Friday, 31 october 2025.
Prijavite se na sedmični newsletter Detektora
Newsletter
Novinari Detektora svake sedmice pišu newslettere o protekloj i sedmici koja nas očekuje. Donose detalje iz redakcije, iskrene reakcije na priče i kontekst o događajima koji oblikuju našu stvarnost.

This post is also available in: Bosnian

By Aida Alic The presentation of evidence by the Defence of Ferid Hodzic, former commander of the Territorial Defence, TO, in Vlasenica, eastern Bosnia, finished one year after it began. The two parties are due to present their closing arguments on June 23.

Hodzic is charged with having taken part in crimes against civilians and prisoners of war in the village of Cerska, in Vlasenica municipality, from May 1992 to January 26, 1993.

In defence of the indictee, witness Vahid Karavelic described the situation in Cerska as unimaginably difficult.

“There were many self-appointed commanders because the General Staff of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina did not appoint any ,” he said.

“If Hodzic did something under the circumstances, he did it only because he wanted to help. His intentions were good as he wanted to save the civilians in that area,” the witness added.

The Defence examined six other witnesses and one court expert during the course of its evidence presentation, which lasted a year. Many hearings had to be postponed after Hodzic suffered a heart attack in June 2008.

Although a member of the Trial chamber was replaced in November 2008, both Prosecution and Defence agreed the evidence presentation by Hodzic’s defence should continue.

The indictment alleges that Hodzic issued an order for Bosnian Serb civilians and prisoners-of-war to be held in the “Stala” (“Barn”) prison in Rovasi, a hamlet, where they experienced inhumane treatment. It alleges that he was aware that crimes had occurred but failed to prevent them or punish the perpetrators.

The indictment further alleges that members of the TO of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina used to come to Stala and physically and mentally abuse the Bosnian Serb detainees. Hodzic was allegedly apprised of these events. In the meantime, one person died as a result of injuries sustained in a beating.

However, the Defence witnesses insisted Hodzic had no official role in the Vlasenica TO and that Stala was not a prison in any case but a “local detention unit” where both Serbs and Bosniaks were detained.

According to Vahid Karavelic, Hodzic had commanded the Patriotic League in Vlasenica and was commander of the TO in the municipality before the war.

But on April 8, 1992, the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina ordered the abolition of the Patriotic League. “New commanders of the municipal TO forces were appointed. However, Hodzic was never appointed to that function,” Karavelic said.

Witnesses recalled that experts among the refugees had decided to form a wartime court, prosecution and detention sites in Cerska.

“Ramiz Duric, a wartime court judge, appointed Radif Mujanovic as the detention camp manager, so the Army did not have any competencies over the detention unit,” Sejfudin Hodzic said.

Defence witnesses maintained Hodzic had no “effective control” over the prisoners held in Stala and further claimed some people were detained there of their own volition.

Salih Jusic mentioned one such detainee, named as Rade Pejic, known as Miso, who allegedly had not wanted to hand in his shotgun.

“He agreed to be detained in Stala until an exchange was organised he did not want to become a member of the Territorial Defence or Civil Protection Unit,” Jusic said.

The same witness insisted he did not hear of any beatings or abuse of prisoners while he and Hodzic were members of the crisis committee in Vlasenica.

He also said the conditions experienced by the detainees were no worse than those experienced by the rest of the population.

“The living conditions were the same for all of us,” Hodzic said. “We too slept in barns. There was no way one could provide better life conditions for anyone.”

Witness Fajko Kadric spoke about Hodzic’s functions in the course of 1992.

He recalled that the indictee had led the Joint TO Command in Vlasenica, but added that he “could not give any orders. All he could do was provid

Najčitanije
Saznajte više
New Blood Samples and More Experts Needed to Remedy Misidentifications After War
Every year in Bosnia and Herzegovina, families learn that the remains of persons they have buried, believing them to be their loved ones, were misidentified. However, such cases could be reduced if all families agreed to provide blood samples for DNA identification. The search for remaining missing persons is also slowed by the absence of an umbrella state forensic agency, as well as by the lack of forensic archaeologists, pathologists, and other experts who could take over this work from international colleagues.
Eksumacija posmrtnih ostataka na području Opštine Zvornik. Foto: EPA
Funding and New Technologies for the Search for the Missing in Bosnia and Herzegovina At the Will of Politicians
As the years pass, families of victims still missing from the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina grow increasingly desperate to locate the remains of their loved ones and lay them to rest with dignity. Meanwhile, the authorities responsible for locating the more than 7,500 missing persons in the country are drafting new strategic documents so that, thirty years after the war, leading global technologies can finally be utilised in the search. Yet, this effort hinges primarily on securing public funding and political will, as donor funding has become increasingly scarce.
Bosnia Losing the Battle against Illegal Landfills, Satellite Images Show
In Bosnia, Defiant Serb Strongman is Still Playing President