Paul Lowe’s exhibition of photographs of everyday life during the siege of Sarajevo shows how people in the Bosnian capital dealt with the everyday dangers and deprivations of war with courage and creativity.
Nikola Koprivica, who is suspected of committing a crime against humanity in the village of Novoseoci, where over 40 Bosniaks were executed in 1992, was extradited from Canada to Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Policemen Milan Dumanovic and Mladen Trbovic were cleared of disclosing an official secret when they spoke publicly about covertly recording a Srebrenica genocide commemoration in 2015, when Serbian leader Aleksandar Vucic was attacked.
Montenegrin police on Thursday promised to secure the safety of rights activist Aleksandar Sasa Zekovic, after Russian nationalist extremist Vladislav Pozdnyakov threatened him online, saying he would 'pay for his lies'.
Draft bill, condemned by the opposition and rights groups, threatens to imprison journalists who allegedly harm companies’ reputations by publishing critical news reports.
Personal possessions and toys owned by children who lived through the wars in Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo and Serbia, as well as the ongoing war in Ukraine, went on display for the first time in the Serbian capital.
Four convicted war criminals have been involved in campaigning for the upcoming elections in Serbia, all of them supporting parties in the governing coalition, the Youth Initiative for Human Rights said in a new report.
Over the last 20 days, two Serbian citizens have been banned from entering Bosnia and one Bosnian citizen has been refused entrance to Serbia, all on security grounds, in what seem to be tit-for-tat gestures.
Human rights activist Aida Corovic went on trial on charges of disturbing public order after she threw eggs at a mural celebrating Bosnian Serb war criminal Ratko Mladic in the Serbian capital Belgrade.