Monday, 5 may 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

Sijak is charged, along with Muhidin Basic, with war crimes in Vares in 1993. The two indictees are charged with having raped a Croat female on January 25, 1994.Fahrija Karkin, Defence attorney of indictee Sijak, compared the indictment with Ernest Hemingway’s book “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”.“In the book a tiger blindly follows a wrong person. The Prosecutor blindly sticks to a statement given by person A. In the book the tiger was frozen on Kilimanjaro. The indictment will have the same destiny,” Karkin said. He said that the Prosecutor had never determined the exact time when the alleged rape was committed, adding that person A “avoided that fact like the devil avoids holy water, because she fabricated the whole story”.According to his Defence attorney, Mirsad Sijak reported to his Command in Vares in the morning on January 25, 1994 and then went, together with Sabahudin Operta, to Kakanj, where he attended a Corps hand-over ceremony. As he said, this was written down in his diary, which was presented as the Defence’s evidence. “Both the indictee and witness Operta confirmed this. The witness said that Sijak was with him the whole day. Prosecution witness Rifet Alihodzic too said that he saw Sijak, who was not alone, upon his arrival in Vares with person A on that morning,” Karkin explained, pointing out that Sijak had an alibi, which was supported by numerous pieces of evidence. He said that the indictee submitted documents about the fact that he had been wounded on his lower limbs on January 6, 1994.“He did not rape person A, because he was wounded, which is also to his advantage. He was in Kakanj on the day on which person A claims to have been raped,” the Defence attorney of Sijak said.Indictee Sijak addressed the Court, saying that a huge injustice was done to him, but he believed that the verdict would be fair. “My life, honour, family and career have been destroyed by this indictment. I have nothing to do with the crime charged upon me,” Mirsad Sijak said.

Najčitanije
Saznajte više
BIRN BiH and Partners Team up to Help Teach Facts about War
BIRN BiH, Srebrenica Memorial Centre and Forgotten Children of War Association launch joint initiative designed for students and teachers on judicially established facts about the Bosnian war.
Detektor Journalist Wins First Prize at ‘Remembering Through Art’ Exhibition
A testimony by Srebrenica mother Emina Hajdarevic about the son she lost in the 1995 Srebrenica genocide, filmed by Detektor journalist Lamija Grebo, has won first prize at the Remembering through Art online exhibition.
Bosnian Croat Ex-Fighters Charged with Wartime Prisoner Abuses
Bosnia Indicts Five Serb Ex-Military Policemen for Genocide
Bosnia Charges Ten with War Crimes Against Serb Prisoners
Ukraine Does Not Get to Penalize All Crimes against Children