From Yugoslavia To The Western Balkans
From Yugoslavia To The Western Balkans
From Yugoslavia To The Western Balkans
others
others
others
others
others
s fate 115
apologize to the Germans, but no more than that (see Nagengast 1996). As
far as the dominant position of Czech public figures is concerned, there
is nothing to apologize for; and certainly, no question of reparations for
the property confiscated from the Germans. In a survey of Czech public
opinion in early 1996, 86% of respondents said that they would not vote
for political parties that favored making an apology to the Sudetenland
Germans, while only 7% said that they would vote for such a party (OMRI
Daily Report II, 9 April 1996).
Yet what occurred in 1945 was expulsion, and not some orderly trans-
fer, except in the sense that Czechs, Poles and Yugoslavs ordered Germans
to move with little or no notice, and brutalized those who resisted; tens
of thousands of Germans were killed. Once the Germans were gone, the
places were de-Germanized, transformed entirely so that as many traces
of German culture were destroyed as possible (see, e.g., Mach 1993: 187
200). The intent was certainly to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group, as such (to quote Article II of the UN
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide).
The Sudetenland Germans were eliminated as an identifiable national
group as such, as were other locally identified (and self-identified) groups
of Germans elsewhere.
Whether expulsion is legally genocide, however, is another matter;
and we should remember that the UN convention was sponsored by
the same parties that had approved in Potsdam the destruction of these
Germans as groups. Thus, legally, genocide is defined in the same arti-
cle as specific acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national...group as such:
(a) killing members of the group;
(b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring
about its physical destruction in whole or in part.
At this point, a number of legal arguments could be made, but we will
leave them aside for the moment. What is more important is that almost
no one would bother to make them. The brutal expulsion of ten million
Germans, as Germans, from east-central Europe; the destruction of their
culture; their elimination as groups as such, is, and was, of no interest to
anyone not German. Indeed, I am quite aware that in raising the issue, I am
doing something unseemly. The Germans, it is usually said, deserved it.
116 chapter six
It is just this sentiment that I wish to probe, however; or rather, its
expression in discourses on and of violence. Under what circumstances is
it no longer shocking, but desirable, to the democratic west, for persons
in multiples of thousands, tens of thousands, or millions to be brutally
expelled from their homelands, their property stolen, all traces of their
culture expunged, their very identity as a group, as such, destroyed? Or,
perhaps better, what rhetoric is used to justify such expulsions by the same
parties that profess to be implacably against the crime of genocide?
My argument is that the crimes of the Holocaust provide a rhetorical
structure that lends itself to the justification of the process that it pro-
fesses to abhor: the destruction, in whole or in part, of national, ethnic
or religious (terms that are themselves overlapping) groups as such. My
ground of comparison will be the former Yugoslavia; not just Bosnia, cer-
tainly, and also not simply the period since 1991, when the wars of the
Yugoslav secessions and succession began.
It is necessary to state at the outset what it should not, in fact, be neces-
sary to state: my analysis does not justify the violence it analyzes, even as
it seeks to explain it. It would be comfortable to rest on Tzvetan Todorovs
distinction (1996: 137), in a very similar context, between anthropology,
which concerns itself with human dispositions rather than any particu-
lar action, and law or justice (which he seems to use interchangeably),
which punish only acts which have been committed, and nothing else,
and to privilege my anthropological intellectual persona over my legal
one. Yet at the same time, we are caught in a trap of morality: the more
actions are explainable, the less culpable they seem.
This moral problem is, perhaps, at the heart of any consideration of
rhetorics of genocide. The word itself denotes an absolute evil which can
only be condemned: justice trumps anthropology here. If justice is to be
exemplary, however, it must look forward as well as backwards, and this
task requires understanding. Todorov again (1996: 277): it is understand-
ing, not the refusal to understand, that makes it possible to prevent a rep-
etition of the horror. Similarly, Milan Kundera, in a passage discussing
evils scandalous beauty, argues that a portrayal of evil cannot be read
as endorsement of it, and that without its beauty, the barbaric would
remain incomprehensible (Kundera 1995: 91; the immediate reference is
to Adornos accusation that Stravinskys Le Sacre du printemps does not
identify with the victim, but rather with the destructive element). There
is, obviously, no beauty of any kind in the campaigns of ethnic cleansing
in Yugoslavia, yet they do reveal a very strong logic (see Hayden 1996. At
a time when a U.S. congressman, for example, calls this specific atrocity
schindler
s fate 117
irrational because it is inherently evil (CSCE 1995: 1[comments of Rep.
C. H. Smith]), it is even more important to consider seriously evils scan-
dalous logic, since evil may be as rational as it is banal indeed it would
seem to need to be rational in order to be banal. It is necessary to explore
horrors thoroughly in order to understand them, but doing so does not
endorse the horror.
It should also be unnecessary, but again is not, to say that in looking
at the use made of rhetorics derived from the Holocaust, I am not casting
doubt on either the quantity or quality of that experience. Similarly, dis-
tinguishing one set of horrors from another does not diminish the second.
The first epigram at the head of this paper is not the usual tragedy-repeats-
itself-as-farce, but rather tragedy repeating as tragedy. Understanding the
historical repetition of patterns of tragedy may require differentiation
from rhetorics whose applicability is so easy that it should, on reflection,
be suspicious. To do so, however, does not imply that either historical
moment is any less than tragic; quite the opposite, in fact. To fail to do so
is to misrepresent the second tragedy, as not tragic at all.
What is needed is a rhetoric that is historically specific, if such an enter-
prise is not oxymoronic. This is not to say that experiences of violence
aimed at eliminating specific groups from particular territories are under-
standable only in their own terms. To the contrary, I argue that the trag-
edies we see in the 1990s in what was Yugoslavia are comparable in many
ways to other events in some of the same territories fifty years earlier,
and elsewhere in the world, if not to the Holocaust. The point instead is
that by classifying recent Yugoslav events as genocide, the nature of the
events themselves is actually obscured rather than explained. While the
moral certainty of condemnation is always comfortable, when condemna-
tion obstructs understanding it also obstructs attempts at prevention of
the repetition of the horror.
Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing
The term ethnic cleansing seems to have originated with the wars in
the former Yugoslavia; certainly it has been popularized by them. For
many writers, ethnic cleansing has become conterminous with geno-
cide. Thus, for example, a hearing before the Commission on Security
and Cooperation in Europe of the U.S. Congress was entitled Genocide
in Bosnia Herzegovina (CSCE 1995), but it is clear from the opening
statements of the congressional participants that the primary focus is
118 chapter six
ethnic cleansing, and the two terms are used almost interchangeably. The
testimony of the primary professional giving witness, however, was more
circumspect. Professor M. Cherif Bassiouni of the DePaul University Law
School, who chaired a Commission of Experts charged by the UN Security
Council with investigating war crimes in the former Yugoslavia, is very
careful to say that while ethnic cleansing is certainly a crime against
humanity, [t]he question of genocide is a little more complicated
because of the definitional problem as to whether genocide requires an
intent to exterminate an entire group, as in the Nazi campaign against
the Jews. Professor Bassiouni says that the Commission of Experts took a
more progressive look at it, and said that genocide should be interpreted
not in light of an entire group...but rather to look at it in terms of more
specific contexts, such as particular towns, since then you can find
an intent to eliminate in whole or in part a particular group within that
context (CSCE 1995: 12).
The Commission of Experts itself defined ethnic cleansing quite spe-
cifically, as rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or
intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or
religious group (Bassiouni 1994: 17, in CSCE 1995: 89). Coupled with the
progressive interpretation of genocide enunciated by Professor Bassiouni,
the legal problems of equating the two terms are resolved. But note that this
is also a matter of determining morality; genocide is, unquestionably, the
moral horror of the present century, so that any new process that can be
classed as genocide deserves all of the moral, political and military con-
demnation of the entire world community.
Yet the Expert Commissions definition of ethnic cleansing, if taken
seriously, means that genocide has been a tool for building a number of
nation-states which are now honorable members of the world commu-
nity. The problem may be seen in the commentary of one of the more
vigorous condemners of genocide in Bosnia, William Safire of the New
York Times, on the occasion of the joint visit to Sarajevo of Prime Minis-
ters Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan and Tansu Ciller of Turkey. Safire praised
them as leaders of two secular Muslim democracies (thus, of course,
putting that last term to less than critical use). Yet Pakistan exists only
because Muhamed Ali Jinnah in 194647 took exactly the same position as
Radovan Karadi in 199192, refusing inclusion as a minority in someone
elses promised democracy in favor of creating a nation-state, based on
the right of self-determination, for Indias Muslim nation (note that I am
not thereby equating Alija Izetbegovi with Nehru, a point returned to
below). The result was predictable: while in 1941 Hindus formed 13.4% of
schindler
s fate 119
the population of what was to become West Pakistan, by 1961 they were
only 1.5% of this population, reduced in absolute numbers from 3.8 mil-
lion to 600 thousand (Herald Annual 1993: 88). Turkey, for its part, has
shown in Cyprus that a NATO member can invade, partially occupy and
partition a sovereign member state of the United Nations. The partition
of Cyprus, of course, also involved ethnic cleansing, the removal of non-
Turks from northern Cyprus and Turks from the rest of the place.
Rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimida-
tion to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious
group seems, in fact, an essential element in the program of many state
builders and national liberation movements. As Rogers Brubaker has noted
(1995), the unmixing of peoples is a common concomitant of the collapse
of empires. The pressure on ethnic Russians to leave most of the formerly
Soviet republics is part of his analysis. The expulsion of Armenians from
Azerbaijan is matched by the expulsion of Azeris from Armenia, including
parts of what is supposedly still Azerbaijan, taken militarily by Armenians
with no international criticism (indeed, the USA maintains economic
sanctions on Azerbaijan, whose territory is occupied, rather than on the
occupier, Armenia!). The creation of modern Turkey in the aftermath of
the Ottoman Empire involved the elimination of the Armenians (the pro-
cess that put the term genocide into the political vocabulary) and the
expulsion of the Greeks; since the latter process was accomplished as a
population exchange in which Turks were also forced from Greece, it is
now largely forgotten, although it was brutal in its implementation. Also
largely forgotten are the campaigns of ethnic cleansing in the so-called
Independent State of Croatia, which included Bosnia and Herzegovina,
in 194144, to which I return, below. For the moment, it is enough to say
that nothing seen in Bosnia since 1992 surprises anyone familiar with the
same process fifty years earlier, save that while in the 1990s the primary
victims were Muslims, at the hands first of Serbs and then of Croats, the
primary victims in the 1940s were Serbs, first at the hands of Croats, and
secondarily of Muslims.
Liberation movements may be the most interesting, because of their
invocation of the right to self-determination. In an international moral
and political milieu in which only governments can do wrong, the result-
ing population movements are usually if not ignored, then not the focus
of much concern: the departure of Hindus from Indian Kashmir, of non-
Tamils (including Tamil-speaking Muslims) from the putative Tamil
Eelam in northern Sri Lanka, of non-Albanians from Kosovo and western
Macedonia. Viewing most such departures as voluntary ameliorates the
120 chapter six
discomfort that would arise were matters to be perceived with greater
clarity.
I do not mention these points to justify the events in Bosnia, but rather
to raise the question of how those occurrences are to be distinguished
from the events surrounding the creations of Pakistan and Turkey (both
of which, ironically, have sent peacekeepers to Bosnia) as well as Greece,
the expulsion of the Germans from Poland and the Czech lands, and the
mutual forcible homogenizations engaged in by the forces of Armenia
and Azerbaijan. Clearly, all of these meet the experts definition of ethnic
cleansing, and also their progressive definition of genocide. Yet equally
clearly, few commentators would wish to view any of these events as
genocide, since they are not in fact comparable to the Holocaust. Geno-
cide, after all, was exceptional. Bosnia may not be.
Well, so what? Isnt the point of the genocide convention the preven-
tion of just the kinds of acts found in Bosnia? And surely I am not arguing
that such acts are acceptable simply because they have been common in
the past?
Surely I am not; but I do wish to make clear, first, the rhetorical shifts
that make some ethnic cleansings seem acceptable. Second, I wish thus to
clear the space for exploring when, exactly, and despite all of our most
moral rhetoric, we might expect ethnic cleansing to occur.
So let me be blunt: genocide draws its moral force, and conceptual
horror, precisely because of the exceptional nature of the holocaust. Hitler
wanted the Jews utterly exterminated, not simply driven from particular
places. Ethnic cleansing, on the other hand, involves precisely such remov-
als rather than extermination, and is not exceptional, but rather common
in particular circumstances. Further, ethnic cleansing may be sponsored
by the very powers that profess horror at genocide. In other words, eth-
nic cleansing may lead to international rewards. The rhetorical device of
labeling some ethnic cleansing genocide, and other ethnic cleansing a
population transfer, constitutes the legitimation in the second case of
what, to the victims, is surely a process of horror.
Let me say immediately that in taking this position I am not asserting
that final solutions are so common in history as to be inevitable, the
stance taken by Dr. Franjo Tudjman, now President of Croatia, in a book
written before his election (Tudjman 1990: 166; quotation marks in origi-
nal). Instead, my questions are twofold: first, when is ethnic cleansing so
congruent with a political logic as to be irresistible, and when does this proj-
ect gain international approval. The difference is essentially that between
Hannah Arendt as political philosopher and Franjo Tudjman: where
schindler
s fate 121
Tudjman sees genocide as existing since time immemorial (Tudjman
1990: 266), Arendt recognizes that it occurs only when particular philoso-
phies of nation and state prevail, and looks at the conditions under which
this happens (see Arendt 1966: 227243 and 267302). While I would not
dream of arrogating any claim at all to Arendts mantle, I would hope that
my effort is more closely related to hers than to Tudjmans.
The Rationality of Ethnic Cleansing
In 1934, as the guarantees of the minority treaties of the Versailles settle-
ment proved utterly illusory and as Hitler consolidated power in Ger-
many, the secretary to the Minorities Committee of the League of Nations
Union published a detailed analysis of the minority problem in Europe,
and came to the conclusion that:
the real root of the problem lies in the philosophy of the national state as
it is practiced today in central and eastern Europe.... It is true that the
[minorities] Treaties provide in general terms for the equality of all nation-
als of the contracting state before the law, and as regards enjoyment of civil
and political rights, and for the same treatment and security in law and
fact.... [However], since the whole conception of the national state implies
a violation of the principle of equality to the detriment of the minorities, the
guarantee of equality might be construed as involving the renunciation by
the state of its national character.... A national state and national minorities
are incompatibles. (Macartney 1934: 421422, emphasis added).
The philosophy of the national state referred to by Macartney was that
the state, a territory with a government, is an expression of the sover-
eignty of a nation, a group that is in American terms defined ethnically
(even religion being considered more a matter of heritage than neces-
sarily of faith). He also noted that the new states after Versailles defined
themselves constitutionally in national terms, each as the state of a single
nation that forms the majority of its population (Macartney 1934: 208210).
Macartney noted that when a minority exists in such a state, only three
solutions are possible: the revision of frontiers to match the distribution
of populations; the elimination of the minorities by emigration (perhaps
through exchange of populations); or by altering the basis of the state,
so that it is no longer a national state (Macartney 1034: 423). He also noted
that a fourth possibility could be seen in physical slaughter, but that
although this most effective of remedies is still in vogue in certain coun-
tries it shall not be discussed in this humane essay.
122 chapter six
Unaware at the time of Macartneys work, I analyzed the putatively
democratic constitutions of the formerly Yugoslav republics in 199192
and proposed a model of constitutional nationalism, as a constitutional
and legal structure that privileges the members of one ethnically defined
nation over other residents in a particular state (Hayden 1992: 655). My
analysis of the logic of such a state indicated that a regime that engaged
in ethnic cleansing, the expulsion of a minority from its territory, could
actually present itself to its own people, at least, as thereby maintaining
both of the principles of international law that are usually said to conflict:
self-determination of the nation and the inviolability of borders (Hayden
1992: 672). Viewed in this way, ethnic cleansing is a logical corollary of
self-determination in situations in which the existence of a minority may
be presented as potentially threatening to the national state of the major-
ity (see Hayden, 1996). Physical slaughter enters the picture as an element
of ethnic cleansing, since, after all, it usually takes a great deal of pressure
to persuade people to leave their homes for homelands where they might,
in fact, have never been.
Violence may be most required to break up populations that had long
been living intermingled, such as those of Croatia and Bosnia in 1941 and
199192, Palestine in 1948, Punjab in 194748. One of the striking simi-
larities in reports by Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia in 1941,
victims on all sides in the Punjab in 1947 and Muslims in Bosnia in 1992
was that they had never expected to be attacked, since they lived peace-
fully with their neighbors. Note that these were all campaigns primarily of
expulsion or forced assimilation rather than outright extermination. The
Holocaust remains a special case; pace Tudjman, final solutions are not
so common in history.
What is clear, however, is that the logic of the nation-state precludes the
existence of national minorities within it. The contradiction may be faced,
and perhaps overcome, by eliminating the minorities through expulsion,
extermination or conversion, or by redrawing borders and exchang-
ing populations, probably largely through the same means required for
expulsion in the first option. Redrawing borders is likely to be the choice
of the discriminated-against minority, which will favor secession.
Of course, the logic that drives these various outcomes can be defeated
if the majority does not assert the claim that it alone is sovereign in its
own state. However, when a party has come to power precisely on such a
claim, it is difficult to imagine a situation in which abandoning that posi-
tion would be considered, or believed.
schindler
s fate 123
Minority Rights as Oxymoron in Central Europe
It is precisely to counter such majoritarian problems that minority guar-
antees are said to be so important to the Europe of today. Yet one may be
doubtful, on historical grounds as well as in view of current practice. In
so far as history goes, the dead-letter minority treaties of Versailles were
not the first such efforts to fail. Similar disregard of minority guarantees
occurred after the Congress of Berlin in 1878: although the Great Pow-
ers made recognition of Serbia, Romania and Montenegro conditional on
their protection of minorities, recognition was not at any time withdrawn
from any of the states in question on the score of their non-fulfillment
of their minority obligations, even though breaches of the obligations
were frequent (see Macartney 1934: 166171). On the other side of Ver-
sailles temporally, in 1991 the European Community, soon to be the Euro-
pean Union, explicitly conditioned recognition of republics seceding
from Yugoslavia on their protection of minorities, but when confronted
with the opinion of its own expert committee that Croatia did not meet
the condition, while Macedonia did, the EC recognized Croatia and not
Macedonia (Petruevska 1995). One might note that since then, eighty per
cent of the Serbs in Croatia have left, with the largest departures being
the expulsions following the Croatian military offensives of May and
August1995. Yet no European Union country withdrew its ambassador
to protest this. Similarly, even though the EU had as late as February 1995
expressed unwillingness to recognize the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
until the rights of the Albanians of Kosovo were protected, most EU coun-
tries recognized the FRY in April 1995 despite the lack of the supposedly
prerequisite guarantees.
The chimerical quality of minority protections in Europe may be seen
in another parallel between the post-Versailles period and the 1990s,
which is the refusal of the European powers to be bound by the minor-
ity protections that they would pretend to impose upon others. Thus the
post-Versailles minority treaties were to be binding only on new states,
which did not even include Germany. Similarly, in 1995, the OECD cov-
enant on the rights of minorities was not signed by France, on the grounds
that there are no minorities in the country, a position with which several
million Arabs may beg to differ.
With her customary bluntness, Hannah Arendt viewed the minorities
treaties of the Versailles settlement as saying in plain language what
until then had been only implied in the working systems of nation-states,
124 chapter six
namely, that only nationals could be citizens, only people of the same
national origin could enjoy the full protection of legal institutions, that
persons of different nationality needed some law of exception until or
unless they were completely assimilated and divorced from their origin
(1966: 275). Or, Macartney might add, expelled. Or slaughtered.
When, however, is expulsion ethnic cleansing, thus genocide under
the U.N. Expert Commissions progressive view, and when is it not? The
problem may be put in the context of the Croatian attack on the Krajina
region, in August 1995. As Croatian forces recaptured regions that had,
in fact, never been under the control of the Croatian government that
seceded from Yugoslavia, the Serbs living in those regions were expelled.
The Croatian army shelled civilian areas, then left open escape routes into
Serb-controlled Bosnia for the Serb population to use (Silber and Little
1995: 350351). Even then, the Croatian forces shelled some of the columns
of refugees (see Owen 1995: 265). When all Serb resistance ended, Croa-
tian police forces escorted Serbs to the border with Serbia. Once outside
of Croatia, these Serbs, putatively citizens of Croatia, have been prohibited
from returning by the brilliantly vicious circle of permitting return only to
those who have documents issued by the Croatian government, and then
not issuing such documents to Serbs outside of Croatia (New York Times,
17 Dec. 1995, at A-4). Peter Galbraith, however, American Ambassador to
Croatia and the author of one of the first depictions of ethnic cleans-
ing in Bosnia (Galbraith and Maynard 1992), said that the expulsion of
the Serbs from the Krajina was not ethnic cleansing, because ethnic
cleansing is a practice supported by Belgrade and carried out by Bosnian
and Croatian Serbs, while the Croatian action could be a positive step in
resolving the Yugoslav conflicts (OMRI Daily Report, 10 August 1995). As
in 1945, apparently, expulsion is sometimes a legitimate tool for solving
minorities problems.
The question is, however, what rhetoric is used to cover this unpleas-
ant reality? In order to approach this question, it is useful to consider
two cases that might seem at first glance quite disparate: the partitions of
Punjab in 1947 and Bosnia from 1992 to 1996. On closer examination, what
is disparate is mainly the rhetoric used to describe the removals of large
segments of the populations in each case.
Genocide is in the Eye of the Beholder: Punjab, 1947/Bosnia, 1992
In 1947, the British acceded to the demands of the Muslim League for a
separate state for Indias Muslim nation, and thus to the partitioning of
schindler
s fate 125
Britains Indian empire into two states, India and Pakistan. In the western
part of the still-united India, it was relatively easy to see that the farthest
western regions, with large Muslim majorities, would become parts of Paki-
stan, while the regions in the center of the country would remain as India.
Between them, however, lay Punjab, with a third major community in the
Sikhs, with the three communities living intermingled and the major lines
of communication, transportation, irrigation and other infrastructure so
intertwined that cleanly dividing any of it was impossible. Yet the Brit-
ish accepted the position that if India would be divided, then so must be
Punjab. I suspect that they recognized that Punjabi Muslims would in the
main prefer to join Pakistan and Punjabi Hindus to join India, leaving the
Sikhs with little choice: an independent state of their own was not pos-
sible. With the agreement of the transitional governments-in-waiting of
the new India and Pakistan, the British drew the border between them,
announcing it only after the independence of the two countries had been
proclaimed.
The result was one of the worst episodes of ethnic or communal vio-
lence ever seen, as literally millions of people left their homes for their
newly defined homelands, prompted on their way by murder, rape, assault
and robbery. Yet for all of the violence of the transfer of populations, it
was soon over. Since the border had been drawn beforehand, those trying
to reach it knew when they would be safe, at least from the communal ter-
ror. Further, since 1947, the vast majority of the refugees from that period
were incorporated into India and Pakistan relatively quickly and relatively
completely. Considering the importance of place of origin to many Indi-
ans (even built into their names in some places), this incorporation is
remarkable.
Note that while the traffic was two-way, the effect on the two countries
was different. Although Pakistan was emptied of Hindus, many Muslims
stayed in India, so that India still has one of the very largest Muslim popu-
lations of any country. Whatever the complexities that guided the deci-
sions of many Muslims to stay may have been, the promise of equality
offered by Nehru, whose The Discovery of India (1945) is the basic text of
Indian secular nationalism, may have been in part responsible. The Indian
National Congress was a movement, then a party, that incorporated Mus-
lims and other minorities, promoting a view of Indian secular nationhood
that was reflected in the symbolic and constitutional structures of the
state. Further, the Indian effort to build a democratic system was real, a
process of constitutional drafting by a constituent assembly that lasted for
a year and a half, with a constitutional structure emerging that not only
promised equality but attempted to create institutions to bring it about
126 chapter six
(see Galanter 1982) this at a time (194950) when the United States was
a country that found segregation (the American form of apartheid) con-
stitutionally acceptable and legally enacted.
Where Nehru wanted a democratic country of Indians, however, Jinnah
wanted a nation-state for Indias Muslims. Whatever reference the Muslim
League may have made to democracy, the model was essentially of the
exclusionary nation-state type found in Europe in the 1930s, with all of
the promise for protection of minorities that Macartney found there. With
partition, India could remain the state of Muslim Indians, but Pakistan
could not remain the state of non-Muslims, since to do so would have
been contrary to its very justification for existence.
Let me not idealize India too much. Certainly Indian Muslims are
in many ways subordinated to Indian Hindus, and of late, the hindutva
campaign of the RSS, BJP, Shiv Sena and the like seems aimed at prov-
ing Jinnah to have been right all along. Yet note that the militant Hindu
movement must try to redefine the Indian nation in a way contrary to the
Nehru/Gandhi image institutionalized in the structures of India since 1947
(see Varshney 1993).
Turning to what was Yugoslavia, in 1991 as the country was disinte-
grating into nation-states for each of the Yugoslav peoples, the European
Community was confronted with the problem of Bosnia. Like Punjab
between the new states of India and Pakistan that were forming in 1947,
Bosnia lay between Croatia and Serbia, with a third community, Muslims,
no majority, all living intermingled, with the major lines of communica-
tion, transportation, irrigation and other infrastructure so intertwined
that cleanly dividing any of it was impossible. Yet it was clear to any-
one who knew anything about the place that Bosnia in 1992 had as much
chance of avoiding partition as Punjab in 1947. The Serbs and Croats had
made no secret of their plans to divide Bosnia, and members of all three
of the major groups in Bosnia, the Muslims, Serbs and Croats, had voted
overwhelmingly for separate nationalist parties (one Muslim, one Serb,
one Croat) in the only free elections in Bosnia, in 1990 (see Hayden 1993).
And there were no Nehrus in Bosnia, but only Jinnahs. The Party of Demo-
cratic Action of Alija Izetbegovi was founded as a party of and for Mus-
lims, and remains a party of and for Muslims, as nationalistic a party as
its Serbian Democratic Party and the Croatian Democratic Union counter-
parts. Democratic in these parties names is meant to indicate that the
party manifests the will of the particular nation (Serb, Croat, Muslim),
not an undifferentiated body of citizens.
schindler
s fate 127
The initial response to the Yugoslav crisis of the Dutch government,
holding the EC presidency in the second half of 1991, was in fact to con-
sider redrawing republican borders in the process of creating successor
states (see Owen 1995: 3133). In an action that David Owen calls incom-
prehensible (1995: 33), the other EC members ruled this out as opening
Pandoras box and as being out of date to draw borders on ethnic lines.
Six months later, as EC recognition of republics within their current bor-
ders grew increasingly likely, the head of the ECs own mediation effort in
Yugoslavia as well as the Secretary General of the United Nations advised
the EC that to do so would likely cause Bosnia to explode (Owen 1995:
343344). Yet the EC recognized first Slovenia and Croatia, then Bosnia.
And, as predicted, Bosnia did explode.
In a situation in which a large portion of the population of the puta-
tive Bosnian state rejected inclusion within it, recognition had to mean
war for one of two reasons. If the international community were seri-
ous in insisting that Bosnia be imposed on the large numbers of people,
Serbs and Croats, who rejected it, the EC would have had to support a
war of conquest on those people either to impose Bosnia on them or to
expel them. On the other hand, having ruled out the partition of Bosnia,
the international community left no choice to those who rejected it other
than partition by military means, an option that both the Serbs and the
Croats then took.
It does no good to argue, implausibly, that Bosnia was always a peace-
able kingdom in which everyone got along (see, e.g., Donia and Fine 1993).
The people living there were as aware of the real implications of suddenly
being members of a minority in someone elses state as were the people
of the Punjab in 1947 (see Smajlovi 1995). Saying that Sarajevo society
was composed of the intertwining of Muslim, Serb and Croat cultures is
as meaningful as Kafkas comment on the inherent Czech, German and
Jewish character of the people of Prague: quite true at the time, but con-
trary to the logic of most states in modern Europe. In Bosnia in 1992, the
practical logic of nation-state was far more real than the pieties of minor-
ity rights, particularly as those pieties had been expressly ignored only
months earlier in the recognition of Croatia.
So let me be blunt: the difference between Bosnia in 1992 and Punjab in
1947 was that in the Punjab, the agreement on territorial division before-
hand meant that the horror was over relatively quickly. In Bosnia, how-
ever, the pious insistence that partition would not happen when clearly
it would meant that the lines were drawn, and redrawn, in blood; and
128 chapter six
the process took years longer than the partition of the Punjab. This is not
to say that the partition of Bosnia could ever have been accomplished
without brutality, but rather that its prolongation ensured that casualties
would be higher than they would have been had partition been legiti-
mated immediately (see Owen 1995).
Yet it is this external insistence that Bosnia exist despite the wishes
of the elected representatives of two of its three constituent groups that
seems to have driven the view that genocide took place there. Ethnic
cleansing is only likely to be recognized as such, to say nothing of as geno-
cide, when those making the charge view the territory being cleansed as
belonging to those being driven out, a determination that may often have
less to do with who, exactly, owns what, or how they came to be there,
but with whose national-state the territory has been recognized as being.
Thus, Hannah Arendt (1966: 276) says that after World War II, those mak-
ing the peace began to repatriate nationalities as much as possible in
an effort to unscramble the belt of mixed populations. Repatriation,
usually defined as to send back to the country of birth, citizenship or alle-
giance, here provides the rhetorical cover for expelling people en masse
from the country of their birth and citizenship, regardless of allegiance.
Thus an uncomfortable conclusion follows: the depiction of the expul-
sion of a population depends on the political position of the party making
it. Put another way, it seems likely that if the international community
had agreed to the suggestion of the Dutch government in July 1991, and
accepted the partition of Bosnia, the resulting mass expulsions of popula-
tions would have been regarded as regrettable but normal consequences
of the redefinition of the territorial states succeeding the former Yugosla-
via, as in Punjab in 1947. When instead the EC and US chose to pretend that
partition could not happen, this determination also meant that expulsions
would be seen as pathology instead of normality, thus genocide instead of
population exchanges.
Genocide and the Necessity of Collective Guilt
The International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for
Serious Violations of Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the
Former Yugoslavia since 1991 at the Hague is charged with trying individu-
als for specific crimes, a stance developed at Nuremberg. Yet genocide
must be a collective act, a policy and practice formed in the name of one
collectivity and implemented against another. Thus even prosecutions of
individuals presuppose the collective guilt of those whom those defen-
schindler
s fate 129
dants claim to represent. Further, this charge of collective guilt is irrefut-
able. While an individual defendant may be acquitted, the charge itself
indicates that the larger guilt is assumed. After all, the crimes listed in the
UN Convention on the Prevention of Genocide constitute genocide (as
opposed to other, one hesitates to say ordinary, crimes) because they are
part of a larger enterprise. To see this situation clearly, it is necessary only
to imagine a prosecution for genocide of an individual acting completely
alone who commits racially motivated killings and espouses a desire to
exterminate the group to which his victims belong. While possibly per-
mitted under a literal reading of the language of the convention, such a
prosecution would seem absurd no group is in danger of extermination
from the actions of isolated individuals, abhorrent as they may be.
Thus an accusation of genocide in itself works to establish the collec-
tive guilt of those in whose name it is said to have been carried out, even
if only individuals are to be prosecuted. Such trials employ a rhetoric of
adjudication when what is actually assumed is the stance of a tribunal,
in the sense identified by Milan Kundera from the work of that classic
expositor of central European legal and bureaucratic logic, Kafka. The
trial brought by the tribunal, notes Kundera, is always absolute, meaning
that it does not concern an isolated act, a specific crime (theft, fraud, rape)
but rather concerns the character of the accused in its entirety (Kundera
1995: 227, emphasis in original). In regard to genocide, a defendant may
deny that she or he committed specific acts charged, but no defendant is
in a position to deny that genocide took place. But the individual is not
the real defendant, in any event; rather, the defendant is the collective for
whom the individual is said to have acted, which cannot be defended.
The problem with collective guilt, of course, is that many individuals
in the condemned collective are not themselves guilty of anything. This
uncomfortable fact is concealed, however, by what Kundera, again follow-
ing Kafka, sees as the specific form of memory of the tribunal, a memory
that is colossal but which could be defined as the forgetting of everything
not a crime (Kundera 1995: 229, emphasis in original). It is this stance that
is manifested by most accounts of the Germans of the Sudetenland and
Poland, and the Serbs of Croatia and Bosnia.
Schindlers Germans
Thomas Keneally (1993: 32) makes reference to Schindler and his family
having in 1918 found themselves citizens of the Czechoslovak republic.
Yet Germans such as the Schindlers didnt simply find themselves in the
130 chapter six
new Czechoslovak, Polish and Yugoslav states: those states were imposed
upon them, against the wishes of many of them. In 1918, the German
deputies in Austria proclaimed an independent German-Austrian state,
with the German deputies in Bohemia proclaiming themselves to consti-
tute a provisional diet of a German Bohemia that was to be included in
the German-Austrian state. These efforts were frustrated militarily: Czech
troops seized control of Bohemia (see Kalvoda 1985: 111).
