Nearly 15,000 war missing still haunt the Balkans

 

 

Sunday, August 29, 2010

 

BELGRADE – Agence France-Presse

 

Families throughout the western Balkans still hope to find out what has 
happened to their missing loved ones, after the wars in Croatia, Bosnia 
Hercegovina and Kosovo, if only to bury and grieve for them properly. Nearly 
15,000 people are still missing more than a decade after the wars in former 
Yugoslavia countries


 

 

Photographer Nick Danziger 
<http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/images/2010_08_29/nearly-15000-war-missing-still-haunt-the-balkans-2010-08-29_l.jpg>
  poses in front of his photographs in Belgrade, dedicated to the missing 
persons and their families of some 14,650 people unaccounted for after the wars 
in Balkans.

Verica Tomanovic holds up a flyer as she talks about her Serb husband who 
disappeared in Kosovo more than a decade ago. "This man went missing. If you 
know his whereabouts, please call KFOR or 92 (the police)."

Andrija Tomanovic, the 62-year-old chief of surgery in Pristina's hospital, 
disappeared in broad daylight on June 24, 1999, two weeks after the war ended 
and NATO-led KFOR peacekeeping forces controlled the area.

He is one of some 14,650 people unaccounted for after the wars in Croatia, 
Bosnia Hercegovina and Kosovo, which tore apart the former Yugoslavia in the 
1990s.

Families throughout the western Balkans still hope to find out what has 
happened to their missing loved ones, if only to bury and grieve for them 
properly. "On that day he called (from the hospital)... and said he was going 
home and would call back in 10 minutes," Tomanovic's wife recalls. "We haven't 
heard from him since," she adds in a whisper.

Immediately after he disappeared Verica, who was visiting her daughter in 
Belgrade at the time, spent frantic days and nights calling friends and 
colleagues in a desperate bid to locate her husband.

"Eleven years have passed and I still do not know where he is," the tearful 
woman, dressed in black, said as she and scores of other families prepare to 
mark the International Day of the Disappeared on Monday.

The problem of missing persons has remained a huge obstacle to reconciliation 
in the Balkans and has prevented the region moving on from its bloody past, 
according to the International Committee of the Red Cross, or ICRC.

Paul-Henri Arni, the Belgrade-based head of ICRC's regional delegation, 
calculates that 15,000 missing people affects the lives of another 200,000 
people who still search for their loved ones.

"Now you have a political problem, with 200,000 people. In some areas you don't 
have conditions for regional cooperation or reconciliation," Arni says. To 
highlight the issue the ICRC has launched "Missing Lives", a book and 
exhibition telling the stories of 15 people whose loved ones went missing in 
the Balkans wars. "We wanted to put faces on statistics to show that right now 
people are suffering a hell of a lot," Arni says. "It is a suffering different 
from others. It is the only suffering that gets worse with time."

It took several years before Tonka Pezelj of Croatia found out what had 
happened to her husband Miljenko, a judge and president of a district court in 
the Croatian town of Petrinja. She said in the book that she begged him to 
leave the town before the rebel Serbs took control but he refused, saying it 
was his duty to stay in Petrinja.

After the takeover she lost contact with her husband and spent years asking 
everyone she could think of, from the ICRC and European observers to U.N. 
peacekeepers and even the Serb military authorities, for any information about 
him. It was only when the Croatian army regained control over Petrinja three 
years later that she was able to go back and discovered that he had been killed 
by local Serb forces after months of house arrest early in the 1991-95 war.

Tonka said she finally found peace when she reburied her husband, who had been 
entombed in a local cemetery, in the family grave site. "There is no bigger 
suffering than not knowing where your loved person is buried," she said. "There 
is an extraordinary similarity between the stories, be they Serb, Bosnian, 
Albanian, Croat... same feelings, same people and the same tragedies," says the 
ICRC's Arni.

Out of 140,000 victims in the 1990s Balkan wars, some 35,000 went missing, 
according to the ICRC. While the states of the former Yugoslavia are doing a 
relatively good job with 58 percent of these war missing cases solved, it's 
still not enough, Arni says.

At this rate it will take another 24 years in Croatia and 50 years in Kosovo to 
solve the still open cases, while for Bosnia it will likely take another 10 
years, Arni adds. The ICRC has called on both Brussels and Washington to help 
increase pressure on authorities throughout the Balkans states to open wartime 
military and police archives, allocate more money and speed up the search for 
the missing.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=nearly-15000-war-missing-still-haunt-the-balkans-2010-08-29



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