Thursday, February 23, 2012


Bosnia

In Bosnia-Herzegovina, One Family, Three Armies, And A Lost Generation

Zoran Laketa lost his father and brother in the war
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By Tina Jelin-Dizdar
MOSTAR, Bosnia-Herzegovina -- Zoran Laketa knows what it's like to fire a gun and wonder if the soldier on the other side of the front line just might be his brother. Or his father.
 
Before the Bosnian War broke out in the picturesque and harmoniously mixed city of Mostar, Laketa and his ethnic-Serbian, Orthodox Christian family lived quietly on the city's east side. But their idyllic life was about to change dramatically.
 
In 1993, ethnically driven violence ripped Mostar apart. Dozens, perhaps hundreds, of families were split in half, with siblings pitted against each other and parents against children. Laketa says the war turned his family's life upside-down -- with himself, his brother, and his father ending up forced to serve in different armies.
 
"I was 25 when it all started. I call it a primitive uprising. People can call it whatever they want -- a defensive war, an independence war, or aggression, or anything else. I don't care. I call it an uprising because it stopped my life at 25 and turned it around," Laketa said.
 
Family Against Family
 
More than 5,000 people died and tens of thousands were displaced in the fighting in and around Mostar, which largely pitted ethnic Croats against Bosniaks. Laketa's family is just one of those ripped apart when Mostar exploded into violence. 
 
Before the war, he says, he gave little thought to ethnic issues.

"I always lived just like everyone else. Mostar is known for having the highest rate of mixed marriages and, until recently, I did not know who was a Serb, who was a Croat, or who was a Bosniak," Laketa said.
 
"Instead, I looked forward to every Eid, to every Christmas. But then it started -- and I believed it would not happen, so we stayed. I was 25, and my brother was 23."
 
Before the shooting began, Laketa and his brother, Goran, and their father, Rajko, were subjected to constant pressure to join the Yugoslavian National Army (JNA), which had taken up positions on the eastern bank of the Neretva River, which divides the city.
 
To avoid this fate, the brothers fled to the western part of the city, sharing a flat with Zoran's girlfriend. Rajko, however, was conscripted into the JNA. To this day, Zoran doesn't talk about his father's fate -- saying only that he died during the war without seeing his sons again.
 
Mostar's famous bridge was rebuilt after being partially destroyed during the war
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Mostar's famous bridge was rebuilt after being partially destroyed during the war
​​After the JNA withdrew in mid-1992 after heavy fighting, Goran returned home. But in May 1993, fighting erupted between the city's Bosniak and Croat communities, and the two brothers were caught on opposite sides of the front. Goran found himself in the Muslim-led Army of Bosnia-Herzegovina, which dominated the city's eastern side, while Zoran joined the Croatian Defense Council (HVO) in the west.
 
The ensuing fighting not only pitted brother against brother, but also friend against friend. Zoran's close friend, Adis, was with Goran and the two died just days apart during intense urban fighting in August 1993.
 
"Adis would not have been there without Gogo [Goran]. He was one of the rarest, one of the bravest men. I'm having a hard time talking about it. But he crossed over to be with Gogo, with my brother. Gogo died on August 6 and Adis died on August 15, just 10 days later," Laketa said.
 
Still Divided
 
He says that Goran was his "brother by blood" and Adis was simply his brother. But during the chaos of the war, a more brutal logic prevailed.
 
"I actually shot at them, and they shot at me," Laketa said.
 
WATCH: Zoran Laketa talks about his war-time experience

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​​
Nearly two decades after the guns fell silent in Mostar, the city remains far from what it once was. The once mixed city is divided into the Croat-run western part and the Muslim-controlled eastern part. As an HVO veteran and the brother of a veteran of the Bosnian army, Laketa could have joined either side and been given a job and benefits.
 
But he won't choose sides again. He blames both groups for the suffering he and his city have endured and for perpetuating the divisions that they created. So today he is unemployed and without veterans' benefits.
 
He walks wistfully now through the streets of Mostar, mixing in his mind the city of his youth, the city of war, and the city of today.
 
"I feel sorry for this generation, the lost generation. Some of them have spread throughout the world. Some of them are taking medication to this day because they suffer from depression. Some of them live on the margins. But tomorrow we will meet again and live our lives," Laketa said.
 
