KMLDJ reacts to Serbian List: Failure to honour Srebrenica Massacre victims is solidification with crime

The Council for Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms has said that the failure to honour Srebrenica Massacre victims is solidification with crime. This response comes after the Serbian List issued the Parliament when Kosovo deputies honoured the victims of this massacre. “The Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo, to commemorate and honour the victims of the massacre [...]
The Council for Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms has said that the failure to honour Srebrenica Massacre victims is solidification with crime.
This response comes after the Serbian List issued the Parliament when Kosovo deputies honoured the victims of this massacre.
“The Assembly of the Republic of Kosovo, in commemoration and honour of the victims of the Srebrenica Massacre, made a minute of silence that was the moral obligation of expressing respect to all civilian victims who were executed in the wars of former Yugoslavia”.
The Serbian List Deputies ignored this honour and respect by launching the House Hall during the time of commemoration of the victims of Srebrenica Maskrequet. Denying and ignoring the respect of the civilian victims of Srebrenica Massacre from the Serbian List is denying all civilian victims during the last war, insensible to the suffering and pain that victims' families still feel and unwilling to build through confrontation with the past an already accepted one from all. Crime failure is actually solidifying with crime, and this is what the Serbian List is demonstrating by ignoring the civil victims of the Srebrenica Massacre”, it says in response.
“Midis 11-22 July 1995, Serbian military, police and paramilitary forces led by former Yugoslav Army General Ratko Mladic executed and massacred approximately 8,000 Bosnian civilians, of various ages, at Srebrenica”.
This unprecedented execution of defenseless Bosnian civilians was pronounced genocide, but the International Court of Justice denied the direct responsibility of the former Yugoslavia for this genocide. Direct responsibility for the Srebrenica Massacre also had the Dutch contingent of UN soldiers who, instead of protecting captured Bosnian civilians or who surrendered under UN protection, surrendered to Serbian General Ratko Mladic, after which the largest massacre took place in Europe, following the end of World War II”.












