Share.

    8 commenti

    1. EbbNervous1361 on

      Thank god NATO took a stance and used their strength to intervene.
      If the tankies had their way, it would just continue and cause even worse suffering

    2. Former-Language-2543 on

      Damn, 30 yrs huh? Crazy how time flies. Tbh, history hits harder when it’s not just in textbooks. Everytime we remember this tragedy, it’s a chance to step up, spread love not hate

    3. Whitechix on

      I read once that the UN only evacuated women and young children leaving behind any man over the age of 15 to their fate. I can’t imagine how terrifying this ordeal was.

    4. You even have spelling errors.

      Instead of honoring the victims, you are attempting to demean an entire nation?

    5. Krasniqi857 on

      never forget Srebrenica, never forget how these people suffered and what these monsters did to them

    6. Hard to believe it’s been 30 years since the Srebrenica genocide. Over 8,000 boys and men murdered in cold blood, and still, it feels like the world has barely come to terms with what really happened. What makes this even more personal for me is that two of my uncles were with the Dutchbat battalion at the time. The things they went through still haunt them — both are living with severe PTSD to this day.

      One of them saw a child murdered with a knife right in front of him by the hands of a Serbian soldier. The other, a sniper, was put in situations that no human being should ever face — having to take out children rigged with explosives by Bosnian mujahedeen. It’s something he’s never been able to reconcile. One of the most horrifying things one of them told me was witnessing a Serbian soldier cut off the feet of children. And what made it all even worse was that they couldn’t engage unless they were directly fired upon — they were forced to stand by and watch.

      It’s hard to wrap your head around how something like that was allowed to happen under the eyes of international forces. The trauma of that time didn’t end in July ‘95 — it’s still living in the minds of survivors, soldiers, and families today.

    Leave A Reply