It is not exactly a
peaceful haven ~ more than 2 decades after the end of the war in Bosnia, the
country is still contaminated with landmines and cluster bombs causing fatal
accidents. The Swiss government and the Swiss foundation “World without Mines”
(WoM) has supported the war-ravaged country in its fight against this vicious
legacy of war for years. At the Global Training Centre for Mine Detection
Dogs in Blagovac, in rural Bosnia, about 10 kilometres north of the capital
Sarajevo there are more than 50 dogs, states on report – not ordinary street
dogs, but ones more efficient than
humans, more precise than drones. It is
claimed that dogs are much more
efficient than humans when it comes to finding explosive devices. “While a
minesweeper with a metal detector can only search an area of 35m2 per day, a
dog covers between 400m2 and 600m2.”
Mailonline and
frontline medias report that more than 2,000 honoured a dead Croatian general who drank
cyanide at the Hague after he was convicted of carrying out war crimes in
Bosnia. Huge crowds packed a public memorial in Zagreb for the service to
remember war criminal Slobodan Praljak whose
final act was to kill himself in front of UN judges. Public buses ran free of
charge to the ceremony for the wartime military commander, who swallowed
potassium cyanide last month during a court hearing broadcast live around the
world.
Praljak had a
private funeral in Zagreb last week, according to media reports. The
72-year-old took his life just seconds after appeal judges in The Hague upheld
his 20-year jail sentence for war crimes and crimes against humanity during
Bosnia's 1990s conflict. The judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia confirmed that Praljak and his five Bosnian Croat
co-defendants were part of a 'joint criminal enterprise' to ethnically cleanse
Bosnian Muslims in the war. But since Praljak's death, Croats have paid
multiple tributes to the late general, laying flowers and lighting candles in
town squares in Croatia and Bosnia.
Monday's commemoration,
organised by the Croatian generals' association, was attended by at least one
government minister in the EU member state, along with top officials of the
ruling conservative HDZ party. The event, which lasted around an hour
reportedly included music, recitals and speeches by Praljak's associates and
friends from the military, politics and theater. The 72-year-old took his life just seconds
after appeal judges in The Hague upheld his 20-year jail sentence for war
crimes and crimes against humanity during Bosnia's 1990s conflict. The
commemoration ended with a rendition of the Croatian national anthem led by a
choir. The crowd, some of whom had traveled from Bosnia, stood up and joined
the singing. Before the ceremony, visitors queued up to sign two books of
condolences. So .. .. .. .. …… …….., !!!
With regards
– S. Sampathkumar
12th Dec 2017.
