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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
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Massacre Survivors Protest Peter Handke’s Nobel Prize

Bosnian war survivors, including mothers who lost husbands and sons in the Srebrenica massacre, protested Tuesday in Sarajevo, urging the Nobel Committee to reverse its decision to award the 2019 Nobel Prize in literature to Austrian writer Peter Handke.

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Bosnian war survivors, including mothers who lost husbands and sons in the Srebrenica massacre, protested Tuesday in Sarajevo, urging the Nobel Committee to reverse its decision to award the 2019 Nobel Prize in literature to Austrian writer Peter Handke.

Protesters gathered outside the Swedish embassy in downtown Sarajevo carrying banners with slogans comparing Handke with Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic and Bosnian Serb wartime leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.

All three former Serb leaders were tried for genocide before a U.N. tribunal handling war crimes from Bosnia's 1992-95 war. Milosevic died in 2006 before the end of his trial, while Karadzic and Mladic were convicted and imprisoned for life.

Handke, 76, has long faced criticism for his vigorous defense of the Serbs during the 1990s wars that devastated the Balkans as Yugoslavia disintegrated. He even spoke at Milosevic's 2006 funeral, calling him "a rather tragic man." And despite U.N. court rulings to the contrary, Handke has persistently denied that genocide took place in Bosnia's 1995 Srebrenica massacre.

Bosnian Muslim women whose husbands and sons were slain at Srebrenica carried Handke's photo with the words "awarding Handke equals awarding war crimes" written over it.

Protester Murat Tahirovic urged the Nobel Committee to reverse its decision.

"(Handke) supported war criminals; he does not deserve the (Nobel)," said Tahirovic, a member of a survivors’ group for Bosnian Serb wartime torture camps.

The protest was timed to coincide with a three-day visit to Bosnia by Swedish Crown Princess Victoria and Prince Daniel.

More than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys were killed in days of slaughter after the U.N.-protected enclave of Srebrenica was overrun by Bosnian Serb forces on July 11, 1995. It is the only episode of Bosnia's war to be defined as genocide by two U.N. courts.

Serbs hastily disposed of the victims’ bodies in several large pits, then dug them up again and scattered the remains over the nearly 100 smaller mass graves and hidden burial sites around the town.

Tens of thousands of massacre survivors gather outside Srebrenica on July 11 each year to commemorate the crime and bury the newly exhumed and identified remains of victims. The event is typically attended by international leaders.

Munira Subasic, who lost her husband and son in the massacre, said the mothers of the Srebrenica victims group wrote a letter to the Swedish queen as "fellow mothers" to let her know of Handke's support for Serbian war criminals during the 1990s Yugoslav wars. They invited the Swedish queen to visit Srebrenica for commemorations next July on the 25th  anniversary of the genocide.

"I think that genocide denial is the final stage of that crime; awarding (Handke) a Nobel Prize is the last stage of genocide," Subasic said.

Categories / Arts, International

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