Saturday, 6 december 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

“Our goal is to introduce this issue to the public,” Elmina Kulasic, president of the Transitional Justice, Accountability and Remembrance in Bosnia and Herzegovina association, which is running the project, told a press conference in Sarajevo on Tuesday.

“So far we have completed the profiles for 15 camps and detention facilities, and we worked on it for several months. Now it is important to develop partnerships with various organisations to improve our work,” Kulasic said.

The coordinator of the project, Hikmet Karcic, said that it is estimated that there were more than 600 locations where prisoners were held during the 1992-95 conflict.

“We hope that after this work is done, we will be able to put together a working group of experts which will define what a camp is, what is a concentration camp, what is a transit camp, and what is a prison during a war,” said Karcic.

Karcic showed data on three detention facilities from the war, in Foca, Butmir and the village of Kacuni in the Busovaca area.

He explained that the verdicts handed down by the Hague Tribunal and the Bosnian state court, as well as witness statements, suggested that over 260 people were killed in Foca, which makes it the camp with the largest number of victims, while Butmir was the camp with the highest number of prisoners, with over 10,000 people being detained during the time that it was open.

However there were no court judgements with information about Kacuni, so the project had to rely on witness testimonies alone, “which are quite uncertain”, according to Karcic.

Sarajevo law professor Zdravko Grebo praised the project as “an attempt to reach the factual truth about what was done during the war”.

“The time has finally come to deal with this because there are fewer living witnesses of that time, and we need them to find out what happened,” he said.

But although the project managers said they were cooperating with all the wartime detainees’ associations, the president of the Association of Prison Camp Detainees of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Jasmin Meskovic, issued a statement saying that it was “presenting incomplete information and a distortion of the facts”.

“Although the Association of Prison Camp Detainees participated as a partner in the implementation of the project from August to December 2013, and made a contribution in documenting ten camps, for which there are final verdicts, we distance ourselves from the results of the project, because originally it was agreed that the project will deal only with the camps whose existence was confirmed by a final court verdict,” said Meskovic.

When asked about Meskovic’s statement, Karcic said that it was “just a misunderstanding”.

Najčitanije
Saznajte više
Detektor Journalist Shortlisted for Fetisov International Journalism Award
A story about obtaining the right to justice for victims of war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina was one of two articles by Detektor journalist Emina Dizdarevic Tahmiscija which have been shortlisted for the Fetisov International Journalism Award for 2025.
BIRN BiH Joins in Presenting Database of Facts About War and Handbook for Teachers
The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network of Bosnia and Herzegovina, BIRN BiH, the “Forgotten Children of War” Association, and the Srebrenica Memorial Centre presented a Database of Judicially Established Facts about the War and a handbook, How to Learn ad Teach about the War in Bosnia and Herzegovina, a tool for educating young people, combatting denial and relativization of verdicts, and building peace and mutual understanding.
BIRN BiH Director Wins ‘Goran Bubalo’ Peace Award