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This war crime occurred on March 26, 1992, when various formations mixed between Bosniaks and Croats, with the markings of Croatian military formations, crossed the Sava River from Croatia and committed a war crime against the Serb population in Sijekovac. The motive and cause of the attack on Sijekovac remains questionable to this day. Serbian sources claim that Croat-Bosniak forces killed civilians and set fire to around 50 houses in the village without any reason, while Human Rights Watch states that it could not establish allegations of massacre because it was an armed conflict between Serb and Croat-Bosniak soldiers, while which killed about 20 soldiers. Civilian casualties in that conflict occurred by accident, when the locals found themselves between two conflicting parties. In May 2014, the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina sentenced Zemir Kovačević to ten years in prison. As a member of the Intervention Platoon of the 1st Bosanski Brod Brigade, during the months of March and April 1992, and July and August of the same year, he participated in murders, torture, illegal imprisonment, forced labor, alone and with unidentified members of the HOS and the Croatian Army (HV) in the area of the municipality of Bosanski Brod.
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The Grabovica massacre refers to the murders of 33 ethnic Croat inhabitants of the village of Grabovica located between Jablanica and Mostar by members of the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The massacre occurred during Operation Neretva '93, which aimed to conquer HVO-controlled areas from Bugojno to Mostar. The victims included 17 women and one child. The youngest victim was Mladenka Zadro, a four-year-old girl, and the oldest, 87-year-old Marko Marić. This publication includes three convictions for war crimes committed in the village of Grabovica, issued by the Cantonal Courts in Mostar and Sarajevo, and the Supreme Court of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. They were sentenced Enes Šakrak, Haris Rajkić, Mustafa Hota, Nihad Vlahovljak, and Sead Karagić from nine to thirteen years in prison.
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This book contains verdicts passed before the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Cantonal Court in Sarajevo, which concern war crimes committed in the area of the pre-war municipality of Foča. The book contains the following subjects: Gojko Janković, Jasko Gazdić, Krsto Dostić, Mitar Rašević and Savo Todović; Neđo Samardžić, Novica Tripković, Radovan Stanković and Veselin Čančar. They were sentenced to four to 34 years in prison. Gojko Janković received the highest prison sentence. Some of the convicts are already free today. Mitar Rašević was released from the Foča Penitentiary in 2010, and Savo Todović in 2014. In addition to the verdicts, the book includes a list of names of persons who have been exhumed from mass graves and who disappeared in the area of the pre-war municipality of Foča.
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International criminal law. --- Criminal jurisdiction. --- International crimes.
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Criminal jurisdiction. --- Human rights. --- International crimes.
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International crimes. --- International offenses. --- Terrorism --- Terrorism.
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"The Legacy of Punishment in International Law illustrates how 17th and 18th century rationales for the use of force in support of piracy and colonialism have been transformed into progressive features of contemporary International Law. The classic practice of international punishment was a part of the jus ad bellum, and was the fig leaf for intra-European violence, and for the European conquest of the Americas. It has been transformed, however, into the basis for the assertion of a set of unconditionally, universally binding rules of international law, and for universal jurisdiction over perpetrators of crimes against humanity and war crimes"--
International crimes. --- International law. --- International offenses. --- Punishment.
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International crimes. --- Respondeat superior. --- International criminal law.
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