Incorrect media reports about the charges against Ratko Mladic
June 13, 2011
Author: Daniel Toljaga
| BOSANSKI |
Associated Press and Reuters — two major global news agencies — are both feeding the public misleading information about the charges against Ratko Mladic.
Throughout their news reporting, they unceasingly repeat the inaccurate information that Mladic is charged only with genocide at Srebrenica and the siege of Sarajevo.
The fact of the matter is that former commander of the Bosnian Serb army currently before the International Criminal Tribunal is charged with orchestrating genocide not only at Srebrenica, but also in a number of other Bosnian municipalities: Bratunac, Foča, Ključ, Kotor Varoš, Prijedor, Sanski Most, Vlasenica and Zvornik. Read more
It’s Time We Started Talking About the Bosnian Genocide
June 8, 2011
By: Mirza Velagic
In 2005 the United States Senate and House of Representatives passed resolutions (S. Res. 134 and H. Res. 199) commemorating the 10th anniversary of the fall of the U.N. “safe zone” of Srebrenica and officially recognizing the Bosnian Genocide. Both resolutions contain the same central paragraph:
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Serbs must recognize aggression against Bosnia and Herzegovina
May 27, 2011
Haris Alibasic, MPA, President of CNAB Board of Directors, took part in NTN24 program Zoom a la Noticia, on May 26, 2011 at 10:45 pm EST. NTN24 viewers benefited from the information he provided on the issue of the arrest of the war criminal Ratko Mladic.
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Mladic arrest only one step towards peace and stability
May 27, 2011
Hamdija Custovic, spokesperson for the CNAB Board of Directors spoke to CNN reporter Moni Basu regarding the arrest of Serb war criminal Ratko Mladic. Along with his personal story of witnessing the aggression on Bosnia and Herzegovina and brutal detainment of Bosniak civilians in his hometown of Gacko , he expressed views held by CNAB regarding the peace and reconciliation process in the Balkans. Read more
Anti-Semitism, racism and Srebrenica genocide denial
March 24, 2011

Source: Originally Published on March 24, 2011 in Greater Surbiton Blog, by Dr. Marko Attila Hoare.
The justice or injustice of a cause may in large part be measured by the ethics displayed by those who uphold it. The ongoing campaign to whitewash the former regimes of Slobodan Milosevic and Radovan Karadzic and to justify their genocidal crimes against the Bosniaks is about as unworthy a cause as it is possible to imagine; consequently, the people who wage it do so in the most dishonest and malicious manner possible. Read more
Appeal to the Defenders of the Truth about the Genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina
March 18, 2011
By: M. Sci Marjan Hajnal
I have been following with great dismay the intensification of attacks on the Institute for Research of Genocide of Canada {IRGC} and the Congress of North American Bosniaks {CNAB} through various channels including the internet and telephone threats towards members of these two organizations. Read more
The Arrest of General Divjak: The Insanity of Serbia Continues
March 9, 2011
On March 3rd, Jovan Divjak, a former general of the Bosnian army was arrested at the Vienna airport, served with a warrant by Interpol. The country asking for Mr. Divjak’s arrest is Serbia. Since the end of the Bosnian war Serbia has repeatedly proven itself a country full of delusion, paranoia, and denial. Striking a note of sanity, the Foreign Minister of Austria, Michael Spindelegger told the Kurier newspaper that, “according to our international law experts, an extradition to Serbia is inconceivable.” Read more
Denying genocide should not be called freedom of speech
March 3, 2011
By Dr. Srdja Pavlovic
University of Alberta
(Originally appeared in Edmonton Journal, 28 Feb. 2011.)
Does denying genocide count as free speech? Dr. Srdja Trifkovic is an associate of the Rockford Institute and the visiting professor of international relations at the University of Banja Luka in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Read more
Letter by Dr. Marko Attila Hoare regarding Anti-Muslim hate-speech at UBC
February 23, 2011
Office of the President
The University of British Columbia
6328 Memorial Road
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z2
Dear Professor Stephen J. Toope,
I am writing to you to express my deep concern at the lecture by Srdja Trifkovic, hosted by the Serbian Students’ Association, scheduled to take place at UBC tomorrow (Thursday, 24 February). I am a firm believer in freedom of expression, even for those who hold offensive views. However, I believe that hate-speech directed against an ethnic, racial or religious minority goes beyond anything that can be permitted at a university, and constitutes a threat to the security and wellbeing of students and academic staff who belong to the minority in question. Read more
Letter to Nobel Prize Committee for Literature Regarding Dobrica Cosic
February 8, 2011
To the Nobel Prize Committee for Literature
Letter of appeal to deny Nobel Prize nomination for Dobrica Cosic
The Congress of North American Bosniaks (CNAB), Institute for Research of Genocide Canada (IRGC), and Bosnian-American Institute for Genocide and Education (BAGI), on behalf of victims of crimes of aggression and genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina, voice their concern over possible proposal to the Committee of the Nobel Prize that Dobrica Cosic be awarded a prestigious award for literature. Read more