The incorporation of millions of Germans into Czechoslovakia and
Poland was acknowledged by Woodrow Wilsons secretary of state to
have been a striking example of the abandonment of the principle of self-
determination, as was the prohibition on German unification with Austria
at Versailles (Lansing 1921: 9899). While the justification for this was usu-
ally put at ensuring the viability of the new states, those involved in drafting
the treaties knew better. Charles Seymour, Chief of the Austro-Hungarian
division of the American Peace Commission, noted that although Austria
had a right to expect that territory would be allocated in the spirit of
the Fourteen Points of Woodrow Wilson, this was not done (Seymour
1921: 9091). Harold Nicolson argued (1965: 13) that nineteen out of Presi-
dent Wilsons twenty-three Terms of Peace were flagrantly violated in
the Treaty of Versailles as finally drafted. Clemenceaus plans for dividing
the German nation as one way of keeping Germany permanently weak
employed the Wilsonian rhetoric of self-determination single-mindedly,
against the Germans.
As noted above, for the Germans, as for other minorities, the protec-
tion afforded by the minorities treaties was non-existent. The new Pol-
ish state aimed at eliminating its German minority by forced assimilation
or by forced emigration (Blanke 1993). Czechoslovakia, it is true, was the
only one of the new states to sign the minorities treaties voluntarily, and
had the best record of any in dealing with minorities. Even there, how-
ever, policies on language use, for example, and other actions to exclude
Germans from sharing power with Czechs and Slovaks left the Germans
smarting under a sense of grievance not felt by smaller minorities
(Macartney 1934: 415). After all, there were more Germans than Slovaks
in Czechoslovakia, so the logic of proclaiming it a Czecho-Slovak state
instead of a Czecho-German one could never have been convincing to
the Germans. Even so, the majority of Germans in Czechoslovakia voted
for parties that worked within the political and constitutional systems of
Czechoslovakia, in elections in 1920, 1925 and 1929 (Kalvoda 1985: 115).
Did the Bohemian German sense of grievance justify Hitler? Of course
not. But note that Hitlers manipulation of the Germans of Czechoslovakia
schindler
s fate 131
was based on real grievances. Note as well that the developments from
1935, when the German parties that had cooperated with the Czech estab-
lishment were decimated in elections (with an apparently pre-Righteous
Oskar Schindler joining the nationalist Sudetan German party and soon
thereafter the National Socialist party), until the Munich conference in
1938, reflected the politics of other groups as well. At Munich, after all, not
only was the Sudetenland awarded to Germany, but parts of Czechoslova-
kia to Poland and Hungary. This last fact is usually forgotten in citations
of Neville Chamberlains actions at Munich.
Should the Germans have been incorporated in 1918 into states defined
as manifestations of the sovereignty of other peoples? How much of their
rejection of such states was based on a realistic assessment of their posi-
tion as second-class citizens at best? How much of the vehemence of Ger-
man rejection of Czechoslovakia had its basis in the manifest hypocrisy of
the Versailles settlement? How much easier is it to say that the Germans
deserved it than to deal with such questions? To do so, however, not only
justifies but requires ignoring the uncomfortable grievances of the Ger-
mans, instead listing only their crimes: the tribunal rather than the trial.
Schindlers Serbs
The Germans of the Sudetenland are perhaps the least sympathetic of
group victims, both because of the use made of them by Hitler to justify his
own campaigns of ethnic cleansing and because of the rather better treat-
ment that they received under the Bene government until 1938 than most
minorities in Europe: second-class citizens, to be sure, but still citizens.
Bene, after all, had earned a personal reputation for promoting tolerance
and democracy here, perhaps, a European counterpart to Nehru.
Nothing similar could be said of the leader of Croatia in 199091, how-
ever, Dr. Franjo Tudjman. Author of a book that sought to minimize the
ethnic cleansing of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia from 1941
to 1945 (as well as of the Holocaust), head of a political party in the 1990
elections-at-the-end-of communism whose slogan We alone will decide
the fate of our Croatia left little doubt as to who was included in the
we, publicly thanking God that his wife was neither a Jew nor a Serb,
Dr. Tudjman was not a man to inspire confidence among Serbs in Croatia.
Where Nehrus The Discovery of India sought to create an Indian national
ideology that was inclusive of all living in India, Tudjmans Bespua sought
to show how no state in which different peoples are intermingled can long
132 chapter six
exist. Part of the tragedy of Yugoslavia in 199091 was that at the same
time that Serb politicians in Belgrade were invoking the experience of
the ethnic cleansing of World War II to turn Serbs in Croatia against the
new Croatian regime, Tudjman seemed to do everything he could to lend
support to the Serb propaganda.
Let us not suppose that Serbs were innocent in World War II, of course.
They, too, engaged in ethnic cleansing, notably of Muslims in eastern Bos-
nia (Dedijer and Mileti 1990). Yet the numbers are quite clear. The most
reliable estimates of World War II deaths of the three Serbo-Croatian
speaking groups in Yugoslavia (see Appendix) are (Bogosavljevi 1995: xvi):
Minimum Maximum
Serbs 460,000 590,000
Croats 190,000 270,000
Muslims 70,000 95,000
In Bosnia, then part of the Independent State of Croatia, Serbs consti-
tuted 72% of victims, Muslims 17%, Croats 4%; in Croatia, Serbs consti-
tuted 50% of victims and Croats 37% (Bogosavljevi 1995: xv).
I am aware that citing such statistics may appear as an attempt to jus-
tify the actions of Serbs in Croatia in 1991 and Bosnia from 1992 through
1995, but this is not my point; I have stated elsewhere that these recent
actions of Serbs have constituted atrocities rivaling those of their earlier
German, Croatian and Muslim tormentors and that [b]ecause of these
atrocities, the legitimacy of the Serbian cause has been lost, and the Serb
victims of the 1940s, once honored dead, will be forgotten (Hayden 1995:
182). Note, however, that the total for Serb victims alone in this 194145
period was more than twice the number of the next largest group, and also
more than twice the estimates for all victims on all sides in the wars in what
was Yugoslavia since 1991. It is for this reason that Misha Glenny (1993) has
called the rationale behind the wars in Yugoslavia the revengers tragedy,
and Susan Woodward (1995) has noted that behind almost all of the vio-
lence was fear. Their goal, like mine, was explanation, not justification.
The Comforting Morality of Amnesia
Most readers would say, however, that I am leaving something out. After
all, surely, the Germans were expelled only after the horrors that they
inflicted on the Czechs, Poles, Yugoslavs and the rest of Europe, while the
schindler
s fate 133
Serbs were the ones who started ethnic cleansing in Croatia and in Bos-
nia. These people deserved it, in other words. (I might add that very few
Serbs will accept willingly a comparison with the Germans expelled from
the Sudetenland, Silesia or the Vojvodina, since Germans committed ter-
rible atrocities in the Serbia that they occupied from 194145 while coun-
tenancing those committed by others against Serbs in the Independent
State of Croatia, including Bosnia, at the same time; so this paper seems
set to receive condemnation from all sides.)
Yet raising this concern simply returns to an acceptance of the concept
of collective guilt that underlies any movement for mass expulsion. Did
all ten million Germans deserve deportation in 1945? Did eighty per cent
of the Serbs in Croatia in 1991 deserve to be expelled by the end of 1995,
including the survivors of 194145 and their descendants? Did the Croa-
tian government elected in 1990 deserve to be allowed to expel them?
It is far easier to avoid thinking about such questions, particularly when
in doing so one can be seen to be supporting the morality of condemning
ethnic cleansing. Yet if morality is aided by amnesia, how do we prevent
history from repeating itself, the first time as tragedy, and then again as
tragedy?
Appendix: War Victims in Yugoslavia, 194145
The number of people killed in Yugoslavia during the period 194145 has
been a subject of debate since immediately after the war and particu-
larly since 1990 (Hayden 1995, Denich 1994). In general, it would be safe
to say that Serbs and the Yugoslav federal authorities reported higher fig-
ures than Croatian writers. The figures put out immediately after the war
by the Yugoslav government were that 1,700,000 were killed, a figure that
almost all reputable studies later on view as too high (see Bogosavljevi
1995, Djilas 1991: 126128). The matter became particularly vexed in the
1980s as the Croatian historian Franjo Tudjman, later President of Croatia,
published works arguing that very few were actually killed in the Inde-
pendent State of Croatia, and of those many were not Serbs, while citing
sources that said that Jews helped to staff camps like Jasenovac, the most
notorious camp in the NDH (Tudjman 1990: 318321). At the same time,
intellectual figures in Serbia raised increasingly high figures on Serbs said
to have been killed by the Croatian state (see Boban 1990 for a Croatian
position on this tactic). Fortunately, by the late 1980s, Serb and Croat writ-
ers had, independently of each other, provided comparable gross figures
on casualties (1,014,000 [Serb figure] and 1,027,000 [Croat figure]) so that
134 chapter six
all but the far-right fringes of all sides should have had grounds for reason-
able discussion. Unfortunately, the far right dominated this discourse in
Serbia and won (Tudjman) electorally in Croatia.
The figures provided in the text are derived from an analysis that
attempts to reach reliable figures from all of the published data and from
a highly significant unpublished source, a census of war victims taken
in 196264 by the Yugoslav government, but then suppressed as a state
secret until the late 1980s (see Boban 1990: 587, Bogosavljevi 1995). The
material has again been treated as a state secret, and is not available to
researchers (Bogosavljevi 1995: xv).
In view of the politicization of these figures, it should be noted that
the author cited in the main text, Srdjan Bogosavljevi, was Director of
the Federal Statistical Institute in Belgrade in the late 1980s, and thus
had access to the materials. It should also be noted that Bogosavljevi
is a well-known member of the civil (as opposed to nationalist) opposi-
tion in Serbia, and that the article cited was published in Republika, an
independent magazine that is closely allied with the Civil Alliance in Bel-
grade, the most well-known anti-war party in Serbia. The figures given by
Bogosavljevi are much lower than those usually cited by Serbs which
was precisely the point of his article.
References
Abrams, Bradley (1995). Morality, Wisdom and Revision: The Czech Opposition of the
1970s and the Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans. East European Politics and Societies
9: 234255.
Arendt, Hannah (1966). The Origins of Totalitarianism (new edition). New York: Harcourt,
Brace.
Bassiouni, M. Cherif (1994). Final Report of the United Nations Commission of Experts Estab-
lished Pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780 (1992): Annex Summaries and Conclu-
sions. UN Doc. S/1994/674/Add.2(Vol. I), 28 December 1994.
Bernires, Louis de (1994). Corellis Mandolin. New York: Vintage.
Blanke, Richard (1993) Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland, 19181939
Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky Press.
Boban, Ljubo (1990) Jasenovac and the Manipulation of History. East European Politics
and Societies 4: 580592.
Bogosavljevi, Sran (1995) Drugi Svetski Rat rtve u Jugoslaviji. Republika (Belgrade),
115 June 1995: xixvi.
Brubaker, Rogers (1995) Aftermaths of Empire and the Unmixing of Peoples: Historical
and Comparative Perspectives. Ethnic and Racial Studies 18: 189218.
CSCE [Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe] (1995) Genocide in Bosnia
Herzegovina (Hearing before the CSCE, doc. no. CSCE 104-1-4). Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office.
Dedijer, Vladimir and Antun Mileti (1990) Genocid nad Muslimanima, 194145. Sarajevo:
Svjetlost.
schindler
s fate 135
Denich, Bette (1994). Dismembering Yugoslavia: Nationalist Ideologies and the Symbolic
Revival of Genocide. American Ethnologist 21: 367390.
Djilas, Aleksa (1991). The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution,
19191953. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Donia, Robert and John Fine (1994). Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Tradition Betrayed. New
York: Columbia University Press.
Galanter, Marc (1982). Competing Equalities: Law and the Backward Classes in India. Berke-
ley: University of California Press.
Galbraith, Peter and Michelle Maynard (1992). The Ethnic Cleansing of Bosnia Herzegov-
ina: A Staff Report to the Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate. Washing-
ton, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
Glenny, Misha (1993). The Fall of Yugoslavia (2d ed.) New York: Penguin.
Grass, Gnter (1992). The Call of the Toad. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich.
Hayden, Robert M. (1992). Constitutional Nationalism in the Formerly Yugoslav Repub-
lics. Slavic Review 51: 654673.
(1993). The Partition of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 199093. RFE/RL Research Report
2(#22): 114 (28 May 1993).
(1995). Recounting the Dead: The Rediscovery and Redefinition of Wartime Mas-
sacres in Late- and Post-Communist Yugoslavia. In Rubie S. Watson, ed., Memory, His-
tory and Opposition under State Socialism, pp. 167184. Santa Fe: School of American
Research.
(1996). Imagined Communities and Real Victims: Self-Determination and Ethnic
Cleansing in Yugoslavia. American Ethnologist, 23: 783801.
Herald Annual (1993). Special Report: Religious Minorities. The Herald Annual (Karachi
[?]), January 1993: 83109.
Kalvoda, Josef (1985). National Minorities in Czechoslovakia, 19191980, in Stephan
Horak, ed., Eastern European National Minorities 1919/1980: A Handbook. Littleton, CO:
Libraries Unlimited.
Keneally, Thomas (1993 [1982]). Schindlers List. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Klma, Ivan (1993). Waiting for the Dark, Waiting for the Light. New York: Picador USA.
Kundera, Milan (1995). Testaments Betrayed. New York: Harper Collins.
Lansing, Robert (1921). The Peace Negotiations: A Personal Narrative. Boston and New York:
Houghton Mifflin.
Macartney, C. A. (1934). National States and National Minorities. London: Oxford University
Press.
Mach, Zdzisaw (1993). Symbols, Conflict and Identity: Essays in Political Anthropology.
Albany: State University of New York Press.
Nagengast, Emil (1996). Coming to Terms with a European Identity: The Sudeten Ger-
mans between Bonn and Prague. German Politics 5: 81100.
Nicolson, Harold (1965). Peacemaking, 1919. New York: Grosset and Dunlap.
Owen, David (1995). Balkan Odyssey. New York: Harcourt, Brace.
Petruevska, Tatjana (1995). International Recognition of Newly-Created States and
European Paradoxes on the Threshold of the Twentieth Century. Balkan Forum 3 (#1):
245267.
Seymour, Charles (1921). The End of Empire: Remnants of AustriaHungary. Pp. 87111
in Edward M. House, ed., What Really Happened at Versailles. New York: Scribner.
Smajlovi, Ljiljana (1995). From the Heart of the Heart of the Former Yugoslavia. Wilson
Quarterly, Summer 1995: 100113.
Todorov, Tzvetan (1996). Facing the Extreme: Moral Life in the Concentration Camps. New
York: Metropolitan/Henry Holt.
Tudjman, Franjo (1990). Bespua povijesne zbiljnosti. Zagreb: Nakladni zavod Matice
hrvatske.
Varshney, Ashutosh (1993). Contested Meanings: Indias National Identity, Hindu Nation-
alism and the Politics of Anxiety. Daedalus 122 (#3): 227261 (Summer 1993).
Woodward, Susan (1995). Balkan Tragedy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institute.
CHAPTER SEVEN
MASS KILLINGS AND IMAGES OF GENOCIDE IN BOSNIA,
194145 AND 199295
Bosnia and Herzegovina (hereafter, Bosnia) was the site of the first crimes
in Europe after World War II to be pronounced judicially as genocide, the
massacre of thousands of Bosniak (ethnic Muslim)1 males by the forces
of the Bosnian Serb Army, in July 1995.2 This massacre came near the
end of the 199295 conflict in which approximately 100,000 people were
killed.3 All reasonable analyses show that the majority of the victims in
the Bosnian conflict were Muslims, with Serb casualties the next largest
in number; in a scientific paper, an employee of the Demographic Unit of
the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) provided figures that indicate that about 50%
of a total of 102,000 dead were Muslims and 30% Serbs.4 However, while
Serb casualties were overwhelmingly among military personnel, Muslim
casualties were evenly split between military and civilian, so that the great
majority of civilian casualties were Muslims. As discussed in detail below,
publicizing the victimization of Muslims by Serbs was a primary public
relations strategy of the Bosnian government and those who supported
it, who invoked the term genocide early on in the war, using imagery
that drew parallels between the events in Bosnia in the 1990s and the Holo-
caust, a point discussed below. The 1990s genocide in Bosnia has become a
cause clbre internationally, as seen in the passage of Written Declaration
1Until 1994, the term Muslim (Musliman) was used in general speech and in consti-
tutional, legal and political documents in Bosnia and the rest of the former Yugoslavia to
refer to peoples of Muslim heritage who speak Serbo-Croatian. In 1994, the term Bosniak
(Bonjak) was adopted for official use for these peoples (see Fran Markowitz, Census and
Sensibilities in Sarajevo, Comparative Studies in Society and History 49: 4073 (2007). Since
Muslim was the term used throughout most of the war, I will use it in this paper. I am
grateful for the comments on earlier versions of Xavier Bougarel, William Brustein, Tomis-
lav Duli, Ilya Prizel and Dan Stone.
2Prosecutor v. Radisav Krstic, ICTY case no. Case No: IT-98-33-A, Appeals Chamber
judgment of 19 April 2004, http://www.un.org/icty/krstic/Appeal/judgement/index.htm.
3E. Tabeau and J. Bijak, War-related Deaths in the 19921995 Armed Conflicts in Bos-
nia and Herzegovina: A Critique of Previous Estimates and Recent Results, European Jour-
nal of Population, 21 (2005), 187215.
4Ibid.
138 chapter seven
no. 366 by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on 22
June 2005, and the international commemoration of the tenth anniversary
of the Srebrenica massacre in July 2005.
Yet Bosnia was also the site of far greater mass killings in 194145, orga-
nized and effected in ways that seem much more clearly to fit the term
genocide than does the massacre in Srebrenica. From 194145, about
300,000 people were killed in Bosnia, about 65% of them Serbs, and 18%
Muslims.5 However, invocation of this larger set of ethnically-targeted
mass killings has been seen by many analysts, myself included, as part of
the late 1980s and early 1990s nationalist political mobilization of Serbs in
hostility to Croats and Muslims.6 At the same time, attempts to minimize
the 1940s events by Croatian politicians, notably Dr. Franjo Tudjman in
his transformation from nationalist anti-communist dissident to President
of Croatia, were part of the Croatian nationalist project.7
The greater attention given to the lesser mass killings of the 1990s, com-
pared with that given the larger ones of the 1940s, the insistence that the
1990s events constituted genocide, and the post-1995 insistence by many
international actors and some Bosnian ones that those events be a main
focus of Bosnian politics, provide an opportunity for examining the pro-
cess through which the term genocide becomes attached to a situation
of mass killing. This is not necessarily an encouraging exercise. In regard
to Bosnia, the invocation of the term genocide is primarily a political
process that, like the invention of tradition, creates essentialized images
of a supposed past to serve the purposes of present-day political actors.
The success of such a process depends not on the accuracy with which the
5S. Bogosavljevi, The Unresolved Genocide, in The Road to War in Serbia, ed. N. Popov
(New York and Budapest: Central European University Press, 2000), p. 155; T. Duli, Utopias
of Nation: Local Mass Killings in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 194142 (Uppsala: Uppsala Uni-
versity Press, 2005), p. 314. The actual number of dead is undoubtedly substantially higher,
as both Bogosavljevi and Duli worked from a 1964 census of victims of World War II
that was acknowledged by its authors to encompass probably only 56%58% of the total
victims.
6R. Hayden, Recounting the Dead: The Rediscovery and Redefinition of Wartime Mas-
sacres in Late- and Post-Communist Yugoslavia, in Memory, Opposition and History under
State Socialism, ed. R. S. Watson (Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, 1994),
pp. 16784; B. Denich, Dismembering Yugoslavia: Nationalist Ideologies and the Symbolic
Revival of Genocide, American Ethnologist, 21 (1994), 36790. The best accounts of the
rise of Serbian nationalism in the 1980s are in Popov, ed., The Road to War in Serbia and
J. Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation: Serbias Intellectual Opposition and the Revival of
Nationalism (Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press, 2002).
7See R. Hayden, Balancing Discussion of Jasenovac and the Manipulation of History,
East European Politics and Societies, 6 (1992), 20712.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 139
images reflect the events they supposedly represent, but rather with how
well the images invoke an emotional reaction from the intended recipi-
ents. This kind of argument is the inversion of the rationality that Max
Weber invokes for science: to state facts, to determine mathematical or
logical relations or the internal structure of cultural values.8 Instead, they
are parts of political rhetoric; to Weber not means of scientific analysis
but means of canvassing votes and winning over others...such words are
weapons.9
This chapter analyzes the ways in which the term genocide has been
invoked to label events of mass killing in the Balkans. In doing so, I raise
questions about the effects of this labeling that many may find uncom-
fortable, and I will probably be called a genocide denier. So let me be
clear from the outset. My analysis begins with acknowledgment of the
magnitude of the causalities: approximately 100,000 in the 199295 war,
the majority of them Bosnian Muslims, and about 300,000 in the 194145
war, the majority of them Bosnian Serbs. In both conflicts, the casual-
ties were inflicted in large part by organized attempts to remove the tar-
geted populations from part of the territory in which they were living, and
where their ancestors had also lived for centuries. The questions I raise
are whether the application of the term genocide to these events aids or
distorts our understanding of them, and may possibly have made address-
ing the political situations in Bosnia since the late 1990s more difficult.
To presage the argument, the effort to fit the ethno-national mass kill-
ings in the former Yugoslavia into a framework defined by the Holocaust
has produced systematic distortions in the ways in which the conflict
has been presented. These distortions have intellectual impact much
of the material written on the Bosnian genocide by those who became
interested in Bosnia only after reading accounts of events there is inac-
curate about these events and the motivations of the actors who commit-
ted them, and thus is unreliable. But this intellectual failing has also had
policy impact. Insofar as policy decisions are based on mistaken premises,
they are unlikely to bring about the desired result.10
8M. Weber, Science as a Vocation, in From Max Weber, eds. H. Gerth and C. W. Mills
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1946), p. 146.
9Ibid., p. 145.
10If, of course, policy decisions actually are meant to bring about any result greater
than increasing the domestic popularity of the political actors making them see M. Edel-
man, Political Language: Words that Succeed and Policies that Fail (New York: Academic
Press, 1977) for a discouraging analysis that argues the contrary position and is congruent
with Baileys concept of the tactical uses of passion.
140 chapter seven
One might respond that if the political rhetoric is being used to stop
genocide, so what if the images are inaccurate? Yet the very question pre-
supposes that what is taking place is in fact genocide, thus not only obvi-
ating the need for close inquiry about whether that label is accurate but
rendering the very question itself illegitimate, probably immoral.11 In this
regard, the invocation of genocide may be the tactical use of passion,
that provokes feeling rather than thought...to provoke a direct connec-
tion between feeling and action without the intervention of mind and its
capacities for criticism.12 It may also serve as a God term, the ultimate
point of reference of a rhetorical framework, invoked to forestall further
examination by all but heretics.13 But more troubling is the possibility
that invoking what seems to be the supreme immorality of genocide
becomes a reason for avoiding political solutions that might have ended
the conflict, and even prevented greater massacres. In that case, rather
then ending massacres, actions grounded on the emotional politics of the
rhetoric of genocide may set the stage for wider slaughter.
In Bosnia specifically, decisions by international political actors, sup-
posedly grounded in morality and informed by the rhetoric of genocide,
11See, for example, T. Cushman and S. Metrovi, eds., This Time We Knew: Western
Responses to Genocide in Bosnia (New York, NYU Press 1996), which castigates intellectuals
who attempt to make a balanced analysis of events in Bosnia (p. 5): Balance is a necessary
quality of intellectual life, except when it comes...at the expense of confusing victims
with aggressors, and the failure to recognize those who are the perpetrators of genocide
and crimes against humanity. They further assert that it is vitally important to let the
facts speak for themselves, particularly where genocide is involved (p. 15). How one might
determine the facts without engaging in a balanced weighing of evidence is left unstated.
Weber, of course, said (Science as a Vocation, p. 146) that To let the facts speak for them-
selves is the most unfair way of putting over a political position.
12F. G. Bailey, The Tactical Uses of Passion: An Essay in Power, Reason and Reality
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1983), p. 23.
13Some well-known works about Bosnia (for example, those by David Rieff, Norman
Cigar, Noel Malcom, Michael Ignatieff) are essentially prosecutors briefs that ground
their presentations about the putative genocide in Bosnia on the unrebuttable presump-
tion that genocide in fact occurred. An outstanding example of this prosecutorial genre is
J. Gow, The Serbian Project and Its Adversaries (London: Hurst & Company, 2003), which
is explicitly not about the the Yugoslav war as a whole but rather only Serbian strategies
and activities, because, to Gow, this Serbian project was the primary and defining element
in the war and thus analysis of it is essential both to exploring the true character of the
war and to recognizing the central responsibility for what happened (p. 9). Purposefully
ignoring the complexities of a historical process is an unusual intellectual strategy, and in
this case a teleological one: all evidence is presumed to lead to the predetermined conclu-
sion. This is a good strategy for making a prosecutors case, but it is unacceptable in social
science, because evidence that might tend to disprove the predetermined conclusion is
ignored. Such studies, political rhetoric in the Weberian sense mentioned above, and are
not considered here.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 141
helped structure the local configuration of civilian populations and mili-
tary forces in Srebrenica in 1995 that put Bosnian Serb forces in a position
to engage in what was by far the worst crime of the Bosnian conflict, the
massacre of thousands of Bosnian Muslim males in the last months of
the war. That mass slaughter may have put, finally, some accuracy into
the charges of genocide that had been made since the very start of the
conflict, thus turning genocide from politically-inspired label to self-
fulfilling prophecy.
Raising this problem, with specific reference to Srebrenica, will be
extremely distasteful to many readers. It is not comfortable for me as an
author. Yet avoiding an issue because it is uncomfortable is itself of dubi-
ous morality. Tzvetan Todorov may be optimistic in arguing that it is
understanding, and not the refusal to understand, that makes it possible
to prevent a repetition of the horror, but surely he is correct to say that
the best way to allow the murders to happen again is to give up trying to
understand them.14
The Background:
Competing National Identities in a Multi-National Region
Yugoslavia was a very logical idea. As the concept of the nation-state devel-
oped in the nineteenth century and was used to inspire political actors to
persuade various people to constitute themselves as Peoples and demand
independence from the European empires, the idea of a single state for
the speakers of the south Slavic languages made great sense. The dialects
spoken in Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia were (and are) mutually intelligible,
and Slovenian and Macedonian are closely related. While there were obvi-
ous differences of religion, historical tradition and culture, the differences
between Serbs, Croats and Bosnian Muslims were not greater than those
between, say, Bavarians and Prussians. Thus the state recognized after
World War I, composed by adding Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Macedo-
nia, plus part of what had been Hungary (Vojvodina) and the until-then
independent Montenegro to the Serbia that emerged as one of the victori-
ous allies, seemed politically viable.15 Yet the Yugoslav idea (jug meaning
14T. Todorov, Facing the Extreme: Moral Life in the Concentration Camps (New York:
Metropolitan Books, 1996), p. 277.
15The literature on the formation of Yugoslavia is huge; recommended recent works
include D. Djoki, ed., Yugoslavism: Histories of a Failed Idea, 19181992 (London: Hurst,
142 chapter seven
south in the various languages, thus Jugoslavija as the land of the South
Slavs) was in constant competition with the separate nationalist move-
ments of the South Slav peoples: Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Macedonians,
Montenegrins and later Bosnian Muslims. The first Yugoslavia (191941)
was thus a tenuous, unstable state, almost from its birth, because the com-
peting nationalisms of these separate (and separatist) nations could not
easily be accommodated to the idea of a unified state under a Serbian
king. Resistance to what was regarded as Serbian hegemony was particu-
larly pronounced in Croatia.16
Whether the Kingdom of Yugoslavia would have survived the 1940s is
unclear, but was rendered moot when Germany invaded the country in
April 1941, conquered it in ten days, and created an Independent State
of Croatia (hereafter NDH, after its Croatian acronym, for Nezavisna
Drava Hrvatska) that included Bosnia and Herzegovina, under the fas-
cist Ustasha party, while giving parts of Serbia to its neighbors and placing
the rest under occupation. What followed was a complex combination
of war of resistance to Axis occupation (mainly by the Partisan army of
the Communist Party of Yugoslavia under Tito and by Serbian royalist
forces), attempts to establish an ethnically pure nation state (NDH, sup-
ported by the Axis powers), and a Serbian royalist attempt to eliminate
non-Serb populations from eastern Bosnia, in opposition both to the NDH
and to Titos communists and in order to establish their own ethnically
pure nation-state.17 Of all of these parties, only the communists had the
goal of reconstituting a multi-ethnic Yugoslavia, and they won the war,
perhaps in part for that very reason (they had also attracted the sup-
port of the Allied Powers, in place of the Serbian royal regime and its
Chetnik army).
Communist Yugoslavia (194590) also balanced national tensions, under
the slogan of (compulsory) brotherhood and unity, before succumbing
2003) and G. Stokes, Yugoslavism in the 1860s? and The Role of the Yugoslav Committee
in the Formation of Yugoslavia, both in Three Eras of Political Change in Eastern Europe,
ed. G. Stokes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 8392 and 93108.
16Standard references on the political development of the first Yugoslavia are I. Banac,
The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History and Politics (Ithaca, NY: Cornell Uni-
versity Press, 1983), and A. Djilas, The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist
Revolution, 19191953 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991).
17See J. Tomasevich, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and Col-
laboration. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001); Djilas, The Contested Country;
Duli, Utopias of Nation; and M. Djilas, Wartime (New York: Harcourt, Brace 1981).
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 143
to them with the end of communism in Europe.18 What was striking by
the end of the 1980s was that with the end of communism, no political
party was able to mobilize successfully on a platform of Yugoslavia as a
civil society of equal citizens; what won instead, in each republic, was
separate (and separatist) nationalism: Slovenia as the state of the sover-
eign Slovene nation, Croatia as that of the sovereign Croat nation, etc. I
have elsewhere called this formulation constitutional nationalism since
the sovereignty of the majority nation (ethnically defined) over all other
citizens of the state is enshrined in the constitutions.19 Demands for the
sovereign state of each constituent nation of Yugoslavia was incompatible
with the existence of the federation, which thereby collapsed, and led to
war in portions of the former country in which newly disfavored minori-
ties rejected inclusion in the state premised on hostility towards them.
What is striking about the demise of both Yugoslavias is that intense
ethno-national conflict followed. But this conflict is a corollary of the logic
of constitutional nationalism which is openly hostile to minorities and
thus also tends to produce resistance from them.20 In both cases, 1941
45 and 199295, the demise of the larger state that was premised on the
equality and fraternity of the Yugoslav peoples (and willing to sacrifice lib-
erty to maintain the other two) led immediately to brutal conflicts in the
most ethnically mixed regions, in efforts to establish the control of one
group over the territory by expelling the members of the other group.21
18The masterwork on Titos Yugoslavia is D. Rusinow, The Yugoslav Experiment,
19481974 (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1977). The demise of Yugoslavia is
well analyzed in S. Woodward, Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Dissolution after the Cold War
(Washington, DC: Brookings Institution 1995); see also the Central Intelligence Agencies
unclassified Balkan Battlegrounds, 2 vols. (Washington, DC: Central Intelligence Agency,
2002, 2003), and R. Hayden, Blueprints for a House Divided: The Constitutional Logic of the
Yugoslav Conflicts (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1999). A good journalis-
tic account is L. Silber and A. Little, Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation (New York: TV Books,
distributed by Penguin USA, 1995); however, the television series that the Silber and Little
book accompanies is less reliable. The literature on the last few years of Yugoslavia and
the wars that followed is otherwise too vast to survey here.
19Hayden, Blueprints for a House Divided; also R. Hayden, Constitutional Nationalism
in the Formerly Yugoslav Republics, Slavic Review, 51 (1992), 65473.
20R. Hayden, Imagined Communities and Real Victims: Self-Determination and Ethnic
Cleansing in Yugoslavia, American Ethnologist, 23 (1996), 783801.
21In many places, the violence of the 1990s was locally viewed as a continuation
of the violence of the 1940s, including Srebrenica; see C. Sudetic, Blood and Vengeance
(New York: Penguin books, 1998) and G. Duijzings, History and Reminders in East Bos-
nia, Appendix IV to Nederlands Instituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie NIOD), Srebrenica:
A Safe Area, http://www.srebrenica.nl/en/a_index.htm. A similar point is made by Mart
Bax for Medjugorjje; see M. Bax, Medjugorje: Religion, Politics and Violence in Rural Bosnia
144 chapter seven
The Brutal Breakdown of Coexistence: Numbers of Casualties
Since the numbers of victims of the mass killings of both decades have
been manipulated heavily for political purposes, it is necessary to begin
with a brief report of the findings of studies by highly qualified statis-
ticians not in thrall to any of the nationalist parties in the ex-Yugoslav
conflicts.22
194145: in the mid-1980s, two serious studies, one by a Serb and one
by a Croat, found that slightly over 1,000,000 people had been killed dur-
ing the war period in Yugoslavia. After a discussion of these studies and
consideration of a major data source not available to these writers in
the 1980s, Srdjan Bogosavljevi derived minimum and maximum figures:
896,000 and 1,210,000, respectively.23 Using results of a 1964 registration
of war victims, he calculated that about 58% of these victims were Serbs,
14% Croats and 5.4% Muslims. Of all killed in Bosnia, 72% were Serbs,
16.7% Muslims, 6% Jews, and 4.1% Croats.24
Tomislav Duli provides a much more detailed study, drawing on data
sources not available to Bogosavljevi. In Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina
(the NDH), he finds that at a minimum, 76.5% of the Jews living there
in 1941 had been killed by 1945, between 15.920% of the Serbs, 10% of
the Muslims, and 56% of the Croats.25 His estimate of the deaths in
Bosnia-Herzegovina in the period is 292,000308,000, of whom Serbs
were 216,000229,000, Muslims 50,00053,000, Croats 12,500, Jews 10,500.26
(Amsterdam: VU Uitgeverij, 1995); see also Hayden Recounting the Dead, and Denich,
Dismembering Yugoslavia.
