
08 August 2008 Survivors of the notorious Serb-run detention
centres in north-west Bosnia
and their families are continuing their campaign for a memorial centre to
record their suffering.
By: Aida Alic, Prijedor
This August, for the fifth time, former
detainees and families of victims gathered in Omarska, near Prijedor, to mark the anniversary of the closure of
the infamous detention camp, announcing that they would unite in order to call
on the local authorities to build a memorial centre.
In May 1992, Serbian authorities formed three
detention camps in Prijedor
municipality – Keraterm, Trnopolje and Omarska. About a thousand people were
killed in Omarska, which many former detainees recall as the worst of
all. The detention camp was closed on August 6, 1992. On that day, every
year, people from Prijedor,
north-west Bosnia,
recall the terrible events that occurred there in 1992.
| Kompleks logora Omarska |
“We have decided to commemorate the victims and
visit the detention camp in order to try to understand, to some extent, what
those people suffered in the course of 1992,” a former detainee Edin Ramulic,
of the Izvor Association from Prijedor,
said.
However, camp survivors have encountered strong
resistance to their plan from authorities in the Republika Srpska, of which Prijedor has been a part since the 1995 Dayton peace deal.
In 2004 they put forward an initiative for
building of a memorial, but it did not produce any results. They reactivated
the idea this year. In May, they formed an initiative board for the
establishment of a foundation, which would become involved in building the
memorial centre.
A conference has also been announced for later
this year in order to discuss, among other things, the detention camps in Prijedor area and post-war activities related to the
facing up to the past in this region. Pending approval of the site’s current
owner, the conference is to take place in the premises of the former detention
camp.
| Bijela kuca, Omarska |
Omarska camp was set up in a mining complex in
Omarska village, near Prijedor.
Most detainees were held at one of
four locations: the administrative building, where they were examined; 37
female detainees were held in this building; the garage or hangar; the building
known as the Bijela kuca (White house), in which many detainees were tortured
and beaten; and the asphalted area between the buildings, which was known as
Pista (Runway).
There was also a small building, known as Crvena kuca
(Red house), to which detainees were taken and often killed.
Sixteen years on, camp survivors and families of
the killed detainees gathered again in front of and inside these
premises.
| Crvena kuca, Omarska |
“I came here because of my brother. He was a
sportsman. He was taken from his apartment in early August. He was killed in
Hrastova glavica,” Emir Alibegovic said.
The former detention camp buildings now belong
to the Mittal Steel mine, in which production has started again. For several
years, former detainees had to struggle even to obtain permission to enter
Omarska. In 2007, they finally won the right to go inside and visit the former
detention camp premises every year on August 6.
As part of the memorial activities, the group
visited one of the biggest mass graves in this area, Hrastova glavica, which
was found in 1998. The bodies of 124 detainees killed in Omarska and Keraterm
were
| Hrustova Glavica |
exhumed from this grave.
The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina pronounced
a first instance verdict, sentencing Zeljko Mejakic to 21 years' imprisonment,
Momcilo Gruban to 11 years and Dusko Knezevic to 31 years for crimes committed
in Omarska and Keraterm detention camps.
After Dusan Fustar admitted
guilt, the State Court sentenced him to nine years' imprisonment for crimes
committed in the course of 1992.
Aida Alic is BIRN – Justice Report journalist. aida@birn.eu.com. Justice Report is BIRN
online weekly publication.
Justice Report is a
specialist reporting agency focusing on war crimes trials taking place before
local courts; development of the local legal system; and efforts to come to
terms with the past.
Read more

The International Transitional Justice Center has created an online database called Memory and Justice, dedicated to memorial centers all over the world.
Read more
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