RFE/RL correspondent Robert Coalson contributed to this story from Prague  

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Comment Sorting
Comment on this forum (16)
Comments
     
by: John Harduny from: Reston, VA, USA
January 27, 2012 03:35
Most likely this is a bogus or a terribly spinned off story. Hard to believe this nonsense.
In Response

by: Darko from: Cevo
January 27, 2012 16:45
And you're basing your assessment on....?
In Response

by: Felipe Muñoz from: Santiago, Chile
January 28, 2012 00:04
maybe it's not a nonsense after all. and.. if Goran and Adis considered Zoran a ''traitor'' when he joined the Yugoslav Army??.. Maybe Zoran still believed in the yugoslav project in those days. But not his brother.. who -something very probably for me- maybe believed in an independent Bosnian state. just look the timeline.. it's so probably Goran changed his mind about his brother, the whole time Zoran was fighting under JNA (considered an oppresor of bosnian independent dreams, as well as a 'serbian dominated' army.
And, it's so possible, if they weren't a truly cohesive family...
In Response

by: vn from: Belgrade
January 28, 2012 14:05
Felipe, this is not a very long reading, and by judging by your comment, your English is more than passable reading and writing. For the comprehension part, please note that during the war, according to the story, Zoran had never joined the Yugoslav Army. It was his father. (BTW, for fifty years it was a very respectable Army, the fourth one in Europe). Zoran joined the Croatian forces - led by the breakaway nationalist freak, President of Croatian Republic, Franjo Tudjman.

Now, that's where Chile comes in with their illegal shipments of weapons etc., in the beginning of the 90's.

Yes, unfortunately, it's a very plausible story. A tragedy. The bastards were very knowlegdeable about the weakest spots and strongest traits of Yugoslavia and the Yugoslavians, with three different confessions, at least four major languages, ... The first thing they had to do for the purpose of breaking the cohesional bond in families, as you perceptibly noticed, was to rip the Yugoslavians off. Billions of US dollars had disappeared overnight. The rest is economic downturn and playing the ethno-nationalistic tunes.

There are traitors and traitors. They needn't worry. There's no place they can hide.
In Response

by: Eugenio from: Vienna
January 28, 2012 16:03
This is actually an answer to "vn" from Belgrade: I am not sure about how plausible the story of this article is, but as far as your comment is concerned - "that's where Chile comes in with their illegal shipments of weapons etc., in the beginning of the 90's" - from what I know it was ARGENTINA under the ex-president Menem (1991-1999) that was sending arms to the Croatian army and not Chile.
In Response

by: vn from: Belgrade
January 29, 2012 11:35
To: Eugenio

Thank you for your contribution. Yes, there had been a number of countries involved in illegal arms smuggling in the 90's.

As for Chile, some of Pinoche's friends, two retired generals, Ektor Letelier Skiner and Visente Rodriges Busto (sorry for any misspeling of the Spanish names), just a day or two ago got a sentence for three years of house detention for breaking the UN Arms Embargo in 1991/92. The armament was found and confiscated in Hungary. Seven other accomlices, army officers, are waiting for their sentence.

Lieutenant Herrardo Uber, who was assasinated in 1992 (first presumed to have committed suicide), was also involved.

Last year, Menem was apparently exempted from liability of being involved in this case.

From the comments it seems that the case is tied to the downing of an EU chopper carrying the EU monitoring mission members, by a Yugoslav Army pilot, over the territory of former FR of Yugoslavia, in 1992. The pilot had been sentenced to several years of prison in Italy, and after seven years was transferred to Serbia.

The sources are Serbian newspaper "Politika", newsagency "Vesti". I don't have the time to check out on English language sources.
In Response

by: Eugenio from: Vienna
January 30, 2012 09:41
To: vn from Belgrade
Actually you are right: I have just checked and found the reference (in Spanish) that confirms your info on the illegal Chilean arms exports to Croatia, it also says that some German officers were involved in the deal. Here is the reference anyways: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerardo_Huber

by: Vakhtang from: Moscow
January 29, 2012 04:27
The bulk of the civil war begins when the number of lumpen reaches a critical mass.
Рeople who could not adapt to earn,who experience problems with sexual life, schizophrenics, the evil types, maniacs and perverts never satisfied and want to change, even if it is related to blood.
Нere one can agree with the Zohan when he call it a primitive uprising...it is then there are the terms-- ideological background, religion.
Рerhaps only ethnic hatred can serve as a pretext for massacre
but for the most part the tendency of people to violence and social disorder.

Of course, Zoran victim of circumstances but he was not particularly need to mourn with the understanding that violence is part of being human.
And now, when we write posts people cut, rob and kill each other around the World

by: steve from: vancouver
January 29, 2012 09:41
The author, who obviously is on way too high a dose of prozac, should offer at least half of his dosage to vn from belgrade. This should take care of Coalson's inexplicable attempt to fairy-tale someone's drug-induced dream, and should take care of vn's hare-rage towards Croats. Mind you there is still that problem of medicating vn's psychoses that manifest as delusion and paranoia but once he is on valium that shouldn't prove to be a major challenge. Then maybe Croatians will be able to travel to serbia to see sporting events, etc. without fear of a boulder being thrown through their car window, or being attacked by an axe-wielding serb radical.
In Response

by: vn from: Belgrade
January 29, 2012 17:27
To: Steve

To the paranoid Steve raving like a mad dog against the Serbs: maybe the Serbs would be able to go to concerts to Rijeka/Croatia "without fear of a boulder being thrown through their car window", or go on a holiday to Dubrovnik, Hvar, ... Thank you for showing us your liberal high-on-drugs life style in Canada, and for sharing with us the sporting news on Croatians actually physically beating the Serbs in Split and Vukovar after the Croatians lost the game in the handball semi-finals.

