Five wartime Bosnian Serb fighters were sentenced to a total of 59 years in prison for involvement in an attack that left several civilians dead in the village of Zecovi near Prijedor in July 1992.
The Bosnian state court asked Interpol to issue international ‘red notices’ for the arrest of Dusan Milunic, Ilija Zoric and Zoran Stojnic, who were convicted under a first-instance verdict of attacking civilians in the village of Zecovi in 1992.
Bosnian Serb ex-policeman Radomir Stojnic, who was on trial for involvement in the mass killings of Bosniaks in the village of Zecovi near Prijedor in 1992, became the second defendant to die during the long-running case.
A protected state prosecution witness testified at the trial of fourteen former Bosnian Serb fighters charged with attacking the village of Zecovi in 1992. The witness said he didn’t hear defendant Radomir Stojnic giving any orders, using the word “clean,” or approving any crime.
A protected state prosecution witness testifying at the trial of fourteen former members of Bosnian Serb forces said he remembered seeing bodies in Zecovi and Prijedor, near Gradina.
Testifying at the trial of fourteen Bosnian Serb fighters charged with crimes in Zecovi, a state prosecution witness said she heard that defendant Rade Grujcic took her son away in a personnel carrier with another perpetrator. The witness said her son’s remains were found in the Tomasica mass grave after the war.
A state prosecution witness testifying at the trial of fourteen former members of Bosnian Serb military and police formations said he saw people lying in front of several houses during a military operation in the village of Zecovi in the municipality of Prijedor. The witness said he assumed they were dead.
A state prosecution witness said that during in the summer of 1992 he saw defendant Zoran Milunic during a shooting which took place in the village of Zecovi near Prijedor.
Testifying at the trial of fourteen defendants charged with attacking civilians in the village of Zecovi in the municipality of Prijedor, a state prosecution witness said she hid in the basement of a house in the village with women and children during the attack. Serb forces attacking the village then set the house on fire.