AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
6 September 2013
A Dutch Supreme Court judgment finding the state liable for the deaths
of three Muslim men amid the Srebrenica genocide marks a significant
victory in the decades-long search for accountability, Amnesty
International said today.
“Nearly two decades on from
Srebrenica, this Dutch case marks the first time an individual government
has been held to account for the conduct of its peacekeeping troops under a
UN mandate,” said Jezerca Tigani, Deputy Europe and Central Asia
Programme Director at Amnesty International.
According to the
court, Dutch troops serving as UN peacekeepers in Srebrenica sent three
Bosniak Muslim men away from a “safe area” on 13 July 1995.
This effectively handed them over to Bosnian Serb forces, who went on to
kill some 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys; many of their bodies have
still not been found.
Rizo Mustafic, an electrician, as well as
the brother and father of Hasan Nuhanovic, an interpreter who assisted the
Dutch battalion of UN peacekeepers (Dutchbat) in Srebrenica, died because
the troops sent them away from a “safe area” under their
control. Nuhanovic’s mother was also killed, but her death was not
included in the current case.
They were expelled from the
peacekeepers’ compound despite the Dutch troops having witnessed
multiple incidents of Bosnian Serb forces mistreating or killing men
outside the “safe area”.
The Supreme Court decision
upholds a July 2011 local appeals court ruling in The Hague, in a civil
case brought by relatives of the three men who were killed.
“This is a historic victory for the relatives of those who were
killed in this case, but also marks a symbolic step for the thousands of
other victims of Europe’s worst crimes under international law since
the Second World War,” said Tigani.
The Dutch state has
faced several lawsuits in the past in relation to its role in the
Srebrenica genocide, but this is the first time it has been found
responsible in a civil suit for any of the deaths.
“This
Dutch Supreme Court ruling makes crystal clear that states can be held
responsible for the conduct of international peacekeepers,” said
Tigani.
“It should pave the way for the Dutch government
to provide full reparation – including compensation – to the
relatives who brought this case, as well as other family members of victims
of the Srebrenica genocide.”
Background
Past
attempts to hold international peacekeepers criminally responsible for
human rights violations have been unsuccessful, including in cases
involving UN peacekeeping operations in Bosnia and Kosovo, and at the
European Court of Human Rights.
The International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has charged former Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadžic and former Bosnian Serb Army General Ratko Mladic with
genocide in Srebrenica and other crimes under international law during the
1992-1995 armed conflict in Bosnia.
Amnesty International has
repeatedly highlighted the more than 10,000 unresolved cases of enforced
disappearances dating back to the conflict.
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HREA - www.hrea.org
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