European parliamentarians adopted reports calling on Serbia and Kosovo to do more to investigate suspected wartime grave sites and resolve hundreds of remaining missing persons cases from the 1998-99 Kosovo war.
The Supreme Court overturned the acquittal of Marko Carevic, wartime commander of rebel Croatian Serb Territorial Defence forces, for ordering the killing of an 83-year-old civilian in October 1991.
On a programme to mark the anniversary of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, freed Hague Tribunal convicts Nikola Sainovic and Vladimir Lazarevic told Radio-Television Serbia they were not responsible for war crimes against Kosovo Albanian civilians.
With COVID-19 putting an unprecedented strain on the Albanian health system, some COVID-19 patients and their families are turning to an unregulated and dangerous black market in oxygen, potentially doing more harm to their health than good.
Ninety-one-year-old former Bosnian Serb President Biljana Plavsic, who served a sentence for war crimes, was admitted to hospital in Belgrade for treatment after becoming infected with the coronavirus.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled that Croatia violated the rights of a Serb whose property was stolen and damaged after he fled the country because of the 1991-95 war.
Pjeter Shala, a former Kosovo Liberation Army fighter, was arrested in Belgium after being indicted for war crimes by the Kosovo Specialist Chambers in The Hague.
The Croatian Supreme Court rejected Mirko Graorac’s plea for a retrial, despite new witnesses saying they never saw him at a Bosnian detention camp where he allegedly committed war crimes in 1992.
Former brigade commander Rajko Kusic went on trial in Belgrade for ordering attacks on non-Serb civilians in the Rogatica area of Bosnia during the war, resulting in crimes including 150 killings, torture and rape.