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The next day, Yousef drove the van down the basement beneath the World Trade Center. A group of workers were conversing on their lunch break. Unaware of the danger, Yousef then enacts his plan; he lit the fuse and ran away as fast as possible. The clock ticks down to the eventual explosion. Two people died, while a hundred were injured.
The Serbian goal, throughout 1992–1993, was to besiege and capture the cities of Žepa, Srebrenica and Goražde.A few days before Lukavac '93, Bosnian Muslim militias successfully occupied Trnovo and surrounding mountain ranges which cut communications between Serbian Herzegovina and the rest of Republika Srpska.
The 1993 World Trade Center bombing was a terrorist attack carried out by Ramzi Yousef and associates against the United States on February 26, 1993, when a van bomb detonated below the North Tower of the World Trade Center complex in Manhattan, New York City.
Sep. 11—Among the more indelible images to emerge from the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11 are the photographs and video footage of two airplanes flying into the North and South Towers of the ...
The following is a list of wars involving Serbia in the Middle Ages as well as late modern period and contemporary history. The list gives the name, the date, combatants, and the result of these conflicts following this legend:
Siege of Sarajevo; Part of the Bosnian War: Clockwise from top left: Crashed civilian vehicle after being fired upon with small arms; UNPROFOR forces in the city; Government building hit by tank shelling; U.S. airstrike on VRS positions; Overview of the city in 1996; VRS soldiers before a prisoner exchange.
The Bridge at the End of the World: Most na kraju svijeta: Branko Ištvančić: Drama, Thriller. 2015 Croatia Serbia Slovenia The High Sun: Zvizdan: Dalibor Matanić: Drama, Romance. 2016 Croatia Wasn't Afraid to Die: Nisam se bojao umrijeti: Jakov Sedlar Biography, Crime, Drama, History, War. 2016 Croatia Serbia On the Other Side: S one strane ...
Following the Kosovo war, 200,000 to 245,000 Serb, Roma, Ashkali, Albanian and Egyptian people fled into Serbia proper or within Kosovo, [97] fearing revenge, and due to severe violence and terrorist attacks against mostly Serbian civilians after the war [98] amounting to about 700,000 displaced or refugees in that country. [99]