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By: Ed Vulliamy, The Observer/Guardian UK
In 1992 Ed Vulliamy revealed the
existence of the Bosnian concentration camps. The remarkable image of Fikret
Alic showed for the first time how Muslim prisoners were being brutalized by
the Serbs. In the week of Radovan Karadzic's arrest our reporter returned to
find Alic. In this moving dispatch, he - and other survivors - tell of their
anger, despair and continued attempts to try to rebuild their shattered lives.
A still image from video
footage showing emaciated prisoners at the Trnopolje concentration camp in Bosnia in the
summer of 1992. Fikret Alic is standing in the centre, at the front.
Photograph: Reuters
Most people would not recognize him now - he
has a full and manly frame, and a puckish smile; he has even had his teeth
fixed. But I would know it anywhere, from the mixture of mischief, a deep
inward stare and that mop of hair. Sixteen summers ago next week, Fikret Alic
was probably the most familiar figure in the world. His skeletal, emaciated
torso and xylophone ribcage, behind the barbed wire at Trnopolje concentration
camp, embodied the violence unleashed on Bosnia's Muslim civilians at the
orders of Radovan Karadzic, the man due to be taken to The Hague this weekend
to answer charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.
As Karadzic awaits his fate, Fikret Alic is
back in Bosnia.
Although currently living in Sonderberg,
Denmark, he has
bought a flat in a block still under construction in Kozarac town centre, and
is here to save money to rebuild the nearby family home out of which he was
chased in 1992, having completed the foundations. The arrest of the man who
organized his torments has left a bittersweet taste.
'I am happy and I am angry,' he says. 'For
13 years, he was living protected as a free man. And for the three years before
that, all the world knew what he was doing, from my camp to Srebrenica, but did
nothing to stop him. So now the truth will be told, but what has happened to us
all this time? Now at last I am happy just because I am alive and here, with my
wife and children, and not dead like so many others. But while he was free, I
was broken, too.'
I came across Fikret Alic in 1992 at the
Trnopolje concentration camp, where I had gone at Karadzic's invitation, while
trying to inspect the gulag of concentration camps he had set up across
northwestern Bosnia - places of reputed mass murder, torture, mutilation and
rape - all of which Karadzic denied, insisting: 'See for yourself.' We took up
his suggestion and were directed down a seamless chain of command, first from
Karadzic's doorstep to the gates of a place of horror called Omarska, then,
after being bundled out before seeing too much, Trnopolje, where Fikret and
others languished behind the wire. They had arrived that morning, he said then,
from yet another camp, Keraterm, where during a single night 130 men had been
massacred in a hangar. Fikret said he had been ordered to help load the bodies
on to bulldozers, but, weeping, had his place taken by an older man.
Now Fikret and I meet again, this time to
celebrate the arrest of the man who orchestrated the most terrible days of his
life. After the embrace, there's a hollow laugh and a pledge that next time we
really must get together for another reason. We are talking in Fikret's native
town of Kozarac,
a place that the Bosnian Serb leader hoped to wipe from the map. As Karadzic
languishes in Belgrade,
Friday night is getting into gear, the fairground is grinding into action,
children are whooping despite the rain; music is throbbing out of bars and cars
on to the warm, wet streets and girls on heels like stilts strut into town. The
boys' haircuts are stiff with gel and families of three generations are out for
a stroll. It could be a libidinous seaside town in Southern
Europe.
Kozarac now calls itself 'the biggest small
town in the world. Yet 16 summers ago this week, when I came through here on
Karadzic's authority, escorted by his guards, it had been burned to the ground
and the stench of charred masonry was still heavy in the air. Its inhabitants -
apart from a few Serbs tending their animals as though nothing had happened -
were either dead, driven out, or taken to one of the gulag of concentration
camps. There was no war here in the Prijedor region of Bosnia, just a
sudden, vicious and brazen attempt to eradicate an entire population by
killing, incarceration, rape and enforced deportation. According to the
masterplan of which Karadzic is accused, all the people on these streets this
Friday night, and in these rebuilt houses, were intended to be dead, gone or
never born.
But Kozarac has been rebuilt by the hard
work and defiance of a diaspora, some of whom come back for the summer and
others who have come back to live - albeit in the Serbian half of Bosnia, the
so-called Republika Srpska. The mosques are rebuilt, too. As Edin Kararic, a
truck driver living in Watford - an Omarska survivor who has opened the Mustang
bar on the main street - said to me a few years ago: 'It's not hard to get
money for a mosque, but it is extremely hard work to get money to rebuild our
houses. I don't go to the mosque, but I like it that they are here, because
every minaret is a finger up to the people who tried to put us out. It says:
We're back!'
