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Netherlands to release Srebrenica report
Reuters News Agency
Sunday, April 07 – Globe and Mail
Amsterdam — Reeling from charges that it failed to prevent the 1995 massacre of up to 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica, Bosnia, the Netherlands is preparing to release a report into the bloodbath this week.
Up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed in the United Nations-designated "safe area" — Europe‘s worst massacre since World War Two — when the town fell to Bosnian Serb forces during the Bosnian war.
More than five years in the making, the 7,000-page report by the Dutch Institute for War Documentation (NIOD) is the official Dutch history of events in Srebrenica.
Tension is high ahead of Wednesday‘s publication, not least because of a damning report released two weeks ago.
That report, Srebrenica: The genocide that was not prevented, by domestic peace group IKV (Interchurch Peace Council), said Dutch UN troops, generals and politicians bore clear responsibility for failing to protect the Muslims.
The IKV wants a parliamentary inquiry and an official Dutch apology for events in Srebrenica, where some 110 lightly-armed Dutch peacekeepers were stationed when the town fell without a shot being fired.
A French parliamentary report last November assigned wider blame, finding UN members including France and Britain shared responsibility for failing to stop the July, 1995 massacre, and cited a lack of political will to intervene.
France‘s report accused French General Bernard Janvier of an error of judgement for refusing to sanction air strikes, as the Dutch requested, to protect the enclave.
The IKV, whose sources included leaked cabinet meeting minutes, accused Dutch ministers of knowing the Muslims risked slaughter if the troops abandoned them but of doing nothing to prevent those fears being realised.
"For the Dutch government, the lives of the Dutch blue helmets were far more important than the safety of the Muslims, who depended on them," said the organisation.
The IKV accused the Dutch defence and foreign ministries of pulling in conflicting directions and said Prime Minister Wim Kok, still in power, sat on his hands.
Mr. Kok, who has called the IKV report "one-sided," is withdrawing from politics after next month‘s general election in which his Labour party aims to maintain its dominant place in the government coalition.
He had been keen to keep a lid on the debate until NIOD finally issued a report widely expected to contain criticism on many fronts, thus blunting the attack on any one player.
Some analysts say the blame was not all Dutch. UN errors lay at the root of the catastrophe, said **** Leurdijk of the Clingendael Institute in The Hague.
The UN Security Council declared Srebrenica a "safe area" without thinking through what that really meant, and then sent peacekeepers to a war scene, said Leurdijk, a UN expert.
"From the strictly military point of view, the Dutch mission in Srebrenica was a mission impossible," he said.
The UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague last year jailed former Bosnian Serb general Radislav Krstic for 46 years for genocide over the Srebrenica massacre. One of his subordinates arrived in The Hague last week to deny genocide charges.
Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic and his military commander Ratko Mladic are also indicted for genocide in Srebrenica — the tribunal‘s most wanted men after former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic arrived in The Hague in 2001.
The Dutch government commissioned NIOD in 1996 to conduct an inquiry into events before, during and after the fall of Srebrenica, including policy- and decision-making at a national and international level.
Reuters News Agency
Sunday, April 07 – Globe and Mail
Amsterdam — Reeling from charges that it failed to prevent the 1995 massacre of up to 8,000 Muslims in Srebrenica, Bosnia, the Netherlands is preparing to release a report into the bloodbath this week.
Up to 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed in the United Nations-designated "safe area" — Europe‘s worst massacre since World War Two — when the town fell to Bosnian Serb forces during the Bosnian war.
More than five years in the making, the 7,000-page report by the Dutch Institute for War Documentation (NIOD) is the official Dutch history of events in Srebrenica.
Tension is high ahead of Wednesday‘s publication, not least because of a damning report released two weeks ago.
That report, Srebrenica: The genocide that was not prevented, by domestic peace group IKV (Interchurch Peace Council), said Dutch UN troops, generals and politicians bore clear responsibility for failing to protect the Muslims.
The IKV wants a parliamentary inquiry and an official Dutch apology for events in Srebrenica, where some 110 lightly-armed Dutch peacekeepers were stationed when the town fell without a shot being fired.
A French parliamentary report last November assigned wider blame, finding UN members including France and Britain shared responsibility for failing to stop the July, 1995 massacre, and cited a lack of political will to intervene.
France‘s report accused French General Bernard Janvier of an error of judgement for refusing to sanction air strikes, as the Dutch requested, to protect the enclave.
The IKV, whose sources included leaked cabinet meeting minutes, accused Dutch ministers of knowing the Muslims risked slaughter if the troops abandoned them but of doing nothing to prevent those fears being realised.
"For the Dutch government, the lives of the Dutch blue helmets were far more important than the safety of the Muslims, who depended on them," said the organisation.
The IKV accused the Dutch defence and foreign ministries of pulling in conflicting directions and said Prime Minister Wim Kok, still in power, sat on his hands.
Mr. Kok, who has called the IKV report "one-sided," is withdrawing from politics after next month‘s general election in which his Labour party aims to maintain its dominant place in the government coalition.
He had been keen to keep a lid on the debate until NIOD finally issued a report widely expected to contain criticism on many fronts, thus blunting the attack on any one player.
Some analysts say the blame was not all Dutch. UN errors lay at the root of the catastrophe, said **** Leurdijk of the Clingendael Institute in The Hague.
The UN Security Council declared Srebrenica a "safe area" without thinking through what that really meant, and then sent peacekeepers to a war scene, said Leurdijk, a UN expert.
"From the strictly military point of view, the Dutch mission in Srebrenica was a mission impossible," he said.
The UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague last year jailed former Bosnian Serb general Radislav Krstic for 46 years for genocide over the Srebrenica massacre. One of his subordinates arrived in The Hague last week to deny genocide charges.
Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic and his military commander Ratko Mladic are also indicted for genocide in Srebrenica — the tribunal‘s most wanted men after former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic arrived in The Hague in 2001.
The Dutch government commissioned NIOD in 1996 to conduct an inquiry into events before, during and after the fall of Srebrenica, including policy- and decision-making at a national and international level.