BOSNIAN GENOCIDE
Miriam Sid
Historical Context
   Before the Genocide happened there was the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1990.
    Yugoslavia were one of the nations who were under the Soviet Union, thus
    they were unstable. Yugoslavia had been under the communist
    government for 40 years. Slovenia and Croatia declared independence,
    and war quickly followed between Serbia and these breakaway republics.
    People who had lived peacefully for years as neighbors turned against
    each other. When Bosnia attempted to secede, Serbia under Slobodan
    Milosevic’s leadership invaded, claiming it was there to “free” fellow
    Serbian Orthodox Christians living in Bosnia who were being “mistreated”
    by the Bosnian Muslims. On April 1992 and November 1995, Serbia set out
    to “ethnically cleanse” Bosnian territory by removing all Bosnian Muslims.
    Serbia, together with ethnic Bosnian Serbs, attacked Bosnian Muslims with
    former Yugoslavian military equipment and surrounded Sarajevo, the
    capital city. The siege of this city was brutal, as snipers were used to shoot
    civilians walking in the street. Many Bosnian Muslims were driven into
    concentration camps where women and girls were systematically gang-
    raped and other civilians were tortured, starved and murdered. In the
    course of the war as many as 1 million Muslims in Bosnia were forced to
    flee their homes.
Bosniangenocidemiriamsid(unfinished)
Bosniangenocidemiriamsid(unfinished)

Bosniangenocidemiriamsid(unfinished)

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Historical Context  Before the Genocide happened there was the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1990. Yugoslavia were one of the nations who were under the Soviet Union, thus they were unstable. Yugoslavia had been under the communist government for 40 years. Slovenia and Croatia declared independence, and war quickly followed between Serbia and these breakaway republics. People who had lived peacefully for years as neighbors turned against each other. When Bosnia attempted to secede, Serbia under Slobodan Milosevic’s leadership invaded, claiming it was there to “free” fellow Serbian Orthodox Christians living in Bosnia who were being “mistreated” by the Bosnian Muslims. On April 1992 and November 1995, Serbia set out to “ethnically cleanse” Bosnian territory by removing all Bosnian Muslims. Serbia, together with ethnic Bosnian Serbs, attacked Bosnian Muslims with former Yugoslavian military equipment and surrounded Sarajevo, the capital city. The siege of this city was brutal, as snipers were used to shoot civilians walking in the street. Many Bosnian Muslims were driven into concentration camps where women and girls were systematically gang- raped and other civilians were tortured, starved and murdered. In the course of the war as many as 1 million Muslims in Bosnia were forced to flee their homes.