Every year now, there is a commemoration
service at Omarska, making this the gathering of a unique tribe in Europe, Clan Omarska. This year's remembrance takes place
next week. A local group called Izvor, formed by camp survivor Edin Ramulic,
calculates that for all the thousands of bodies already uncovered 3,205 people
are still unaccounted for.
As the night unfolds around us, Fikret tells
about the hunt in Trnopolje, after our visit, for anyone who talked to the
press that day in 1992. He talks about how seven people had been killed for
doing so, and how he had had to hide for 10 days after our meeting on 5 August,
at which point he joined a convoy of deportees on a terrifying mountain exodus
at gunpoint across no-man's land and into Muslim-held territory. Disguised as a
woman he was saved from being taken into a group to be raped because he smelt
so badly.
Later in the conflict he had tried to fight
in the remarkable 17 Krajiske Brigade, based in Travnik, made up of ethnically
cleansed men and women from around Prijedor determined to go home. But he kept
coughing up blood and was discharged.
After living in Slovenia
and Croatia
he had a breakdown. 'I was talking to a tree about my time in the camps. I
might as well have been in a straitjacket.' Then came a chance to go to Denmark, a
meeting with a Bosnian woman from Sanski Most, near Kozarac, in 1999, 'and when
I woke up, I was married,' he laughs. Work loading trucks at a slaughterhouse
ended in 2000 after an accident in which a 200kg (32st) carcass fell on his
back, but although he does not receive disability pension, the couple have
clawed together the money to buy the lease on their flat in Kozarac, and are
considering rebuilding the family home, which lies in a small hamlet,
surrounded by other incinerated houses, a few returnees and their killers and
torturers.
Of his persecutors he now says: 'No one has
ever said sorry for what they did. I don't know what it is about these people -
I can show you five killers any time we go to Prijedor. Either they are proud
of what they did, or pretend it did not happen. I am waiting for someone to
admit what they did, or apologize, but they do not, they never will. They have
built a monument outside the camp where I was, but it is to Serbs who died, not
us. I don't know of any Serbs who died there.'
The long road to Fikret, Trnopolje and
Omarska - and to being back in Kozarac last week - began in London at the end
of July 1992, when my colleague Maggie O'Kane and the American Roy Gutman
published reports from fugitive deportees from Bosnia telling of beatings,
torture and murder in the camps, among them Omarska - the place that would
emerge as the second most deadly killing field in Bosnia's war, after
Srebrenica.
When he invited us to visit the camps,
Karadzic greeted us with that professorial, wayward air and faux academic
veneer that belied his deranged vision, but left no doubts about his authority
over Omarska, promising that we would enter the camp on his word. He sent us
down the chain of command to Omarska, first to his Deputy President, Nikola
Koljevic, who would be our supervisor, then the crisis staff of the nearest
town and administrative centre for Omarska, Prijedor. On the way there we
passed the incinerated ruins of Kozarac - 'They are the people who fled because
they would not accept the peace,' said our escort, Colonel Milan Milutinovic of
the Bosnian Serb army.
After hours of obfuscation and failed
attempts by the committee to take us to other camps that had already been
inspected by the Red Cross, we set out for Omarska, eventually passing through
the back gates of the camp and into another world.
A column of 30 men emerged blinking into the
sunlight from the depths of a hangar. They were in various states of decay,
some skeletal, with shaven heads. They drilled across a tarmac piste under the
watchful eye of a machine-gunner and into a 'canteen', where they gulped down
watery bean soup like famished dogs, keeping their bread roll for later. They
were told they were allowed to speak freely, but they clearly dared not, the
guards swinging their guns; there are few things like the burning eyes of a
prisoner who dare not speak what he yearns to say. One man, Dzemal Partusic,
said only: 'I do not want to tell any lies, but I cannot tell the truth.'
Another, Serif Velic, replied when I asked him about a wound to his head, that
he had fallen - it had happened naturally.
When we tried to get to the hangar in which
the prisoners were held, we were stopped by the commandant and Prijedor's chief
of police, Simo Drjlaca, cocking their guns. Time, and subsequent trials at The Hague, would tell
what Karadzic wanted to hide - a nightmare of killing, torture, mutilation,
starvation, drunken sadism and rape.
Like Alic, Serif Velic also joined the 17
Krajiske 'ethnically cleansed' brigade after suffering in the camps. This week,
he, too, was back in Kozarac, living next to a stone marking a mass grave of
456 bodies in the nearby village
of Kevljani, and pointing
out another likely mass grave in the field behind his house, where the
vegetation becomes suddenly uncomfortably lush.
'I was happier about the rain on my lawn
than about the arrest of Karadzic,' he says. 'It's too little, too late. I have
taught myself not to hate, because if I hate, that is yet another burden on my
back. I want justice, but not revenge - I just want my soul to be in peace. But
I cannot forgive. How can I forgive someone who shows no remorse, like Karadzic
and all the little Karadzics around here who did these things to us? How can I
forgive things that were done by people who are proud of doing it, would do it
again and do not ask my forgiveness?'
