Bosniak policemen suspected of war crimes
Three Bosnia-Hercegovina police employees are suspected of war crimes against Serbs during the Bosnian war.
Tuesday, 04.09.2007.
11:27
Three Bosnia-Hercegovina police employees are suspected of war crimes against Serbs during the Bosnian war. Trebinje Public Security Center has lodged criminal complaints against Zijo Landzo, Faik Spago and Vahid Alagic on suspicion that during the war in Bosnia-Hercegovina, they committed crimes against humanity against the civilians in the Konjic municipality. Bosniak policemen suspected of war crimes A Banja Luka newspaper, Fokus, reports that between 1992 and 1995, the three men ordered and took part in attacks, robberies, arson, persecution, murder and imprisonment of the Serb civilian population around the villages of Bradina and Glavaticevo. In a report sent to the prosecution ten days ago, it is alleged that 48 unidentified civilians of Serb nationality were murdered, while the remaining Serb population in those villages was forcibly and illegally imprisoned at a camp in Konjic. According to the paper, Landzo was at the time one of the commanders of the muslim-Croat armed forces in Konjic, and is today employed at the Bosnia-Hercegovina State Investigation and Protection Agency. Spago, who was chief of Konjic Public Security Agency, also currently works there, while Alagic, who was a commander of a Muslim armed unit in Konjic during the war, is now deputy director of the Bosnia-Hercegovina border police.
Bosniak policemen suspected of war crimes
A Banja Luka newspaper, Fokus, reports that between 1992 and 1995, the three men ordered and took part in attacks, robberies, arson, persecution, murder and imprisonment of the Serb civilian population around the villages of Bradina and Glavatičevo.In a report sent to the prosecution ten days ago, it is alleged that 48 unidentified civilians of Serb nationality were murdered, while the remaining Serb population in those villages was forcibly and illegally imprisoned at a camp in Konjic.
According to the paper, Landžo was at the time one of the commanders of the muslim-Croat armed forces in Konjic, and is today employed at the Bosnia-Hercegovina State Investigation and Protection Agency.
Špago, who was chief of Konjic Public Security Agency, also currently works there, while Alagić, who was a commander of a Muslim armed unit in Konjic during the war, is now deputy director of the Bosnia-Hercegovina border police.
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