Ethnic cleansing in the Bosnian War
Ethnic cleansing occurred during the Bosnian War (1992–95) as large numbers of Bosnian Muslims (Bosniaks) and Bosnian Croats were forced to flee their homes or were expelled by the Army of Republika Srpska and Serb paramilitaries. Bosniaks and Bosnian Serbs had also been forced to flee or were expelled by Bosnian Croat forces, though on a restricted scale and in lesser numbers. The UN Security Council Final Report (1994) states while Bosniaks also engaged in "grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and other violations of international humanitarian law", they "have not engaged in "systematic ethnic cleansing"". According to the report, "there is no factual basis for arguing that there is a 'moral equivalence' between the warring factions".
Ethnic cleansing in the Bosnian War | |
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Part of the Bosnian War | |
Exhumed victims of ethnic cleansing through murder in the Srebrenica massacre | |
Ethnic distribution at the municipal level in Bosnia and Herzegovina before (1991) and after the war (1998) | |
Location | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Coordinates | 43°52′N 18°25′E |
Date | 1992 – 1995 |
Attack type | Ethnic cleansing, deportation, concentration camps, torture, genocidal rape, mass murder, genocide |
Deaths | Tens of thousands |
Injured | 18,000–25,000 women and men raped |
Victims | 1.0–1.3 million deported or forcibly resettled |
Beginning in 1991, political upheavals in Bosnia and Herzegovina displaced about 2.7 million people by mid-1992, of which over 700,000 sought asylum in other European countries, making it the largest exodus in Europe since World War II. It is estimated between 1.0 and 1.3 million people were uprooted in these ethnic cleansing campaigns, and that tens of thousands were killed.
The methods used during the Bosnian ethnic cleansing campaigns include "killing of civilians, rape, torture, destruction of civilian, public, and cultural property, looting and pillaging, and the forcible relocation of civilian populations". Most of the perpetrators of these campaigns were Serb forces and most of the victims were Bosniaks. The UN-backed International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) later convicted several officials for persecution on political, racial and religious grounds; forced transfer and deportation constituting a crime against humanity. The Srebrenica massacre, which was also included as part of the ethnic cleansing campaign, was found to constitute the crime of genocide.