ICMP and how it came about

The International Commission for Missing Persons (ICMP) was until recently based in Bosnia and Herzegovina and played a leading role in the collection and analysis of physical evidence of Srebrenica-related events in July of 1995. It has carefully nurtured an image of a professional organization composed of international experts. In “About ICMP” on its website…

Konstantin Kilibarda: Refuting the Srebrenica Myth – An Islamist Perspective

“The international press…made the battle for Srebrenica sound like Stalingrad. There is a kind of dialectical relation between the attention of a great power and the power of the media. It creates a distortion in our work. What I am trying to do, without great success, is to correct this distortion.”– Comments by UN Secretary General…

ICMP: A stocktaking – Missing persons from the armed conflicts of the 1990s

The International Commission of Missing Persons (ICMP) summary report issued in 2014 is a useful tool for sorting out various Srebrenica issues, though it should be read carefully and critically. Information contained elsewhere on this website facilitates such an alert and critical study of this document. ICMP is a major player in creating and sustaining the…

Jean M. Morgan: Proving Genocide – The Role of Forensic Anthropology in Developing Evidence to Convict Those Responsible for Genocide

The article that follows is a textbook example of conclusion-driven “scholarship” which operates independently of the facts and in disregard of any relevant theoretical guidelines. Anthropology can play a role in sorting out a crime scene where homicide is suspected to have been committed, but it plays no role at all in “proving genocide.” The…

Admir Jugo and Sari Wastell: Disassembling the pieces, reassembling the social: the forensic and political lives of secondary mass graves in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Unintentionally but perfectly, the authors illustrate the nature of the pseudo-scholarly drivel that passes for serious analysis of Srebrenica forensic issues. Disassembling the pieces, reassembling the social – The forensic and political lives of secondary mass graves in Bosnia and Herzegovina Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1wn0s24.13

K. Dekleva and J. Post: “Genocide in Bosnia: The Case of Dr. Radovan Karadzic”

“From 1992 to 1995 the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina experienced a war of genocidal proportions between the Bosnian Serbs, the Bosnian Croats, and the Bosnian Muslims. The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia has indicted Dr. Radovan Karadzic-former President of the Bosnian Serb Republic, psychiatrist, and poet-as a suspected war criminal for his role in…

M. Klinkner: Karadžić’s guilty verdict and forensic evidence from Bosnia’s mass graves (2016)

We are always happy to present views that differ from our own, in particular if they are well argued. Such is undoubtedly the case with Prof. Klinkner’s (Bournemouth University, UK) analysis of the forensic evidence and its impact on the guilty verdict in the Karadžić trial. Rather than attempting to highlight the weak points in…