The Security Ministry of Bosnia and Herzegovina has started collecting information for its final report on the implementation of the Action Plan for the Strategy for Preventing and Countering Terrorism, which expired late last year.
Former Bosnian Serb Army soldier Vuk Ratkovic, who was convicted of raping a woman during the war and was on trial again for involvement in kidnapping train passengers who were then killed, has died.
A Belgrade court ruled that the case of Husein Mujanovic, sentenced to ten years in prison for beating Serbs at a prison near Sarajevo in 1992, will have to go to a retrial.
Our world looks very different today to how it did a year ago, and no doubt it will look very different again when we eventually emerge from this pandemic. No aspect of our lives will be left unchanged by the events of the year gone by. The Fellowship, however, is still looking for stories that reveal something new about the world – or that reveal the familiar in a new light.
A Greek police spokesperson has dismissed reports that Christos Pappas, a convicted senior member of the far-right Golden Dawn party, has fled to monastery in Serbia to escape serving his 13-year jail term at home.
Interpol has issued a ‘red notice’ asking for states worldwide to arrest Mladen Mitrovic, who is suspected of committing crimes against humanity against non-Serbs in the Prijedor area of Bosnia during wartime.
New research documents more than 600 detention camps, prisons or other jail facilities that operated during the 1992-95 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina - many more than have been documented by court verdicts.
The state court confirmed the indictment of wartime Bosnian Serb Army officers Radomir Nedic and Ratko Djurkovic for crimes against humanity after the prosecution brought new evidence to support charges claiming they persecuted Bosniak civilians.
The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina has jailed former ISIS fighter Jasmin Keserovic for joining a terrorist organisation – and for publicly calling for Muslims to murder Christians by any means available.
A court in Belgrade upheld the verdict sentencing former Bosnian Serb Army serviceman Zeljko Maricic to two years in prison for beating up Bosniak prisoners in the town of Kljuc in May 1992.