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To: Wraith
Got lots of pictures, but won't post any on line. Frankly, I am not all that internet savvy when it comes to HTML and stuff like that.

Howzabout this?

There's a little gas station at Konjevic Polje, at the end of the road in the Suceska Valley to Bratunac, and beyond that, Srebrenica. I forget what brand name the gas station is, but there's a half-built Serb Orthodox church across the street on the foundation of a demolished mosque. Beyond the church is a white two story ruin (used to be a hotel or something) spraypainted SSJ ARKAN.

As you drive into Bratunac, you pass what used to be the Vuk Karadzic School, since renamed. Infamous as a concentration camp during the early days of the war, its 600 victims (local, male Muslims involved in the community, the communist party, high school teachers, soccer coaches, etc) were almost all massacred, except for one, a former junior high school teacher who is now deputy mayor of the town.

Driving south from Bratunac you pass through some open fields, down a road that passes the Battery Factory (former UN headquarters) to your left, and a huge cemetery on the right, where the victims of the Srebrenica massacre are now laid out.

I helped plan that cemetery.

Across the field from the cemetery is a soccer field that is used for mass memorial ceremonies and soemtimes as a landing pad for SFOR helicopters.

You then pass the high school on your left, which still has a large shell hole in the middle of the basketball court. The shell that made it killed about twenty high school boys during the seige. Don't worry, their fathers don't mourn their deaths any more. Their fathers were very likely killed during the fall of the city which followed about 3 months later.

Continuing past, you enter into the town where you pass a huge Serb cemetery filled with glittery marble headstones. Straight ahead you see a huge pile of uninhabitable rubble (the former Srebrenica department store). To the right, the cultural center, used for community meetings even though 90% of its windows hadn't been replaced as of 2002. The TV station there was taken down by SFOR orders in 2001.

Take a sharp left at the wrecked shopping mall, up a small hill, and you're at a small hotel which was UN/SFOR HQ for Srebrenica until it was turned into a DP waystation right before I left.

Convinced?

If not, kiss my grits.
157 posted on 02/06/2004 5:03:12 PM PST by Ronly Bonly Jones (The more things change...)
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To: Ronly Bonly Jones
When were you in Srebrenica/Bratunac area Mr. Bones? I was in the area of Bihac i.e. the Serbian Krajina back in 1992. From what I gather you were in Serbrenica sometime after 1995?
160 posted on 02/06/2004 11:21:27 PM PST by Wraith (He who defends everything, defends nothing. Napoleon.)
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