Tens of thousands of people mourned at a commemoration ceremony in Srebrenica for the victims of the July 1995 massacres, but some targeted their anger at the Serbian prime minister.
It remains to be seen whether judicial proceedings for war crimes and genocide will deter others from committing atrocities in the future, former Hague Tribunal prosecutor Geoffrey Nice told BIRN.
A Defence witness told the trial of former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic that the official army and police of Republika Srpska had no connection to the paramilitary formations.
International and Bosnian courts have so far sentenced a total of 37 people to around 630 years in prison for genocide and other crimes against Bosniaks from Srebrenica 20 years ago.
Testifying in defense of Ratko Mladic, Milutin Misic, a member of the Board of the Directors of the Institute for Missing Persons of Bosnia and Herzegovina, denied the accuracy of lists of missing persons who disappeared after the fall of Srebrenica.
Over the past two decades, the Hague Tribunal has convicted 14 people of genocide and other crimes in Srebrenica the result of investigations by a team led by French police officer Jean-Rene Ruez.
The presentation of evidence on the Tomasica mass grave ended at the Ratko Mladic trial in the Hague. The Tomasica mass grave, near Prijedor, has revealed the mortal remains of several hundred victims allegedly killed by the Bosnian Serb Army.
A Hague Tribunal prosecution expert said that victims exhumed from the Tomasica and Jakarina Kosa mass graves near Prijedor were killed in attacks listed in Ratko Mladics indictment.
Starting with no more than rumours of a colossal atrocity, investigators and prosecutors recall how they put together a convincing case that the Bosniaks of Srebrenica were the victims of genocide.