Bijeljina is an interesting case study because it was one of
a handful of municipalities in Bosnia that, except for a few days of fighting
at the beginning of the war, the Serbs took over without opposition.
Examining what happened there during the war sheds light
on the long-term political aims, as distinct from short-term military aims, of
the Bosnian Serb leadership, because, unlike in other areas, the ethnic
cleansing visited on the Muslim population cannot simply be dismissed as a
side-effect of the fighting.
And Bijeljina was by the end of the war in 1995 thoroughly
ethnically cleansed of Bosnian Muslims – much of this cleansing having been
accomplished in 1992 – suggesting that an ethnically pure Republika Srpska (RS)
was indeed the political aim of the Bosnian Serb leadership.
The ethnic cleansing was facilitated by killing, some of it
during the takeover of the town when Serb paramilitaries did face opposition
from the Muslim ‘Patriotic League’, but most of it when the town had already
been secured and the Muslim population could not meaningfully be perceived as
threatening Serb control of the town. A report by the influential Balkan Investigative Reporting
Network, ‘Bijeljina’s Strange Silence over War Crimes’, notes that the
Sarajevo-based Research and Documentation Centre found that 1,040 people were
killed in Bijeljina during the war. The report fails to note that a large
majority of this figure was actually Serb, presumably soldiers from the municipality
killed on the nearby frontline, but still, some 300 Muslims were killed, which
at about 1% of the municipality’s pre-war population is a substantial figure,
probably enough to scare the rest of the population into leaving.
The ethnic cleansing of Bijeljina’s Muslims is described in the 2005 International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) judgement against Momcilo
Krajisnik, a senior member of the Bosnian Serb leadership.
According to this judgement, Serb paramilitaries, together
with local MUP (Interior Ministry) forces, terrorised Muslims and some Serbs in
Bijeljina in the months following the takeover. On 15 June the paramilitary
leader Ljubisa Savic, known as Mauzer, stated that the presidency of SAO
Semberija-Majevica (the region including Bijeljina and neighbouring
municipalities) had decided that all Muslims in managerial positions would be
fired if the “genocide” continued against Serbs elsewhere in the country. From
July, Muslims in the town were subjected to looting and expulsion by the SDS.
In this, Vojislav “Vojkan” Durkovic of the Bijeljina SDS was aided by Mauzer’s
men. Muslim houses were then allocated to Serbs in exchange for a fee. “The
Bijeljina SDS was determined to rid the municipality of its remaining
Muslims”by killing a Muslim family on each side of town. The plan was
implemented in September 1992 by a special police unit led by Dusko Malovic at
the instigation of Drago Vukovic of the MUP. The Serb plan to rid Bijeljina of
its Muslims also involved cutting off electricity, water and telephone lines to
the homes of Muslims who refused to be mobilised and firing them, as well as
forcing prominent Muslims to perform menial tasks. At least 52 people, mostly
Muslims, were killed between April and September, on top of the at least 48
civilians killed during the takeover of the town.
This account of events in Bijeljina during 1992 is almost
wholly taken from the witness statement and testimony of Milorad Davidovic, a
policeman working for the Yugoslav Federal SUP (Secretariat for Internal
Affairs) who was called in by the SDS leadership in July 1992 to help deal with
problems caused by paramilitaries in Bijeljina, but soon forced out, probably
because he was seen as being to rigorous.
The description of Djurkovic as “of the SDS” comes from
Davidovic’s account. According to Davidovic’s witness statement Djurkovic
“worked for the SDS as a field operative.” But the Krajisnik judgement does not
explain Djurkovic’s role in the SDS in Bijeljina and fails to note that he was
actually a member of the Party of Serbian Unity, which was headed by Arkan, the
paramilitary leader active during the takeover of Bijeljina in early April
1992, setting in train the reign of terror continued by Djurkovic and Savic.
Savic was a member of the SDS, but the relationship of both of these characters
with the Bijeljina SDS leadership and the SDS leadership for the whole of RS is
not fully explained.
The Krajisnik judgement also draws heavily from Davidovic’s
account of a three-part SDS plan to ethnically cleanse Bijeljina of its
Muslims. The plan involved: killing Muslim families in different parts of the
city to scare the remaining Muslims away; firing Muslims who refused to respond
to the call for mobilisation from their jobs and cutting off their utilities;
and forcing prominent Muslims to perform menial tasks. The first and second
parts of the plan were conducted by Drago Vukovic and his colleague Predrag Jesuric, while
the third part “was the SDS policy,” thought up by a member of the SDS
municipal main board. The link between the SDS and the first two parts of the
plan is not explained, although Davidovic does say that he attended a meeting
of the local SDS and crisis staff where the whole plan was discussed. Predrag
Jesuric was according to Davidovic, “the main ideologue in the Bijeljina SDS”,
but later in his witness statement Davidovic says, “I do not know if he was a
member of the SDS.” Drago Vukovic’s connection with the SDS is not explained.
