http://www.ex-yupress.com/dani/dani2.html 

  


5,000 Muslim Lives for Military Intervention


Dani, Sarajevo, Bosnia-Hercegovina, June 22 1998


Interview with Hakija Meholjic, president of Social Democratic Party for
Srebrenica, by Hasan Hadzic 

In your accusations of the state leadership, and particularly of President
Izetbegovic, over a share of the Bosniak blame for the Srebrenica tragedy,
the departure of the Srebrenica delegation to Sarajevo in September 1993 for
talks on the fate of this enclave cannot be avoided? 

The invitation came from President Izetbegovic. At a meeting of the
municipal war presidency we designated the delegation for Sarajevo. We
immediately had some premonition that big issues would be resolved there
because it was the first time we were leaving Srebrenica and we were
provided transport in two helicopters. We exited safely, yet ever since we
had became a demilitarized zone not a single civilian or military delegation
had come to us. It was envisaged that Naser Oric would be going also, but he
did not want to go. We were transported in armored personnel carriers from
Sarajevo airport to the Holiday Inn hotel. That was the time of the Bosniak
Convention, where a decision was being made on the peace plan and the
division of Bosnia. We were received there by President Izetbegovic, and
immediately after the welcome he asked us: "What do you think about the swap
of Srebrenica for Vogosca [a Sarajevo suburb]?" There was a silence for a
while and then I said: "Mr. President, if this is a done thing, then you
should not have invited us here, because we have to return and face the
people and personally accept the burden of that decision." 

So you rejected Izetbegovic's decision? 

We rejected it without any discussion. Then he said: "You know, I was
offered by Clinton in April 1993 (after the fall of Cerska and Konjevic
Polje) that the Chetnik forces enter Srebrenica, carry out a slaughter of
5,000 Muslims, and then there will be a military intervention." Our
delegation was composed of nine people, one among us was from Bratunac and
unfortunately he is the only one not alive now, but all the others from the
delegation are alive and can confirm this. Since the Convention had started
the President entered to announce us, and when he did it all the present
stood up and welcomed us with an applause as heroes. We had a request, in
case the peace plan was accepted, that Srebrenica be provided a physical
link with Tuzla and not with Gorazde. Therefore, we asked for Bratunac and
Zvornik because a link across the desolate stretches and mountains did not
suit us and we had never been linked to that area anyway. It was said the
President would receive all delegations, but he accepted them all except
ours. 


Srebrenica Was Sold


Did you talk to someone else? 

Then they somehow judged I was the toughest nut to crack, so Hazim Rancic,
the then chief of the Tuzla police, told me it was the politicians' stance
that I should stay behind for some seven days in order for us to discuss and
agree on something. Then they would transport me by a helicopter to Zepa and
I should then go on foot from Zepa to Srebrenica. I told them I was to go to
Srebrenica because the people would think I did not want to return. I also
told them if they really wanted it I would go to Zepa from Srebrenica if
they would send a helicopter. Since the people there were already
disappointed, during the trip back we decided not to tell the people we were
offered a swap; otherwise they would understand it as if we were written
off. I can say that, regardless of the mistakes, the municipal presidency
was good and tried to work for the good of the people. We understood
everything clearly. We connected that with the fact that nobody had
organized us for defense since the ruling party surrendered Srebrenica in
April 1992 without resistance. I had been asked then to surrender weapons
because I had organized a unit of my own, but I had refused to do so. My
most difficult moment was when at the departure from Sarajevo my colleague
Adnan Karovic told me: "Hakija, you have been sold! Please, if Srebrenica
does fall, kill my mother, I beg of you. Just do not let her fall into their
hands!" 

Even after the fall of Srebrenica in 1995 you had a chance to address
President Izetbegovic? 

I requested then that a state commission be formed to examine the
responsibility of the international community, the President, the Army
General Staff, the Second Army corps, our responsibility.... The people are
missing, hey.... He (President Izetbegovic) asked me what I would achieve
with that? Rasim Delic tried to say something, too, but nobody gave him a
chance to speak. I did not interfere, but, generally, I have a very bad
opinion about the majority of the General Staff members. Never in the
history of wars had the people, "processed" by other armies, been appointed
commanders. You spend five to six months in their prison, then you come
through an exchange, and become a commander. On the second day after
Srebrenica fell we heard on the radio in the woods Rasim Delic calling us to
return as the situation in Srebrenica was normal. That provoked a total
confusion. 

You had another interesting meeting with the President? 

