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Sarajevo marks 30 years since the siege with Ukraine in thoughts
by AFP Staff Writers
Sarajevo (AFP) April 5, 2022

Sarajevo on Tuesday marked the 30th anniversary of the start of the infamous siege by Serb forces during the Bosnian war by paying special tribute to victims of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

"What was not stopped in the 1990s in Bosnia is becoming even more visible across Europe and the world," Sarajevo Mayor Benjamina Karic lamented at the ceremony, which took place in the National Library building, a symbol of the destruction during the siege of Sarajevo which is now rebuilt.

At the start of the commemorations devoted to Bosnian capital's resistance during the 44-month siege, a minute of silence was observed in tribute to the victims of the war in Bosnia, but also "innocent civilians killed in Ukraine".

Bosnian Serb forces killed over 11,500 people during the siege which lasted from 1992-1996, including 1,600 children and teenagers. More than 50,000 people were injured..

"What was thought would remain in the history of human dishonour is coming back ... through brutality, destruction and fascist ideology in new clothes," said Karic, who was only one year old when the siege began on April 5 1992.

Today, the siege of Mariupol, in southeastern Ukraine, and the discovery of numerous bodies in town of Butcha, near Kyiv, send shockwaves across the globe, just as the brutality of the Sarajevo siege did three decades ago.

While speaking about Sarajevo, the mayor seemed to be seeking words of encouragement for besieged Ukrainian cities.

"From this city -- a symbol of resistance -- we say that despite all horrors, never lose hope and give up fighting for a better tomorrow", Karic said.

"Abandoned by almost everyone, without weapons, without electricity, without water, without food, without gas, Sarajevo never surrendered."

The Bosnian inter-communal war has left nearly 100,000 people dead.


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WAR REPORT
Survivors of Mariupol theatre strike recall 'horror' of strike
Lviv, Ukraine (AFP) April 1, 2022
Two women that survived the Russian airstrike on a theatre sheltering civilians in Ukraine's besieged city of Mariupol earlier this month told AFP about the "horror" they endured. Viktoria Dubovytskaya was inside the Mariupol drama theatre when it was hit on March 16. Maria Kutnyakova - who left the theatre to get water the day of the shelling - witnessed the strike from outside, while her mother and sister were still in the building. The two residents of the besieged port city are now refuge ... read more

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