The Day After the
Videotape Depicting Cold-Blooded Killing of Civilians
in Srebrenica Was Broadcast
ALMOST ALL BELGRADE PRINT MEDIA DEAF MUTE
06/02/2005
Regardless of the fact that yesterday morning, June 1, viewers of the TV
B92 - and, later on, audiences of other broadcast media - had the opportunity to see the
shocking and exclusive videotape of the execution of civilians in Srebrenica, The Hague
Prosecution showed during the cross-examination of former Serbian assistant interior
minister Obrad Stevanovic, who has been testified in Slobodan Milosevic's defence case,
editors and reporters for Belgrade-seated print media were, as it seems, somewhere else,
assigned more important tasks. What made breaking news at global level - by its horrifying
effect at least - did not happen at all, if it were for them. Their full attention was
focused on various speculations of the withdrawal of Interpol's arrest warrant after Mira
Markovic and other "sensational" revelations.
The Danas daily was the only exception. Dailies Politika and Novosti
carried news agencies' reports: Politika run a front page story under the headline
"The Witness Aghast" and a subhead "Stevanovic Negates that 'Scorpions'
Made Part of the Serbia's Interior Ministry's Public Security Department," while the
Vecenje Novosti run their story on page 17 and, true, took over a somewhat longer version
of the agencies' news, "creatively" headlined "Key Denies Nice's
Film."
Apart from a bylined story telling the readership in detail what is to
be seen and heard in the film, as well as presenting most illustrative instances of the
prosecution's cross-examination of Obrad Stevanovic, the Danas daily publicized the
testimony of Nikola Fuks, private of the Yugoslav Army in the period 1992-93.
Danas, June 2, 2005
Unit for Special Operations Was in Bosnia, while the Army in Bajina Basta (excerpts)
.According to Stevanovic, except for police forces, military troops were
not in Bajina Basta and surrounding area, while the Unit for Special Operations (JSO) of
the Serbian interior ministry was not deployed in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Intent
to deny such Stevanovic's claims, Nikola Fuks, private of the Yugoslav Army (VJ) in the
period 1992-93, who served his term in Novi Sad and was later transferred to the 19th
Borderline Battalion in Bajina Basta, called in the Danas newsroom. His testimony is
diametrically opposite to Obradovic's statements.
"Stevanovic said only police forces were deployed, and that's not
true. The Yugoslav Army was engaged in the field, i.e. its elite units such as Guard and
the 63rd Parachute brigades, and the JSO was also there. Obradovic was in Bajina Basta at
the time and must have seen all that army," says Fuks.
He points out that JSO troopers, led by Franko Simatovic-Frenki, have
been accommodated in the Bajina Basta police station, the same as his unit.
"Few people knew about 'Frenki guys' at the time. While on watch
duty I saw a Land Rover with the 'Frenki' inscription. I thought it was about a Bosnian
Serb unit." .
"It's not true that only police forces have been deployed. I saw VJ
artillery targeting the territory of Eastern Bosnia from the Yugoslav territory. Actually,
a battery of rocket missiles was stationed nearby the 'Mitrovac' holiday resort for
children at the Tara Mt. From that place they targeted Bosnia, and Srebrenica I
suppose." .
On the grounds of his personal experience, Fuks is certain that the
population of Eastern Bosnia could not have used mine throwers and siege guns for attacks.
He says his unit was tasked with transporting seized Muslim weapons. They wanted to see
what kind of weapons were transported, he said.
"We opened a case and saw arms made up of some tubes, resembling
plumbing pipes. Such guns were more dangerous to shooters than to those standing for their
targets," says Fuks.
"I witnessed the arrivals of volunteers, the so-called
weekend-warriors. They used to come from Serbia and were armed from the VJ storage that
was also housed in the Bajina Basta police station. I also witnessed the arrivals of
Russian volunteers, who were given arms and then sent to the Eastern Bosnia
battlefield," says Fuks.
HCHRS |