Thousands of Bosniaks were not driven out of the Rogatica area by Serbs in spring 1992 but actually chose to leave, a former local Serb politician told the war crimes trial of Ratko Mladic.
Bosnian Serb ex-soldier Bozidar Krnojelac testified on behalf of his former commander Ratko Mladic that Bosniak forces torched Serbs houses in the Foca area in 1992.
The Bosnian prosecution filed an indictment against eight former Bosnian Serb troops for killing 20 civilians, mainly women, children and elderly people, in the Rogatica area in 1992.
Ex-servicemen Muhamed Sisic, Tarik Sisic, Emir Drakovac and Aziz Susa are accused of wartime crimes in Rogatica and Foca, including a deadly attack on fleeing Serb civilians.
Marking the 22th anniversary of the killing of Bosniaks in the Rogatica area, survivors express their dissatisfaction with the slow processing of those crimes by judicial institutions.
Four former Bosnian Army servicemen have been indicted for allegedly staging an attack on Serb civilians who were fleeing the conflict in Gorazde in 1992, leaving 21 people dead.
For a year-and-a-half, F.K. was mentally and physically abused in the Rasadnik detention camp in Rogatica, where she was repeatedly raped and forced to have sex with another detainee. She says that thanks to her faith, she stayed sane.
Three men alleged to have been Bosnian Serb soldiers were acquitted of killing a Bosniak man and torturing his teenage son outside a village near Rogatica in 1992.
Prosecutors called for the conviction of three former Bosnian Serb soldiers for killing a Bosniak villager and torturing his teenage son near Rogatica in 1992.
Testifying for the District Prosecution in Eastern Sarajevo at the trial for crimes in Rogatica, an additional witness recalls August 8, 1992, when her husband was killed and twelve-year old son wounded.