By the end of the war, Radovan Karadzic had
for three years had his hand clasped by the leaders of the Western world, as a
fellow politician and diplomat. Then, suddenly, after his indictment by the
newly established Hague tribunal, he became a wanted war criminal. But while
our journey to the camps had taken us down the chain of command from Karadzic
to Omarska over four days, The Hague's
long road to Karadzic worked the other way round over 13 years, beginning with
the minnows.
In 1996, while 60,000 foreign troops
patrolled Bosnia,
the fugitive Karadzic moved openly between his home in Pale and the Prijedor
area. The first man to be arrested and delivered to the tribunal was Dusko
Tadic, a parish-pump sadist from Kozarac, who had kept a café called Tibet.
Tadic had toured the camps to kill and rape
at leisure, and became The Hague's
first conviction, in May 1997. I had not known him, and testified as an expert
witness. But I was curious about the people I had met; much was known about
Karadzic by now, but not his middle management, the people we had met that day
along the chain of command, on our way into Omarska. I found Deputy President
Koljevic in Banja Luka; he had been a mid-ranking Shakespeare scholar before
going into politics with Karadzic, but was now mumbling into his cigar about
'digging up the bones, we were digging up the bones' - though it was not clear
which bones.
So, finally, in court at The Hague, the story of Karadzic's camps
began to be told. Now Mark Harmon and Alan Tieger, two remarkable Americans,
the latter having prosecuted Dusko Tadic at the outset, are due to bring the
case against Karadzic.
The survivors' campaign for a memorial at
Omarska - which is now owned by steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, and produces 1.5
million tonnes of iron ore a year - is four years old, led by Satko Mujagic, a
survivor living in Leiden, the Netherlands.
Satko's foundation, Optimisti 2004, has been building sports and communal
facilities in Kozarac, and he is back this week to inaugurate a gym with 49,000
euros given by wellwishers and what Satko believes to be the first and only
donation ever made by the Serbian authorities to a returnee project, of 15,000
euros.
'It is one thing, and a good thing, to
arrest the man, Karadzic,' he says. 'He was the big war criminal, the man with
the idea for all that happened. But it is another thing to arrest the idea.
Karadzic's ideas live on in the existence of Republika Srpska, and if this is
all about joining the European Union, for the Republika Srpska to join the EU
would be like Europe admitting a part of Germany
that still agreed with Hitler, just because it is in Europe.
I have rebuilt the house you are staying in now, but in 1992 it was burned
while my grandmother was inside - she is one of the 3,205 people still missing
- and I was taken to Omarska. No one has ever said sorry for what they did, no
one has ever helped us to return and the authorities oppose outright any
monument in Omarska to what they did.'
I remember Satko playing ball with his
little girl against the wall of the cells where he was kept in Omarska during a
visit when she was two years old. Now she is six, and Satko says: 'When I told
Lejla that Karadzic had been arrested, she said that if he killed more than one
man, he should go to prison for life, but in prison should not be starved like
her father - no one should do that.'
Dzemal Partusic - the man who had not wanted
to tell any lies, but could not tell the truth in the Omarska canteen in 1992 -
has also rebuilt his home here, on a hillside in Kozarac. In the week of
Karadzic's arrest, he is free and happy to talk as he feels.
'It is important that Karadzic has been
arrested,' he says, above a beautiful view stretching towards Omarska. 'I see
him as a second Hitler, the person who thought he could do whatever he wanted
to us, and did. He was a man the world negotiated with, but I saw him as a man
you cannot negotiate with. So that is good. But what are we left with?
'We can build our houses, we can show them
we are back, that this is our country, but we can never get back our lives as
they were before. Karadzic being arrested will not give us back our dead.'
Eventually Fikret Alic and I take a drive
out of flourishing Kozarac to the hamlet where he grew up and from which he
fled into the mountains, only to be captured - while most of his friends were
killed. 'We found parts of their remains later,' he says. We stop at a mosque,
where a plaque names the hundreds of dead from just that tiny neighbourhood.
'That is my brother,' he says, 'and that my grandfather.' We drive on, past the
rebuilt houses, to the cement foundations of what Fikret hopes will one day be
his home again, and where he and his mother, sisters, wife and their children
were yesterday due to cook a lamb barbecue. I praise the whole, defiant miracle
of Kozarac. 'Oh,' counsels Fikret in reply, 'it is not a problem to build a
house. It is more of a problem to awake a dead man.'
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This article is posted in the Features - Weekly Bridge Publication: Features, Reflections, Stories should not be told, Film in a spoon, Book in a Spoon, Letters to Editor, Video Basket
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