Those inclined to swallow Davidovic's account of events in Bijeljina whole should note that he has described Mirko
Blagojevic, a local Serb Radical Party and paramilitary leader who is named as one of members of the Joint Criminal Enterprise in
the Krajisnik judgement as a “very positive character during the war in terms
of protecting Muslims”. He also stated that the conflict in Bijeljina was “started
by the Muslim forces that tried to provoke a clash.”
Nevertheless, Davidovic’s account is valuable and
it is still the case that the SDS was the main political force in Bijeljina and
presided over the ethnic cleansing of Muslims in 1992. There is little reason
to doubt Davidovic’s claim that Milan Novakovic, an SDS deputy from Bijeljina
elected in 1990, was close to the paramilitaries operating in Bijeljina, aware
of their activities and unwilling to do anything about them. (Davidovic says
that another elected SDS deputy from Bijeljina, Dragoljub Micic, was
sympathetic to his attempts to halt the ethnic cleansing activities of the
paramilitaries in Bijeljina.) His claim that members of the Bosnian SDS
leadership such as Radovan Karadzic and Momcilo Krajisnik benefited from and
knew about the looting activities of the Serb paramilitaries in Bijeljina is
also very credible.
That the SDS leadership was heavily implicated in but not in
full control of the ethnic cleansing of Bijeljina is also suggested by an
Amnesty International Report from 1994, which describes Vojkan
Djurkovic’s“Commission for the Exchange of Population”, established in 1992 to
conduct ethnic cleansing operations, as “semi-official”, but later vying for
power with other Serb factions in the area.
The Amnesty report also cites the claim by the human rights
group the Humanitarian Law Fund that in 1993 the Bijeljina authorities said
that they were implementing a policy of to reduce the municipality’s Muslim
population to 5%. There is no smoking gun evidence of this kind in the ICTY
account of events in Bijeljina in 1992, however.
The appeal judgement in the Krajisnik case adds to the
impression that events in Bijeljina in 1992 may not have been the result of a
plan to drive out the entire Muslim population. It notes that since each of the
Serb crisis staffs included at least one Assembly deputy among its members the
Bosnian Serb leadership exercised “a substantial amount of control over” the
crisis staffs, but also that the initial judgement against Krajisnik “did not
reach any general finding on the link between the Bosnian-Serb leadership and
crisis staffs.”
Many far-fetched claims have been made about the wars in the
former Yugoslavia, by all sides. Among these are the Serb claim that the exodus
of Serbs from the Croatian Krajina region was part of a Croat plan for an
ethnically pure Croatia and the Croat claim (outlined in Charles Shrader’s “The
Muslim-Croat Civil War in Central Bosnia") that there was a Muslim plan to drive
the Croat population out of central Bosnia. The claim that what happened in Bijeljina
in 1992 was wholly the result of a plan to create an ethnically pure “Greater Serbia” also
belongs in this category.
6 comments:
"except for a few days of fighting at the beginning of the war"
But this fact shows the Muslims did have militant and paramilitary at the very beginning, only they weren't strong enough here to keep it going. In such cases, they ordered the men to other areas/fronts.
There are plenty cities, towns, regions in Bosnia which have had their ethnic Serbian population reduced to nothing, or almost nothing, and that are now dominated by Muslims.
What you need is an official census of who lives there now, but the Bosnian Muslims keep refusing this even though it's been 21 years. Croatia finally did one in 2002 and it did indeed show a marked fall of the Serbian population from 1991's 12.2% to only 4.5% in 2002. (And I believe that is counting Serbs who don't actually live there, but are registered to vote and travel there for that.)
Also, without the Bosnian Muslim military records, you can not know what all they were doing and where they might have been called off or transferred.
It's know they and the Croatian army did run concentration camps for Bosnian Serb civilians right up close to Serbia's border. And unlike the Muslims and Croats, the Serb survivors have the scars, need the surgeries, etc. from what happened at the hands of Croats and Muslims. While the Croats and Muslims have big stories, pushed by the media, but don't have the signs of torture.
Is there a readily accessible source that would shed light on the two other accusations that you dismiss as far-fetched in your concluding paragraph? Was it the case there was no need to plan any population removals, because it was understood these would as a matter of fact take place after the military conquest of their own, without ever having to be ordered from above? Or is it even more than that and they were not even anticipated or envisioned?
