not a whisper about "the Srebrenica massacre of 7000+ Muslim men & boys"...
 


They arrived in Tuzla. 
UN provided fuel





The Independent (London)


July 16, 1995, Sunday


UK set to join Gorazde airlift; Tuzla braced for fresh waves of refugees
Thousands of men and young women missing

BYLINE: Christopher Bellamy in Tuzla, Stephen Castle and Robert Block

SECTION: TITLE; Page  1

LENGTH: 764 words

BRITAIN will back a French plan to reinforce the Bosnian Muslim enclave of
Gorazde provided allied commanders on the ground say it can be done,
officials in London said yesterday. The French Defence Minister, Charles
Millon, said France is proposing the creation of a multinational force to
guarantee Gorazde as a safe area and secure Sarajevo. The French Armed
Forces Chief of Staff, Jacques Lanxade, will present details of the French
proposal for military action at a meeting today in London with his British
and American counterparts, Field Marshal Sir Peter Inge and General John
Shalikashvili. Mr Millon said he wants the United States, Britain and
Germany to participate in the force.

The proposed airlift to Gorazde, where 300 British troops and 50,000
civilians are surrounded by Bosnian Serb forces, would be the first phase of
a military response to the Serb offensive against the "safe areas" in the
past week. Officials in Washington expressed the administration's
willingness to consider using US helicopters and air support to transport
members of the 12,000-man Rapid Reaction Force, made up mostly of British
and French troops.


One "safe area", Srebrenica, has already fallen to the Serbs and a second,
Zepa, was under heavy attack yesterday. Bosnian Serb forces released 55
Dutch UN peace-keepers after taking them hostage during the Serb attack on
Srebrenica.

Meanwhile, the refugee crisis mounted. UN and local officials in Bosnian-
controlled Tuzla were struggling to clear the first wave of 8,000 to 9,000
women, children and old men to have flooded in from Srebrenica, before a
second expected influx of 15,000 reached the town. If Zepa falls, up to
15,000 more may follow. Extreme concern is being expressed for the thousands
of men detained and young women abducted by the Serbs after they captured
Srebrenica.

The EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs, Emma Bonino, who yesterday
visited Tuzla, said the major problem was "some 15,000" missing persons:
"There are men missing, 

but also the young women . . . We are most concerned about that."

The refugees were arriving mostly on foot after five days on the road, and
the Tuzla authorities were desperately bussing them out to local reception
centres to clear the camp. What was once the largest airbase in the former
Yugoslavia now holdsgreat masses of human beings.

The diplomatic squabbling between London and Paris continued yesterday. The
Foreign Secretary, Malcolm Rifkind, rejected French charges of appeasement
and said what was needed was not talk but a plan. He told BBC radio: "If
France actually believed that military action could save Zepa and
Srebrenica, then no doubt French troops would be marching on Zepa and
Srebrenica at this time. They are not." The French, however, insisted that
their plan had been put before the Prime Minister, John Major, on Friday.

At Heathrow airport on his way to speak to the US Congressyesterday,
Mohammed Sacirbey, the Bosnian Foreign Minister, said the only future for
the defence of his country would be in Washington, and the British
Government's prevarication had made it a "non-player".

Besides today's military meeting, Britain has summoned members of the
five-country Contact Group, together with UN and Nato representatives, to
London on Friday. It is understood that a final decision on the French
proposal for a multinational force will be taken at that meeting. The
Contact Group meeting was welcomed by Russia, which has long opposed
international military action in Bosnia, but in Britain the former defence
secretary, Sir John Nott, said: "I am astonished that the Prime Minister
should have called a conference on Bosnia in one week's time. Is it not
plain that Britain's Bosnian policy is in ruins and no conference can put it
together again?

"In one week's time Zepa and Gorazde may have fallen and British soldiers
been taken hostage once again. This is a time for leadership, not another
conference."

However, the British government may favour a reconfiguration and
concentration of forces in central Bosnia, with a withdrawal from the east.
Although a reinforcement of Gorazde would complicate this, the humanitarian
price of failing to reinforce might be too great.

In Zagreb, the Croatian Foreign Minister, Mate Granic, said yesterday that
Croatia and Bosnia should join forces in response to the Serb military
threat, and announced that their leaders would meet within 10 days to
discuss such an alliance. Further reports, pages 16-17 rushed to hospital
Photo: ENRIC MARTI/AP



http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk-set-to-join-gorazde-airlift-1591638.htm
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