The Knife, The Wire, Srebrenica (Nož, Žica, Srebrenica), OP/ED by Ida Sefer
December 17, 2008
Technology has done wonders for recent activist and progressive movements. One of these tech information sources is Facebook. Facebook is a social utility open to the public for interaction with other Read more
Facebook Hate Group Glorifies Srebrenica Genocide
December 12, 2008
Approximately 19,000 people have joined a group on the Facebook social networking website demanding removal of a Serbian hate group that glorifies the 1995 Srebrenica genocide. Srebrenica genocide claimed lives of 8,000 to 10,000 Bosniaks Muslims, including ethnic cleansing of more than 20,000 civilians. Read more
CNAB Condemns Burning of Mosque in Fazlagica Kula
December 8, 2008
The Congress of North American Bosniaks (CBNA), an umbrella organization representing Bosniaks living in the United States and Canada strongly condemns the today’s attack against Bosniaks’ mosque in Fazlagica Kula near Gacko municipality during the most sacred holiday for Bosniaks, Eid Al-Adha. Read more
CNAB Condemns the Draft Law on the Territorial Organization of RS
December 6, 2008
The Congress of North American Bosniaks (CNAB), an umbrella organization representing Canadian and US Bosniaks, sharply condemns the draft law, about the Territorial Organization of Republika Srpska (RS), approved by RS legislators. The draft Read more
Photos: Serbian Authorities Torture Bosniaks Muslims in Sanjak
December 5, 2008
(VIEWER DISCRETION ADVISED) Sanjak (Bosnian: Sandžak) is a region divided between Serbia and Montenegro, mainly populated by Bosniaks Muslims. During 1990s, it was a place of brutal killings, torture and ethnic cleansing of the Bosniak population perpetrated by the oppressive Serbian regime. Hundreds of Bosniak Muslim villages in Sanjak were ethnically cleansed, looted and burned to the ground. Many people were killed and many went missing. Serbian regime kept the area under tight military control and intense media blockade. Read more
The Power of Samantha Power, by Haris Alibasic
December 2, 2008
In addition to the fact that the future Vice President, Joe Biden, the two more recent announcements that came from President-elect Obama’s transition team may mean some cautious optimism for the future of Bosnia. Read more