22The 194145 sources are Bogosavljevi, The Unresolved Genocide, and Duli, Utopias
of Nation; those for 199295 are E. Tabeau and J. Bijak, War-related Deaths in the 19921995
Armed Conflicts and the as yet unpublished findings of the Istraivako dokumentacioni
centar of Sarajevo (http://www.idc.org.ba) as reported by its President, Mirsad Tokaa, in
media interviews. These 199295 studies were supported by the Office of the Prosector of
the ICTY (Tabeu & Bijak) and the embassies of NATO countries, especially Norway (IDC),
so the fact that their findings are contrary to the rhetoric of the war period serves to give
them greater credibility. The 194145 period studies were self-funded (Bogosavljevi) and
funded from Swedish academic sources (Duli).
23Bogosavljevi, The Unresolved Genocide, p. 157
24Ibid., p. 155.
25Duli, Utopias of Nation, p. 317. In an email on 1 March 2006, Duli informed me that
he has recalculated erjavis figures and slightly lowered the upper range of percentage of
Serbs killed, to 19%; see T. Duli, Mass Killing in the Independent State of Croatia, 194145:
A Case for Comparative Research, unpublished ms.
26Duli, Utopias of Nation, p. 321.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 145
However, flaws in the data sets make it likely that Croats were severely
undercounted and should be perhaps as high as 45,000.27
199295: Ewa Tabeau and Jakub Bijak drew on a variety of sources to
arrive at an estimated total figure of war-related casualties in Bosnia-
Herzegovina, 199295, of 102,622. Of known casualties (as opposed to esti-
mates), 68.6% were Muslims, 18.8% Serbs, 8.3% Croats. Of these 47,360
were estimated to be military casualties, and 55,261 civilian. However,
they noted that their figures were least complete and reliable from the
Republika Srpska.
Mirsad Tokaas centre responded to the initial release of the Tabeau
and Bijak findings in an interview in the main Sarajevo daily, Oslobodjenje,
that was headlined The total number of victims in B&H was less than
150,000!28 In a Reuters interview the next day, Tokaa said that we can
now say with almost absolute certainty that the number is going to be
more than 100,000 but definitely less than 150,000.29 As the project has
neared completion, Tokaa has revised the total numbers downwards: in
December 2005 the BBC carried a report that said that while the project
would not be completed until March 2006, final figures would be about
102,000, and that of the data processed to date, 67.87% of the casualties
were Bosnian Muslims, 25.81% Serbs and 5.39% Croats. Of the Muslim
casualties, 50% were military, 50% civilian; a ratio that holds for the far
fewer Croat casualties as well. Serb casualties were overwhelmingly mili-
tary: 21,399, to 1,978 Serb civilians.30
Thus the two most recent studies of the 199295 casualties agree that
total killed were about 102,000. They differ mainly in that the Tokaa
study shows more Serb military casualties and fewer Serb civilian casual-
ties than does the Tabeau and Bijak study.
The total figures are summarized in Table 1, which may be compared
with the machinations over numbers discussed in the section numbers
games, below.
27Ibid., p. 323.
28Oslobodjenje (9 December 2004).
29Report carried on Justwatch listserv, 10 December 2004.
30BBC Worldwide Monitoring, 17 December 2005; carried on Justwatch listserv,
17 December 2005. See also Genocide is Not a Matter of Numbers, Bosnian Institute
News & Analysis (www.bosnia.org.uk) 19 January 2006, an inteview with Tokaa.
146 chapter seven
Distortions 1: Competing for Victimhood in the Late 1980s
Communism failed as an ideology and basis for one-party government
sooner in Yugoslavia than in the countries of the Warsaw Pact. In the early
1980s, analyses critical of Yugoslavias unique system of socialist self-
management were openly published. Previously taboo subjects, such as
the expulsion of 500,000 ethnic Germans from Vojvodina after World
War II, the brutal imprisonment of those alleged to support the Soviet
Union after Titos break with Stalin in 1948, and the mistreatment of those
seen as bourgeois class enemies in 1945, were explored in magazines, novels,
films and other popular sources.31 While there were attempts to develop
political alternatives to state socialism based on the principles of a civil
society of equal citizens,32 they lost in each republic to the classic position
of European nationalism, that each nation (e.g., Serbs, Croats, Slovenes)
had the right, and need, to be sovereign in its own separate state.33
31See Hayden, Recounting the Dead; Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation; Popov,
ed., The Road to War in Serbia; A. Wachtel, Making a Nation, Breaking a Nation: Literature
and Cultural Politics in Yugoslavia (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1998).
32See, e.g., D. Toi, The Democratic Alternative, pp. 2862297, and B. Horvat, The
Association for Yugoslav Democratic Initiative, pp. 298303, both in Yugoslavism, ed.
Djoki; Woodward, Balkan Tragedy.
33Woodward, Balkan Tragedy; Hayden, Constitutional Nationalism; I. Vejvoda, Yugo-
slavia 194591: From Decentralization Without Democracy to Dissolution, pp. 927 in
Yugoslavia and After, eds. I. Vejvoda and D. Dyker (London: Longman, 1996). The matter
was more complicated in Bosnia, since the electorate de facto partitioned into separate
Muslim, Serb and Croat electorates, each of which voted for a single nationalist party; see
S. Burg and P. Shoup, The War in Bosnia and Herzegovina (New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1999),
pp. 4661; and X. Bougarel, Bosnie: Anatomie dun conflit (Paris: ditions La Dcouverte,
1996), revised edition published as K. Bugarel, Bosna: Anatomija Rata (Beograd: Fabrika
Table 1.Total Casualties by Ethno-National Group in Bosnia
194145 and 199295
Serbs Bosnian Muslims Croats
194145 216,000229,000 50,00053,000 12,500 [unrealistically
low figure due to
flaws in data set]
199295 24,216 63,687 2,619
Sources: 194145: T. Duli, Utopias of Nation (Uppsala 2005): p. 321 and 323 (Croats); 1992
95: Published interviews with Mirsad Tokaa, Istraivako dokumentacioni centar, Sara-
jevo, as of December 2005.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 147
The need to be sovereign, however, had to be justified, with arguments
about why the given nation was damaged by its inclusion within Yugosla-
via. Considering the importance of brotherhood and unity, direct appeals
to nationalist antagonism against other Yugoslav peoples were not at first
possible. Instead, the original arguments about the harmfulness of Yugo-
slavia were economic in nature: inclusion within Yugoslavia damaged the
economic interests of the given nation. However, these economic argu-
ments were quickly transformed into positions claiming that the writers
separate nation was threatened by other nations within Yugoslavia. This
form of argumentation was common to the first direct challenges to the
premise of Yugoslavia as unquestioned good for all Yugoslav peoples, the
Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU, from
its Serbian acronym), and the Slovenian National Program.
The SANU Memorandum quickly became notorious within Yugoslavia and,
once the wars began, widely condemned outside of the country.34 Whether
it was read or not is another matter. As Michael Mann has noted,35 the
first part of it was a critique of the economic failings of Yugoslav self-
management socialism and elements of the structure of the Yugoslav fed-
eration. However, the second part depicts Serbs as victims of genocide
on the grounds that they were being forced out of Kosovo a tendentious
claim and irresponsible rhetoric that shows, however, the political attrac-
tiveness of the genocide label for claims that ones own group has been
victimized.
At the same time that the Serbian Memorandum was being drafted and
leaked to the press, a Slovenian National Programme was published in
Ljubljana.36 Similarly to the Serbian Memorandum, the Slovenian docu-
ment claimed that inclusion within Yugoslavia was not only harmful to
Knjige Edicija Re, 2004), ch. 1; Bougarel, Bosnia and Herzegovina: State and Communi-
tarianism, in Yugoslavia and After, eds. Vejvoda and Dyker.
34The Memorandum was never actually adopted by the Serbian Academy; rather, a
working document was leaked, apparently in an effort to expose its nationalist tenden-
cies, which portrayed Serbs as victims of the machinations of other nations throughout
the twentieth century (see Woodward, Balkan Tragedy, p. 78). The Serbian Academy
did finally issue the Memorandum in an attempt to defend itself; in K. Mihailovi and
V. Kresti, Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts: Answers to Criticisms
(Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 1995). The Memorandum is discussed
extensively in Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation, pp. 17795.
35M. Mann, The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing (Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 2005), pp. 3645.
36See Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation, pp. 18995; Woodward, Balkan Tragedy,
p. 94.
148 chapter seven
the economic interests of Slovenia, but even threatened the existence
of the ethnic Slovene nation, in this case because of dangerously high
immigration that threatened to turn Slovenia into a multiethnic republic.37
Unlike the authors of the Serbian Memorandum, the Slovene writers did
not invoke the term genocide to cover the allegedly dire situation of their
own nation, but their view of the nature of nation (narod) clearly was
based on the standard European romantic ideology of a unity of blood,
language and culture, which would be threatened by contamination if
Slovenes had to share Slovenia with others.
Distortions 2:
The wish to be a Jew: The Power of Jewish and Nazi Tropes in
Depicting Victimization38
Economic problems can presumably be addressed by changing economic
and political systems; they are not, of themselves, threatening to the very
existence of a nation perceived, in the manner of classical European
Romanticism, as a biological and cultural entity. Threatening the exis-
tence of the nation is, of course, a phrasing that is close to that of the
definition of genocide, which concerns the intent to destroy, in whole or
in part such a group. As noted, the Memorandum of the Serbian Academy
of Sciences and Arts saw genocide in the pressures on Serbs to leave
Kosovo in the 1980s, although few non-Serbs have accepted or would
be likely to accept that labeling. The point was clearly to appropriate
for Serbs the most terrible victimization known. The claim was thus not
about acts of extermination so much as it was about the status of victim-
ization, and genocide was invoked not as a description of the kinds of
actions directed against Serbs but rather of their status as victims. In this
rhetorical configuration, identification as supreme victim is crucial, and
in the 1980s and 1990s in Yugoslavia, at various times Serbs, Kosovo Alba-
nians, Croats and Bosnian Muslims all claimed to be the new Jews, thus
the new victims of genocide. At the same time, in this rhetorical context
there are no Jewish victims without Nazi perpetrators, so claiming victim
37Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation, pp. 18990. Other elements of Slovenian chau-
vinism towards other Yugoslavs are discussed in M. Baki-Hayden and R. Hayden, Orien-
talist Variations on the Theme Balkans, Slavic Review, 50 (1992), 115.
38The title of this subsection is borrowed from M. ivkovi, The Wish to be a Jew: The
power of the Jewish Trope in the Yougoslav [sic] Conflict, Cahiers de lUrmis, 6 (March
2000), 6984, and many of the ideas discussed in it are based on ivkovis work.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 149
status as the new Jews also meant imposing the status of the new Nazis
on another national group.
Serb intellectuals, not themselves Jewish, were the first to assert the vic-
timization of their own nation by claiming to be the new Jews. In 1985, the
writer Vuk Drakovi issued a Letter to the Writers of Israel that claimed
that the Serbian subjugation to the Ottoman Empire had been like that
of Israel to the Babylonians; that the exodus of Serbs from Ottoman ter-
ritories was like the Jewish diaspora; and that the slaughter of both Serbs
and Jews by fascists in World War II had completed the common identity
as martyrs of Serbs and Jews.39 But others asserted the same claim to be
the real Jews. Thus in a meeting in Slovenia held to support Kosovo Alba-
nians said to be oppressed by Serbia, the Slovenian organizers distributed
traditional Albanian mens caps decorated with a Star of David, to mark
the Albanians as victims and the Serbs as the new Nazis. Another Serbian
writer then asserted that the Slovenes had forgotten that in the murders
of World War II, the kinship of Jews and Serbs has been sealed forever.40
In the late 1980s, a Serbian-Jewish Friendship Society was organized, in
an attempt to gain the support of Israel and thus, it was hoped, the United
States; the Jewish Community of Serbia, however, played no part in these
activities.41
When the wars began in 1991, some attempts were made to assert that
Croats, rather than Serbs, were the victims of genocide.42 The equation
of Croats with Jews, and Serbs with Nazis, was explicit: how is it that
so many...have managed not to see the Nazis of this story for what
they are, and have hastened to embrace them as fellow Jews instead?43
However, it was difficult for this effort to succeed, in large part because
the regime of the NDH had not only been explicitly allied with Nazi Ger-
many, but also because it had practiced extermination policies against
Jews and Gypsies and those of mass murder against Serbs.44 This history
was made relevant by Tudjmans invocation of symbols associated with
the NDH and the Ustasha in his political campaigns and in the newly
39Ibid., p. 73.
40Matije Bekovi, quoted and translated by ivkovi, ibid., p. 73.
41Ibid., pp. 73, 75.
42See I. Primoratz, Israel and Genocide in Croatia, in Genocide After Emotion: The
Postemotional Balkan War, ed. S. G. Metrovi (London: Routledge, 1996), pp. 195206.
43Ibid., p. 205.
44Duli, Utopias of Nation.
150 chapter seven
independent Croatia,45 and what have generally been interpreted as
antisemitic passages in his best-known book, Bespua povijesne zbiljnosti
(1990), published in translation as Horrors of War, with the objectionable
parts removed or changed. A leader of the Croatian Jewish community
argued in 1991 that of all the occupied countries in World War II, it was
only in Croatia that the quisling regime had independent authority over
concentration camps,46 and that of the 40,000 Jews living in 1940 in what
became the NDH, the Ustae killed 26,000 and paid the Germans to take
care of 5,000 more in Auschwitz.47 In 1997, Croatia issued a statement
that completely condemns Nazi crimes of the Holocaust and genocide
over Jewish people in many European states, including Croatia, as part
of its establishment of relations with Israel.48
The best-known passages in Tudjmans book internationally were those
in which he seemed to question the total of 6,000,000 victims of the Holo-
caust49 (a term, Holokaust, that he consistently puts into quotes), and
his reference to a long-term policy and strategy on the plan of a final
solution of the Palestinian problem at a time in the middle of the 1980s,
when world Jewry still had the need to recall their victims in the holo-
caust.50 Perhaps the most remarkable passages in Tudjmans book were
those that asserted that Jews actually controlled the internal management
of the largest concentration camp in Croatia, Jasenovac, up until 1944 and
that it was, therefore, Jews who had inflicted sufferings at Jasenovac on
Roma and Serbs.51 As Tomislav Duli has pointed out, the Ustasha admin-
istration of Jasenovac followed the methods of the German camps and
thus used inmates (kapos) as internal administrators; since Jews were the
first prisoners brought to Jasenovac, and were also better educated than
most Serbs or Roma, they dominated the internal administration in the
first stages of the camp, and it was in any event standard practice in the
45See S. Kinzer, Pro-Nazi Legacy Lingers for Croatia, New York Times (31 October 1993),
6; C. Hedges, Fascists Reborn as Croatias Founding Fathers, New York Times (12 April
1997), 3.
46Romania, however, also controlled its own camps (Ilya Prizel, personal communica-
tion, 14 February 2006).
47Antisemitizam: Jesu li Ustae zaista bili dentlmeni?, Globus (23 August 1991), 14.
48Croatia Apologizes to Jews for Nazi-Era Crimes, New York Times (23 August 1997),
A-6.
49F. Tudjman, Bespua povijesne zbiljnosti: Rasprava o povjesti i filozofiji zlosilja. (Zagreb:
Naklodni zavod Matice hrvatske, 1990), pp. 1568.
50Ibid., p. 160.
51Ibid., pp. 31620.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 151
German camps for members of one nation to be the kapos for prisoners
of other groups.52
The image problem that Tudjmans book caused for Croatia can be
seen in the favorable article on Bespua in the Croatian version of the
reader-edited on-line encyclopedia Wikipedia, which says that the book
was translated in a cleansed version because of its supposedly murky
sections which offended the sensibilities of the Jewish community. The
article then notes that Tudjman cited Israeli and Jewish historians who
problematized the numbers of those killed in the Holocaust, saying that
the number was closer to 4,000,000 than 6,000,000, and that because of
this, and because he opened up the uncomfortable theme of the Jewish
kapos in the concentration camps (i.e. the cooperation between Jewish
inmates with Nazi administrators...), and leaving aside the clumsiness
of some of his formulations, Tudjman struck the sacred cow of the new
Jewish national mythology....53 If Tudjmans book still has this reputa-
tion in Croatia, it is easy to see why it was hard for Croatia under his lead-
ership to dodge the Nazi label long enough to pin it on other groups.
If Croats could not easily claim to be the new Jews victimized by Serb
Nazis, however, Bosnian Muslims and their supporters were able to make
effective use of both parts of this polarized pair of tropes. In part their
success in this effort was indeed due to the Muslims having been brutally
expelled from large parts of Bosnia by the much better armed and orga-
nized Bosnian Serbs, and the disproportionately high casualties suffered
by Bosnias Muslims compared to other groups, especially at the start of
the war. However, the success of the Nazi trope for Serbs and that of Holo-
caust victim for Muslims also benefited from the temporal coincidence
of the start of the Bosnia conflict with the opening of the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum and the critical and commercial success of
Steven Spielbergs film Schindlers List, which brought these tropes into
the centre of public discourse.
The assertion of a parallel with the Holocaust was explicit: from
Auschwitz to Bosnia.54 Making this case involved the frequent and explicit
52Duli, Utopias of Nation, p. 260. Duli refutes other arguments by Tudjman about the
supposed role of Jews in Jasenovac on pp. 2613.
53Wikipedia article URL: http://hr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bespu%C4%87a_povijesne_
zbiljnosti, checked 27 January 2006.
54This parallel is explicitly drawn, with references to other uses of it at the time, by
T. Cushman and S. Metrovi in the Introduction to This Time We Knew, pp. 613; indeed,
this volume is exemplary of the rhetorical tactic of grounding assertions about events in
Bosnia on supposed parallels with the Holocaust. Metrovis role in propagating such
152 chapter seven
invocation of elements of the Holocaust as the proper frame of reference
for understanding events in Bosnia, especially images of concentration
camps, and even holding a contest to find a Bosnian Muslim surrogate
for Anne Frank. Just before his death, Bosnian Muslim leader (and first
President of Bosnia and Herzegovina) Alija Izetbegovi acknowledged to
Bernard Kouchner that he had known at the time that these comparisons
were false, that whatever horrors were there, these were not extermina-
tion camps, although he acknowledged that he had used precisely that
phrase in speaking with French President Mitterrand in 1993 in an attempt
to precipitate bombing of the Serbs.55
The point, again, is not that there were not horrors in Bosnia and
Croatia in the 1940s and 1990s, but rather that the depictions of them
were systematically distorted to bring them into the framings set up by
the Holocaust. If we are to understand events in Bosnia, the distortions
caused by this framing must be clarified.
Distortions 3: Numbers Games
194145: World War II in Yugoslavia was exceptionally brutal even for
that period in Europe, since it was simultaneously a war against foreign
occupation, Croat and Serb attempts to create ethnic states by expelling
or killing members of other nations, and communist revolution, with
literatures is noteworthy. A Croatian-American, he co-authored, with a Zagreb University
professor who was one of Franjo Tudjmans advisors in 1990, a book that purported to dif-
ferentiate Western, thus civilized Croatia from Eastern, thus barbaric Serbia (S. Metrovi
and S. Letica, Habits of the Balkans Heart: Social Character and the Fall of Communism
[College Station, TX: Texas A&M Press, 1993]). This kind of literally Orientalist rhetoric in
regard to the Balkans has been well analyzed; see, for example, L. Wolff, Inventing Eastern
Europe: The Map of Civilization in the Mind of the Enlightenment (Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1994); M. Todorova, Imagining the Balkans (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1997); and most recently J. Brcz, Goodness is Elsewhere: The Rule of European
Difference, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 48 (2006), 11038); in specific regard
to the former Yugoslavia, see M. Baki-Hayden, Nesting Orientalisms: The Case of Former
Yugoslavia, Slavic Review, 54 (1995), 91731, and M. Razsa and N. Lindstrom, Balkan is
Beautiful: Balkanism in the Political Discourse of Tudjmans Croatia, East European Poli-
tics and Societies, 18 (2005), 62850. Metrovi has used the facilities of his own universitys
press (Texas A&M Press) to establish a series of books on eastern Europe, several of them
asserting the evil of Serbs and Serbia. One is reminded of Milan Kunderas observation
that the spirit of propaganda...reduces (and teaches others to reduce) the life of a hated
society to the simple listing of its crimes (Kundera, Paths in the Fog, in his Testaments
Betrayed (New York: Harper Collins, 1995), p. 225.
55B. Kouchner, Les Guerriers de la paix: Du Kosovo lIrak (Paris: Grasset, 2004), pp.
3745.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 153
retribution by the communists against the various nationalist forces at the
end of the war. Immediately after the war, official figures were generated,
about 1,700,000 victims overall.56 Figures were sensitive because so many
Yugoslavs had been killed by other Yugoslavs, albeit of different national
groups, especially Serbs murdered by Croats, Muslims murdered by Serbs
and, most sensitively, non-Communists killed by Titos Partisans. The sen-
sitivity of all of this history is most apparent from the fate of a census of
war victims that was conducted in 1964, after extensive preparation: after
its completion, the census was not publicly released, and the press run of
the books was destroyed in the late 1980s.57 Briefly opened to the public
in the late 1980s, the 1964 data set was unavailable during the Miloevi
period, though it is now available and in fact was a main data source for
Dulis study.
In the 1980s, the topic of the casualties in World War II was re-opened
by Serbian and Croatian writers.58 Serb authors stressed what they called
the genocidal nature of the NDH, increasing the numbers of people sup-
posedly killed in Jasenovac alone to 700,000 (Vladimir Dedier) and even
one million (Velimir Trzi).59 This explosion of false information provided
the opportunity for responses by Croatian historians that minimized the
casualties in Jasenovac, thereby attempting to discount the accusations of
genocide. This was explicitly the main argument of Tudjmans Bespua,
the first chapter of which refers to the Jasenovac myth and also the
thesis of genocidal Croatianism. Tudjman devotes a great deal of space to
showing the impossibility of the highest figures, and on this point he is
correct. However, by focusing on the myth of Jasenovac, he and his crit-
ics ignore the great majority of the killings in the NDH, which did not take
place in camps, a point discussed in the next section.
199295: As the war developed in Bosnia, the numbers of dead were
very quickly inflated. At a hearing of the U.S. Commission on Security
and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) on War Crimes and the Humanitarian
Crisis in the former Yugoslavia on 25 January 1993, Congressman Christo-
pher Smith stated that a few weeks earlier, Bosnian President Izetbegovi
had stated that more than 200,000 had been killed and that 70,000 people
56Bogosavljevi, The Unresolved Genocide, reviews these studies.
57Ibid., pp. 1524. Bogosavljevi was one of the highest officials in the Federal Bureau
of Statistics in the Ante Markovi period and thus had access to the materials.
58See Dragovi-Soso, Saviours of the Nation, pp. 10014.
59Ibid., p. 111. It should be noted that Dedijer also was the first to raise to prominence
the issue of Serb killings of Bosnian Muslims during the war.
154 chapter seven
were being held in detention camps.60 The 200,000 figure was repeated at a
4 February 1993 CSCE hearing by Bosnian Foreign Minister Haris Silajdi.
This 200,000 figure was widely accepted thereafter. At a hearing of the U.S.
House International Relations Committee on 18 October 1995, Secretary
of Defense William Perry said that more than 200,000 people had been
killed; at a hearing before the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee on
7 June 1995, Perry had said that in 1992, there were about 130,000 civilian
casualties in Bosnia. At a National Press Club press conference on 24 June
1994, Bosnian Prime Minister Ejup Gani raised the total to a quarter mil-
lion killed. Silajdi at least remained consistent, saying on the American
public television news program Newshour on 13 May 1997 that 200,000
people were killed. Richard Holbrooke, on the other hand, in an interview
on the tenth anniversary of the Dayton Agreements, managed to raise the
figure to 300,000 dead.61 News accounts tended to keep to the 200,000
figure, used as recently as 18 December 2005 in the New York Times.62
Estimates by researchers during the war period generally tended to
overstate casualties. Figures from institutions or individual research-
ers within Bosnia and Croatia ranged from a low of 156,824 to a high of
329,000. Those from outside of Bosnia were somewhat lower, ranging
from 25,00060,000 by former State Department officer George Kenney
to 200,000 by Chicago law professor Cherif Bassiouni.63 Since Kenneys fig-
ures did not include casualties from 1995, his high-end figure for casualties
through 1994 (60,000) may actually have been the closest to accurate, but
did not gain acceptance, and the 200,000 figure generated in 1993 became
the most accepted figure.
Distortions 4: Restaging the Holocaust
Looking for Auschwitz
One effect of the establishment of Holocaust imagery as the standard
for genocide has been to focus attention on concentration camps as the
sites of the greatest horrors. In the former Yugoslavia, this imagery was
60Transcripts of hearings of the CSCE may be accessed at http://www.csce.gov, where
they are organized by issue and by country, then listed chronologically within each category.
61On U.S. Public Broadcasting System, The Charlie Rose Show, 23 November 2005.
62The Civilian Toll of War, New York Times (18 December 2005).
63These studies are summarized and evaluated by Tabeau and Bijak, War-related
Deaths, p. 194.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 155
adopted by Serbs in reference to the massacres in the NDH. A highly ten-
dentious book from the late 1980s by Vladimir Dedijer exemplifies this
approach: The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the Vatican: The Croatian Massacre
of the Serbs During World War II.64 The Yugoslav Auschwitz was said
to be the concentration camp at Jasenovac, with the methods of murder
described in great detail. The unreality of the numbers game is shown in
this single volume. The opening article by Mihailo Markovi states that
In one huge concentration camp alone Jasenovac 750,000 Serbs were
exterminated, together with Jews and Gypsies,65 but the Foreword to
the First German Edition that follows states that In this infamous death
camp, over 200,000 people, mostly Orthodox Serbs, met their death.66
Even if one were to accept this second figure (and Tomislav Dulis
careful 2005 study indicates that it is about twice as high as the actual
death count at Jasenovac), this would be perhaps one-third of the Serb
victims of the war. As Aleksa Djilas has noted, the technology and trans-
portation systems available to the Ustasha were not well developed,67 and
most of the deaths occurred in direct attacks on villages and in towns,
which makes sense: in the early 1940s, Yugoslavia was one of the least
developed countries in Europe, with over 85% of the population living in
villages and small towns, rather than cities. Duli provides better figures:
in the NDH, 19% of the Serbs killed died in camps, 45% in direct terror,
and 25% in military-related actions; on the other hand, 95% of the Jews
killed died in camps.68 Thus the focus on concentration camps rather
than rural massacres missed the largest component of the 194145 war, a
mistaken focus that makes sense only if the point of the exercise is not
to commemorate actual victims so much as to elaborate on the symbol of
the greatest victimization of the twentieth century: the Nazi concentra-
tion camps, symbolized by Auschwitz.
The images of concentration camps became firmly linked with the 1990s
events in Bosnia in August 1992, when two British television journalists
64V. Dedijer, The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the Vatican: The Croatian Massacre of the
Serbs During World War II (Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1992). The American edition is a
translation from the original German edition of 1988. The hostility of some segments of
Serb nationalist writers to the Roman Catholic Church is beyond the scope of this paper,
but this volume is by no means unique in the historiography of socialist Yugoslavia.
65M. Markovi, A Preliminary Note on the Historical Background of the Present Yugo-
slav Crisis, in V. Dedijer, The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the Vatican, p. 11.
66G. Niemtietz, Preface to the First German Edition, in Dedijer, The Yugoslav Auschwitz
and the Vatican, p. 23.
67Djilas, The Contested Country, p. 126.
68Duli, Utopias of Nation, p. 313.
156 chapter seven
delivered stories, accompanied by film, of Muslim prisoners in detention
centres run by Bosnian Serbs in northern Bosnia.69 Some of the films
showed emaciated prisoners, one extremely so; the apparent similarity
between this prisoners condition and that of the extremely emaciated
prisoners in Nazi extermination camps was seized upon by the world
press the next day as evidence that the Serbs were running concentra-
tion camps like those of the Third Reich.70 The Daily Mirror of London
put a picture of the most extremely emaciated Bosnian Muslim prisoner
on its front page, with the captions Belsen 92 and Horror of the new
Holocaust. Thereafter, camps became a dominant trope for the war in
Bosnia, and a focus of international activity. The very first indictment in
the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was
that of one Dragan Nikoli, a commander of the Suica Camp, and the
first trial that of a guard at the Omarska camp, Duko Tadi. Other cases
focusing primarily on criminal actions in camps were those of Mejakic
et al. (Omarska Camp), Sikirica et al. (Keraterm Camp), Fustar et al. (Kera-
term Camp), Mucic et al. (Celebici), Kvocka et al. (Omarska, Keraterm and
Trnopolje Camps), Mejakic et al. (Omarska Camp and Keraterm Camp),
Banovic (Omarska Camp and Keraterm Camp), including five of the first
eight indictments made public.71
Considering the attention paid to camps, one might expect them to
have been major sites of extermination, as were Auschwitz and Treblinka.
The ICTY, however, found that the Omarska Camp operated only from late
May to late August 1992, and that about 3,000 detainees passed through it
during this time.72 The Keraterm camp, also established in late May 1992,
held up to 1500 prisoners.73
69These stories are extensively discussed in D. Campbell, Atrocity, Memory, Photogra-
phy: Imaging the Concentration Camps of Bosnia the Case of ITN versus Living Marxism,
Part 1, Journal of Human Rights, 1 (2002), 133; part 2, Journal of Human Rights, 1 (2002),
14372. The World Wide Web version, http://www.virtual-security.net/attrocity/atroindex
.htm, contains links that show the original broadcasts and other relevant visual materials.
70Ibid. Again, the web version of Campbells articles contains links showing interna-
tional television and newspaper coverage; the print version contains some of the news-
paper coverage.
71Data taken from the index of cases on the ICTY website, http://www.un.org/icty/
cases-e/index-e.htm. All of the references to camps are in the index following the names
of the accused, except for the Tadic case.
72Prosecutor v. Miroslav Kvocka et al., ICTY Trial Chamber I Judgment, 2 November
2001 (http://www.un.org/icty/kvocka/trialc/judgement/index.htm), paras. 17 and 21.
73Prosecutor v. Predrag Banovic, ICTY Trial Chamber III Sentencing Judgment, 28
October 2003 (http://www.un.org/icty/banovic65-1/trialc/judgement/ban-sj031028e.htm#II),
para. 23.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 157
Obviously, this is not to say that the camps were not the site of mass
criminality. There is no question but that large numbers of prisoners were
mistreated, tortured, raped and murdered.74 The Trial Chamber in Bano-
vic found that
The Keraterm and Omarska camps were operated in a manner designed to
ill-treat and persecute non-Serbs from Prijedor and other areas, with the aim
of ridding the territory of non-Serbs or subjugating those who remained.
The detention of non-Serbs in the camps was a prelude to killing them or
transferring them to non-Serb areas.75
To return to the words of Bosnian leader Alija Izetbegovi, however,
whatever horrors were there, these were not extermination camps.
Finding a Bosnian Anne Frank
The parallel between Bosnia and the Holocaust produced a great com-
mercial success, and a major publicity one as well, with the publication of
Zlatas Diary: A Childs Life in Sarajevo, immediately hailed as the work of
the Bosnian Anne Frank.76 This other diary of a young girl77 was writ-
ten by a thirteen-year old girl in Sarajevo, beginning just before the war
(September 1991) and lasting until two months before her growing fame in
Europe and America led to her evacuation with her parents, in late 1993.
The young writer explicitly compares herself to Anne Frank, first in adopt-
ing a name for her diary eight months into it (the earlier entries have no
salutation), and just as the war begins (30 March 1992), Since Anne Frank
called her diary Kitty, maybe I could give you a name too. She lists five
puns on Bosnian words, then settles on Mimmy, which contains a dou-
bled consonant and the letter y, neither of which is found in the Latin-
script orthography of Serbo-Croatian she uses, but which probably work
better for foreigners than the other choices would have: Asfaltina, efika,
evala, Pidameta, Hikmeta.78 Not quite six months later, she is told that
they want to publish a childs diary and it just might be mine...and so I
copied part of you into another notebook and you, Mimmy, went to the
City Assembly to be looked at. And Ive just heard, Mimmy, that you are
74ICTY Kvocka Judgment, paras. 45108.
75ICTY Banovic Sentencing Judgment, para. 22 (references omitted).
76Z. Filipovi, Zlatas Diary: A Childs Life in Sarajevo (New York: Viking, 1994).
77C. Lehmann-Haupt, Books of the Times: Another Diary of a Young Girl, New York
Times (28 February 1994).
78Filipovi, Zlatas Diary, p. 29.
158 chapter seven
going to be published! Youre coming out for the UNICEF week! Super!79
The book then became a bestseller in a number of languages. The diary
actually ends when the author finds out that it will be published interna-
tionally: the next-to-last entry (14 October 1993) reads youre going to be
published abroad. I allowed it, so you could tell the world.80 Apparently
the job was done; but not quite, for one final entry three days later ends
the volume with these words: We havent done anything. Were innocent.
