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  2. Glogova massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glogova_massacre

    The Glogova massacre was the mass murder of 64 Bosniak civilians by Serb forces, consisting of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), Bratunac Territorial Defence (TO), local police, and paramilitaries from Serbia, on 9 May 1992.

  3. Mičivode massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mičivode_massacre

    Mičivode massacre was the mass murder of 42 Bosniak civilians, including several minors, on September 20, 1992. This act was carried out by members of the Army of Republika Srpska (VRS) in the village of Mičivode, which is located in the Sokolac municipality of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  4. Doboj massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Doboj

    Before the war, in 1991, the population of the municipality had been 40.14% Bosniak (41,164), 38.83% Serb (39,820), 12.93% Croat (13,264), 5.62% Yugoslav (5,765) and others 2.48% (2,536). [5] The town and surrounding villages were seized by Serb forces in May 1992 with the Serbian Democratic Party taking over the governing of the city. What ...

  5. Bijeljina massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bijeljina_massacre

    Many deaths in Bijeljina were not officially listed as civilian war victims and their death certificates claim they "died of natural causes." [92] After the war ended, less than 2,700 people of the pre-war Bosniak population of over 30,000 still lived in the municipality of Bijeljina (the town itself had 19,000 Bosniak inhabitants [9]). Many ...

  6. Višegrad massacres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Višegrad_massacres

    Day after day, truckloads of Bosniak civilians were taken down to the bridge and riverbank by Army of Republika Srpska paramilitaries, unloaded, shot, and thrown into the river. On 10 June 1992, Milan Lukić entered the Varda factory and collected seven Bosniak men from their workstations. He thereafter took them down to the bank of the Drina ...

  7. Battle of Prozor (1992) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Prozor_(1992)

    First big massacre was Lapsunj massacre when HVO killed 21 Bosniak civilian on 23 August 1992. [citation needed] During 1993, the HVO carried out an almost complete expulsion of the Bosniak population from the occupied territory. Military-capable Bosniaks (about 1,000) were deported to camps in Prozor or western Herzegovina. On August 28, 1993 ...

  8. Tomo Buzov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomo_Buzov

    A Bosnian court accused him in 2020 for the massacre in Štrpci, but Lukić, imprisoned in Estonia, refused to acknowledge it. [2] In 2023, a court in Sarajevo sentenced seven Bosnian Serbs to 91 years in prison for murdering 20 non-Serbian civilians from the train. [1] The Bosniak youth saved by Buzov survived the war and has three children. [2]

  9. Momir Savić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momir_Savić

    On 25 May, when one of a group of captured Bosniak civilians being beaten up by Savić and a group of other Serb soldiers tried to run away, Savić shot and killed him. Individually, between 7 June and late September 1992, on numerous occasions he went fully armed to the house of a Bosniak woman where he raped her, threatening her not to tell ...