Two former policemen and three Bosnian Serb Army ex-soldiers were cleared of involvement in the murders of at least 57 Bosniak civilians in the village of Zaklopaca in the Milici municipality in 1992.
Former Bosnian Army military police officer Mehmed Alesevic was sentenced to five years in prison for seriously abusing civilian detainees in Buzim in 1994 and 1995.
Malko Koroman, a wartime police chief, was acquitted of unlawfully detaining Bosniak civilians, some of whom were tortured and killed, in the town of Pale in 1992.
The Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina has filed an indictment against Branislav Lasica and Miroslav Milovic for crimes in the village of Lozje, near Gorazde, in 1992.
Former reservist policeman Simo Stupar, who was convicted of involvement in killing, beating and illegally detaining Bosniaks in the Vlasenica area in 1992, asked the Bosnian court to overturn his conviction.
In closing arguments at the trial of wartime police chief Dragomir Vasic, the defence argued that he did not know about a plan to forcibly relocate and kill Bosniak men from Srebrenica in 1995.
Former Bosnian Serb soldier Cvijan Tomanic was sentenced to seven years in prison for his involvement in beating and killing one ethnic Albanian civilian and assaulting others in the Zvornik area in 1992.
The Bosnian prosecution called for a 20-year sentence for Sakib Mahmuljin, wartime commander of the Bosnian Army’s Third Corps, for failing to stop Islamic volunteer fighters torturing and killing Serb prisoners.
Wartime Bosnian Serb police reservist and army officer Rade Garic was sentenced to 20 years in prison for persecuting Bosniaks from the Vlasenica and Srebrenica areas in 1992 and 1995 in a series of crimes including several murders.