But helpless!81
One must be pleased for the young author of this Anne Frank with a
happy ending,82 yet wonder how much calculation went into the decision
of whoever they were in the City Assembly, to publish a childs diary, and
the editorial decision to end it with the plea of innocence and helpless-
ness, in case anyone had missed the point. The book is controversial even
in Sarajevo. One review of Bosnian literature in the Sarajevo weekly Dani
says this controversial piece (to some a plagiarism of the famous Diary of
Anne Frank) in any event supercedes all other Bosnian authors combined
in terms of readership.83 One must also wonder about the acuity of the
journalists who covered this story when Janine di Giovannis Introduc-
tion to the book describes Zlata, whom she met, as having bright blue
eyes,84 since the girl on the cover of the Penguin edition, at least, has
brown eyes. But one of the Western journalistic clichs used during the
war to show that even though they are Muslims, the Bosnian Muslims are
like other Europeans, was to make reference to their blue eyes.
The Involvement of the U.S. Holocaust Museum
The United States Holocaust National Museum opened on 22 April 1993,
at a time when the Bosnian war was a major international story. At the
request of the U.S. State Department, the organizers invited the leaders of
all of the newly independent Yugoslav Republics except Serbia and Mon-
tenegro (then the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), including Croatian
President Tudjman. Considering the controversy over his book Bespua,
this invitation attracted criticism from many quarters, and Elie Wiesel said
79Ibid., p. 96
80Ibid., p. 198.
81Ibid., p. 200.
82F. Prose, A Little Girls War, New York Times (6 March 1994).
83M. Stoji, Bosanskahercegovaka knjievnost i rat, BiH Dani no. 216 (27 July 2001).
84Zlatas Diary, p. viii.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 159
that his [Tudjmans] presence in the midst of survivors is a disgrace.85 At
the event itself, Mr. Wiesel looked away from Tudjman when the Croa-
tian president took a seat near the podium, then denounced the atrocities
in the Bosnian war and called for U.S. intervention.86
In 2001 the U.S. Holocaust Museum did, however, mount a major exhi-
bition, now on-line, on Jasenovac and the Holocaust Era in Croatia, 1941
1945. The Museum also became involved in the preservation of records
and materials from Jasenovac that had been taken to the Republika Srpska
in Bosnia during the 199195 war.87 Both the U.S. Holocaust Museum and
Israels Yad Vashem were involved in designing a new memorial centre
at Jasenovac, which produced its own controversy in late 2005 and early
2006. That is, the new monument at Jasenovac will be patterned after Yad
Vashem, and list the names of about 70,000 victims, but without indicat-
ing their nationality or indeed anything else about them; it will also be
included in a web of Holocaust museums in Europe linked to Yad Vashem.
But representatives of the Serbs in Croatia, the Croatian Jewish Commu-
nity, and the anti-fascist veterans of Croatia that is, of the groups that
represent most of the victims at Jasenovac and their descendants have
objected, saying that turning Jasenovac into simply a Holocaust museum
obscures the true nature of the camp.88 This twist in the play of repre-
sentations of victimhood solves the image problems for Croatia problems
caused by Tudjmans handling of the Holocaust, and also turns the Serb
victims from being the central figures of Croatian massacres in World
War II to being collateral damage in the Holocaust. There is a certain irony
in this: the earlier Serb labeling of Jasenovac as the Croatian Auschwitz
has succeeded, but Jasenovac, like Auschwitz, thereby becomes best
known for its role in the Holocaust even though more Serbs than Jews
were murdered there.
When we recall that most Serbs were not killed in camps, the new
controversy shows again the flaw in using concentration camps as char-
acteristic of genocide. Even the Serb representatives fall into the trap of
assuming that commemoration should be done at Jasenovac, the camp
85Anger Greets Croatians Invitation to Holocaust Museum Dedication, New York Times
(22 April 1993); see also A Different Guest (editorial), Washington Post (4 April 1993).
86Holocaust Museum Hailed as Sacred Debt to Dead, New York Times (23 April 1993).
87Croatian WWII Concentration Camp Records Made Available for First Time by
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Press
Release, 13 November 2001.
88Jasenovac opet posvaao ive zbog mrtvih, Jutarnji.hr, (published on-line 13 January
2006 14:40).
160 chapter seven
as representation of the events of 194145. Meanwhile, the great majority
of the non-Jewish victims of the NDH will not be commemorated, since
they did not die at Jasenovac.
Back to the 199195 wars, the Holocaust Museum had taken at least
an informal position in 1997 that genocide had occurred in Bosnia. Thus
when the Museum sponsored a discussion of a paper about whether the
term genocide was actually appropriately applied to the ethnic cleansing
campaigns in Bosnia,89 at the last moment the Director changed the title
of the event from Genocide in Bosnia? to Ethnic Conflict in the Former
Yugoslavia: Perspectives and Implications, because, he said, the Museum
had already pronounced that genocide took place in Bosnia. The website
devoted to responding to threats of genocide that is maintained by the
Museums Committee on Conscience has a section on the Balkans, but
the only incident specifically discussed is the massacre of Muslim males
in Srebrenica in 1995, to which we now turn.
Extending the Law: The Mass Killing at Srebrenica as Genocide
In July 1995 the Bosnian Serb Army took control of the safe area of Sre-
brenica in eastern Bosnia. The judgment of the trial chamber of the ICTY
in the case of General Radislav Krsti states concisely what happened
next:
Within a few days, approximately 25,000 Bosnian Muslims, most of them
women, children and elderly people who were living in the area, were
uprooted and, in an atmosphere of terror, loaded onto overcrowded buses
by the Bosnian Serb forces and transported across the confrontation lines
into Bosnian Muslim-held territory. The military-aged Bosnian Muslim men
of Srebrenica, however, were consigned to a separate fate. As thousands of
them attempted to flee the area, they were taken prisoner, detained in bru-
tal conditions and then executed. More than 7,000 people were never seen
again.90
Demographic experts employed by the Office of the Prosecutor of the
ICTY have estimated that at least 7,475 persons were killed in this action,
including one-third of all Muslim men enumerated in the April 1991 census
89See R. Hayden, Schindlers Fate: Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing and Population Trans-
fers, Slavic Review, 55 (1995), 72778. That article, like this one, did not question the extent
of the atrocities but rather only the applicability of the term genocide in this context.
90Prosecutor v. Radislav Krsti, ICTY Trial Chamber I, Judgment, 2 August 2001, para. 1
(hereafter, Krsti trial judgment).
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 161
of Srebrenica. Less than 1% of the victims were women, and 89.9% men
between the ages of 16 and 60.91 While some of these men were killed
in military action, thousands were executed. The result of the operation
was to drive almost all Muslims from Srebrenica, which was almost 73%
Muslim before the war; only a few hundred have since returned.
The criminality of these actions is clear. What may be questioned, how-
ever, is whether the application of the term genocide to this action is
appropriate. Since the ICTY did proclaim this mass killing to be genocide,
a discussion of this question must focus on the reasoning of the Tribunal,
specifically with the judgments of both the trial chamber and then the
appeals chamber in Krsti.
Genocide is defined in regard to specific acts committed with intent
to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious
group, as such, including killing members of the group or causing serious
bodily or mental harm to them; the goal of bringing about the physical
destruction in whole or in part is important as well.92 It was undeniable
that the Bosnian Serb Army had killed members of the group and caused
bodily and mental harm to those who survived. The only question was
that of intent: whether the offences were committed with the intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group,
as such.93
In regard to Srebrenica, this definition is more problematical than non-
lawyers might realize. The original 1946 UN resolution defined genocide as
a denial of the right of existence of entire human groups, and it was said
at that time that the victim of genocide was not the individuals killed but
the group.94 But what counts as the group in this case? The Prosecution
was inconsistent, referring at various times to the Bosnian Muslims, the
Bosnian Muslims of Srebrenica and the Bosnian Muslims of Eastern Bos-
nia. The Trial Chamber agreed with the defense that the proper group was
the Bosnian Muslims, leaving then the question of whether the destruc-
tion of a part of that group would qualify as genocide.95
Having made this determination, however, the Trial Chamber then
contradicted itself by saying that
91All figures are from H. Brunborg, T. Lyngstad and H. Urdal, Accounting for Genocide:
How Many Were Killed in Srebrenica?, European Journal of Population, 19 (2003), 22948.
92Krsti trial judgment, para. 540. While the Krsti court uses the definition found in the
ICTYs founding statute, this is drawn directly from the relevant UN treaty definitions.
93Ibid., para. 544.
94Ibid., para. 552.
95Ibid., para. 560.
162 chapter seven
the killing of all members of the part of a group located within a small geo-
graphical area...would qualify as genocide if carried out with the intent to
destroy the part of the group as such located in this small geographical area.
Indeed, the physical destruction may target only a part of the geographically
limited part of the larger group because the perpetrators of the genocide
regard the intended destruction as sufficient to annihilate the group as a
distinct entity in the geographic area at issue.96
Yet even annihilation of a small local group seems unlikely to threaten
the larger group as such, already defined as the Bosnian Muslims, that
is, the group itself (rather than the individuals that comprise it), which is
the party to be protected from genocide. Further, the Bosnian Serb Army
did not try to kill all members of the group, but rather only males between
ages of 16 and 60; although they were treated appallingly, women, small
children and old people were transported out of Srebrenica. In this con-
nection, the Trial Chamber referred to the catastrophic impact that the
disappearance of two or three generations of men would have on the
survival of a traditionally patriarchal society, thus incorporating into its
reasoning stereotypes about Bosnian society.97 Strangely, the Trial Cham-
ber also referred to the strategic location of Srebrenica and noted that by
killing the men, the Serbs precluded any effective attempt by the Bosnian
Muslims to recapture the territory98 strange, because this reasoning
seems to acknowledge a military strategic reason for killing the men of
military age.
Through this reasoning, the Krsti trial chamber extended the defini-
tion of genocide from acts made with the intent to cause the physical
destruction of a group as such, to covering acts made to remove an eth-
nic or religious community from a specific territory, especially one of stra-
tegic importance.
A subsequent ICTY trial chamber expressed some hesitancy about
adopting this reasoning, which permits a characterization of genocide
even when the specific intent extends only to a limited geographical area,
such as a municipality. This Trial Chamber was aware that this approach
might distort the definition of genocide if it is not applied with caution.99
The Staki court cited a law review article that had argued that if such a
definition prevails, local mass killings might be taken to indicate that there
was not a plan on a national level. Carrying this logic further, Tomislav
96Ibid., para. 590.
97Ibid., para. 595.
98Ibid., para. 595.
99Prosecutor v. Milomir Stakic, ICTY Trial Chamber II, Judgment, 31 July 2003.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 163
Duli notes that if local mass killings are defined as genocide, even the
Holocaust becomes composed in part of many individual genocides, or
local massacres.100 At that stage, the possibility arises of seeing recipro-
cal or retributive genocides when forces of antagonistic racial, ethnic or
religious groups each commit a local massacre of the others people, even
of their military forces.101 Yet at that point, what distinguishes genocide
from other ethnic, racial or religious mass killings?
The defense appealed the findings of the Krsti trial chamber that
genocide had occurred, in part because the definition of the part of
the protected group men of military age in Srebrenica, as part of the
Bosnian Muslims was too narrow, and in part because the Trial Cham-
ber had enlarged the definition of genocide to encompass expulsion of a
group from a territory, rather than their physical destruction. The Appeals
Chamber dismissed the Appeals, but in doing so made the issues less
rather than more clear.
In regard to part of a protected group, the Appeals Chamber simply
said that all that was necessary was that the alleged perpetrator intended
to destroy at least a substantial part of the protected group. Substan-
tial part was left undefined, but the Appeals Chamber then introduced a
purely political consideration: If a specific part of the group is emblem-
atic of the overall group...that may support a finding that the part quali-
fies as substantial.102 It then stated that Srebrenica was important militarily
to the Bosnian Serbs, because its capture would severely undermine
the military efforts of the Bosnian Muslim state to ensure its viability.103
Further, the Appeals Chamber said that
Srebrenica was important due to its prominence in the eyes of both the Bos-
nian Muslims and the international community.... The elimination of the
Muslim population of Srebrenica, despite the assurances given by the inter-
national community, would serve as a potent example to all Bosnian Mus-
lims of their vulnerability and defenselessness in the face of Serb military
forces. The fate of the Bosnian Muslims of Srebrenica would be emblematic
of that of all Bosnian Muslims.104
100Duli, Utopias of Nation, pp. 1819.
101See, e.g., P. Brass, The Partition of India and Retributive Genocide in the Punjab,
194647: Means, Methods and Purposes, Journal of Genocide Research, 5 (2003), 71101.
102Prosecutor v. Radislav Krsti, ICTY Appeals Chamber Judgment, 19 April 2004 (here-
after, Krsti appeal), para. 12.
103Krsti appeal, para. 15, emphasis added; the depiction of the conflict as one between
a Bosnian Muslim state and a Serb state was empirically accurate (though it ignored the
Croatian state in Herzegovina) but contradictory to the premise that the recognized Bos-
nian government represented all of Bosnias peoples.
104Krsti appeal, para. 16.
164 chapter seven
This is an extraordinary statement, because it conditions genocide on
the purely political determination that even a relatively small portion
of a protected group is either so politically prominent or so strategically
located that its removal from a territory, rather than physical annihilation,
would symbolize the vulnerability of the larger group.
Having made this determination, the Appeals Chamber then put forth
the normative statement that the crime of genocide is singled out for
special condemnation and opprobrium. The crime is horrific in its scope;
its perpetrators identify entire human groups for extinction. Those who
devise and implement genocide seek to deprive humanity of the manifold
richness its nationalities, races, ethnicities and religions provide.105 Yet
the same court had just decided that in fact, genocide could be found
when the intent was not to destroy an entire group, nor even a large part
of it, much less seek to deprive humanity of a nationality, race, ethnicity
or religion.
The question of whether genocide occurred in Bosnia became even
more complicated with the decision of the trial chamber in the case of
Momilo Krajinik, one of the most important political actors among the
Bosnian Serbs from 1990 throughout the war. According to the indictment
against him,106 Krajinik
had de facto control and authority over the Bosnian Serb Forces and Bos-
nian Serb Political and Governmental Organs and their agents, who partici-
pated in the crimes alleged in this indictment.
He was indicted, and convicted, of crimes based on his political responsi-
bility. The presentation of evidence lasted more than two years, involved
27,000 pages of transcripts, 3,800 Prosecution exhibits, 380 defense exhib-
its and 27 Chamber exhibits.107 Krajinik openly argued with his defense
attorneys, so the defense was not unified and the case should have been
an easy win for the Prosecution. And, in fact, Krajinik was convicted
of extermination, murder, persecution, deportation and forced transfer,
all as crimes against humanity, involving imposition of restrictive and
discriminatory measures and the denial of fundamental rights; murder;
cruel and inhumane treatment during attacks on towns and villages and
within various detention centers; forcible displacement; unlawful deten-
105Krsti appeal, para. 36.
106Prosecutor v. Momilo Krajinik, Consolidated amended Indictment, 7 March 2002.
107Prosecutor v. Momilo Krajinik, ICTY Trial Chamber I, Judgement, 27 September
2006, para. 21.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 165
tion; forced labor at front lines; appropriation or plunder of private prop-
erty; and destruction of private property and of cultural monuments and
sacred sites. Further, all of this was the result, the court found, of a com-
mon criminal enterprise involving Krajinik and other persons in the
Bosnian Serb leadership. Yet despite all of this evidence, the court found
that none of these acts were committed with the intent to destroy, in
part, the Bosnian-Muslim or Bosnian-Croat ethnic group, as such, and thus
that Krajinik was not guilty of genocide or of complicity in genocide.108
The February 2007 decision of the International Court of Justice in the
case brought by Bosnia and Herzegovina against Serbia and Montenegro109
did nothing to make matters more clear. It simply adopted the finding
of the ICTY in Krsti that genocide had occurred at Srebrenica, without
discussing the reasoning behind that decision.110 It also decided that Bos-
nia and Herzegovina had not proved that the authorities in Belgrade had
ordered the massacre, and indeed that all indications are to the contrary:
that the decision to kill the adult male population of the Muslim com-
munity of Srebrenica was taken by the VRS [Bosnian Serb Army] Main
Staff, but without instructions from or effective control by Serbia and
Montenegro.111 For this reason, the ICJ found that Serbia had not commit-
ted genocide, incited the commission of genocide, conspired to commit
genocide, or been complicit in the commission of genocide in Bosnia, but
that it had violated the Genocide Convention by failing to prevent geno-
cide in Srebrenica and by not arresting general Ratko Mladi.
Thus far, then, the international legal decisions in regard to the allega-
tions of genocide in Bosnia are ambiguous at best. The ICTY and the ICJ
have held that only the mass killings of Bosnian Muslim men at Srebren-
ica at the very end of the war constituted genocide (ICTY Krsti decision,
finding adopted by ICJ); that while a general of the Bosnian Serb Army
who helped organize those killings was guilty of complicity in genocide,
he himself had not intended to commit genocide (ICTY, Krsti); that a
leading political authority of the Bosnian Serbs had no intent to commit
genocide (ICTY, Krajinik, referred to by ICJ); that Serbia neither ordered
the Bosnian Serb Army to commit the murders at Srebrenica nor was it in
108Krajinik judgement, paras. 867869.
109International Court of Justice, Case Concerning the application of the Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Serbia
and Montenegro), Judgment, 26 February 2007.
110Ibid. Paras. 296, 297.
111 Ibid. Para. 413.
166 chapter seven
a position to control the Bosnian Serb Army once the killings began (ICJ);
but that regardless of whether it could have prevented the killings, Serbia
should have tried to do so but did not. All of these judgments rest on the
decision in Krajinik to say that a massacre of men in a single location
counted as genocide, because that location was important both symboli-
cally and militarily. While genocide requires the intent to to destroy, in
whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such,
the courts have yet to find that anyone actually had that intent not
Serbia (the ICJ decision), nor the Bosnian Serb leadership (Krajinik), nor
even one of the generals who carried it out (Krsti). Presumably, General
Ratko Mladi had the intent to commit genocide, but only on a local level.
But then, why is a massacre at a local level considered to be genocide
instead of, say, persecution, extermination, or mass murder? The Krsti
decisions are certainly neither consistent nor convincing on this issue.
By broadening the definition of genocide to include expulsion from
territories that are important strategically or symbolically, the Krsti
appeals chamber seems to endorse a definition of genocide that would
fit with that of none other than Franjo Tudjman, that throughout his-
tory there have always been attempts at a final solution for foreign and
other undesirable racial-ethnic or religious groups through expulsion,
extermination, and conversion to the true religion.112 As discussed ear-
lier, Tudjmans work was criticized because he questioned the extent of
the Holocaust; but the logical grounds on which he argues are that since
genocide is a universal phenomenon of history, no special guilt may be
attached to those societies or nations that practice, in his words, final
solutions through expulsion and conversion as well as extermination.
The Krsti decision seems to accept genocide as the universal phenome-
non that Tudjman envisions, though unlike Tudjman it does assign guilt.
The Krsti definition thus relativizes the concept of genocide to the point
at which it equates conceptually the strategic killing of small numbers of
people with actual efforts at the extermination of entire groups. Univer-
salizing genocide in this way, however, means, first, that the extreme evil
of attempts to exterminate a people as such, which the term genocide
was originally coined to cover, is left without distinction from other cases.
Further, this broad definition also means that most of the forced move-
ments of population in the twentieth century count as genocide: not only
the deportations and mass murders of Armenians from Anatolia in 1915,
112Tudjman, Bespua, p. 166.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 167
but of Greeks from Anatolia and Turks from Greece in 1923, Serbs from the
Independent State of Croatia in 194145, Germans from Czechoslovakia,
Poland and Yugoslavia in 1945, Poles from Ukraine and Lithuania in 1945,
Muslims from India and Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan in 1947, Palestin-
ians from Israel in 1948, Jews from the Arab world after 1948, Turks from
southern Cyprus and Greeks from Northern Cyprus in 1974, Croats from
Republika Srpska Krajina in 1992, Muslims from Herzeg-Bosna in 1993,
Azeris from Nagorno-Karabakh in 1993, Serbs from Croatia in 1995 this
is not a complete list. Some of these movements have been viewed as
population transfers accepted by the international community, others
ethnic cleansing or even genocide, and this labeling was made on political
grounds.113 According to the Krsti decision, however, such political attribu-
tion is legally appropriate, since a key criterion is the symbolic importance
of the presence of that community on that territory to the international
community. But what is to be gained by deciding after the fact that not
only Turkey but Poland, the Czech Republic, Croatia, the Republika
Srpska, India and Pakistan (among others) were founded on genocide?
Conclusion
The Holocaust has raised our tolerance for ordinary evil. This forces people
to make their own plight more Holocaust-like.
M. Berenbaum114
The Krsti decisions adoption of political criteria for determining geno-
cide returns us to the consideration raised at the start of this paper: that
the invocation of the term genocide is primarily a political process that
creates images of a supposed past to serve the purposes of present-day
political actors. The imagery gains its power from Auschwitz: rewarding
the descendants of those murdered, and penalizing the descendants of
those who did the murdering, seems justified when genocide is in ques-
tion. But the stakes at issue are not simply remembering the fate of the
victims, but rather how that remembrance can be used to benefit those
who claim to be their descendants, or to penalize those said to be the
inheritors of their national guilt.
113Hayden, Schindlers Fate.
114Quoted in G. Kenney, The Bosnia Calculation, New York Times Magazine (23 April
1995), 43. Michael Berenbaum was at the time Director of the Holocaust Research Institute
at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
168 chapter seven
With this in mind, the invocation by Serb politicians in 199092 of the
mass killings of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia (and thus in
Bosnia) fifty years earlier was indeed a call to mobilize the descendants
of those Serbs against the descendants of those said to have killed them,
in order to justify aggressive Serb political actions (and later, military
ones) against those Others. But the invocation of the short-lived camps of
northern Bosnia in 199293 and the mass killing at Srebrenica in 1995 as
genocide has equally been a call to mobilize the international commu-
nity, and also Bosnian Muslims, against Serbs. The suit by Bosnia against
Serbia in the International Court of Justice is primarily a tool by which
Bosniak political forces are trying to undermine the Bosnian Serbs, even
to eliminate the Republika Srpska.115 Yet the war in Bosnia was driven by
the rejections by Bosnian Serbs and Herzegovinian Croats of inclusion in a
unitary Bosnian state, and they still reject this.116 It is difficult to see how a
Bosnian state can be imposed on the very large portion of the population
that rejects inclusion within it the precedents of Ireland, Kosovo, Cyprus
do not augur well for such an effort. Any attempt to do so would require
the maintenance of a police state, a difficult position to justify on any
normative grounds. Of course, it could be proposed that those putative
Bosnians who reject inclusion in Bosnia could be expelled from the state
that the international community has recognized against their wishes (the
Sudeten German solution) but that position is an endorsement of ethnic
cleansing. Proposals for the elimination of the Republika Srpska privilege
Bosniaks over Serbs, which is a major point of the invocation of geno-
cide to label the events of the 1990s.
Katherine Verdery has argued that entire battalions of [massacre
victims] served as shock troops in the Yugoslav breakup.117 While her
specific reference in this passage is to the mobilization of the dead of
World War II, her model includes those of the later wars: the concern
with corpses continues, as the fighting produces even more graves. Their
occupants become the grounds for mutual recrimination...and means
of a politics of blame, guilt and accountability.118 As this passage shows,
115See Editorial: Looking for a Culprit, in Transitions on Line (7 February 2006), http://
www.tol.cz/look/TOL/.
116See R. Hayden, Democracy without a Demos? The Bosnian Constitutional Experi-
ment and the Intentional Construction of Nonfunctioning States, East European Politics &
Societies, 19 (2005), 22659.
117K. Verdery, The Political Lives of Dead Bodies: Reburials and Postsocialist Change (New
York: Columbia University Press, 1999), p. 21.
118Ibid., p. 102.
mass killings and images of genocide in bosnia 169
these are dangerous politics, which produced new corpses, and not only
because of the actions of ex-Yugoslavs themselves (though they were pri-
mary: my own view in 199091 was that those who were insisting that
history of genocide not be forgotten were doing so in order to repeat the
conflicts that produced it). In regard to Srebrenica, a U.S. official told me
that while the U.S. government knew that at the end of the war, Srebrenica
would be part of the Serbian territory, they would not, for moral reasons,
urge the Izetbegovi government to evacuate the town. This morality
left the Muslims of Srebrenica in place,119 where they were massacred by
Bosnian Serb forces a year later. This does not exculpate the Serb forces
of responsibility for the mass killing, but it is discomfiting that concerns
about a genocide that had not actually taken place might have helped
set the stage for these larger massacres later.
Perhaps the labeling of mass killings in Bosnia as genocides should
give pause. The term genocide may not fit all mass killings. Invoking that
term may well be a tactic for inciting hostility between the descendants
of putative victims and alleged victimizers. It may serve to preclude dip-
lomatic efforts on supposedly moral grounds. Finally, forcing accounts of
ethnic conflict into the framework of the Holocaust distorts perceptions
of the real causes and trajectories of the conflict, thus not only hindering
understanding of the conflict itself, but also obstructing efforts to estab-
lish new forms of relations between the groups involved.
119Actually, rather more than that: the U.S. worked to break the U.N. arms embargo
on Bosnia, and sent arms specifically to the Srebrenica region, where Muslim forces used
them to attack not only the Bosnian Serb Army but Serb villages; these attacks may have
contributed to the Bosnian Serb Army decision to massacre so many Muslim men. See
C. Weibes, Intelligence and the War in Bosnia 19921995: The Role of the Intelligence and
Security Services, Appendix II to Nederlands Instituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie NIOD),
Srebrenica: A Safe Area, http://www.srebrenica.nl/en/a_index.htm.
CHAPTER EIGHT
MASS RAPE AND RAPE AVOIDANCE IN ETHNO-NATIONAL
CONFLICTS: SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN LIMINALIZED STATES
Rape is a concept that is now closely linked to violence, although this has
not always been true. In English and American law, for example, rape
until relatively recently was defined primarily in terms of lack of consent
by a woman to sexual intercourse with a man (see Sanday 1990: 1516,
62).1 From this traditional legal perception, violence was relevant as proof
of lack of consent, but violent imposition of sexual intercourse by a man
on a woman did not qualify as rape simply because of the violence this
was the famous marital rape problem, a traditional rule that held that
at marriage a woman consented to sexual relations with her husband and
could not later refuse him. On the other hand, lack of physical violence
was also not always evidence of consent and in some circumstances was
irrelevant. Thus statutory rape involved sexual intercourse with a female
presumed, usually because of age, to have been incapable of truly con-
senting, because she was by law presumed to lack full legal capacity to
manage her own affairs. In such cases, as Blackstone put it (1783: 212), the
consent or non-consent is immaterial, as by reason of her tender years she
is incapable of judgment and discretion.
Since the late 1970s most of these traditional rules have changed, so that
marital rape, for example, is no longer a legal oxymoron (see Russell 1990).
At the same time, the concept of consent has been problematized by
the introduction of the concept of power. The rules governing intimate
personal relationships that have been promulgated in many American
work settings and in colleges and universities are premised on consent
being dubious at best and presumptively fictive when one person is in an
1As stated recently in the decision of the first case before the International Criminal
Tribunal for Rwanda, Rape has historically been defined in national jurisdictions as non-
consensual sexual intercourse. (The Prosecutor versus Jean-Paul Akayesu, Case no. ICTR-
96-4-T, 2 September 1998; http://www.un.org/ictr/english/judgements/akayesu.html). The
locus classicus of English common law, Blackstone (1783: 210) defines rape as the carnal
knowledge of a woman forcibly and against her will, stressing on the following page that
a necessary ingredient of the crime of rape is that it must be against the womans will
(Blackstone 1783: 211). Blackstone also notes that the law of England holds it to be a felony
to force even a concubine or harlot (1783: 213).
172 chapter eight
inferior relationship of power to another. This problematization of con-
sent is not inconsistent with the stress on violence. In English and Ameri-
can law any physical touching of a person that is not privileged, usually
by consent, is a battery, a cognate of the verb to batter that invokes the
image of violence.2 In essence, the new strictures on the validity of con-
sent reduce the scope of the privilege of sexual touching and presume
that any unprivileged touching is violence. Indeed, the introduction of the
concept of marital rape removes a privilege for battery that the law had
earlier granted husbands as against their wives.
A focus on power is also seen by the definition of rape adopted by
the International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and Yugoslavia: a physi-
cal invasion of a sexual nature, committed on a person under circum-
stances which are coercive, and sexual violence as any act of a sexual
nature which is committed on a person under circumstances which are
coercive.... not limited to physical invasion of the human body, and may
include acts which do not involve penetration or even physical contact.3
This equation of non-consensual sexual activity with violence probably
reflects the feelings of, by far, most women (and men) subjected to it.
It is probably the abhorrence of this violence felt by many analysts that
accounts for the tendency in most cultural and social anthropological work
on the subject to be concerned with the social and cultural circumstances
under which rape occurs (e.g. Sanday 1981 and 1990, Palmer 1989).4
At the same time, the concentration on when violence is likely to occur
seems to me to obscure the related but largely unasked question of when
sexual violence does not occur, in circumstances in which it might be
thought that it would, not least by the people involved themselves. By
this I do not mean identification of cultures that are said to be free of rape,
if indeed any exist (see Palmer 1989). Instead, I want to raise the question
of whether it is possible to identify instances of mass violence when rape
is intentionally avoided, as opposed to those cases of mass violence where
2Non-lawyers routinely confuse assault with battery or assume that they are synonyms.
In law, an assault is an action that is intended to induce apprehension in the person to
whom it is directed and that succeeds in this, while a battery requires physical touch. The
classic first-year law school example is that the punch thrown in anger that misses but
causes apprehension constitutes assault; the one that connects, a battery.
3Akayesu (Rwanda Tribunal; see Note 1); this definition was adopted in the Yugoslav
Tribunal in Prosecutor versus Zejnil Delali and others, IT-96-21-T (19 November 1998); avail-
able at http://www.un.org/icty/celebici/judgement/main.htm.
4There is a literature on the topic in sociobiology, but I do not deal with it in this
paper, since it addresses issues different from those under consideration here.
sexual violence in liminalized states 173
rape has been widespread, and to determine what factors might account
for the difference in manifestations of mass rape.
Comparing mass rape with rape avoidance has implications for issues
of culpability in international law, discussed below. But looking at rape
avoidance to break the conceptual lock of violence as definitive of the
matter of rape or sexual assault is important for advancing understand-
ing of sexual violence itself. I suggest that the recent focus on violence in
place of consent has distorted perceptions of many cases of gender rela-
tions in situations of ethno-national conflict by labeling almost all sexual
relations between members of conflicting ethno-national communities
as violent, despite what seem to be the strategic choices in the matter
of the parties themselves. Ironically, this presumption of violence denies
agency to all women of locally victimized communities, thus denying
some of them the power, and even the right, to reconstruct their lives
and identities if such reconstruction involves establishing links with men
of the putatively victimizing community. This is not simply an academic
point, because the current equation of certain kinds of sexual relations
with violence has, I believe, obscured observation of sexual relations in
which some women and men have, admittedly in a larger context of mass
sexual violence, negotiated relationships that would, in other contexts, be
accepted as legitimate unions.
In using the term mass violence, I also want to break one of the other
presumptions of most research on rape, which views it as being an action
of one individual person on the body of another, a point of view which
seems common sense but which misses the possibility that rape is a social
action, not simply an individual one.5 Of course, feminist analyses of rape
start from the presumption that rape is socially determined, but it is the
coordination of large numbers of rapists that is of concern in this paper.
What I am interested in pursuing here is those circumstances in which
large numbers of individuals commit rape, or intentionally avoid commit-
ting rape, because both they and their victims see themselves as compo-
nents of larger social entities, and rape would have a serious impact on
the relations of those entities (and thus of their members) to each other.
5Sandays study of fraternity gang rape (1990) makes similar points about the social
nature of the phenomenon. Her work has clear relevance to some of the matters discussed
in this paper, particularly in her links between the construction of masculinity via sexual
violence in certain settings. However, Sandays express purpose is to explore and ana-
lyze the sexual subculture that encourages fraternity gang rape (1990: 8) while mine is to
identify conditions under which mass sexual violence occurs, or does not occur, in ethno-
national conflicts.
174 chapter eight
This paper begins with the reports of mass rape in Bosnia in the early
stages of the war there, and the international response to those reports.
It then moves to an examination of sexual violence in India, both the
reported instances of mass rape in Punjab in 1947 and the lack of such
mass rape in other communal violence in the 1980s and 1990s, using this
South Asian material as a lens with which to re-examine events in Bosnia.
The purpose is ultimately to understand not only the circumstances under
which mass rape takes place, but also those in which sexual violence
against women is largely avoided even during mass violence between
different ethno-national-religious groups.