My view is that each of the three ethnic groups in Croatia and Bosnia sought to achieve its aim – which was political unification of all or nearly all members of the ethnic group – unopposed, in line with Carl von Clausewitz’s dictum, “The aggressor is always peace-loving... he would prefer to take over our country unopposed.”
The Croats wanted to control all of Croatia as well as part of Bosnia, the Serbs wanted to control all of Serbia, plus parts of Croatia and Bosnia and the Bosnian Muslims wanted a unified Bosnian state. None of these aims included the expulsion of minority populations as long as those groups were willing to accept their minority status.
I am not sure about a single source that sheds light on my point about Croatia, but I am also unaware of any evidence that irrefutably demonstrates that the explusion of Serbs was Croatia’s aim. If you know of any please let me know. It seems to me that one of Croatia’s main aims from 1991 to 1995 was to demonstrate its Western credentials and curry favour with the US and the European Community and that this was more important to them than any desire they may have had to get rid of the Serb minority. Eastern Slavonia was transferred peacefully to Croatia in 1998 and retained a large Serb population. It is interesting to consider whether the Croats would have taken it over by force in 1995 if they knew the Serbs would crumple as they had in Western Slavonia and around Knin. I think they would not have done this because of the West’s opposition. Being liked in the West was much more important to them than achieving ethnic purity.
My point about the Muslim-Croat conflict is perhaps slightly more difficult to argue because Charles Shrader claims that the plan to expel Croats from central Bosnia was conceived in late summer to early autumn 1992, when war was already raging in Bosnia. It would have been madness for the Muslims to deliberately start a conflict with the Serbs rather than seeking to achieve their aim of an independent Bosnia peacefully, but once that conflict had started might it have made sense for them to then turn on their weaker partner? Shrader’s claim, which that the Muslim-Croat conflict arose not from any long held dream of an ethnically claim Muslim state, but in order to house the thousands of Muslims expelled to central Bosnia from areas captured by the Serbs, is plausible. I have even pointed out myself that the ARBiH appears to have targeted the village of Vozuca in 1995 partly to provide housing for Muslim refugees from Srebrenica, suggesting that the expulsion of Serbs from the village was part of the plan.
Yet I still think Shrader’s claim is not fully substantiated by the evidence he presents. He seems not to pay any attention to the political aims of the Croats in central Bosnia and I am not sure if he even mentions that many municipalities there were designated as part of “Herceg-Bosna”. While I think that Herceg-Bosna has been widely misrepresented and caricatured by the ICTY and others, I still believe that it was a legitimate source of concern for Muslims, to put it mildly. If the Croats had fully cooperated with the Muslims against the Serbs in defence of a united Bosnia-Herzegovina would they have been discriminated against and sidelined? Yes. Would they have been expelled en masse from large parts of central Bosnia? I do not think there is any convincing evidence of this.
Turning to the next question, it seems that the population removals you are referring to are those that occurred for military, rather than political reasons. Villages were often ethnically cleansed not as part of any long-standing plan for ethnic purity, but for the short-term military aim of removing a hostile population. I think this often did happen without being ordered from above, though the fact that it wasn’t ordered doesn’t mean that the commanders weren’t well aware – and in some, though not all, cases, hopeful – that it would happen.
I think it highly unlikely that population removals were ever not anticipated or envisioned. I am not aware of a single example from the 1991-1995 wars of territory being captured by one ethnic group from another without a mass exodus of civilians and mistreatment of those who remained. In Operation Storm, for example, I have no doubt that the Croats envisaged the mass exodus of Serbs, but that doesn’t mean that the expulsion of Serbs from Croatia was one of their aims.
Thanks, that clarifies things. Let me just say that I believe the theories that Bosnian Muslims intended to drive out the Croats from Central Bosnia, and that Croats intended the same for the Serbs in Krajina presume the two reasoned the Western powers would not raise complaint about it.
I was born in Bijeljina. I was 11 years old when the conflict begun late evening March 31, 1992. I left Bijeljina May 23, 1995. Having said that, as a young child then I endured a lot from Bosnian Orthodox side (meaning, "Serbs"). Personally, I refer to Serbs from Serbia, Croats from Croatia, all others were/are Bosnians of different religious backgrounds (i.e. Catholics (Croats), Russian-Orthodox (Serbs), and Muslims). I have evidence of things done to me, things I never shared and do not plan to share for a very long time. When it comes to Orthodox Bosnians talking about BN, DO NOT! PEOPLE had no idea what happened over night...but the evidence of cries, pictures, recodings, do exist. Thankfully, majority of those who comitted crimes are being brought to justice.
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