West has a special obligation - not to mention regional self-interest - in helping the country rebuild.
The year 2002 is an important milestone for Bosnia : it marks the tenth anniversary of the beginning of the conflict, as well as the year in which Slobodan Milosevic will finally be brought to trial before an international court at the Hague on charges of genocide for his role in instigating and leading the war.
 

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The widows of Srebrenica
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The youth of Sarajevo
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