The comparison between the Balkans and South Asia may be partic-
ularly apt because in both settings, religion provides the greatest deter-
mining criterion in differentiating between nations (Serbs [Orthodox
Christians], Croats [Roman Catholics] and Bonjaci [Muslims]) in the
first case and communities (Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Parsis, etc.) in the
second (see also van der Veer [1994]).6 This means that in South Asia, as
in Bosnia, perpetrators and victims of mass violence often speak the same
dialects of the same languages and frequently were neighbors, or at least
acquaintances, before their communities were disrupted.7
6Religion in both cases is treated in this paper only in terms of its ethno-nationalist
linkages, not in terms of religiosity (philosophy, values, world view, etc.). Considering
the frequency with which members of various religious communities in South Asia and
Europe have used the simple fact of communal difference as justifying mutual slaughter,
I find little point in pursuing doctrinal justifications for their doing so. I am in any event
deeply suspicious of attempts to link religiosity with particular forms of deplored social
action, since such putative links are a staple of Orientalist and other deprecatory political
rhetorics, especially in the Balkans (Baki-Hayden 1995). In regard to violence, the fact that
supposedly pacifistic Buddhists, for example, engage in mass slaughter may be a matter
of a tradition betrayed (to cite Stanley Tambiah [1992]), but then again, there are too
many such traitors to too many supposed traditions of tolerance to really take seriously
the invocation of such traditions. In regard to Bosnia specifically, Islamicist Michael Sells
(1996) has tried to link violence against Muslims with a supposed Christoslavism that
posits Orthodox Serbs and Catholic Croats as united in attempting genocide against Mus-
lims. This characterization is contrary to the history of the region in this century, since
from 194145 Croats and Muslims were united in attempting genocide of Serbs, and Serbs
and Croats were doing to each other in 1991 what both then did to Muslims in 1992. As I
have argued elsewhere (Hayden 1999), the Bosnian Muslims could have been Bogomils,
Baptists, Buddhists or worshippers of Baal and they would have received the treatment
that they did in 1992 from the Croats and Serbs, on structural principles of identity. Of
course, Serbs and Croats, echoing much Euro-American political commentary, themselves
see Muslims as inherently violent, returning to the point about deprecatory political
rhetorics.
7A reviewer of this paper has noted that in South Asia, Pakistan opted for a religious
definition of the nation but that Indias self-definition is that of a secular state. While this
comment is certainly accurate in regard to the Nehruvian definition of India (Nehru 1946),
sexual violence in liminalized states 175
Bosnia 199295: Rape as a War Crime
In the early to mid-1990s, the war in Bosnia was notorious. It contributed
the term ethnic cleansing to the worlds vocabulary, and also led to an
emphasis on rape as a war crime. An enormous literature on wartime rape
appeared both within the former Yugoslavia and outside of it.8 Within
anthropology the main contributions have been by Bette Denich (1995)
and more recently by John Borneman (1998).
While there is no question that many women (and not a few men; see
arkov 1997, Borneman 1998)9 were raped during the Yugoslav conflicts,
the literature analyzing these events has been widely divergent. The lit-
erature in the United States seems to have been dominated by feminist
writers who knew nothing at all about the former Yugoslavia until it had
become the former Yugoslavia, which is probably not surprising; how-
ever, those who were familiar with the region were frozen out.10 This
marginalization of American experts on the region may have been due to
their reflection of discourses in Yugoslavia which ran counter to dominant
trends in the U.S. Within the former Yugoslavia, long established femi-
nists tended to maintain gender as central to their analyses, seeing rape
Indias secular identity has been challenged by the rise of the Hindu nationalist BJP party,
so that there are competing definitions of the Indian nation, some of which are religious
(see Varshney 1993, Ludden 1996, Khilnani 1997). The same reviewer states that Hindus
and Muslims continue to live together in India in the face of memories of rape across
communities. But it is important to note that in the places in Punjab where rape was most
common, Hindus and Muslims no longer live together: Hindus no longer live in (Pakistani)
West Punjab, nor Muslims in (Indian) east Punjab (see Wallace 1996: 765 table 1).
8This literature is too huge to cite comprehensively. Well known components are
Amnesty International (1993), Stiglmayer (1994), Allen (1996) and a very widely circulated
article by Catherine MacKinnon in Ms. (MacKinnon 1993). Critiques of this literature
appear in arkov 1997, Kesi 1994 and Kora 1996.
9This paper concentrates on sexual violence against women, although some such vio-
lence against men is also discussed. The primary focus on violence against women is in
part a reflection of the similar orientation of most of the literature, although Borneman
(1997) and arkov (1997 and n.d.) have recently brought sexual violence against males
into the discussion. However, as discussed below in the context of India, there seems to
be a difference in meaning and effect of sexual violence targeted against men as opposed
to that against women: where such violence against a man shames him personally, sexual
violence against women in the context of ethno-national conflicts shames the group to
which she belongs.
10Probably the worst example of this phenomenon was the action of a very prestigious
law review which asked a scholar with three decades of research experience in Yugoslavia,
author of several classic studies of sex and power in the Balkans, to write about rape in
Bosnia, but then disinvited her in favor of Catherine MacKinnon, whose knowledge of the
Balkans is minimal.
176 chapter eight
as a common weapon of war, directed mainly against women. This global
feminist view (Helms n.d. 1) was contrasted with a genocidal rape view
(Helms n.d. 1) that saw the rapes of Muslim women in Bosnia as a unique
historical phenomenon, rape warfare (Allen 1996) conducted by Serbs
against Muslim and Croat women. In the first view, rape is a weapon of
war, used against women; in the second, rape is a form not only of war,
but of genocide (MacKinnon 1993, 1994).
The genocidal rape view was promoted by partisans of the several
nationalist causes, although always in ways in which only women of their
own nation had been so treated. As Dubravka arkov (1997 and n.d. 1)
has shown, the representation of rape and of rape victims varies with the
different nationalist governments and the information media they con-
trol, which is not surprising; the use of reports of sexual violence, whether
true or not, is a common propaganda technique. Interestingly, the invo-
cation of genocide seems to have caused a number of western, particu-
larly American, writers to decenter gender from their analyses, focusing
on rape as a crime against a nation rather than a gender crime.11 Some of
the most widely publicized American feminist writers thereby put them-
selves into what should have been the bizarre position of criticizing long
established feminists in the former Yugoslavia, becoming themselves sup-
porters of particular nationalist causes at the expense of general feminist
ones (see Korac 1996, Helms n.d.). The case of the University of Michigans
Catherine MacKinnon is best known in this regard (see Kesic 1994).
Neither of these approaches, global feminist and genocidal rape,
gives much real consideration to the circumstances under which mass
rape has taken place,12 and none at all to those instances where mass
rape might have been expected but did not occur. Furthermore, both
11At nearly the extreme of political incorrectness, it is possible to argue that the invoca-
tion of genocide in regard to Bosnia obscures, perhaps intentionally, the nature of events
there, which are in many ways not distinguishable from events elsewhere (e.g. Punjab
1947) that have been classed as population transfers (and thus normal) as opposed to
genocide (thus pathological). The major difference seems to be that in cases classed as
population transfers, the partition was generally agreed to beforehand, while in those
classed as genocide or ethnic cleansing it was not agreed to (see Hayden 1996). Events
on the ground, however, are hard to differentiate in these cases.
12MacKinnon did make a highly publicized assertion that Serbs raped because of wide-
spread pornography in Serbia, an assertion that will seem strange to those who passed by
Frankfurt airport sex shops on the way to Belgrade. By that standard, Germany and Hol-
land should have been the rape capitals of Europe. MacKinnon also asserted that Serbs
filmed their victims, a charge for which no proof has been offered other than MacKinnons
own assertion (arkov n.d.).
sexual violence in liminalized states 177
schools tend to see rape in Bosnia as the result of an intentional cam-
paign directed by Bosnian Serb authorities. While there are reports of
some direct invitations to soldiers to rape prisoners on the part of local
commanders,13 however, it is improbable that any general authority actu-
ally ordered, or directed, rape. As Susan Brownmiller has noted (1975: 87),
while earlier incidents of mass rape during warfare (e.g., Bengali women
by Pakistani soldiers in Bangladesh in 1971) were frequently said to have
been ordered, no proof of such orders was presented (see also Helms
n.d. 2). In regard to Bosnia, even the indictment before the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) of Radovan Karadi
for responsibility for rapes committed by Bosnian Serb forces rests pri-
marily on the concept of command responsibility, that is, responsibility
for the criminal actions of a subordinate when he knew or had reason to
know that the subordinate was about to commit such acts or had done so
and the superior failed to take the necessary and responsible measures to
prevent such acts or to punish the perpetrators thereof.14
Without doubting the legal sufficiency of the command authority con-
cept as a matter of international law,15 it is not sufficient as a matter of
social science, or at least not to that part of social science that is con-
cerned with determining the general characteristics of human behavior,
particularly because there have been other cases of such widespread rape
that cannot be linked to a command structure that extends beyond the
local level. In other words, the question becomes whether there are kinds
of conflicts in which mass rape is likely to occur regardless of whether
13The ICTY registered its first conviction for rape as both a violation of international
humanitarian law and as torture against one Hazim Deli (ironically enough, a Muslim
convicted of raping Serb women), but as a direct participant in these acts, not as a mat-
ter of command responsibility (Prosecutor versus Zejnil Delali and others, IT-96-21-T
[19 November 1998]). Similarly, conviction by the Rwanda Tribunal of Jean-Paul Akayesu
for aiding and abetting rape involved cases in which he was directly in charge of those
committing the act, not those in which command responsibility would have had to be
attributed to him by virtue of his position.
14ICTY, Prosecutor v. Radovan Karadi and Ratko Mladi (Case nos. IT-95-5-R61 and
IT-95-18-R61), Review of the Indictments Pursuant to Rule 61 of the Rules of Procedure
and Evidence, 11 July 1996 (emphasis added).
15Which is not to say that the concept cannot or even should not be doubted. Negative
criminality, the basis of command responsibility, was accepted by the Tokyo tribunal
over the dissents of the Indian judge, Radhabinod Pal, but this trial was clearly flawed, so
much so that the dissenting opinion was never published officially (see Minear 1971). The
problem with the concept of command responsibility is that it imposes liability regard-
less of whether the commander actually knew of the crimes of subordinates. Nevertheless,
it has been adopted by the ICTY in the Delali case, the opinion of which discusses the
matter extensively.
178 chapter eight
general orders are issued to commit it. In order to explore this problem
it is necessary to consider cases where mass rape has not occurred even
though, on other occasions in the same part of the world and involving
what are viewed locally as the same communities, it has. For this explora-
tion we turn to India.
India
Punjab, 1947: Mass Violence with Mass Rape
Those who are inclined to think of rape in Bosnia during the 199295
war as unprecedented would do well to look at recent work on violence
against women during the partition of Punjab between Pakistan and India
in 1947 (Das 1995 and 1996; see also Butalia 1993, Menon and Bhasin 1993
and 1998). This partition was very similar in structure to that of Bosnia in
1992, involving as it did three intermingled communities (Hindus, Mus-
lims and Sikhs) in proportions such that half of the population rejected
the idea of joining Pakistan and the other half rejected the idea of join-
ing India.16 One important difference between Bosnia in 1992 and Punjab
in 1947 was that the international community accepted the partition of
Punjab, so that a border was drawn and agreed to by both parties before
conflict began; and in fact that border has not been contested since 1947
even though India and Pakistan have fought three wars since then.17 In
contrast, the internal borders partitioning Bosnia were initially drawn
militarily after the international community tried to prevent partition by
recognizing a Bosnian state that was rejected by a large percentage of its
putative citizens, under a government without constitutional legitimacy
and which never controlled more than about a third of the territory of the
supposed state (see Hayden 1993 and 1998). The de jure internal borders
between the two entities in Bosnia were drawn at Dayton, and there is very
little sign that Bosnia will become a single state in fact (Hayden 1998a).
Even though the border between India and Pakistan was drawn in
advance of the independence from the British Empire that created the
two states, and even though that border was never contested, the process
16The similarities between events in Punjab in 1947 and those in Bosnia in 1992 are
explained in greater detail in Hayden (1996).
17India and Pakistan have fought over Kashmir, where no border was drawn, but not over
the border in the Punjab, or between Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan) and India.
sexual violence in liminalized states 179
of partition involved massive violence and an exchange of populations
that reduced the Hindu population of the new Pakistan from 17.5% (1941)
to 1.5% (1961), and virtually eliminated Muslims from the part of Punjab
that remained in India. The violence on all sides was massive, with esti-
mates of about 8 million people having crossed the new borders, aban-
doning their homes for new homelands where most had never been,
with fatalities of about a half million people all in six months.
During these events,
thousands of women on both sides of the newly formed borders (estimates
range from 25,000 to 29,000 Hindu and Sikh women and 12,000 to 15,000
Muslim women) were abducted, raped, forced to convert, forced into mar-
riage.... Untold numbers of women, particularly in Sikh families, were killed
(martyred is the term that is used) by their kinsmen in order to protect
them from being converted, perhaps equal numbers of them killed them-
selves. The violence women experienced took particular forms: there were
accounts of innumerable rapes, of women being stripped naked and paraded
down streets, of their breasts being cut off, of their bodies being carved with
religious symbols of the other community. (Butalia 1993: WS-14)
Both states, India and Pakistan, made recovery of abducted women
a matter of national honor, insisting that even women who had mar-
ried members of the other community and borne children by them be
returned from their homes to their new homelands where, in many
cases, their families did not want to receive them (see Das 1995).
While there is some indication that much of the violence in Punjab
was planned by local leaders, no one has suggested that the widespread
patterns of ethnic conflict were ordered by central authorities in either
India or Pakistan. It is also unlikely that the mass rapes and other sexual
violence directed against women were ordered by the governments of
India and Pakistan.
This is not to say, however, that the sexual violence directed against
women in Punjab in 1947 was somehow the result of passions unleashed
in the fury of partition. Instead, I would argue that the sexual violence
was indeed strategic, even if it was not ordered by any central authority.
As Veena Das and her colleagues have shown, drawing on the work of
Charles Tilly (1986) on collective action, mob violence is highly patterned,
and there is no contradiction between the fact that, on the one hand, mob
violence may be highly organized and crowds provided with such instru-
ments as voters lists or combustible powders, and on the other that crowds
draw upon repositories of unconscious memories (Das 1990a: 28).
180 chapter eight
Delhi 1985 & Hyderabad 1990: Mass Violence without Rape
The sexual violence of the partition of Punjab may be compared to other
instances of communal violence in which sexual violence against women
was strikingly absent. Veena Das recounts the experiences related to her
of survivors of Hindu attacks on a Sikh neighborhood in Delhi in 1985,
following the murder of Indira Gandhi by her Sikh bodyguards. In the
neighborhood that she studied,
there were eighty deaths among the 150 households in this and the adjoin-
ing block. The majority of the dead were adult men, though one woman
was burnt with her husband because she refused to leave him.... All the
men killed were burnt alive in the presence of their wives. Many men had
managed to escape, either by donning the clothes of women or by hiding in
neighborhood houses (Das 1990b: 362).
That only men were targeted is shown by the report of a girl who, rec-
ognizing some of the people in the crowd besieging her house, begged
them to spare her baby brother, who was hiding in the house: when her
calls were heard, one of the men said Why did you not say so earlier? Do
you think we have come here to kill children? (Das 1990b: 348, emphasis
in original). Similarly, a woman whose three small sons were burnt alive
with their father when he refused to come out of the house blamed her
husband for the deaths: referring to her husband and her eldest son, she
said Why did they not open the door and come out and give themselves
up to the crowd? The crowd was not out to kill young children (Das
1990b: 350).
As Das shows, the targeting of the men was not only to eliminate them
physically, but rather to humiliate the men of the entire Sikh community,
who could not defend themselves, or their homes, unless they ran and hid
(often leaving behind close kinsmen) or shamed themselves by dressing
as women, or by having their distinctive beards and long hair cut, under-
stood as a public humiliation and emasculation of Sikh men (Das 1990b:
386). The sparing of women even reinforces this image of impotency: one
man explained that as he and his wife began to run away from a crowd,
they were attacked by people using lathis (long staffs). When the wife
tried to come between her husband and the crowd
one of them said to her courteously, sister, please move away. When I real-
ized they were calling her sister, I knew that no harm would come to her. So
I left her and ran. They intended no harm to women. Since then I have sent
my wife to get rations or to gather news. (Das 1990b: 387).
sexual violence in liminalized states 181
In a cultural context in which men are the public figures, this man was
reduced to depending upon his wife for contacts with the outside world.
To be sure, this targeting of men specifically is itself a form of gendered
violence. In so far as it shames men sexually it is also sexual violence
under the Rwanda Tribunals Akayesu definition, since the Tribunal said
that such violence may include acts which do not involve...physical
contact, such as forcing a woman to do gymnastics, naked, before a group
of men.18 Sikh men in Delhi who were humiliated in this way wanted to
move from the neighborhoods in which they had been living (Das 1990b:
386387), which might indicate that sexual violence against men has a
similar result as that against women, inducing them to abandon what had
been their homes. Yet Das (1990b: 386) also notes that Sikh women victims
felt that they could still continue to live in Delhi, and in fact, most vic-
tims did remain there. As noted by one reviewer, there may be nuances
of what living together means, so that if Sikh neighborhoods became
more isolated from Hindu ones, gendered violence against men may have
provoked increased separation. On the other hand, the Punjab violence of
1947, like that in Bosnia in 199293, was premised on not only complete
separation but creation of a state border between the newly (and forcibly)
homogenized territories of each group; this is partition, discussed in the
next section.
What is striking from the accounts of violence against Sikhs in 1984 is
the lack of sexual violence against women, read against the widespread
sexual violence that occurred during partition (it should be noted, for
those who are not South Asianists, that Sikhs are Punjabis). Why was it
that attacking Hindus intended no harm to women? It might be thought
that this avoidance of rape could be due to an inherent respect of Hindus
for Sikhs, who were, after all, allies in the Punjab against Muslims. But this
explanation fails to account for the other incidence of patterned avoid-
ance of sexual violence during communal riots in India, that between Hin-
dus and Muslims in Hyderabad in 1990 (Kakar 1995).
In the south Indian city of Hyderabad studied by Sudhir Kakar, Hindus
and Muslims lived in separate neighborhoods but in close contact, inter-
acting daily. The interaction did not include sexual relations: both Hin-
dus and Muslims disapproved of intercommunal dating, to say nothing
of marriage, although Muslims were more vehement in their disapproval
than Hindus. (Of course, since intermarriage between Hindu castes is
18Akayesu, Para. 7.7.
182 chapter eight
generally still uncommon in India, to say nothing of between members of
different religious communities, this aversion is hardly surprising). Mem-
bers of both groups also regarded it as impermissible to rape a woman of
the other community, even during times of riot, or to kill women of the
other community, even in times of riot (Kakar 1995: 172 and 181).19
Yet these attitudes may not explain the general avoidance of sexual vio-
lence in riots, particularly when we recall the widespread sexual violence
in the context of partition in 1947. A much more telling reason is stated
by Kakar, drawing an explicit contrast with Bosnia (but not, interestingly
enough, with the partition of Punjab):
In Hyderabad, even now, rape is not used as a vehicle for the contempt, rage,
or hatred that one community feels for the other as it is, for example, in Bos-
nia.... Unlike in the Bosnian conflict, after a riot the Hindus and Muslims
still have to live together and carry out a minimal social and considerable
economic interaction in their day-to-day lives. As [Hindu leader] Mangal
Singh remarked A few days after the riot is over, whatever the bitterness in
our hearts and however cold our voices are initially, [Muslim leader] Akbar
pelwan still has to call me and say Mangal bhai [brother], what do we do
about that disputed land in Begumpet? And I still have to answer, Lets get
together on that one, Akbar bhai, and solve the problem peacefully. Rape
makes such interactions impossible and turns Hindu-Muslim animosity into
implacable hatred. (Kakar 1995: 110).
What is striking here is the way in which the organizers of the riots con-
tinue to communicate with each other, and rule some forms of actions
unacceptable. Certainly such continuing contacts were seen in Bosnia.
But the sheer rationality of the argument that rape makes continued
coexistence impossible should alert us to the conditions that make mass
sexual violence acceptable. For what Bosnia in 1992 and Punjab in 1947
share is partition, not only of territory but of population. The whole point
of the violence is to ensure that there will be no continuation of coex-
istence, and rape seems a powerful weapon, even more powerful than
murder, to bring about that end.
19This is not necessarily a moral issue, however, or at least not one based on consider-
ations of womens rights. Kakar notes that at least some Muslims regard rape of a Hindu
woman as a sin because she is haram, forbidden like the eating of pork or the meat of an
animal not slaughtered in the ritual way. Rape of a Muslim woman, on the other hand, is
not a sin because she is halal (Kakar 1995: 175).
sexual violence in liminalized states 183
Some Common Features: Partition and the Importance of Womens Honor
to Men
The most obvious commonality between Bosnia in 1992 and Punjab in
1947 is partition, meaning a situation in which territory previously con-
sidered to be part of a single state is divided into two or more new states.
While partition can be accomplished peacefully if there are not compet-
ing ethno-national claims on the territory (e.g. the partition of the former
Czechoslovakia), the matter is prone to violence when groups that view
themselves as distinct from each other stake competing claims to the con-
trol over territory. In such cases, demands for self-determination of the
group amount to a charter for what is now known as ethnic cleansing
(Hayden 1996a). Violence here is aimed at driving the other community
from land claimed by the victimizers. Thus rape was used in both cases,
Punjab 1947 and Bosnia 199293 because, as Kakar says, sexual violence
does turn animosity into hatred. But two further points are in order.
The first is that the hatred to be engendered is that of the victims for the
victimizers. Rapists dont rape in this situation because they hate victims
so much as to make the victims hate them, to not want to return.20 Note
that in the case of Punjab, the borders were drawn before the violence
began, but the violence served to ensure that members of the minority
community thought it in their own best interest to leave. In this connec-
tion, rape is rational, as may be other forms of targeted violence, such
as sniping. As one Serb sniper in Sarajevo told an interviewer This isnt
a matter of hatred, at least not on his part.21 A similar sentiment was
expressed by a Sarajevo sniper from the other side, who seemed only to
hate himself:
If peace arrived tomorrow, know what Id do? Id go and seek out people I
shot at. Id recognize them with no problem. Id introduce myself to them.
Seriously. Id say, I shot at you, here I am, punish me. That would save me,
even if they killed me (Vukovi 1993: 31).
On the other hand, hatred was the emotion named explicitly by a Sarajevo
Muslim woman victim of sexual violence (Vukovi 1993: 134):
20One reviewer has suggested that engendering such hatred is counterproductive
because it induces a quest for revenge, which means a continuing relationship of hostility.
But my point remains: hatred precludes coexistence, so in so far as the goal is to drive
victims away and ensure that they will not return, at least as long as the victimizers control
the territory, inducing hatred works.
21In reporting this comment I violate a fieldwork rule: its not in my notes, but was
engraved in my memory.
184 chapter eight
Im a Muslim woman, thirty-five years old. My second, my newborn son, I
named him Jihad, so that he wouldnt forget his mothers oath revenge.
When I first nursed him I said, If you forget, let this milk be cursed. So help
me God....the Serbs taught me hatred.
Yet to point out the instrumental rationality of the act still does not
explain why it is this act that is so effective in dividing communities that
have lived together in relative stability even if punctuated by periods of
extreme brutality. In this regard, the key to explanation may lie in the
same considerations that make rape unacceptable in situations such as
the riots in Delhi in 1985 or Hyderabad in 1990, when rape was not com-
mitted. Rape is unacceptable when the lesson is only to display domi-
nance over people with whom the group asserting dominance expects to
keep on living. When the lesson is to show that life together is finished,
however, rape is an extremely effective tool for conveying the message.
Mass rape, then, is also violence that is symbolic; but the key to under-
standing the social success of the symbolism lies in the basic meaning of
rape as a communicative act. As Das has noted (1995: 56), The womans
body...became a sign through which men communicated with each
other. This communication is not only expressed through the violation
of the womans body, but also through conscious avoidance of such viola-
tion. In an expression of structural logic well known to anthropologists,
the message of rape/rape avoidance is an inversion, expressing, as Levi-
Strauss might put it, the same message but in different contexts.
Of course, the concept of message here seems problematical. After all,
if rape and rape avoidance are both purposeful, the messages conveyed
seem themselves inverted: no further common life/dominance but con-
tinued coexistence. Yet these inverted messages are only possible if there
is a message common to both, which is that the honor of the group (in
which males are the normative actors) is determined by the honor of its
women and by the masculinity of its men. It is only in this context that
rape/non-rape can be expressive acts in the context of ethno-national or
communal violence, conveying the messages to the victims group of sub-
ordinated coexistence, or of expulsion.
Rape and Territoriality: Sexual Violence in Liminalized States
Using Punjab data, Menon and Bhasin (1998: 43) have argued that sexual
mutilation of women treated womens bodies as territory to be con-
quered and engraved the division of India into India and Pakistan on
sexual violence in liminalized states 185
the women of both religious communities in a way that they became the
respective countries (emphasis in original). Similarly, the use of Bosnian
data to posit a connection between rape and exclusive territoriality has
been posited recently by John Borneman (1998) and Dubravka arkov
(1997, n.d.), independently of each other and in rather different ways.
In a very rich analysis of materials from government-controlled mass
media in Serbia and Croatia, arkov has found that specific textual strat-
egies were used to exclude certain sexually violated bodies (male and
female) from territories where they do not belong, a sexual geography of
ethnicity (arkov n.d.: 211). Since the national narratives are about land,
the (ethnic) nation and the connection between the two, bodies excluded
from these narratives are also excluded conceptually from the national
territory. In these accounts raped and castrated Muslim men and raped
Muslim women are excluded from the territory of Croatia and raped Mus-
lim women from the territory of Serbia. At the same time, Serb news-
papers reported on Serb women raped by Muslims, but only when the
women thereby became pregnant.
To arkov, the rhetorical strategy of the Croatian accounts is aimed
at distinguishing rapists (Serbs) and their victims (Muslims) as inferiors,
primitive, non-European, thus non-Croatian, and their violent interaction
as foreign to Croatia itself. Raped Croat women are almost never men-
tioned in the Croatian accounts, since to do so would be to acknowledge
their similarity with Muslim victims and also to acknowledge that the
body of Croatia itself was rendered impure. Further, Croatian accounts
rarely mention rapes within Croatia or by Croatian forces, thus preserving
the purity of the territory and its rulers.
Serbian accounts, on the other hand, are driven by a need to establish
Serbs as victims, in part as a reaction to the widespread international con-
demnation of Serbia as an aggressor. Whereas Croatian accounts avoid
mention of Croat victims of rape, Serb accounts focus on Serb women
victims. Their violation is also outside of Serbia itself, a fact that links the
territory of the violated bodies with that of the violated nation: where the
nations state is under attack, the bodies of its women are unprotected
and, worse, appropriated by the enemy. The focus on Serb women who
have been impregnated by rape serves to make this point, while at the
same time showing that the real victim is the Serb men: the suffering of
Serb women so emphatically depicted served to create empathy with
the central figure through which nationhood is constructed in Serbian
media the Serb man. For he is the one who is deprived of generations
of brave soldiers and other descendants (arkov n.d.: 250).
186 chapter eight
arkov concludes that womens bodies are not symbolic markers of
ethnic or national identity (as per, for example, Menari 1994, Mostov
1995) but that violated bodies are constructed as the ethnic territories
themselves, with rape as the marker that symbolically defines the female
body as itself territory while also excluding the now polluted body from
geographical territory in which it is no longer welcome.
Borneman for his part has argued that ethnic cleansing is a concep-
tual and practical extension of two institutionalized modes of perception
and behavior territorial sovereignty and heterosexuality and that
European heterosexuality...in tandem with territorial sovereignty gen-
erated the categories and inter-national forms that both motivated and
made sense of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, including rape as its most vio-
lent expression (Borneman 1998: 274275). In this analytical framework,
heterosexuality is a political institution, a program for the construc-
tion and institutionalization of a particular kind of gendered and sexed
human...more a habitus (institutions, processes, practices) than an ide-
ology (heterosexism) or a sexual preference (Borneman 1998: 274275).
Borneman then marshals Anglo-American anthropological analyses from
different European sites to posit a (common?) European phallic complex
of male fears of the desire for [sexual] penetration, of sexual inadequacy,
of anarchic sexual desire that are linked together and metaphorically
extended onto a state apparatus that functions within and as a paradigm
for the complex (Borneman 1998: 286). He links territory to heterosexu-
ality through the concept of nation, a distinct people, with an integ-
rity that manifests itself only at the moment of its threatened violation
(1998: 294). Thus, a pronatal policy for oneself often entails a genocidal
policy for the other (1998: 286), and rape, both of females and of males,
is the violent manifestation of the phallic complex.
Elements of Bornemans formula have been explicated in detail by
others, such as in Katherine Verderys (1996) work on the gendering of
nationalism in eastern Europe, or my own linkage of self-determination
of peoples with ethnic cleansing of territories in Yugoslavia (Hayden
1996a). Bornemans broader, encompassing linkage of gender hetero-
sexuality territory violence ethnic cleansing rape is thus impres-
sive, but unsatisfying on several counts. First, it begs the question of the
circumstances under which the linkage of territoriality and nation, thus
in his schema with heterosexuality, actually does produce mass rape. The
qualified assertion that a pronatal policy for oneself often entails a geno-
cidal policy for the other does not specify when this might occur. Thus
Hungary, for example, has seen a strong pronatalist push from the post-
sexual violence in liminalized states 187
socialist governments (Gal 1994) but no sign of genocide; and Romanias
extreme experience with pronatalism, while doing violence to almost all
women (Kligman 1992), did not produce mass rapes of ethnic Hungarian
women.
The answer, I believe, can be found in the circumstances of partition,
which involves creating new borders through what had been an undivided
land.22 I say create new borders rather than draw new borders because
I want to stress the sheer physicality of the event, which usually includes
the erection of checkpoints and other physical barriers. This is true even
when the physical barriers are erected along what had until then been
an administrative boundary between components of the same state, thus
creating an international frontier. Physically, this process means creating
new borders, not simply transforming old ones, which is why the idea that
recognizing the Yugoslav republics as states did not mean changing bor-
ders was simply sophistry. At the same time, these new physical borders
(gates, barbed wire) on land are accompanied by new social boundaries in
which pre-existing social divisions attain a new meaning. Thus just as par-
tition transforms the demarcations of territory, social boundaries within
the population of that territory are also transformed.
Partition, then, is not only a liminal state, but a time when the state
itself is liminal, and the questions of whose state it is, and how the popula-
tion will be defined, are open. Here we have the circumstances in which
the messages of subordinated coexistence or expulsion will be sent. After
these issues are settled, mass rape is no longer likely, because either
22A reviewer has pointed out that there may be a difference between the partition of
Punjab in 1947 and that of Bengal the same year, since little sexual violence was reported
from Bengal. I am not sure, however, whether this difference reflects less sexual violence in
Bengal or just less reporting of it. Certainly, the Direct Action Day in Bengal of 16 August
1946 and its aftermath produced widespread Muslim assaults against Hindu women (Kho-
sla 1989: 76). At the time of partition, a year later, Hindu rhetoric stressed sexual assaults
on Hindu women by Muslims (see, e.g., Chatterji 1994: 242, 243). Whether such attacks
actually took place is another question. When it is recalled, however, that the first serious
studies of sexual violence in 1947 Punjab were written only in 1993 (Butalia 1993, Menon
and Bhasin 1993), it is possible that the stories have simply not been told. In this regard,
it is also interesting that Taslima Nasrins journalistic novel Shame (1994) focusing on sys-
tematic efforts by Bangladeshi Muslims to drive out Hindus in the 1980s, has sexual vio-
lence against both women and men as a central theme. Nasrin presents many accounts of
sexual violence in this novel that she affirms are drawn from actual events, but I am not
able to check her sources, most of which are in Bengali.
188 chapter eight
coexistence will have been reconstituted or the newly consolidated groups
will have separated.23
As final revisions were being made to this article, reports emerged of
mass sexual violence in Kosovo (see, e.g., Fitamant 1999; New York Times
1 May 1999: A6 and 22 June 1999: A1; Los Angeles Times 27 May 1999
[World Wide Web edition]). While the reports themselves were sketchy
(all sources report strong hesitation by victims to report what they and
their families regarded as shameful), sexual violence in the context of the
expulsion of the majority of the ethnic Albanian population of Kosovo
would be in keeping with the argument of this paper, particularly as such
violence was not reported before that campaign of expulsion began. It is
clear that the mass expulsion of ethnic Albanians did not start until after
NATO attacks on Serbia were begun (see, e.g., U.S. Department of State
1999: 6), and sexual violence is also only reported after that time.
Negative Evidence: Rape Avoidance in Stable States
Support for the proposition that mass sexual violence occurs when ethno-
national conflicts make the state unstable might be sought in cases in
which members of antagonistic groups, subjects of mass sexual violence
in regions where partition renders the state itself liminal continue to
coexist in parts of the former state in which control over the territory is
not contested. Thus in India in 1947, some Muslims from western Punjab
fled east to Delhi rather than west to Pakistan (Wallace 1996: 764), feeling
(largely correctly) that they could indeed continue to live with Hindus
even though they could not stay in Punjab. Similarly, in the former Yugo-
slavia, the Sandak region of Serbia and Montenegro bordering Bosnia
has a large population of Slavic Muslims, who now call themselves Bos-
niaks. In 199293, while mass sexual violence was taking place very close
by in Bosnia, these Bosniaks faced discrimination and harassment, and
some were forced to leave their homes (see, e.g. Human Rights Watch/
Helsinki 1994; Humanitarian Law Center 1995). Yet it is striking that even
when reports of violence by Serbs against Muslims are reported, there are
23Which is not to say that new social partitions may not produce new campaigns of
mass rape. Taslima Nasrins novel Shame (1994) is again interesting, since it is a fictional
account of the progressive persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh after independence.