That was immediately after the liberation of Vozuca. I was informed that the
President was waiting in Kozlovac to talk to me. We went through the
complete history of Srebrenica. I told him I was going to sue him when his
power weakens. He asked me again what I was going to achieve with that. I
told him again that an investigation must be conducted because the people
were missing.... He then said: "You know, these investigations remind me of
my own investigation." He meant the political one he had undergone [1983
trial of Izetbegovic]. I told him: "There is a difference there, hey, you
are an individual, and there are no more people...." 

One of the most puzzling personalities from Srebrenica is the commander
Naser Oric. He has avoided speaking, and the others are divided in their
opinion about him. 

I have a normal relationship with Naser. I said that we should all be held
responsible, but as they did not initiate anything that means Naser is not
to blame for anything. All that must be proven. Naser knows a lot and I told
him once he must have been given "something" to keep quiet. He laughed at
that. I told him he would speak sooner or later. If he was guilty then that
should have been proven and he should have been punished; if not, he should
have been kept in the army or police.... They left the man on the street and
now they say he deals with this or that. Well, he has to do something. Alija
is giving up the people. He is getting rid of the greatest commanders and
fighters. 


The Role of Ibran Mustafic


An interesting individual in the Srebrenica story, both the wartime and the
postwar one, is Ibran Mustafic. He has accused everybody else for the
tragedy, yet he is being reproached for rescuing himself through Serb
contacts. Then he founded a new party, after which the authorities denounced
him, and then the authorities sent him to suppress the revolt of the
Srebrenica women. What kind of conclusion should one draw from all that? 

As a deputy of the SDA [Party of Democratic Action] Ibran was a "hawk" in
the prewar assembly. He was not in Srebrenica in the beginning of the war
because he was in Sarajevo. When we advanced well, despite all our internal
disputes, suddenly Ibran came, somewhere from the woods.... Then he started
spreading stories that our army was not good, so bit by bit there was a
split among the soldiers. He wanted power again, so the SDA split into two
camps. One evening someone attacked him, Hamed Salihovic and Hamed Efendic.
Salihovic was killed then. Ibran was wounded and transported to the
hospital. I was the police chief then and we wanted to carry out an inquiry.
But Ibran and Hamed, as eye-witnesses, did not want to give a statement.
Then there was a session of the municipal assembly at which Ibran asked to
be given a radio set to talk to Momcilo Krajisnik so that Krajisnik could
take him out of Srebrenica. Naturally, he was not allowed to do that. I
connected these facts only later. Ibran came to "wreck" Srebrenica while we
advanced as that did not suit someone's plan, and I assume that was the
SDA's plan. When Srebrenica fell he went straight to Potocari instead of
going with all of us through the forest. It is difficult to explain how he
managed to get out while the others were killed. Later he gave statements in
Bijeljina that we killed one another. Many people who did not have any clue
as to what the SDA was were killed, yet he went out and arrived in Sarajevo.


Then again in 1996 Alija invited us to a meeting in the SDA main office
where Ibran stood up and recited a poem: "Alija, without you the Sun will
not shine, without you there will be darkness." And he cried at the same
time. Ibran is the President's man. He openly tells the people not to return
to Srebrenica, and the women who are content are on his side. Those are the
women who receive good money from the SDA in order not to go there, since it
is better for them to talk hot air and halt the traffic here. All that is a
scenario. Srebrenica was first glorified, then mourned, and, in the end,
made odious by taking people to the streets. The goal of the authorities is
to discredit us in the face of other citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina so that
they say we are savages and that the authorities should do to us what they
have been doing. 

What is the position of your minister, Adib Djozic? 

Before the war Adib Djozic spoke on the Srebrenica radio station protecting
Goran Zekic, a Chetnik leader, who we had denounced as an organizer of
Chetnik training. Upon his arrival to Tuzla in the beginning of the war
Djozic presented himself as a founder of the SDA, organizer of the uprising,
and the like. The best illustration of what kind of person he is, is one
detail regarding the petition that thousands of Srebrenica people signed
against him. He then came to the premises of the Srebrenica municipality in
Tuzla and said: "Dear people, I was called by President Izetbegovic, who
asked me if I could 'wreck' Srebrenica, and if I could, then I would be a
minister. I promised I could." That took place in front of a large number of
witnesses. 

You are now in the SDP [Social Democratic Party of Bosnia-Herzegovina] and
in that political framework you have been trying to do something for the
return of refugees. How does it go? 

I have a reason to trust the people like Bogic Bogicevic, Nijaz Durakovic,
Zlatko Lagumdzija, Mirsad Djapo, and many others. They have proved that they
are most sincerely for Bosnia-Herzegovina as a normal state. For me,
Bosnia-Herzegovina without my Srebrenica does not exist and my biggest goal
in life is to return. The current authorities have shown thousand of times
so far that they do not want that.

 

Reply via email to