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In Srebrenica, the presidents of both Serbia and Croatia will for the first time pay respects to victims alongside Bosnian Muslims. Ethnic distrust continues to plague postwar Bosnia, but the leaders' joint presence at the Srebrenica ceremonies is meant to be a powerful sign of reconciliation 18 years after the eruption of Europe's fiercest post-World War conflict. The U.N. will not be represented. But the failure of U.N. peacekeepers to protect the Srebrenica victims is vividly etched in the collective Bosnian Muslim memory. "They watched genocide -- live," said Srebrenica survivor Munira Subasic, who lost 22 relatives. Then-U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in a 1999 report that the United Nations failed at Srebrenica because of errors, misjudgment and "an inability to recognize the scope of the evil confronting us." He said the U.N. treated Serbs and Muslims equally when they should have made a "moral judgment" that ethnic cleansing
-- practiced mostly by the Serbs -- was evil. An independent study by the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation cleared the Dutch troops of blame, noting they were outnumbered, lightly armed, undersupplied, and under instructions to fire only in self-defense. However, the Dutch government has accepted "political responsibility" for the mission's failure, and has given tens of millions of dollars to Bosnia, with a third earmarked for rebuilding Srebrenica. But for most Bosnian Muslims, that is not enough. "We are taking the United Nations to the Court of Human Rights," said Subasic, who heads the victims' association Mothers of Srebrenica. "We will never give up."
[Associated
Press;
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