Where in 1971 (West) Pakistanis were seen to be mass-raping Bengali women (see Brown-
miller 1975), by the 1980s Muslim Bengalis in Bangladesh were raping Hindu Bengalis in
an apparent effort to convince the latter to emigrate.
sexual violence in liminalized states 189
few if indeed any reports of sexual violence in this region.24 Considering
the attention that international news media were paying to rape at that
time, had mass sexual violence been occurring then in Sandak, it seems
unlikely that it would not have been noted.25
The difference in political stability is important: the statuses of Delhi
as capital of India, or of Sandak as part of Serbia, were not in question,
and neither was control over either territory. Thus in each case the state
was not liminal, and sexual violence was not pronounced. Similarly, once
territories in Bosnia had been successfully ethnically cleansed to consol-
idate control, sexual violence was no longer practiced against the minori-
ties who remained.
The difficulties of studying the absence of a social phenomenon are
pronounced, however. In the case of the avoidance of sexual violence,
this difficulty is increased because of the presumption that the acts in
question are pathological, meaning that normal people would not act this
way. The normative and moral frameworks that lead many observers to
assume that mass assaults had to have been commanded may also lead
to overlooking those instances in which sexual violence was consciously
avoided, on the assumption that non-occurrence is always the norm. Yet
if mass rape and rape avoidance are both forms of expressive action, the
assumption that sexual violence is simply pathological is unwarranted. The
24In addition to Human Rights Watch/Helsinki (1994) and Humanitarian Law Center
(1995), other sources include the periodic reports of the Special Rapporteur of the United
Nations Commission on the Situation of Human Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
Republic of Croatia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Since 1993, these reports
have documented human rights abuses in Sandak, but none of them mentions sexual
violence.
25In a comment on an earlier draft of this article, Eugene Hammel asks whether there
were reports of sexual violence in the course of the ethnic cleansing of areas in Croatia,
in, for example, Slavonija (1992) or the Krajina (1995), and asks whether the fact that in
Croatia all involved were Christians (Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats), and thus perhaps
less socially distant than either to the Muslims of Bosnia, mattered. Certainly very little
sexual violence was reported from these parts of Croatia (although a Serbian dramatic film
on the siege of Vukovar, Vukovar: One Story, did include a rape scene; interestingly, the
victim in this Serb film was a Croat woman). However, opportunity may have been miss-
ing: most accounts of the fighting in Croatia had it preceded by the withdrawal of women
and children from mixed regions to more safe places as tensions rose in 1991, while in the
Krajina in 1995, virtually the entire Serb population fled before the Croatian army, leaving
only elderly people. In contrast, Bosnia seems to have involved the more sudden explosion
of violence in communities that had not separated, perhaps in part because there was no
place for many people, and particularly for Muslims, to go. In so far as religious distance
is concerned, anecdotal evidence that I heard in the former Yugoslavia before as well as
after its collapse indicates that Serb women were raped by Croatian Ustaa in 1942, at the
start of the Croatian campaign against the Serb population.
190 chapter eight
question for social science is: are there conditions under which actions
such as mass rape are likely, because otherwise normal people are likely
to engage in them? To answer this question one must hold in abeyance
normative evaluations because they might skew not only the interpreta-
tion of data collected but also the collection of data themselves: it is easy
to overlook that which one does not wish to see.
Implications
The implications of this analysis are in part contradictory and certainly
are not comforting.
On the one hand, the view of rape as a communicative act reinforces
the appropriateness of treating mass rape as a war crime rather than as
a pattern of supposedly random acts of individual soldiers. At the same
time, prosecuting rape as a war crime might be interpreted as reinforcing
the very message of separation that mass rape sent in the first place. It
is into precisely this trap that otherwise feminist writers such as Cath-
erine MacKinnon have fallen: by viewing rape as genocidal they have in
fact accepted the message that coexistence is not possible, for how could
anyone expect victims of genocide to live communally once again with
perpetrators of that act? Thus labeling rape as genocidal would seem to
acknowledge its effectiveness as a tool for partitioning populations.
The potential conceptual problem caused by recognizing that accept-
ing mass rape as a war crime runs the danger of tacitly accepting the very
premises that make it effective need not trouble us too much, any more
than the closely related proposition that accepting the concept of geno-
cide means tacitly accepting the principles of exclusion that inform its
perpetrators, since genocide must be practiced in the name of a collec-
tivity. However, while prosecuting for genocidal rape may well be justi-
fied for reasons of justice for individual victims, it may serve to reinforce
and reproduce the message of collective ethno-national opposition that
produced the rapes in the first place, thus making reconciliation unlikely.
The showy display of victims as proof of the need for protection of their
co-nationals has been a major tool in the promotion of nationalisms
in post-communist Europe (Verdery 1999) and especially in the former
Yugoslavia, where the sudden rediscovery of mass graves of World War
II victims was used by Serb, Croat and Slovene nationalists to mobilize
support for their separate (and separatist) causes (Denich 1994, Hayden
1995). Verdery (1999: 115) has argued strongly that dead bodies are powerful
sexual violence in liminalized states 191
vehicles for symbolic politics because of their connections to matters of
accountability, personal grief, victimization and suffering; but raped bod-
ies, as arkov shows, are at least as powerful in this regard. Since interna-
tional tribunals must hear evidence and make findings of fact in order to
decide cases, they actually specialize in publicizing stories that are likely
to raise emotions hostile to the perpetrators and to the collective in whose
name they presumably acted. Thus prosecuting rape as a war crime may
undermine the supposed goal of Tribunals such as the ICTY to bring about
reconciliation.
What may be more troublesome, however, is the problem of assign-
ing responsibility for mass rape. If the actual rapists are enacting cultural
scripts that existed before the events concerned, but that became mani-
fested only in the new context of partition, rather than coexistence, it is
not at all probable that they are following orders to rape. Indeed, when
one compares sexual violence in Bosnia in 1992 with that in Punjab in
1947, the parallels are striking, yet few suggest that rape was ordered by
the political leaderships of Pakistan or of India in 1947.26
Terribly ironically, the prosecution of rape as a war crime may deprive
women of agency. After the mass rape in Punjab, Indian law classified
all women who remained in their natal villages instead of transferring to
their new homelands as abductees, whose recovery was necessary for
national honor (Das 1995; cf. Butalia 1993). Veena Das has argued (1995)
that this classification deprived these women, many of whom had actu-
ally been incorporated into new families, of choice in deciding their own
fates.27 It is clear from the accounts collected by Butalia (1993) that the
lives of many of these women had actually been spared because men who
26The concept of command responsibility would seem to offer a way out of this
dilemma, since it punishes failure to stop and to prevent criminal acts by subordinates.
One problem, though, is the perception of the politicization of the process, since the pros-
ecution of political leaders is inevitably a political act. This problem is even more difficult
in the former Yugoslavia, where the international community has de facto accepted the
principle of the ethnic state that makes ethnic cleansing such a logical solution (see
Hayden 1996a) and rape thus such a likely possibility, at least in societies in which the
cultural presumption is that sexual violence against women dishonors their communi-
ties. Further, the idea that war crimes trials punish individuals, rather than collectives,
vanishes under the concept of command responsibility, because the individual is tried for
the actions of others, whether or not he knew of them.
27Das does not make the point, but it is possible that the marriage practices general
in Punjab in 1947 created an atmosphere in which young women were actually precondi-
tioned towards some of the trauma that they faced in being incorporated into new families
after partition. North India marriage practices usually involved village exogamy, and the
isolated position of the North Indian bride is legendary in anthropology.
192 chapter eight
knew them were willing to marry them, and that after months or years the
women themselves would have preferred to remain with their new hus-
bands and families. Tragically for them, the Indian state used the occur-
rence of mass rape to vitiate the choices of such women, thus turning
what would otherwise have been marriage into rape. Thus the rhetoric
of mass rape was used to deny choices to women whose bodies were, in
arkovs terms, still claimed as the territory of the newly constituted state
whose territory they did not wish to enter.
There are indications that at least some women in Bosnia see the inter-
national focus on rape as depriving them of personality and agency.28 One
is the withdrawal by Jane Doe II, one of the nominal plaintiffs, from a
lawsuit against Radovan Karadi that had been mounted by the Yale Law
Clinic and the Center for Constitutional Rights. As circulated on various
internet services in May 1997, the woman bitterly attacked the two organi-
zations bringing the suit for having exploited her suffering and the murder
of her mother for their own benefit; of having ignored the victims and
altered their stories; of having endangered the security of those women
who had talked with them. Interestingly, Jane Doe II supported bring-
ing legal actions against those who committed sexual crimes in Bosnia,
but she found it important that Bosnian women themselves initiated such
actions so that, when we do appear in court, we can ourselves explain to
the world what happened to us.
The other example stems from a conference on Bosnia held in early
1993, in New York, on the topic of The Path Beyond Genocide: Construct-
ing Civil Society in Bosnia Herzegovina and the Former Yugoslavia.
When the topic of rapes was raised, a Bosnian Muslim woman participant,
who had otherwise been silent at the conference, said that as a Bosnian
woman, she felt that the international emphasis on rape was inappropri-
ate, because all Bosnian women were victims: they lost their homes, their
sons, their husbands, their jobs, their lives, and whether they had been
sexually assaulted or not was not really the most important problem. Her
interjection was met with silence. Who was she, after all, to pronounce
on such issues?
28Apart from the apocryphal fax to a womens organization in Zagreb by a major news
organization in 1993: Is there anyone there who has been raped and speaks English and
can give an interview?
sexual violence in liminalized states 193
It is this deprival of agency that returns us to the interplay between the
concept of consent and the presumption of violence that now dominates
thinking on rape, particularly in the context of mass rape in an ethnic or
nationalist conflict. Sexual assault is violent, and mass rape is group vio-
lence, but classifying it as genocide accepts the premises of the rapists
themselves, and thus turns consensual sex, even marriage into rape. There
may well be theoretical justifications for doing so, but they lead to the
determination that women themselves lack the capacity to make crucial
decisions, because they remain the real property (territory) of the group
to which they have been classified.
There is a fascinating congruence in this regard between the opinions
of social workers in Punjab in 1947 and those of human rights investiga-
tors in Rwanda in 1996. In 1947, social workers in Punjab asserted that the
resistance of some abducted women to recovery to their natal families
was based on false consciousness, and that the social workers were the
ones who knew the best interests of these women. Das (1995: 72) quotes
one social worker as follows:
Since these women are married and settled here and have adjusted them-
selves to the new environment and to their new relatives...[and] are refus-
ing to go back...is it desirable that we should force them to go back?....
May I ask, are they really happy? Is the reconciliation true? Can there be a
permanent reconciliation in such cases? Is it not out of helplessness, there
being no alternative, that the woman consents to being forced to enter into
that sort of alliance with a person who is no more than the person who is a
murderer of her very husband, her very father, or her very brother?
Das (1995: 73) finds this position to be an alliance, between the state and
social work as a profession, which silences the voices of victims...by an
abstract concern with justice, the punishment of the guilty, and protec-
tion of the honor of the nation. Compare the social worker quoted by Das
with the view of Human Rights Watch/Africa on what it calls individual
sex slavery: forced marriage (Nowrojee 1996: 5662). Here, as in Punjab,
one reads of cases in which men save individual women from mass rape
and often from death, although in the cases reported by Nowrojee some of
the men were brutal, while others were not. The rhetoric used by Human
Rights Watch is almost identical to that of the political parties in India
and Pakistan in 1947 which ignored the actual position of women and
even their desires in order to satisfy national honor (Das 1995, Menon
and Bhasin 1993, Butalia 1993). All cases were classed as abduction and
rape, not real marriage.
194 chapter eight
A number of women have continued to live with the militiamen who
abducted, raped and held them during the genocide. Unfortunately, many
rape survivors who now lack family, skills and resources consider such
arrangements their best hope for economic and physical security. (Nowrojee
1996: 61, emphasis added)
One is not sure here what is most unfortunate, that the women in ques-
tion lack family, skills and resources or that they consider that their best
hope lies with staying with the men who protected them during the mas-
sacres. This assessment might be compared with the marital strategizing
of Hutu women refugees from an earlier genocide in Rwanda, in Tanzania
in the 1980s (Malkki 1995: 175183). While it is clear that these women,
too, were often deprived of family, skills and resources, they did in fact
consider marriage as a viable option, and one doubts that Human Rights
Watch would find these marriages quite so forced and unfortunate.29
But the Hutu women in Tanzania, it might be countered, were not mar-
rying their rapists. This is true enough, but then we do not really know
whether there were women in Rwanda who, like many in Punjab in
194748, came to believe that their best course of action was to stay with
men who had protected them and who, while certainly having sex with
them, were doing so in the role that the women themselves regarded as
husbands rather than as rapists. Indeed, the rhetorical stance taken by
social workers in Punjab and by Human Rights Watch, assuming that all
men who married victimized women were themselves rapists and per-
haps murderers, provides support for the argument that accusations of
genocide presume collective guilt.
It would be useful to have evidence of cases in which men married
women who were threatened with rape in order to save them, having not,
themselves, raped the woman in question or threatened to do so. The pre-
sumption of violence may skew the collection of data, however, as human
29One reviewer has suggested that this section lacks data on the experience of marital
strategizing, but I am not sure how relevant such data would be. The very concept of
marriage systems implies strategizing, a staple topic of ethnographies and of high theory
(e.g. Bourdieu 1977), although usually the strategizing analyzed is that of representatives
of kin groups rather than of the individuals to be married. It may well be that coercion in
marriage is a violation of Art. 16 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Marriage
shall be entered into only with the free and full consent of the intending spouses) but
the concept of consent in systems of arranged marriages is problematic. The negotiated,
hence strategic, nature of South Asian marriage is well known. In rural Bosnia, there was
strong opposition to ethnically mixed marriages into the late 1980s, at least, though hetero-
geneous unions were relatively common in Bosnian cities (Bringa 1995: 149153). In both
India and rural Bosnia, freedom of marital choice was hardly unconstrained.
sexual violence in liminalized states 195
rights workers in the 1990s, driven by many of the same abstract con-
cerns with justice and the punishment of the guilty as were social workers
in Punjab in 1947, publish only those cases in which saviors were brutal
or present all cases in ways that presume brutality. In fact, the Akayesu
equation of coercion with violence implies that marriage under circum-
stances of mass sexual assault against women of the brides community is
legally sexual violence even when the marriage saves a womans life and
offers her a way to reconstruct her life.
The presumptive classification of heterogeneous marriages as rape
reflects the hostility towards such marriages that is felt by many in parti-
tioned societies.30 In the former Yugoslavia, pressure on mixed marriages
began when the federal state entered the period of liminality that led to
its breakup, in 1991.31 In a move revealing of the coming partition, Serbs
married to Croatian women and living in the Croatian town of Zadar peti-
tioned for the resignation of Serbian President Miloevi, whose politics
threatened them and their families.32 Research in Zagreb in 1992 showed
a decline in the willingness of Croats to marry non-Croats and a rise in
divorces in mixed marriages.33 By 1994, leading Islamic figures in Bosnia
were saying that mixed marriage was worse than rape (Mujki 1994, cited
in Helms n.d.).34 In this manner the focus on the violence of rape turns
into the negation of consent to non-violent sexual relations, including
marriage, depriving women (and men) of agency. Analytically, the focus
on rape thus leads to the elimination of rape avoidance as a category.
Conclusion
When rape avoidance is put into the analysis of ethnic or nationalist con-
flict the meaning of mass rape itself becomes more clear: it is a tool used
to partition permanently an already consciously heterogeneous popula-
tion at the time when the territory in which these people(s) live is being
divided physically. Thus mass rape is actually a corollary of the liminality
30Of course, intermarriage may be viewed with suspicion in many circumstances even
before partition, as in India. In Bosnia, interethnic marriages were not uncommon in the
cities but were uncommon in the countryside, which is where most people lived (see
Bringa 1995: 149154).
31See Danas 11 March 1991: 3033, Borba 30 Sept. 1991: 11.
32Vjesnik, 20 March 1991: 3.
33Feral Tribune, 11 January 1994.
34See also Internet Naa Borba, 18 March 1997 and 23 March 1997.
196 chapter eight
of the state when a heterogeneous territory is being sundered into homog-
enous parts. Looked at in this way, a number of assumptions about mass
rape are brought into question, such as that rapists are driven by hatred.
To the contrary, many rapists themselves are conflicted, but their acts are
meant to induce hatred in the victims.
The implications of these findings are disturbing. First, it is unlikely
that prosecuting rapists after the fact will prevent future occurrences of
mass rape during partition. Further, the post-Bosnia linkage of mass rape
with genocide seems to accept the very premises of the rapists and thus
to render future cohabitation of the peoples in question less likely. Finally,
the understandable humanistic concern with the violence of rape leads
investigators not only to ignore instances of rape avoidance, but even to
be very skeptical of consensual sexual relationships and even of marriages
between members of the groups in question. In this way, a focus on rape,
violence, and putative justice may frequently deny agency to women vic-
tims themselves, thus denying to many women, and to many men, the
chance to reconstruct their lives after their countries and communities
have been sundered by ethno-national violence.
Acknowledgments
Revision of paper prepared for the conference on Vocabularies of Identity
in Russia and Eastern Europe, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI,
April 34 1998. Colleagues who have read an earlier draft and commented
on it include Joseph Alter, Rada Drezgi, Eugene Hammel, Elissa Helms,
Dennison Rusinow and Dubravka arkov, and four anonymous reviews
for American Anthropologist. Of course, none of them bears the least
responsibility for the contents of this paper. I would also like to acknowl-
edge an intellectual debt to Veena Das, who noted the complete absence
of consideration of gender factors in her comments on the first version of
an earlier article on violence in Yugoslavia (Hayden 1996). However, she
least of all bears any responsibility for the views expressed here.
References
Abler, Thomas (1992). Scalping, Torture, Cannibalism and Rape: An Ethnohistorical Analy-
sis of Conflicting Cultural Values in War. Anthropologica 34: 320.
Allen, Beverly (1996). Rape Warfare: The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia-Hercegovina and
Croatia. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Baki-Hayden, Milica (1995). Nesting Orientalisms: The Case of Former Yugoslavia. Slavic
Review 54: 917931.
sexual violence in liminalized states 197
Blackstone, William (1783). Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book the Fourth. (9th
ed.) London: W. Strahan/Oxford: D. Prince.
Borneman, John (1998). Toward a Theory of Ethnic Cleansing: Territorial Sovereignty,
Heterosexuality and Europe. In John Borneman, Subversions of International Order.
Albany: SUNY Press.
Bringa, Tone (1995). Being Muslim the Bosnian Way. Princeton: Princeton University
Press.
Brownmiller, Susan (1975). Against our Will: Men, Women and Rape. New York: Simon &
Schuster.
Butalia, Urvashi (1993). Community, State and Gender: On Womens Agency during Parti-
tion. Economic & Political Weekly 28 (#17): WS12WS24 (April 24, 1993).
Chatterji, Joya (1994). Bengal Divided: Hindu Communalism and Partition, 19321947.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Copelon, Rhonda (1994). Surfacing Gender: Reconceptualizing Crimes against women
in Times of War. In Mass Rape: The War Against women in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
A. Stiglmayer, ed. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Das, Veena (1990a). Introduction: Communities, Riots and Survivors. In Mirrors of Vio-
lence: Communities, Riots and Survivors in South Asia. Veena Das, ed. Delhi: Oxford
University Press.
(1990b). Our Work to Cry, Your Work to Listen. In Mirrors of Violence: Communities,
Riots and Survivors in South Asia. Veena Das, ed. Delhi: Oxford University Press.
(1995). National Honour and Practical Kinship: Of Unwanted Women and Children.
In Veena Das, Critical Events (Delhi: Oxford University Press).
(1996). Language and Body: Transactions in the Construction of Pain. Daedalus
(Winter 1996): 6791.
Denich, Bette (1994). Dismembering Yugoslavia: Nationalist Ideologies and the Symbolic
Revivasl of Genocide. American Ethnologist 21: 367390.
(1995). Of Arms, Men and Ethnic War in (Former) Yugoslavia. In Feminism, National-
ism and Militarism. Constance R. Sutton, ed. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropologi-
cal Association.
Fitamant, D. Serrano (1999). Assessment Report on Sexual Violence in Kosovo. United
Nations Population Fund, May 1999.
Gal, Susan (1994). Gender in the Post-Socialist Transition: The Abortion Debate in Hun-
gary. East European Politics and Societies 8.
Gow, James (1997). Triumph of the Lack of Will: International Diplomacy and the Yugoslav
War. New York: Columbia University Press.
Hayden, Robert M. (1995). Recounting the Dead: The Rediscovery and Redefinition of
Wartime Massacres in Late- and Post-Communist Yugoslavia. In Memory, History and
opposition under State Socialism. Rubie S. Watson, ed., pp. 167184. Santa Fe: School of
American Research Press.
(1996). Schindlers Fate: Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfers. Slavic
Review 55: 727778.
(1996a). Imagined Communities and Real Victims: Self-Determination and Ethnic
Cleansing in Yugoslavia. American Ethnologist 23: 783801.
(1998). Bosnias Internal War and the International Criminal Tribunal. The Fletcher
Forum of World Affairs 22 (1): 4563.
(1998a). Bosnia: The Contradictions of Democracy without Consent. East European
Constitutional Review 7 (no. 2): 4751.
(1999). Muslims as Others in Serbian and Croatian Political Rhetoric. In Neighbors
at War: Anthropological Perspectives on Yugoslav Ethnicity, culture and History. Joel
Halpern and David Kideckel, eds. State College, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Helms, Elissa (n.d.). Feminism vs. Nationalism: Representations of Wartime Rape in
Bosnia-Hercegovina. Unpublished paper in authors files.
198 chapter eight
(n.d. 2). The Nation, Culture and Rape: The Aftermath of Wartime Rapes in the for-
mer Yugoslavia. Unpublished paper in authors files.
Human Rights Watch/Helsinki (1994). Human Rights Abuses of Non-Serbs in Kosovo,
Sandak and Vojvodina. New York: Human Rights Watch/Helsinki.
Humanitarian Law Center (1995). Spotlight On: Human Rights Violations in Times of
Armed Conflict. Belgrade: Humanitarian Law Center.
Kakar, Sudhir (1995). The Colours of Violence. Delhi: Viking.
Kesic, Vesna (1994). A Response to Catherine MacKinnons Article Turning Rape into Por-
nography: Postmodern Genocide. Hastings Womens Law Journal 5: 267280.
Khilnani, Sunil (1997). The Idea of India. New York: Farrar, Strauss, Giroux.
Khosla, G. D. (1989). Stern Reckoning: A Survey of the Events Leading Up To and Following
the Partition of India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Kligman, Gail (1992). The Politics of Reproduction in Ceausescous Romania: A Case Study
in Political Culture. East European Politics and Societies 6: 364418.
Korac, Maja (1996). Ethnic conflict, Rape and Feminism: The Case of Yugoslavia. Research
in Russia and Eastern Europe 2: 247266.
Ludden, David (ed.) (1996). Contesting the Nation: Religion, Community and the Politics
of Democracy in India. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
MacKinnon, Catherine (1993). Turning Rape into Pornography: Postmodern Genocide.
Ms., JulyAugust: 2430.
(1994). Rape, Genocide, and Womens Human Rights. Harvard Womens Law Journal
17: 516.
Malkki, Liisa (1995). Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory and National Cosmology among
Hutu Refugees in Tanzania. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Menon, Ritu and Kamla Bhasin (1993). Recovery, Rupture, Resistance: Indian State and
Abduction of Women During Partition. Economic & Political Weekly 28 (#17): WS2
WS11 (April 24, 1993).
(1998). Borders and Boundaries: Women in Indias Partition. New Brunswick: Rutgers
University Press.
Meznari, Silva (1994). Gender as an Ethno-Marker: Rape, War and Identity Politics in the
Former Yugoslavia. In Identity Politics and Women. V. Moghadam, ed. San Francisco:
Westview.
Minear Richard (1971). Victors justice: The Tokyo War Crimes Trial. Princeton: Princeton
University Press.
Mostov, Julie (1995). Our Women Their Women: Symbolic Boundaries, Territorial Mark-
ers and Violence in the Balkans. Peace and Change 20: 515529.
Mujki, Mustafa Spahi (1994). Gore od Silovanja: Zlo Mjeovitih Brakova. Liljan, 10 August
1994: 22.
Nasrin, Taslima (1994). Lajja: Shame. Delhi: Penguin.
Nehru, Jawaharlal (1946). The Discovery of India. New York: John Day.
Nowrojee, Binaifer (1996). Shattered Lives: Sexual Violence During the Rwandan Genocide
and its Aftermath. New York: Human Rights Watch/ Africa.
Palmer, Craig (1989). Is Rape a Cultural Universal? A Re-Examination of the Ethnographic
Data. Ethnology 28: 116.
Russell, Diana (1990). Rape in Marriage (2d ed). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Sanday, Peggy Reeves (1981). The Socio-Cultural Context of Rape: A Cross-Cultural Study.
Journal of Social Issues 37: 527.
(1990). Fraternity Gang Rape. New York: New York University Press.
Sells, Michael (1996). The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia. Berkeley: Uni-
versity of California Press.
Tambiah, Stanley (1992). Buddhism Betrayed? Religion, Politics and Violence in Sri Lanka.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Tilly, Charles (1986). The Contentious French. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
sexual violence in liminalized states 199
U.S. Department of State (1999). Erasing History: Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo (report, May
1999).
van der Veer, Peter (1994). Religious Nationalism: Hindus & Muslims in India. Berkeley:
University of California Press.
Varshney, Ashutosh (1993). Contested Meanings: Indias National Identity, Hindu National-
ism, and the Politics of Anxiety. Daedalus 122 (#3): 227261.
Verdery, Katherine (1996). From Parent-State to Family Patriarchs: Gender and Nation in
Contemporary Eastern Europe. In Katherine Verdery, What was Socialism and What
Comes Next? Princeton: Princeton University Press.
(1999). The Political Lives of Dead Bodies: Reburial and Postsocialist Change. New
York: Columbia University Press.
Vukovi, eljko (1993). Ubijanje Sarajeva. Podgorica: Kron.
Wallace, Paul (1996). The Costs of Partition in Europe: A South Asian Perspective. Slavic
Review 55: 762766.
arkov, Dubravka (1997). War Rapes in Yugoslavia: On Masculinity, Femininity and the
Power of Rape Victim Identity. Tijschrift voor Criminologie 39 (2): 140151.
(n.d.). Sexual Geography of Ethnicity. Part II of From Media War to Ethnic War:
The Female body and Nationalist Processes in the Former Yugoslavia, 19861994
(unpublished draft of doctoral dissertation, Center for Womens Studies, University of
Nijmegen).
PART III
HUMANITARIAN HYPOCRISY
CHAPTER NINE
HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS AND THE CIVIL WAR IN YUGOSLAVIA:
THE QUESTIONABLE MORALITY OF LIBERAL ABSOLUTISM
In the mid-1980s, Amnesty International, Helsinki Watch, the U.S. Con-
gress and other human rights watchdogs were strongly critical of the
Yugoslav governments suppression of the free speech of various national-
ists who urged the disintegration of the country. At that time, the Yugo-
slav governments position was that in the specific context of Yugoslavia,
the views espoused by these dissidents could be used to destabilize the
state and bring on a civil war. With the experience of the ferocious civil
war of 194145 still in living memory, the government argued that a new
civil war would be catastrophic and that they had a duty to prevent it.
However, Amnesty International, Helsinki Watch and the U.S. Congress
argued from the moral high ground that all speech that does not call for
violence must be permitted.
From the vantage point of 1992, the morality of the position of these
human rights advocates is less than clear. On the one hand, Amnesty
International and the others got what they wanted; by 1989/90, the nation-
alists were no longer repressed, and some of them were even victors in
elections in 1990. However, by 1992, the fears of the Yugoslav governments
of the 1980s were proved justified; the policies of these victorious nation-
alist extremists had produced the disintegration of the federal state and
driven the country into a ghastly civil war, with tens of thousands killed in
the first year, more than that wounded, more than a million forced from
their homes, and virtually the entire population impoverished. These
developments constitute wholesale violations of human rights; most of
these people have not been combatants, but rather have been victimized
solely because of their ethno-national status. Further, Helsinki Watch and
Amnesty International are discovering to their dismay that former pris-
oners of conscience and other human rights celebrities of the 1980s are
using their elected positions to oppress political opponents (e.g., Croatias
President Franjo Tudjman and State Prosecutor Vladimir eks),1 or have
1Criminal charges were filed by eks office against the satirical writer Tanja Torbarina
for defaming the president in a satirical piece based on Tudjmans shift of residency
204 chapter nine
organized extremist (para-) military forces which are heavily involved in
murdering and expelling members of other ethnic groups (e.g. Serbias
Vojislav eelj and Croatias Dobroslav Paraga).2
For human rights advocates, Yugoslavia thus presents a disquieting
picture: the assessment of the repressive communist government of
the 1980s was accurate, while some of the most celebrated of the human
rights victims of that time, freed from their oppression in accordance
with internationally accepted human rights standards, are among the
prime actors in authoritarian regimes3 and the war that these regimes
have provoked and supported. One might say with some bitterness that
the human rights groups should be proud of the Yugoslav war, because
taking the steps that they advocated helped bring it about.4 From a human
rights point of view, in fact, we might long for the bad old days of the
into a villa formerly used by Tito. Charges have also been prepared against other journal-
ists for criticizing the government. At least one of the leaders of the Serbian minority in
Croatia, Dr. Milorad Pupovac, has been threatened with prosecution for spreading false
information and disturbing the peace for statements he made to the press during a visit
to Austria. Helsinki Watch has expressed its concern to the Croatian government over
these charges; but HWs action was noted only in one Croatian newspaper which itself
has been attacked by Tudjmans government (see Borba [Belgrade], 26 May 1992: 2 and
27 May 1992: 30).
2eelj, leader of the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party and a member of the Ser-
bian parliament, leads a private army that has taken part in the ethnic cleansing of parts
of Croatia that are under Serbian control. In March 1992, eelj proposed in the Serbian
Parliament that the ethnic Croatian minority in Serbia, which has lived there for gen-
erations, should be expelled (Borba, April 3 1992: 10). A few days later he extended this
proposed pogrom to other non-Serbs resident in Serbia. Paraga, leader of the neo-fascist
Croatian Party of Right, also controls a private army, which has been heavily involved in
attacks against Serbs and Muslims in Bosnia Herzegovina, and Serbs in Croatia. With this
in mind, one is stunned to find that the United States Senate, on August 4, 1989, passed a
resolution supporting the efforts of Dobroslav Paraga to bring about increased respect for
human rights in Yugoslavia (Congressional Record, Vol. 135, No. 109, p. S 10163).
3The authoritarian character of these regimes can be seen in the absolute control over
the major broadcast and print media in the republics of Serbia, Croatia and to a somewhat
lesser extent Slovenia under the nationalist governments freely elected in those republics
in 1990. Ironically, the press in these democratic regimes has been far less free than it had
been for at least the last decade under communism (see Robert M. Hayden, Yugoslavia:
Politics and the Media, Radio Free Europe Report on Eastern Europe, Dec. 6 1991: 1726).
4In an exercise of either stunning naivet or blind stupidity, or perhaps simply egre-
gious arrogance, Jeri Laber, the Executive Director of Helsinki Watch, had urged in a New
York Times op-ed piece in October 1990 that Yugoslavia be broken up because it violated
human rights. Laber gave no thought in the article to the probable bloody consequences of
the disintegration of the country, though they were pointed out by the present author in a
letter published by the Times three weeks after the appearance of Labers original article.
human rights activists and the civil war in yugoslavia 205
1980s, when the Yugoslav government oppressed a few hundred national-
ists a year, as far better than the present nationalist carnage.5
It is not my intention to attack the general enterprise of protecting
human rights. However, I think that the failure of human rights advocates
to either anticipate or else take seriously the dangers of the speech for
which they demanded freedom raises important questions concerning the
proper scope of human rights criticisms and the standards which human
rights organizations should apply. The apparently impeccable morality
of the human rights criticisms of the Yugoslav governments of the 1980s
actually constituted a refusal to recognize the possible risks of following
the course thereby demanded, even when those risks were pointed out by
a government charged with maintaining peace in a multi-ethnic society.
In what follows, I look at some of the issues that Helsinki Watch et al.
ignored in regard to free speech for nationalist extremists in Yugoslavia
in the 1980s, in the hope of provoking discussions that will permit greater
realism in the advocation of human rights principles. My doing so may
be distasteful for those who regard any qualification of human rights
principles as impermissible. However, that extremist position makes
human rights advocates open to the charge that they are willing to risk
the welfare of millions rather than examine their own premises.
Tacit Calls for Violence
As a starting point, we should recognize that there are actually very few
adherents to the principle of absolute freedom of all speech at all times.
The famous American constitutional dictum was that freedom of speech
would not include the right falsely to call fire in a crowded theater,
and, more concretely, that dissemination of information such as the sail-
ing of troop ships during wartime could be prohibited. Human rights
5Even those shocked by the scope of the present disaster might assert that some
unpleasantness was bound to follow the breakup of Yugoslavia, but that, as Lenin once
said, you cant make an omelet without breaking eggs, and that the new democratic
future is bright. In fact, however, the new regimes in Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia and to a
lesser extent Macedonia are busy building constitutional and legal systems designed to
institutionalize discrimination against the local minorities (see Robert Hayden, Consti-
tutional Nationalism in the Formerly Yugoslav Republics, New Perspectives Quarterly,
forthcoming). Americans might get a hint of the flavor of these systems by imagining an
amendment to the U.S. Constitution to make the Preamble read We the White, Protes-
tant people of the United States... and a set of laws in regard to minority rights that was
passed and administered by a government headed by David Duke.
206 chapter nine
advocates tend to draw the line at calls for violence and will not defend
such speech. Thus, Amnesty Internationals descriptions of prisoners of
conscience often include the statement that the person has not advo-
cated violence.
