Testifying at the trial of eight former Bosnian Serb fighters, a state prosecution witness said he identified his mothers remains in the village of Karacici.
A former police inspector testifying at the trial of eight former members of the Bosnian Serb Army said he found the mortal remains of several persons at a crime scene inspection in the village of Karacici.
At the trial of four former members of the Bosnian Army, state prosecution witnesses described how they were injured and lost family members in a civilian convoy which was attacked in Kukavice.
H.S. spent nearly two years in the Rasadnik detention camp in Rogatica. She told BIRN-Justice Report about how she survived the camp, and the fate of the other captives. When she found out after her release that her four sons had been murdered, she was completely broken. Today, the 80 year old has no one to open her door to.
The first witness at the trial of eight former Bosnian Serb Army soldiers said that after the war he found his mothers remains in the village of Karacici, in Rogatica.
The Bosnian state court terminated custody measures for Milisav Ikonic and Zoran Ilic and ordered prohibitive measures instead. Ikonic and Ilic, former soldiers of the Bosnian Serb Army, are suspected of having committed war crimes in the Rogatica area in 1992.
The Bosnian state court has confirmed an indictment against Rajko Kusic, for alleged crimes against humanity committed in the Rogatica area from 1992-1995. The indictment against Kusic, who currently resides in Serbia, was confirmed in December 2014.
The Bosnian state prosecution proposed to extend custody measures for Milisav Ikonic and Zoran Ilic, both suspected of having committed war crimes in Rogatica. The defendants defense attorneys both objected to this proposal.
The Bosnian state prosecution requested that custody measures for Bozidar Perisic and Vinko Zoranovic be extended. Perisic and Zoranovic are suspected of war crimes in the Rogatica area in 1992. The defense teams objected to the state prosecutions motion to extend custody measures.