Prijedor citizens are dissatisfied with the work of prosecutions and courts, because they are still waiting for perpetrators of hundreds of murders committed in 1992 to be processed, says Edin Ramulic of the Izvor Association.
Investigators have discovered a mass grave that could contain the bodies of almost 150 murdered Bosniaks in the village of Oborci near the central Bosnian town of Donji Vakuf.
Throwing 250 roses into the pit at Koricanske Stijene, victims families marked the 21st anniversary of the murder of people from Prijedor at Mt Vlasic in August 1992.
The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, ICTY, organised a screening of documentary film Crimes before the Tribunal: Prijedor in Sarajevo.
Since its creation almost 20 years ago, the Hague Tribunal, ICTY, has made a series of landmark decisions which have significantly impacted the reconciliation process both within Bosnia and across the region, a Sarajevo conference heard.
The Court and Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina must improve their outreach activities and be more open to victims and witnesses, a round table in Sarajevo concluded.
Two years after it has been commissioned, Bosnia has a draft of the Transitional Justice Strategy, but despite widespread acceptance of its importance there are already doubts whether the document will be adopted.
Twenty years since the start of the war in Bosnia, the Republika Srpska government in Prijedor is still refusing to accept the unthinkable war crimes which occurred there, claim representatives of victims associations.
Following the revocation of a first instance verdict, under which four former policemen from Prijedor were sentenced for Koricanske stijene crimes, the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina confirms that a warrant against Dusan Jankovic is still in force.
The representatives of authorities and prosecutions, as well as victims, regard that certain progress has been made in processing of war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but victims, who testify at those trials, still do not receive adequate support.