In the case of Yugoslavia in the 1980s, dissidents such as Tudjman,
eks, eelj and Paraga were expressly said to have not advocated vio-
lence. On the other hand, the positions espoused by these men all called
for the disintegration of the Yugoslav federation into separate states, each
defined by the ethnicity of the largest national group within it. Further,
the borders of these putative states were defined by the several nationalist
advocates in the broadest possible way, each to include areas with large
minorities or even local majorities of people not members of the major-
ity meant to define the state. These claims overlapped, so that different
nationalist groups mounted competing claims to particular territories
within Yugoslavia.
In these circumstances, disclaimers of violence in attaining the ethni-
cally pure nation-state were pious nonsense, probably meant primarily
to legitimate their speakers in international human-rights circles and
clearly quite successful in that regard. In fact, none of these states could
be attained without the high risk, to the point of virtual certainty, of
violence, for several reasons:
1. Overlapping territorial claims: there is no empirical test for sorting out
the various national claims to territory, since some are based on his-
torical principles (e.g., the Serb claim to Kosovo or Croat claim to Bos-
nia) while others are based on the current presence of local majorities
in a disputed region (the Albanian claim to Kosovo or the Serb claim
to some areas of Croatia). As these examples, show, the same group
might make one type of claim in regard to one area and another type
in regard to a different area. The possibility of recourse to that well-
established European mechanism for deciding such questions, military
conflict, was thus always high.
2. Resistance from threatened minorities: unfortunately, the nationalist
claim to statehood was not premised on the creation of a democratic
polity of equal citizens, but rather on one in which the majority (eth-
nic) nation was sovereign, thus relegating those not members of that
nation to second-class citizenship at best (e.g., like Arab citizens of
Israel) or to being scapegoat enemies of the dominant nation and its
state (e.g., like Jews in Hitlers Germany). For understandable reasons,
members of groups that would suddenly find themselves at such a dis-
advantage were always likely to resist the formation of the new state,
human rights activists and the civil war in yugoslavia 207
since it would be based on the premise that they were foreign to the
bodies politic and social.
It might be asserted that the principle of inviolability of borders enunci-
ated by the Council on Security and Cooperation in Europe might solve
this problem of irredentism by rendering the question of border changes
illegitimate. However, in the case of Yugoslavia, acceptance of that prin-
ciple would have rendered the nationalist causes themselves illegitimate,
since the borders of the Yugoslav federation would have been inviolate.
With the recognition of states seceding from Yugoslavia the principle of
inviolability of borders was vitiated, since it was de facto recognized that
borders could, indeed, be changed by secession.6 In that case, there is no
principled reason why areas with local majorities who are minorities in
the larger context of a new state should not themselves be able to secede.
Since this process could become one of almost infinite regression and
would be resisted at each level by the entity from which secession was
proclaimed, the chance for violent resolution of this kind of conflict was
also always inherent in the nationalist claims for independence.
In Yugoslavia in the 1980s, then, demands for the disintegration of the
federal state and the establishment of independent nation states were
tacit calls for violence, since that goal could not be achieved without it.
The failure of human rights activists to recognize this practical political
situation constituted either wishful thinking or perhaps the elevation
of a pious principle into dogma, since recognizing it would have meant
accepting that speech in these circumstances could, indeed, justifiably
be repressed. Yet not recognizing the realities of the Yugoslav ethnic
tangle meant accepting the risks of civil war. Whether it was proper for
non-governmental human rights organizations to advocate actions that
carried a strong risk of inciting civil war is an uncomfortable question but,
I think, an extremely important one.
6In this context, it has not been widely recognized that the international stress on the
inviolability of republican borders actually created borders that for most practical pur-
poses had not existed in the past. The internal Yugoslav borders had been about as visible
as those between American states, with administrative and jurisdictional consequences
but little direct impact on daily life. The new international frontiers are very different,
however, since they create physical barriers to the movement of local populations which
had hitherto passed freely. The true meaning of treating republican borders as interna-
tional frontiers was exemplified by Slovenias action, in the first few days after proclaiming
its independence, in building customs barriers on its border with its fellow secessionist
republic, Croatia.
208 chapter nine
Removed from the immediate context of Yugoslavia, the wider ques-
tion may be phrased as follows: is the achievement of a particular political
demand likely to necessitate violence and the abuse of human rights? If
so, that demand constitutes a tacit call for violence, even when it ostensi-
bly is to be achieved by non-violent means. In such cases, human rights
advocates who support the enunciation of the political demand should
do so with open acknowledgement of the potential risks involved, rather
than accepting at face value the assertion that the person taking the posi-
tion does not advocate violence.
Freedom for Fascist Speech
The extreme nationalist speech that the Yugoslav state censored in the
1980s was in fact a close cousin of the central European fascism of the
1930s. This ideology sees mechanical connections between biological type
(race), language and culture, which views some peoples as inherently
inferior because of these inherent qualities, and bases political participa-
tion, even life itself, on them. In its mildest (?) forms, this ideology envi-
sions ethnically pure nation-states as the natural and inevitable form of
macro social organization. Croatian President Franjo Tudjmans Bespua
povijesne zbiljnosti [The Wasteland of Historical Reality] (1989), written
while he was still a dissident from communism, is a treatise expound-
ing this view. In this scheme, efforts to achieve such a pure society are
inevitable, as are their regrettable excesses of forcible conversion, expul-
sion and mass murder. Thus Tudjman writes:
throughout history there have always been attempts at a final solution for
foreign and undesirable racial-ethnic or religious groups through expulsion,
extermination, and conversion to the true religion.... It is a vain task to
attempt to ascertain the rise of all or some forms of genocidal activity in only
some historical period. Since time immemorial, they [genocidal practices]
have always existed in one or another form, with similar consequences in
regard to their own place and time, regardless of their differences in propor-
tion or origin.... Reasoning that would assign genocidal inclinations, rea-
soning or goals to only some nations or racial-ethnic communities, to only
some cultural-civilizational spheres and social-revolutionary movements, or
to only some individual religions and ideologies is completely mistaken and
beyond any thought of historical reality.7
7F. Tudjman, Bespua povijesne zbiljnosti (Zagreb, 1989), p. 166.
human rights activists and the civil war in yugoslavia 209
This position is mild in that it views only purification within states as
inevitable, and does not envision the necessity for permanent conflict, to
the point of extermination, between nations, as did Hitler.
The truth of a position like Tudjmans is brought into question by the
successful functioning of multi-ethnic or multi-national states (e.g., Swit-
zerland or India) and the existence of monolingual states with different
religions (e.g. Germany or Hungary) even as some states have disintegrated
on the basis of religion despite sharing a major language (the partition of
India in 1947; the partition of Yugoslavia in 199192).8 In the latter cases,
there was clearly no great biological difference between the populations
and much shared culture, thus giving rise to the concept of communal-
ism as distinct from nationalism. However, the empirical shakiness
of positions like Tudjmans does not lower their political impact. Such
myths of nation were dominant in central Europe in the 1930s and 1940s,
and are being resurrected in the 1990s by neo-fascist political parties in
France and Germany. In those countries, after relatively long experiences
with democratic institutions, repression of this kind of hate-based politics
would presumably be inappropriate, perhaps a violation of human rights.
However, in a country like Yugoslavia, where there has been no recent
experience with democratic institutions (if, indeed, any such experience
at all) but where fascism was practiced (the Independent State of Croa-
tia, 194145), the social and political resources to counter fascist politics
were lacking, and the dangers of neo-fascists seizing power were high. In
this context, insistence on the right to promulgate chauvinistic national-
ism is akin to insisting on the right to create hysteria over a disease that
does not in fact exist, and then call for the elimination of those classes of
people said to carry it.
I would argue, then, that it is necessary to consider the context in
which hate-based politics are being promulgated in order to determine
whether those who promote them deserve the protection of human-rights
advocates. Obviously, even in situations in which such speech may be pro-
hibited, those who would promulgate it may not be physically abused. On
8Despite the general recognition now that Hindi and Urdu are separate languages,
most linguists regard them as dialects of the same language (called Hindustani before
partition), as did Pandit Nehru. In a similar fashion, Serbian and Croatian are clearly dia-
lects of the same language (called, until 1991, Serbo-Croatian or Croato-Serbian), divided
by scripts associated with different religious communities.
210 chapter nine
the other hand, some deprivation of the liberty of those who urge policies
that carry a serious risk of inciting civil war may be justified.
The Necessity of Evaluation and Choice
To argue that even speech that ostensibly does not call for violence may,
in some circumstances, be suppressed in order to avoid a massive tragedy
such as civil war may seem heretical to human rights activists. I am well
aware of the dangers inherent in qualifying human rights principles, since
any tyrant is likely to make plausible arguments as to why particular speech
in the specific context of his or her own dictatorship is dangerous. Yet to
ignore the context of political utterances leaves human rights activists
open to the charge of being willing to risk the lives of many thousands and
the well-being of millions in order to avoid compromising their principles.
This last form of liberal absolutism seems to have been the position taken
by Helsinki Watch, Amnesty International and other human rights groups
in their criticisms of Yugoslavia in the 1980s.
This absolutist position is probably vulnerable at the extremes, how-
ever. For example, knowing what we know now, few would actually argue
that limits on Hitlers ability to speak publicly would not have been legiti-
mate. The problem may be one of mechanisms: granted that hindsight
informs our view of Hitler, how do we find mechanisms that will permit
screening of truly dangerous speech from that which is merely trouble-
some, distasteful or bizarre? In this regard, it must be admitted that the
dangers of espousing particular views vary, in fact, with the contexts in
which they might be offered. In order to estimate the potential dangers
of particular criticisms of an established order, it is necessary to look care-
fully at what position is being advanced and at what the potential con-
sequences of accepting it might be. If a dissidents9 position is indeed a
tacit call to violence, as defined above, then I think that a strong case can
be made for the non-violent suppression of that speech.
Of course, evaluation of challenged speech is precisely what human
rights organizations wish to avoid, contending that they are supporting
only the right to free speech, not the truth of particular positions. In fact,
however, the attempt to avoid evaluating the content and context of polit-
9It is fascinating and disturbing to note that dissidents do not exist under authoritar-
ian regimes such as that of Croatia. Apparently, one can be a dissident only from com-
munism, while an opponent of nationalism can be only a traitor.
human rights activists and the civil war in yugoslavia 211
ical speech is really an abdication of moral responsibility masquerading as
universal morality. For those who doubt this, Yugoslavia stands as a trag-
edy, and travesty, of human rights: the demands of human rights activists
of the 1980s were met, thus freeing the political forces that brought on the
civil war of 199192, a greater violation of human rights than any of the
actions of the communist government in the 1980s.
CHAPTER TEN
HUMANRIGHTSISM: FROM MORAL CRITIQUE OF VIOLENCE TO
CRUSADE FOR MORAL VIOLENCE
Justice is the right to do whatever we think must be
done, and therefore justice can be anything.
Mea Selimovi, Death and the Dervish
The last year of the second millennium has been called the beginning
of a new era for the human rights movement.1 Human Rights Watch
(HRW), one of the largest of such organizations, introduced its Decem-
ber 1999 World Report 2000 by noting a decrease in the importance of
sovereignty, because courts are willing to indict leaders, and because of
the threat of military intervention against regimes that commit crimes
against humanity. HRW cites the International Criminal Tribunals for the
former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda, the incipient International Criminal
Court, prosecutions of assorted Yugoslavs and Rwandans by Austrian,
Belgian, French, German and Swiss courts, and a Spanish judges indict-
ment of former Chilean dictator Pinochet. It then mentions the NATO
military actions against Yugoslavia and the international intervention
in East Timor. It concludes that all of this foretells an era in which the
defense of human rights moves can move from a paradigm of pressure
based on international human rights law to one of law enforcement.2
This paradigm shift includes a remarkable transformation of the capabili-
ties of human rights organizations, from persuasion to prosecution:
Until now...human rights organizations could shame abusive governments.
They could galvanize diplomatic and economic pressure. They could invoke
international human rights standards. But rarely could they trigger prosecu-
tion of tyrants or count on governments to use their police powers to enforce
human rights law. Slowly, this appears to be changing.3
HRW is not the only human rights organization that calls for governments
to use their police powers to intervene in other states. Bernard Kouchner,
1Human Rights Watch, World Report 2000: Introduction (www.hrw.org/wr2k/Front
.htm.)
2Id.
3Id.
214 chapter ten
U.N. Governor of Kosovo after NATOs occupation of the place but oth-
erwise one of the founders of Doctors without Borders, the organization
that won the Nobel Peace prize in 1999, is another: a new morality can
be codified in the right to intervention against abuses of national sov-
ereignty.... In a world aflame after the Cold War, we need to establish
a forward-looking right of the world community to actively interfere in
the affairs of sovereign nations to prevent an explosion of human rights
violations.4 To Kouchner, this right to intervene is not human rights
imperialism because
everywhere, human rights are human rights. Freedom is freedom. Suffer-
ing is suffering. Oppression is oppression. If a Muslim woman in the Sudan
opposes painful clitoral excision, or if a Chinese woman opposes the binding
of her feet, her rights are being violated. She needs protection.... When a
patient is suffering and desires care, he or she has the right to receive it. This
principle also holds for human rights.5
While one might question the knowledge and seriousness of a 1999 writer
who calls for protection against a practice last reported in the 1930s, Chi-
nese footbinding, Kouchners personal elevation to administrative office
as well as his organizations Nobel Peace Prize indicate that the NATO
powers, at least, take him seriously. Certainly his sentiments echo those of
Vaclav Havel, that human beings are more important than the state....
the idol of state sovereignty must inevitably dissolve and that NATOs
war against Yugoslavia places human rights above the rights of the state,
thus demonstrating that human rights are indivisible and that if injustice
is done to one, it is done to all.6
The interlinking rhetorics of law, justice and morality (along with their
opposites of crime and injustice) underpin such calls for humanitarian
intervention, and the image of justice via international tribunals is domi-
nant. HRW put what it viewed as significant progress towards an inter-
national system of justice to prosecute crimes against humanity at the
head of its discussion of 1999 achievements,7 and is a strong proponent
of the International Criminal Court, which the United States government
opposes. The link between tribunals and military intervention is explicit:
like the use of military intervention, the emergence of an international
4Los Angeles Times, Oct. 18, 1999.
5Id.
6V. Havel, Kosovo and the End of the Nation-State, New York Review 10 June 1999 at
4, 6.
7HRW World Report 2000 at 1.
humanrightsism 215
system of justice signals that sovereignty is no longer the barrier it once
was to actions against crimes against humanity.8 HRW claims that it and
other human rights organizations have been key catalysts in producing an
evolution of international public morality, so that the people of the world
today are unwilling to tolerate severe human rights abuses and insistent
that something be done to stop them.9 They do this by carefully investi-
gating abuses and holding them up to public scrutiny under international
standards.
Assertions of devotion to justice, however, are common in the world
probably every political actor makes public claims to be on the side of
justice and to uphold morality. HRW and other human rights organiza-
tions that call for military intervention are acting as classic political fig-
ures, demanding the application of massive violence to those whom they
define as immoral. As such, their own actions and the actions of those
whom they support should be exposed to the same scrutiny that they
claim to apply to others.
I want, therefore, to look closely at one of the most important of the
elements of the new international legal order which human rights activ-
ists promote, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugo-
slavia (ICTY, or the Tribunal). In brief, this article argues that the ICTY
delivers a justice that is biased, with prosecutorial decisions based on
the personal and national characteristics of the accused rather than on
what available evidence indicates that he10 has done. Evidence of this bias
is found in the failure to prosecute NATO personnel for acts that are com-
parable to those of people already indicted, and of failure to prosecute
NATO personnel for prima facie war crimes. This pattern of politically
driven prosecution is accompanied by the use of the Tribunal as a tool for
those western countries that support it, and especially the United States,
to pursue political goals in the Balkans: put bluntly, the Tribunal pros-
ecutes only those whom the Americans want prosecuted, and the United
States government threatens prosecution by the supposedly independent
ICTY in order to obtain compliance from political actors in the Balkans.
Further, judicial decisions by the ICTY render it extremely difficult if not
impossible for an accused to obtain a fair trial, while the Tribunal has
8Id. at 6.
9Id. at 910.
10The gendered pronoun is intentional no women have yet been charged by the
ICTY.
216 chapter ten
also shown a lack of interest in the investigation of potential prosecutorial
misconduct.
An expose of the ICTY has its own intrinsic merits, but there is a wider
point as well. The materials that are cited in this paper are almost all
from readily accessible sources, and the facts discussed should be well
known. Yet the arguments that I make, if not exactly unprecedented, cer-
tainly are not those commonly taken in regard to the ICTY by those who
claim to be human rights advocates. Following discussion of the ICTYs
actions, my focus shifts to consideration of why NATO actions that so
clearly violate human rights, and Tribunal actions that so clearly violate
fundamental fairness towards defendants, are not the subject of much
concern by those who profess to support human rights. The answer is
seen in the transformation of human rights concepts, from protesting the
application of state violence on non-violent dissidents to demanding the
application of massive violence on states deemed to be inferior. I see this
transformation as being from human rights to humanrightsism, with the
new ism, like most isms, a repudiation in practice of the principles that
it supposedly embodies. The ICTY is a particularly striking manifestation
of humanrightsism because of its own betrayal of the high principles that
are routinely invoked to justify it.
Selective Prosecution 1: Cluster Bombs and War Crimes
In July 1995, Milan Marti, President of the Republika Srpska Krajina (the
self-proclaimed Serb Republic in Croatia), was indicted before the ICTY
for violations of the laws and customs of war, in that he had ordered a
missile attack on the city of Zagreb in retaliation for the successful Croa-
tian offensive of May, 1995, which had driven Serbs from Slavonija.11 What
is interesting about this indictment is that what made the bombardment a
war crime was that it was carried out by missiles that had been fitted with
cluster bombs warheads: warheads containing 288 bomblets, all of which
in turn have 400 small steel balls, which are scattered, along with bomblet
fragments, on a lethal radius of ten metres.... It is used for soft targets,
that is troops on the ground and vehicles, not for buildings or military
11Prosecutor of the Tribunal v Milan Martic, indictment, 25 July 1995 (hereafter, Martic
indictment) http://www.icty.org/case/martic/4#ind. Note: unless otherwise specified, refer-
ences to ICTY documents are to versions on the Tribunals web page: www.un.org/icty/.
humanrightsism 217
installations.12 Seven civilians were killed and many more wounded, and
it was noted in the Rule 61 hearing that one rocket damaged a home for
the aged and a childrens hospital.13
The use of cluster bombs is key to the Marti indictment, and the
nature of these bombs was described in detail in the Rule 61 hearing. As
the indictment put it, the rocket in question could be fitted with different
warheads to accomplish different tasks: either to destroy military targets
or to kill people. When the [missile] is fitted with cluster bomb...it is an
anti-personnel weapon designed only to kill people.14 With this in mind, it
is interesting to see the lack of response by the ICTY Prosecutor to NATOs
May 7 attack on the city of Ni, when cluster bombs fell on the market,
killing fifteen people, and the citys main hospital was also hit.15 Over the
course of the NATO bombings, nine hospitals were damaged or destroyed
and over 300 secondary and elementary schools and other educational
institutions were damaged.16 According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the
U.S. Defense Department says that American planes dropped 1,100 cluster
bomb canisters, with 220,000 bomblets, over Kosovo while British planes
dropped about 500 bombs, each with 147 bomblets.17 British authorities
have acknowledged dropping large numbers of cluster bombs.
One can only wonder why the Prosecutor has not thus far seen NATOs
use of cluster bombs against the city of Ni as being as serious as the Kra-
jina Serbs use of cluster bomb warheads against the city of Zagreb. It will
not do to say that NATO was only aiming at military targets and missed;
Marti also said that he was aiming at military targets in Zagreb,18 and, as
we have seen, the Prosecutor has already taken the position that cluster
bombs are not suitable for use against military targets, but only to kill
people. Further, it cannot be argued that the US and British command-
ers did not know that they were risking civilian casualties. Martis com-
ment to a Western reporter that I am very sorry if civilian targets were
hit because our aim was to hit military targets19 may be compared to any
12Prosecutor v Milan Martic, ICTY case no. IT-96-11-R61; Rule 61 evidentiary review,
27th February 1996 (hereafter, Martic Rule 61 hearing), at 5. www.un.org/icty/transe11/
960227IT.txt.
13Id. at 18.
14Martic indictment, para. 6.
15BBC News Online, May 7, 1999.
16The Times (London), June 13, 1999.
17Philadelphia Inquirer, Nov. 21, 1999, p. 1.
18Martic Rule 61 hearing at 20.
19Martic Rule 61 hearing at 20.
218 chapter ten
of a large number of NATO statements about collateral damage, includ-
ing NATOs decision on about May 1 to stop even issuing such apologies.20
While the Rule 61 hearing on Marti introduced evidence from interviews
that showed that Marti targeted cities intentionally, this is also true of
NATO generals, including, specifically, American ones, who have recently
complained that French politicians did not permit them to attack even
more sites in Yugoslav cities.21
The reason for the Tribunals disinterest in NATOs actions is perhaps
found in the views expressed by the official NATO spokesman, Dr. Jamie
Shea, on 16 and 17 May 1999, when he was questioned during the daily
NATO press conferences about the possibility of NATO liability for war
crimes before the ICTY. Dr. Shea said on May 16 that NATO is the friend of
the Tribunal...NATO countries are those that have provided the finances
to set up the Tribunal, we are among the majority financiers. He repeated
the same message on May 17: NATO Countries have established these
tribunals...fund these tribunals and...support on a daily basis their
activities. Therefore, he was certain that the Prosecutor would only
indict people of Yugoslav nationality.22
Any remaining doubts on this last point were put to rest in the last
week of the second millennium, when several major newspapers reported
that the ICTY Prosecutor was investigating the conduct of NATO pilots
and their commanders during the Kosovo war,23 including commissioning
a preliminary study of NATOs use of cluster bombs by looking at the his-
tory of such weapons and at how they have been used in previous wars.24
While Milan Marti might well wonder why the Prosecutor had not found
it necessary to make such a study before indicting him for using cluster
warheads, NATO officials would seem to have little to fear. Within days of
the first reports of prosecutorial interest in NATO, tribunal officials were
reported as saying that the study was a preliminary, internal document
that was highly unlikely to lead to indictments or even to be published.25
While the Prosecutor had told the London Observer on December 26 that
if the confidential report indicated that NATO broke the Geneva conven-
tions she would indict those responsible, on December 30 she issued a
20At NATO, a crash course in spin, MSNBC www service, 1 May 1999.
21BBC News Online, Oct. 22, 1999.
2216 May comments: www.nato.int/kosovo/press/p990516b.htm; 17 May comments:
www.nato.int/kosovo/press/p990517b.htm.
23The Observer (London), Dec. 26, 1999; New York Times Dec. 29, 1999.
24New York Times, Dec. 30, 1999, at A5.
25Id.
humanrightsism 219
press release saying that NATO is not under investigation by the Office
of the Prosecutor.... There is no formal inquiry into the actions of NATO
during the conflict.26 It is, of course, possible that this quick about-face
was unrelated to U.S. government denunciations of the reported inquiry
into NATOs actions.27
Selective Prosecution 2: Wanton Destruction of Property
In July 1995, the Prosecutor of the ICTY indicted Radovan Karadi and
Ratko Mladi. One of the sets of acts said to constitute a crime against
humanity was the systematic destruction of Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian
Croat homes and businesses. These homes and businesses were singled
out and systematically destroyed in areas where hostilities had ceased or
had not taken place.28 They were also indicted for a grave breach of
the Geneva Conventions because of extensive destruction of property
that they had individually and in concert with others planned instigated,
ordered or otherwise aided and abetted in the planning, preparation or
execution of the extensive, wanton and unlawful destruction of Bosnian
Muslim and Bosnian Croat property, not justified by military necessity, or
knew or had reason to know that subordinates were about to destroy or
permit others to destroy the property of Bosnian Muslim or Bosnian Croat
civilians or had done so and failed to take necessary and reasonable mea-
sures to prevent this destruction or to punish the perpetrators thereof.29
With these indictments in mind, the enormous economic destruction
of Serbia by NATO is relevant. According to the Group 17 economists (who
form the core of the Savez za promene, the Serbian opposition coalition
most favored by the US, and thus who may be presumed to be fairly reli-
able observers), the economic damage caused by the NATO bombings to
infrastructure, economic facilities and non-economic civil facilities was
slightly over four billion dollars.30 According to the BBC, at least 30%
of the adult population [of Serbia] is unemployed. The economic col-
lapse was caused as NATO switched to infrastructure targets as the war
26ICTY Press Release PR/P.I.S./459-e, 30 December 1999.
27Washington Times, Dec. 30 1999, New York Times Jan. 3 2000, at A6.
28Prosecutor v Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, Indictment, 25 July 1995 (hereafter,
Karadzic/Mladic indictment), para. 29.
29Id. at para. 41.
30Grupa 17, Zavrni raun: Ekonomske posledice NATO bomabardovanja (Beograd:
Stubovi kulture, 1999) at 9.
220 chapter ten
continued31 switched from military targets. In the first month of bomb-
ing alone, according to the European movement in Serbia, NATO targets
included drug and pharmaceutical plants, tobacco plants and warehouses,
printers, and shoe factories,32 while the G17 economists listed as well
wood, textile and food industries, among others. There was clearly no
military necessity for hitting these targets, unless military necessity is
defined as meaning anything the destruction of which might have a polit-
ical impact. Neither can it be said that these were collateral damage.
NATOs generals and politicians made a very purposeful decision to attack
non-military infrastructure early in the war.33 They planned the attacks
very carefully and only one proposed target was ever rejected because of
concerns about its relation to the military.34 But the Yugoslav military was
not the target. NATO generals told the Philadelphia Inquirer on May 21 that
Just focusing on fielded forces is not enough...The people have to get to
the point that their lights are turned off, their bridges are blocked so they
cant get to work. Note that the purpose of destroying these bridges was
not military; but this was clear when NATO destroyed the bridges in Novi
Sad, 500 kilometers from Kosovo, installations that clearly did not make
the effective contribution to military action in Kosovo that would have
rendered them legitimate targets under Art. 52 of Protocol I additional to
the 1949 Geneva Conventions.
Aryeh Neier has noted that the U.N. commission that investigated war
crimes in Bosnia concluded that attacking the civilian population is a
war crime.35 There is no question but that, in attacking infrastructure,
NATO attacked civilians. Judging from the wording of the indictments
of Karadi and Mladi, we should expect indictments against those in
NATO who planned and carried out these attacks, and against Bill Clinton
and Tony Blair for having failed to take necessary and reasonable mea-
sures to prevent this destruction or to punish the perpetrators thereof.
However, I would suspect that Jamie Sheas view, as quoted in the last
section, is accurate, and that we should not expect to see the FOT (Friends
of the Tribunal) indicted.
31BBC News Online, Oct. 15, 1999.
32www.msnbc.com/news April 26, 1999.
33See, e.g., Wall Street Journal April 27, 1999, p. 1; BBC News Online 15 October 1999.
34Washington Post, Sept. 20, 1999, at A20.
35Aryeh Neier, War Crimes (New York: Times Books, 1998), at 169.
humanrightsism 221
Failure to Prosecute Prima Facie War Crimes: Depriving a Civilian
Population of Water
Art. 54 of the Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August
1949 is about as unequivocal as prohibitions of military targeting get.
Entitled Protection of objects indispensable to the survival of the civil-
ian population, it states (Para. 2) that it is prohibited to attack, destroy,
remove or render useless objects indispensable for the survival of the civil-
ian population, such as...drinking water installations and supplies...for
the specific purpose of denying them for their sustenance value to the
civilian population or to the adverse Party, whatever the motive.
On April 25, a NATO official who did not wish to be identified told the
Washington Times that a new phase of the NATO campaign would aim to
destroy electrical systems and water systems in Belgrade and in other major
Serbian cities in order to take the war directly to civilians.36 On May 23,
fifteen NATO bombs hit water pumps...in the northwestern town of
Sremska Mitrovica for the second night in a row.37 Attacks on May 24
slashed water reserves by damaging pumps and cutting electricity to the
few pumps that were still operative.38 Only 30 percent of Belgrades two
million people had running water, and the city was down to 10 percent of
its water reserves.39 That these attacks were not aimed at military opera-
tions in Kosovo is clear from the remarks attributed by the Washington
Post to a Pentagon official, who stated that the attacks had been limited to
Serbia proper but that NATO commanders are understood to be planning
to extend the attacks to Kosovo.40 A clearer example of NATOs targeting
civilians in Serbia rather than soldiers in Kosovo would be hard to find.
To be sure, NATO responded to criticisms of these attacks by saying
that it had not targeted water supplies but only the power system.41 This
was clearly not true in regard to Sremska Mitrovica, but in any event is
irrelevant, because what is prohibited is also rendering useless a water
system, and NATO acknowledged that it was aware that its bombing of
electrical stations would do this: We are aware this will have an impact
on civilians, a NATO official told the New York Times on 24 May.
36Washington Times, April 25, 1999, at C9.
37Washington Post, May 24, 1999 (World Wide Edition).
38Washington Post, May 25, 1999. P. A1.
39New York Times, May 25, 1999, p. A1.
40Washington Post, May 25, 1999. P. A1.
41 BBC News Online, May 24, 1999.
222 chapter ten
Clearly, NATO committed a prima facie war crime, and the evidence
that it did so knowingly is at least as strong as anything used in the speedy
indictment of Milan Marti. However, as a spokesman for the Interna-
tional Relations Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives told the
National Post (Ottawa), Youre more likely to see the UN building dis-
mantled brick-by-brick and thrown into the Atlantic than to see NATO
pilots go before a UN tribunal.42
U.S. Government Direction of Prosecution 1:
Miloevi but Not Tudjman
The putative independence and impartiality of the ICTY was utterly com-
promised by the indictment on May 27 of Yugoslav President Miloevi
and four of his political associates. While there may be little question that
Miloevi is guilty of war crimes, justice that is not impartial cannot be
seen as just. The failure of the Prosecutor to indict NATO or its clients
would seem to confirm Jamie Sheas message that he who pays the pros-
ecutor determines who is charged. It is particularly noteworthy that while
the Prosecutor has been reported unable to indict Croatian generals for
the 1995 ethnic cleansing of the Krajina because the U.S. government has
refused to provide requested information,43 she made well publicized vis-
its to American and British officials to gather information with which to
indict Miloevi. When a Prosecutor who is a citizen of one NATO country
seeks assistance from the governments of other NATO countries in order
to indict the President of the country that NATO is attacking, not even the
pretence of prosecutorial independence remains.
U.S. Government Direction of Prosecution 2:
Threats against Vuk Drakovi
In July 1999, I was surprised when a close advisor to Vuk Drakovi told
me that the United States was threatening Drakovi with indictment by
the ICTY. If the Prosecutors office were truly independent, such a threat
could not be plausible. However, the New York Times has also reported that
Washington has threatened Mr. Draskovic with indictment by the interna-
42National Post, May 22, 1999.
43New York Times, 21 March 1999.
humanrightsism 223
tional war crimes tribunal in the Hague for the activities of his short-lived
Serbian Guard, a paramilitary group, in Croatia in 1991.44 Since contacts in
Washington inform me that a major task of the U. S. governments inter-
departmental Balkans Task Force is now to support the Prosecutors office,
that Washington feels free to threaten indictments seems highly plausible.
Denial of a Fair Trial 1: Judicial Deference to Prosecutor
Politicization of the ICTY Prosecutors office is especially troubling in light
of the extraordinary deference that the judges of the Tribunal afford the
prosecutor. This deference was first shown in regard to a truly outstand-
ing scandal in the first case tried before the ICTY, that of Bosnian Serb
Duko Tadi.45 In that case, no witness had testified to having seen Tadi
personally commit an atrocity, such as murder or rape. However, the Pros-
ecutors final witness testified that not only had he seen Tadi rape and
murder, but he had also been forced by Tadi to rape and murder as well.
The witness was a Bosnian Serb who had been captured by the Muslims,
convicted by them of genocide and then presented to the ICTY Prosecutor
as a witness against Tadi.
The witness testified under complete anonymity, his identity having
been kept a secret even from the defense under a protection order meant
to allay the fears of witnesses that they or members of their families would
suffer retribution if they testified before the Tribunal. In permitting such
protection orders the ICTY adopted one of the less admired procedures of
the Spanish Inquisition, which also concealed the identities of witnesses
from the accused,46 and so it is interesting that such American human
rights advocates as the Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of
Human Rights of the American Jewish Committee, the Center for Con-
stitutional Rights, the Womens Human Rights Law Clinic of the City
44New York Times, Oct. 15, 1999, at A8.
45Candor requires me to state that I was actually the very first defense witness to
appear before the ICTY, in the Tadic case, on the question of the character of the conflict
(national or international), a question discussed in the next section. My testimony was
limited to constitutional and political issues in Yugoslavia and in Bosnia through 1992 (a
prcis of the testimony is found in my article in 22(#1) The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs
4564 [1998]). Apart from one very brief meeting with Tadi in May 1996, at the request
of his defense counsel, I had and have no personal acquaintance with Tadi or knowledge
of the crimes for which he was accused.
46H. Kamen, The Spanish Inquisition (New Haven: Yale University Press 1997), at 182,
194195.
224 chapter ten
University of New York and the Women Refugees Project of the Harvard
Immigration and Refugee Law Program supported prosecution witness
anonymity in a joint Amicus brief filed with the Tribunal.47
As it happened, the defense was able to show that the witness, Witness
L, had lied.48 The man had said that his father was dead and that he had
no brothers, but a member of the defense team was able to discover that,
in fact, he had a brother and that his father was not dead, and arranged
to confront the witness with his father and brother by bringing them to
the Hague. At that point the witness not only confessed to lying about
his family, but also claimed to have been forced by the Muslims, while
he was in their custody, to agree to lie against Tadi, and then trained by
them in the testimony he was to give in the ICTY. Confronted with these
lies, the Prosecutor in Tadi informed the court that it did not regard his
testimony as reliable and invited the court to disregard it, and the identity
of the witness, one Dragan Opai, was revealed.
At this point, the obvious questions would seem to have been why the
witness lied, and whether in fact he was trained to do so by the Bosnian
government, which had made him available to the Tribunal. Indeed, the
Trial Chamber did order the Prosecutors office to investigate the mat-
ter in order to determine whether charges of perjury should be brought
against the Witness. However, at this point, the Trial Chamber gave both
the Prosecutor and the Bosnian government extraordinary deference.
On December 2, 1996, the Prosecutor sent a letter to Alija Izetbegovi,
President of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, thanking him for
his cooperation in investigating the Witness L matter and exonerating his
government of wrongdoing.49 Tadis defense lawyers, who had gone to
Sarajevo to investigate the matter themselves, but who had been given
the cold shoulder by the Izetbegovi government,50 first heard of this
47Prosecutor v Dusko Tadic, Decision on the Prosecutors Motion Requesting Protec-
tive Measures for Victims and Witnesses, 10 August 1995, at paras. 1011.
48The basic story of Witness L can be found in news accounts: e.g. Internet Naa
Borba 28 October 1996, Reuters, Oct. 25, 1996, Associated Press, Oct. 25, 1996. Copies of
an interrogation of Witness L by Tadi defense attorney, Michail Wladimiroff, and of an
Oct. 25, 1995 statement by ICTY Prosecutors investigator Robert Reid concerning Witness
Ls lies and accusations against the Bosnian government are in authors files. The most
detailed account of the Witness L matter was broadcast on Dutch VPRO Radios Argos
program on Sept. 10, 1999, a transcript of which (in English) is available at www.domovina
.net/opacice.html (hereafter, Argos).
49Institute for War and Peace Reporting, Tribunal Update no. 6 (Dec. 26, 1996).
50Letter to author from Michail Wladimiroff, 11 Nov. 1996.
humanrightsism 225
letter several weeks later, when I asked them for a copy of it.51 The Trial
Chamber accepted this action by the Prosecutor without questioning why
the Prosecutor had never shown greater zeal in determining the truth of
the witnesss story before the defense challenged basic facts about it, an
especially interesting question since the Prosecutor knew the identity of the
witness, while the defense, by virtue of the protection order, did not.52 Since
some parts of the witnesss story seemed to indicate that the Prosecutors
office might also have been involved in training him to give false testi-
mony, the Tribunal in effect asked the Prosecutor to investigate possible
wrongdoing by her own office, while offering no support to the defense in
its own efforts to investigate the matter.
To make matters even more odd, neither the judges nor the Prosecutor
showed any interest in determining whether the witness had, in fact, been
threatened by the Bosnian government or whether he would be mistreated
were he to be sent back to that government. Opai, who said that he had
been tortured into making a confession to genocide in Sarajevo, asked not
to be returned to the Bosnian government, requesting asylum in Holland.53
However, even though Opai had an attorney to represent him on these
issues, he was returned to the Muslims, without prior notice being given
to his attorney.54 Opais fears seemed not unreasonable in at least one
case similar to his, two supposed victims of a Serb who confessed to mur-
dering them and was thereupon convicted of genocide were found alive,
but the Bosnian governments courts refused a new trial.55 Yet immediately
after this false case received world-wide publicity, Opai was returned to
the control of the Bosnian government, where he now is serving a ten-year
sentence for genocide following a conviction based solely on his own
confession, which he says was extracted from him by torture.56
When the Dutch Argos journalists asked the Tribunal for an explana-
tion of this failure to investigate the Opai matter more thoroughly, or to
consider his request for asylum, a Tribunal spokesperson said that
51Fax letter from author to Michail Wladimiroff, 30 Dec. 1996; fax letter to author from
Michail Wladimiroff, 7 January 1997.
52It is in fact likely that the Defense was in violation of the protection order when it
questioned people who, the defense thought might have been related to the anonymous
witness. Had they followed the rules, however, the defendant could not have had a fair
trial.
53ICTY: Tadic Case: Update, 2 June 1997.
54Argos.
55New York Times, 1 March 1997, at 3; Washington Post, 15 March 1997, at A15; New York
Times, 15 June 1997, at 10.
56Argos.
226 chapter ten
Defense Counsel Vladimirof [sic] did not prove that all of Dragan Opais
story was untrue. The only point that was established is that Opai lied
about his family members. His father wasnt at all dead, as he had claimed.
And that is the basis upon which the prosecutor decided that Opai was
not a reliable witness.... Why Opai lied and whether the rest of his story
was correct was not relevant to the Tadic case. He was no longer any use as
a witness, and that is why we sent him back to Bosnia.57
Of course, Wladimiroff had not proven more about Opai because his
cross examination of him was stopped as being in violation of the protec-
tion order,58 and the Prosecutor had also objected even to the evidence
about Opais identity but was overruled.59
The questions of why Opai lied and especially of whether the Bos-
nian government and even the Prosecutors office trained him to do so
were basic to determining whether other witnesses might also have been
trained to commit perjury. The Tadic defense did try to raise this question
on appeal, in regard to the testimony of another witness who had been
presented by the Bosnian government, but the Appeals Chamber did not
accept this claim because the circumstances of the two witnesses were
different. Mr. Opacic was made known to the Prosecution while he was
still in the custody of the Bosnian authorities, while [the other witnesss]
introduction was made through the Bosnian embassy in Brussels.60 Why
this particular difference might matter was not explained by the Appeals
Chamber, which also failed to notice that while Opai was in the cus-
tody of the Bosnian government because he was captured as a soldier
in the Bosnian Serb Army, the second witnesss name (Nihad Seferovi)
indicated that he was a Muslim and thus perhaps not as in need of as
much persuasion to lie at the behest of the Muslim government as Opai
had been.
In the Witness L matter, then, the judges of the ICTY afforded very
great deference to the Prosecutor and an equally great indifference to the
causes of the perjury of a prosecution witness who had been found by
the Bosnian government, or of the implications of the possible causes of
the perjury for defendant Tadi and for the witness himself (who claimed,
apparently with justification, to have been the victim of mistreatment by
57Id.
58Fax letter to author from Michail Wladimiroff, 30 October 1997.
59Id.
60Prosecutor v Dusko Tadic, Judgment, 15 July 1999 (hereafter, Tadic appeal judgment),
para. 65.
humanrightsism 227
the Bosnian government), or for future defendants who might be victim-
ized by what may have been collusion by the Prosecutor and the Bosnian
government.
Denial of a Fair Trial 2: Changing the Trial Rules after the Trial is Over
In its decision on a preliminary question before the start of the Tadi trial,
the ICTY Appeals Chamber stated that charges under Art. 2 of the Statute
of the Tribunal (covering grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions)
apply only to persons or objects to the extent that they are caught up in
an international armed conflict.61 The same interlocutory decision con-
cluded that the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia have both internal and
international elements.62 It argued that, had the Security Council consid-
ered the conflict international and bound the Tribunal to that position, an
absurd conclusion would result:
Since it cannot be contended that the Bosnian Serbs constitute a State,
arguably the classification just referred to would be based on the implicit
assumption that the Bosnian Serbs are acting not as a rebellious entity but
as organs or agents of another State, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
(Serbia-Montenegro). As a consequence, serious infringements of interna-
tional humanitarian law committed by the government army of Bosnia-
Herzegovina against Bosnian Serb civilians in their power would not be
regarded as grave breaches, because such civilians, having the nationality
of Bosnia-Herzegovina, would not be regarded as protected persons under
Article 4, paragraph 1 of Geneva Convention IV. By contrast, atrocities com-
mitted by Bosnian Serbs against Bosnian civilians in their hands would be
regarded as grave breaches, because such civilians would be protected
persons under the Convention, in that the Bosnian Serbs would be act-
ing as organs or agents of another State, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
(Serbia-Montenegro) of which the Bosnians would not possess the nation-
ality. This would be, of course, an absurd outcome, in that it would place
the Bosnian Serbs at a substantial legal disadvantage vis-a-vis the central
authorities of Bosnia-Herzegovina. This absurdity bears out the fallacy of the
argument advanced by the Prosecutor.63
In accordance with these decisions, the Prosecutor was required in the
Tadic trial to prove that the conflict was, in fact, international. The Trial
61Prosecutor v Dusan Tadic, Decision on the Defense Motion for Interlocutory Appeal on
Jurisdiction, 2 Oct. 1995 (hereafter, Tadic Interlocutory), para. 81.
62Id. at para. 77.
63Id. para. 76.
228 chapter ten
Chamber viewed the matter as controlled by the International Court
of Justices decision in the Nicaragua case,64 that external support to a
party in an internal conflict would only internationalize that conflict if
the external party had effective control over the forces in question. The
Trial Chamber, over the dissent of the presiding judge, found that the
evidence showed only a coordination between the Bosnian Serb Army
and the Yugoslav Army, not control of the latter by the former; and thus
held that on the evidence presented to it, after 19 May 1992, the armed
forces of the Republika Srpska could not be considered as de facto organs
or agents of the Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Ser-
bia and Montenegro).65 Accordingly, the Trial Chamber found Tadi not
guilty of charges under Article 2 of the Statute.66
The Prosecutor appealed that decision and won: the Appeals Cham-
ber held that the Bosnian Serb forces were acting as de facto organs of
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.67 In doing so, the Appeals Chamber
reached precisely the conclusion in the Tadic appeal that it had itself pro-
nounced absurd in the interlocutory appeal in the same case. The fairness
of a Tribunal that sets explicit rules before a trial and then changes them
after it is over is certainly dubious, but that is what the ICTY has done.
Also dubious is the reasoning of the Tadic appeal. At trial, of course,
the burden of proof rested with the Prosecutor to prove that the events
in question took place in the context of an international conflict, and the
Trial Chamber concluded that this had not been proved. The Appeals
Chamber, however, noted that the Trial Chamber had not said what the
nature of the conflict was after May 19, 1992. Since the burden was on
the prosecutor to show that it was international, there was no burden on
the defense to show that it was not international. Yet the Appeals Cham-
64Case Concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua, 1986
I.C.J. Reports 14. Ironically, the defendant in Nicaragua was the United States, so that
the U.S. in Tadic was urging the abandonment of the position that had protected it in
Nicaragua.
65Prosecutor v Dusko Tadic, Opinion and Judgment, 7 May 1997 (hereafter, Tadic trial
judgment), para. 607. The 19 May 1992 date was important because the Bosnian Serb Army
was formally separated from the Yugoslav Peoples Army on or before that date, and the
only evidence presented on the chain of command between the two armies after that
date was that of a witness who said that there was no real chain of command between
them, and evidence that the Bosnian Serb Army used secure communications links that
ran through Yugoslav Peoples Army headquarters in Belgrade for its own internal com-
munications (Id. para. 598).
66Id. para. 608.
67Tadic appeal judgment, para. 167.
humanrightsism 229
ber phrases the question as whether the conflict became...exclusively
internal after that date.68 Since the Tadic interlocutory judgment had
concluded that the conflict had both internal and international elements,
this could not have been the question that the defense had been required
to counter, or, for that matter, that the Trial Chamber was required to
determine.
Indeed, the Appeals Chamber itself recognized that the conflict was
prima facie internal, because it set up the legal question involved as
determining the legal criteria for establishing when, in an armed conflict
which is prima facie internal, armed forces may be regarding as acting on
behalf of a foreign power, thereby rendering the conflict international.69
The Trial Chamber had undertaken a serious review of the facts in Bos-
nia in 1992 and had concluded that while the Bosnian Serb forces were
allied to those of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, there is no evidence
on which this Trial Chamber can conclude that the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia...and the [Yugoslav Army] ever directed...the actual military
operations of the [Bosnian Serb Army], or to influence those operations
beyond that which would have flowed naturally from the coordination of
military objectives and activities by the two armies.70 The Trial Chamber
based this conclusion in part on the fact that the Republika Srpska politi-
cal leaders were popularly elected by the Bosnian Serb people and that
these elected political leaders played a role in the activities of the Bosnian
Serb Army.71
The Appeals Chamber, on the other hand, paid no attention to the
activities of Bosnian Serbs as political or military actors in their own right.
Instead, it concluded that since the Bosnian Serb Army had received some
financing and equipment from the Yugoslav Army, participation in the
planning and supervision of military activities would constitute overall
control by the Yugoslav Army, thus rendering the conflict international.
This reasoning, of course, negates the meaning of the term control by con-
flating it with participation. At this point, the Appeals Chambers earlier
acknowledgment that the conflict had both internal and international
elements vanishes, and the Tadic appeal judgment reaches precisely the
conclusion that the Tadic interlocutory judgment had rendered absurd:
that even though both the Bosnian Serbs and their victims were nationals
68Id. para. 86, emphasis added.
69Id., IV.B.3 (heading).
70Tadic trial judgment, para. 605.
71Id. para. 599.
230 chapter ten
of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the victims were protected persons because
they found themselves in the hands of armed forces of a State of which
they were not nationals.72
The Appeals Chamber, perhaps aware that it was rejecting its own ear-
lier conclusion even if unwilling to admit it, justified its new holding on
the object and purpose of Article 4 of Geneva Convention IV, as the pro-
tection of civilians to the maximum extent possible.73 If this justification
is valid, the distinction between internal and international conflicts
that the Appeals Chamber affirmed in the Tadic interlocutory judgment
is invalid but for Tadic, it is the interlocutory standard that must apply. In
any event, the Tadic appeals judgment then makes an extraordinary state-
ment, that the applicability of the Geneva Conventions is not dependent
on formal bonds and purely legal relations.74 The same judgment had
already said, approvingly, that international law concerning State respon-
sibility is based on a realistic concept of accountability, which disregards
legal formalities.75 But legal formalities protect an accused prosecutors,
after all, need no protection, but the rest of us may benefit by the bounds
put on prosecutorial zeal. The ICTY Appeals Chamber has thus clearly
indicated that fairness of the proceedings for defendants is not high in
its concerns.
In yet another striking lapse from both fundamental fairness and the
principles of fair trials, the Appeals Chamber, apparently on its own initia-
tive, introduced and discussed what it saw as evidence of FRY control over
the Bosnian Serbs in 1995 as evidence that the FRY controlled the Bosnian
Serb Army in 1992.76 Since the same Appeals Chamber judges had refused
to permit the Tadic defense to introduce additional evidence after the con-
clusion of the trial,77 this seems grossly unfair. However, legal formalities
in regard to evidence do not seem to have been among the stronger points
of this Appeals chamber, which refers in the Tadic appeal to findings of
the international character of the conflict in three Rule 61 Decisions in
other ICTY cases.78 Rule 61 proceedings are reviews of evidence in cases
in which the defendant is not in custody, which permit the charges in
the indictment and the supporting material to be publicly and solemnly
72Tadic appeals judgment, para. 167.
73Id. para. 168.
74Id. para. 168.
75Id. para. 121, emphasis added.
76Id. paras. 157160.
77Id. para. 16.
78Id. note 107.
humanrightsism 231
exposed.79 Rule 61 proceedings are uncontested; in one, the Trial Cham-
ber noted that powers of attorney had been lodged successfully by one
defendant but refused the attorney access to the courtroom or any role in
the proceedings.80 Judicial presentation of the Prosecutors uncontested
allegations in cases other than the one at trial as being evidence on key
issues in the latter seems grossly unfair.
For the Appeals Chamber, however, it would seem that justice is indeed
the right to do whatever they think must be done, and therefore justice
can be anything.
Problems for America? State Responsibility
The dissenting Trial Chamber judge in Tadic was an American by far the
greatest number of staff working in the Prosecutors office were American
and it is likely that the U.S. government supported the Appeals Chambers
reversal of its own interlocutory decision in regard to the nature of the
conflict. Yet if such a thing as international law ever does come into exis-
tence, in the sense of a legal order binding all international actors, the
U.S. might regret elements of the appellate decision in Tadic. The view
that the imposition on States of responsibility of de facto agents should
disregard legal formalities would not only hold the U.S. responsible for
the actions of the Contras in Nicaragua but also for those of the Croatian
Army in its 1995 offensives against Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia. It is no
secret that the U.S. government arranged for the private firm Military
Professional Resources, Inc. (MPRI) to train the Croatian Army, beginning
in September 1994,81 activity that is attributable to the U.S. government
under the Tadic appeal judgment. That the American-trained and Ameri-
can equipped Croatian forces were committing war crimes was known
to the United States government; witness Richard Holbrookes reference
to the harsh behavior of Federation troops during the [Sept. 1995] offen-
sive, which would have produced forced evictions and random murders
79Prosecutor v Radovan Karadi and Ratko Mladi, Review of the Indictments Pursu-
ant to Rule 61 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, 11 July 1996, (hereafter, Karadi and
Mladi, Rule 61 proceeding) para. 3.
80Id. para. 4. Interestingly, the Trial Chamber described its actions in this uncontested
Rule 61 proceeding as being in pursuit of the mission of international criminal justice
of revealing the truth about the acts perpetrated. Id. para. 3. Truth, apparently, can be
found reliably in the uncontested allegations of the Prosecutor.
81Globus, 20 Oct. 1995.
232 chapter ten
of Serbs had Banja Luka been taken yet Holbrooke told the Croatian
Defense Minister that Nothing that we said today should be construed to
mean that we want you to stop the rest of the offensive, other than Banja
Luka.... We cant say so publicly, but please take Sanski Most, Prijedor
and Bosanski Novi.82 Indeed, Holbrooke himself admits telling Croatian
President Tudjman that the actions of Croatian forces could be viewed
as a milder form of ethnic cleansing.83 Yet he urged that the offensive
continue. Of course, as one of Holbrookes colleagues had put it when
the offensive started, We hired these guys [the Croatian Army] to be
our junkyard dogs because we were desperate. We need to try to control
them. But this is no time to get squeamish about things.84 In addition
to Holbrooke, then-U.S. Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith has been
reported to have attended meetings when Croats planned war.85
In the unlikely event that the ICTY ever takes its mandate as a charge
to render impartial justice, and follows the principles announced by its
Appellate Chamber in the Tadic appeal, American political actors who
trained, armed and helped in the planning of Croatian offensives in which
war crimes were committed should expect to be indicted, and the United
Sates as a State should be charged with responsibility for the actions of its
junkyard dogs and de facto agents, the Croatian Army. I do not expect this
to happen, however. As Jamie Shea said, after all, the U.S. is the friend of
the Tribunal, the U.S. is the major financier of the Tribunal.
What, then, does this politicization of the ICTY say about the chances of
ever creating a regime of international law? We might ponder the view of
a leading human rights advocate: that the ICTY was a significant advance
over the tribunals at Nuremberg and Tokyo, because it had a mandate to
prosecute and punish malefactors from all sides...and has carried out its
charge. Accordingly, unlike its predecessors, it is not susceptible to accu-
sations of victors justice.86 It is clear, however, that the ICTY is no more
impartial than were earlier these earlier tribunals. Instead of being victors
justice after the conflict, it is a tool meant to ensure victory during it.
82R. Holbrooke, To End a War (1998), at 166.
83Id., at 160.
84Id. at 73.
85New York Times, May 30, 1996, at A7.
86A. Neier, War Crimes (1998), at 259.
humanrightsism 233
Human Rights Peccadilloes and Humanitarian War Crimes
To its credit, HRW has recognized that NATOs actions in its war against
Yugoslavia signaled a disturbing disregard for the principles of humani-
tarianism that should guide any such action87 and criticized in particular
NATOs use of cluster bombs. It also stated that some of NATOs attacks
on Yugoslav infrastructure were clearly in violation of the Geneva Con-
ventions. However, HRW has not called for investigation of NATO actions
with the goal of prosecuting those in NATO who have violated human
rights. One must wonder why this is so. At the least, we should expect
to see HRW issue a demand for an independent investigation that could
facilitate prosecution of those in NATO who have committed the crimes
that HRW says that NATO committed in Yugoslavia, comparable to
HRWs December 1999 request that the U.N. Security Council appoint an
independent commission of inquiry to investigate war crimes by Russian
forces in Chechnya.88
The difference in standards applied to NATO and to Russia might be
explained by an interesting distinction in a 1998 Washington Post op-ed
piece by HRW executive director Kenneth Roth.89 Trying to assuage U.S.
government concerns that new international judicial institutions could be
used to accuse Americans of war crimes, Roth states that clearly it is not
U.S. policy to commit genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity,
and that there is no prospect of harassment of democratic leaders who
have at worst a few human rights peccadilloes to their record. Of course,
Roth made this distinction before NATO committed what HRW identifies
as violations of the Geneva conventions, but the distinction, perhaps, still
holds: NATO, after all, is by definition democratic, so presumably its war
crimes are peccadilloes, not worthy of prosecution.
Another explanation might be said to lie in the extremity of the situation
to which NATO responded in Kosovo: that it took NATOs controversial
bombing campaign before Belgrade would acquiesce in the deployment of
international troops to stop widespread ethnic slaughter and forced dis-
placement, and that the inspiration for NATOs action was fundamen-
tally humanitarian.... the desire to stop crimes against humanity was
a major goal.90 HRWs recounting of the events leading up to NATOs
87HRW World Report 2000, at 5.
88See www.hrw.org/campaigns/russia/chechnya.
89Washington Post, Nov. 26, 1998, at A31.
90HRW World Report 2000, at 1, 5.
234 chapter ten
attacks closely tracks that of Bill Clinton, who asserted that NATO had
to act when Yugoslav forces began an offensive against the Albanians of
Kosovo.91 Assuming that he read State Department reports, the President
must have known that his account was inaccurate: in a report issued two
weeks before the President published his article in the New York Times,
the State Department said that until the NATO attacks were under way,
Serb forces were engaged in the selective targeting of towns and regions
suspected of [Kosovo Liberation Army] activities, not a general offensive
against the Albanian population.92 This pattern of Serbian actions before
NATOs offensive is confirmed by the OSCE in its massive report on events
in Kosovo, which shows that Serbian forces, until NATO attacked, were
fighting the KLA and not engaged in systematic ethnic cleansing.93 HRW
might have tacitly recognized this uncomfortable fact when it stated that
before using military force to stop crimes against humanity, planners at
a minimum should be confident that intervention will not make mat-
ters worse by provoking a wider war or setting in motion a string of new
atrocities.94 Yet applying this criterion to NATOs actions would delegiti-
mize them, which HRW clearly does not want to do.
The more fundamental problem in any event is HRWs assertion that
war can be seen as humanitarian. Attacks against civilians are probably
inevitable in any supposedly humanitarian intervention. Every nation has
the right to defend itself, and at the level of practical politics, a nation that
is attacked will try to resist the attacker. Winning the war thus requires
defeating not only the army, but the nation: the civilian population. Thus
the decision to attack a sovereign state is, logically, a decision to attack
the civilian population of that state, not just the military. NATOs target-
ing of the civilian infrastructure of Serbia (and earlier, of Iraq), is thus logi-
cal, and the constant repetition that NATO never targets civilians was
hypocritical, presumably meant to obscure the uncomfortable fact that
humanitarian intervention requires the committing of humanitarian war
crimes. At this point, the greatest triumph of the human rights movement,
humanitarian intervention, is revealed as its greatest defeat, because it
transforms what had been a moral critique against violence into a moral
crusade for massive violence. Of course, HRW could escape this trap by
91New York Times, May 23, 1999, at 4 p. 17.
92U.S. State Department, Erasing History: Ethnic Cleansing in Kosovo, May 1999.
93OSCE, Kosovo/ Kosova As Seen, As Told: The Human Rights Findings of the OSCE Veri-
fication Mission (www.osce.org/kosovo/reports/hr/part1), Part I, Chapter 3.
94HRW World Report 2000, at 6.
humanrightsism 235
demanding the indictment of NATO leaders, but it would then precede
the UN in being dismantled brick by brick and thrown into the Atlantic.
While speaking truth to power is admirable, telling power what it wants
to hear tends to bring more tangible rewards.
Humanrightsism
A month after NATO began its attacks on Yugoslavia, Vaclav Havel gave
what seems to be a principled justification for the war:
this is probably the first war that has not been waged in the name of national
interests, but rather in the name of principles and values.... This war places
human rights above the rights of the state. The Federal Republic of Yugosla-
via was attacked by the alliance without a direct mandate from the UN. This
did not happen irresponsibly, as an act of aggression or out of disrespect for
international law. It happened, on the contrary, out of respect for the law,
for the law that ranks higher than the law which protects the sovereignty of
states. The alliance has acted out of respect for human rights.95
Havel then states that human rights are as powerful as they are because,
under certain circumstances, people accept them without compulsion
and are willing to die for them.96
Havel sounds great but, in fact, even as he gave the speech quoted
(April 29, 1999) he must have known that he lied. No one was willing
to die for human rights, particularly in the Czech Republic,97 but rather
NATO was engaged in killing for human rights. As Havel spoke, the alli-
ance was targeting civilian infrastructure because attacking Yugoslav
military targets would have exposed NATO pilots to danger. In the five
days before his speech, NATO repeatedly bombed oil refineries in Novi
Sad, causing massive pollution of the air and of the river Danube; bombed
civilian targets in central Belgrade, and bombed a Serbian town on the
Bulgarian border, destroying houses and killing civilians.98 All but the
last were intentional targeting, so damage to the environment and civilian
deaths were not collateral damage. Havels speech is thus either politically
95V. Havel, Kosovo and the End of the Nation-State, New York Review 10 June 1999,
at 6.
96Id. at 6.
97See M. Znoj, Czech Attitudes toward the War, 8(#3) East European Constitutional
Review 47 (1999).
98U.N. Environment Programme and U.N. Centre for Human Settlements, The Kosovo
Conflict: Consequences for the Environment (1999), at 17.
236 chapter ten
cunning, as befits the elected president of a sovereign nation-state; or else
evasive, avoiding the truth that Havel could not, as a long-term supporter
of human rights, admit.
But the difference between Havel the advocate of human rights and
Havel the War President embodies the difference between human rights
as a principle for criticism of the actions of governments and humanright-
sism as a justification for government actions that violate human rights.
By humanrightsism, I mean what the New York Times has described as the
elevation of human rights to a military priority,99 since military priori-
ties are by definition based on the threat and use of force. This eleva-
tion is actually a striking inversion of the principles that have guided
the growth of human rights organizations. For example, Amnesty Inter-
national long required that its prisoners of conscience not be advocates
or practitioners of violence.100 Humanrightsism, however, itself calls for
violence.
I am aware, of course, of the revival of just war arguments, by political
philosophers101 and politicians.102 In regard to the latter, however, surely
even Vaclav Havel realizes that all politicians justify wars by reference to
principles and values, and justification for attacks that are not based
on self-defense are often less than reliable assessments. After all, were
governments that apply force always candid in their reasons for doing
so, HRW and other human rights organizations would not have been in
business in the first place.
The question then, remains: why have human rights advocates ignored
the actions by NATO and by the ICTY that they would condemn were they
performed by, say, China, or Russia, or India?
This question is addressed directly in a brilliant and brave article by
Dimitrina Petrovna, Executive Director of the European Roma Rights Cen-
ter in Budapest.103 Petrovna acknowledges that she herself was in favor
of NATO intervention in Kosovo until she saw, soon after the bombing
99Editorial, New York Times, 13 June 1999.
100See, e.g., Amnesty International, Yugoslavia: Prisoners of Conscience (1985), at 910:
the following violations of human rights in Yugoslavia are of concern to Amnesty Interna-
tional: the arrest and imprisonment of people for their non-violent exercise of internation-
ally recognized human rights.... the vague formulation of certain legal provisions which
enables them to be applied so as to penalize people for the non-violent exercise of their
human rights.
101E.g., M. Walzer, Just and Unjust Wars (2d ed., 1992).
102E.g. W. Clinton, A Just and Necessary War, New York Times, May 23, 1999 at 417.
103D. Petrovna, The War and the Human Rights Community. 8(#3) East European
Constitutional Review 97 (1999).
humanrightsism 237
began, that it was escalating the human rights catastrophe for everyone in
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, inside Kosovo and in Serbia, and that
from a campaign to defend the lives and rights of Kosovo Albanians, [the
war] metamorphosed into something else: the monster of an escalated
war.104 While Petrovna herself then called for an immediate end to the
bombing and a negotiated peace, few others in the human rights commu-
nity did so. She notes that for east European human rights workers, their
very status and funding could have been jeopardized by criticism of NATO
and especially of the US NATO countries are, after all, the major finan-
ciers of more than just the ICTY. In the Western countries themselves,
however, the reasons are more troubling. There, she notes, human rights
are becoming indistinguishable from official political ideology, producing
a gradual usurpation of the human-rights culture by the dominant pow-
ers, and the very argument for human rights is turning into an apologia for
the global status quo, all in the interests of these very powers.105
From the evidence of NATOs actions in Kosovo and the ICTYs treat-
ment of defendants, this transformation of human rights inverts the con-
cept, from one premised on the protection of people from the violence
of states, to one justifying the application of violence by the worlds most
powerful states against weaker ones. With this transformation, human
rights betrays its own premises and thus becomes its own travesty:
humanrightsism.
104Id. at 99.
105Id. at 101.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
GENOCIDE DENIAL LAWS AS SECULAR HERESY:
A CRITICAL ANALYSIS WITH REFERENCE TO BOSNIA
In early February 2007, the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph
reported that Germany would propose to the European Parliament leg-
islation requiring that Each member state shall take the measures nec-
essary to ensure that the following intentional conduct is punishable:
publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising of crimes of genocide,
crimes against humanity and war crimes.1 The Ottawa Citizen reported
immediately thereafter that under such legislation, Canadian retired
Major General Lewis MacKenzie would face charges for questioning the
numbers killed at Srebrenica in 1995. According to the paper, MacKenzie
acknowledges that thousands were killed, but denies that the acts consti-
tuted genocide.2
This German proposal for criminalizing speech about historical events
raises many troubling issues, and no less a genocide scholar than Deborah
Lipstadt, who had famously won a legal case against David Irving on the
issue of Holocaust denial, came out firmly against it.3 The proposed law is
clearly contrary to what Amnesty International, in a 1985 criticism of the
prosecution of various nationalists and other dissidents in what was then
Yugoslavia, described as the non-violent exercise of internationally rec-
ognized human rights, in particular the right to freedom of expression.4
It has been criticized on such grounds, and passage delayed.5 But this
proposed EU legislation about genocide denial is only one of a number
of such laws in Europe, some of which are in force and have been used
to convict people of verbal crimes. A Turkish politician, for example, was
convicted in Switzerland in March 2007 for denying that the mass killings
1EU plans far-reaching genocide denial law, The Daily Telegraph (London), Febru-
ary 2, 2007.
2Ottawa Citizen, February 2, 2007.
3Daily Telegraph, February 2, 2007.
4Amnesty International, Yugoslavia: Prisoners of Conscience (London, 1985), pp. 910.
5The blog of Deborah Lipstadt, History on Trial, had covered the issue: see http://
lipstadt.blogspot.com/, entries for May 29, 2007 (EU Legislation on genocide denial: Still
in flux) and April 23, 2007 (EU Law to outlaw Genocide denial defeated), though the
latter pronouncement was, as Lipstadt admitted on May 29, premature.
240 chapter eleven
of Armenians in 1915 constituted genocide, even though he had acknowl-
edged that massacres took place.6 Others have been convicted in Austria
and France for denying the reality of the Holocaust.
In Europe, such cases are governed overall by the European Conven-
tion on Human Rights, Article 10(1) of which provides that Everyone has
the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to
hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without
interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. However, this
right is qualified by Art. 10(2), which states that The exercise of these
freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be sub-
ject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are pre-
scribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests
of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention
of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals.... Further,
Art. 17 provides that Nothing in this Convention may be interpreted as
implying for any State, group or person any right to engage in any activ-
ity or perform any act aimed at the destruction on any of the rights and
freedoms set forth herein or at their limitation to a greater extent than is
provided for in the Convention. Taken together, Arts. 10(2) and 17 provide
mechanisms for imposing restrictions on the rights otherwise guaranteed
by Art. 10(1).
A provision in the proposed legislation saying that member states may
choose to punish only conduct which is either carried out in a manner
likely to disturb public order or which is threatening, abusive or insulting7
is hardly re-assuring, since it actually would increase the kinds of vague-
ness and uncertainty that Amnesty complained of in 1985: that the verbal
delict sections of socialist Yugoslavias criminal law rested on the vague
formulation of legal provisions which enables them to be applied so as to
penalize people for the non-violent exercise of their human rights.8 By
the language of the proposed EU legislation, states would be empowered
to criminalize non-violent, verbal actions that are not likely to disturb
public order and are not threatening, abusive, or insulting; indeed, they
6Turkish politician fined over genocide denial, www.swissinfo.org/eng, March 9,
2007, 11:51 AM.
7Council of the European Union, 2794th Council meeting, Justice and Home Affairs,
Luxembourg, 1920 April 2007, Council Framework Decision on Combating Racism and
Xenophobia. Council of the European Union Press Release 8364/07 (Presse 77) (EN)
[emphasis added].
8Amnesty International, Yugoslavia: Prisoners of Conscience, p. 10.
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
genocide denial
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy
democracy