The EU is on the way of getting Croatia in its circles, whose people, it seems, are well familiar only with the economics of off-the-hospital medication, grass from Tibet, Timbuktu and god knows where else from. Despite having most of the Adriatic Sea to themselves they have managed to destroy the tourist industry, and as for the shipping industry - they are in lack of management and shipping engineers. The Serbs are now some place else. Statistics would show that It is the Serbs who have the gens for math.

Finally, I do not support the unfortunate event at the games. I believe the hooligans have been detained.
In Response

by: Steve from: Vancouver
January 30, 2012 07:32
vn would like to travel to Croatia but is worried that people in Dubrovnik will throw rocks at him. Get those paranoia drugs amigo, and get them fast. Despite the fact your countrymen and women tried destroying our Unesco heritage site, you're still welcome there and no-one will harm you. Unless you start behaving like a serb (like you own the place) - then people might actually do the unthinkable - tell you that you're wrong.

Croatia does have the problem of being a thoroughfare for illicit drug traffic, but who are the culprits? Serb mafia. Look at the names of any recent arrests or convictions.

Tourism, while still in the redevelopment stage resulting from damage caused by serb agression, is doing quite well actually. People from all over come for a good swim, good food, good ambience (including serbs capable of civilized behavior).

Croatia's economy, again struggling after having to spend billions of dollars reconstructing the damage left by serb aggression, will recover. Living standards (some exeptions of course) are quite good, but I guess that serbs with those 'math genes' already know that. Average monthly income in Serbia just 'skyrocketed' to 415 euros recently while in Croatia that figure is about 150% higer. The problem vn has these days is that twenty-some-odd years ago his fellow serbs could get their mitts on income generated in Croatia and now they can't. A clear 'sour grapes' situation. No wonder they need medication, what with all their 'math genes' and all... :-)
In Response

by: vn from: Belgrade
January 30, 2012 13:37
To: Steve

I have always considered the UNESCO heritage site, namely the Dalmatian town of Dubrovnik (Ital. Ragusa) to be a Yugoslavian, European town, never a purely Croatian one, and nobody will ever be able to change that. Sorry for that. I doubt I will have a chance to see it any time soon. As for the part about the Serbian attempt to destroy it (I suppose you mean the Serbs from Serbia) those in the know are smiling, for you still have no idea whose idea that was nor why they did it (not the Serbs). Pouring loads of wine ... Sad ... The affairs of war ... As if they cared ... Cheers!!!

As for the state of economy in Serbia, wish the situation were as depicted by Steve. Alas, it's much, much worse than that. Nonetheless, here we are, exposing drug obsessed individuals. Just out of curiosity, since when have the Serbian and Croatian names changed so much? As someone who is familiar with the subject of drug trafficking you should know that the impact of the problem lies much more with the drug users. There's a Croatian writer describing Croatians as "grassy" people - it may have come from Walter Whitman's "The Leaves of Grass".

P.S. In addition, the Serbs do not have a prominent baseball league.

In Response

by: steve from: vancouver
January 30, 2012 17:15
Now there is your problem vn, your genetically engrained faulty 'denial' gene. In your limited mind, Dubrovnik is still yours. So you and your barbarians tried to take it (if we can't have it then neither will the ustashas) by destroying it. Oh, I know that the Montenegrins were involved, but that was only because the serb propaganda machine managed to convince them that tens of thousands of 'ustasha' (serb word for 'Croatian') were hiding. Mind you, the Montenegrins were decent enough to apologize for their actions, which led to much better relations between our two countries. Perhaps something to be learned there.

What Walt Whitman has to do with this discussion or which author refered to us as 'grass people' I don't know and really don't care much to explore, let alone why serbia has no baseball league, but I do know that a good dose of lithium would help you (or the new poster below who manages somehow to make serbs the victims in Mostar) find some escape from those nasty hallucinations. Btw - the chetnik hats that your players wore during the ceremony were such a nice and appropriate gesture, as were the 'kokarde' their girls were wearing, especially given the great treatment Croatia was given in RS over the past week or so. See you in Europe in about 50 years (hopefully your delusionary gene will eventually die off and your grandchildren can finally become reasonable, responsible global citizens)

by: Hot Air from: Brussels
January 30, 2012 14:56
Congratulations to RFE/RL and the author for no mention at all of the serbs who used to live in Mostar. 'Used to live' is also code for 'ethnically cleansed', but we know that the serbs are always the agressors and never the victims. We all remember that when the bridge was blown up, the western media blamed it on the serbs, even though there weren't any left nor any serb forces in the vicinity.

Unfortunately this kind of silence or mangement is common with even experienced reporters. Martin Bell recently did a programme on the BBC called 'Return to Vukovar'. He said the serbs 'left'. He might have well said the serbs ethnically cleansed themselves, either way it shows an all too common ingrained bias in the mainstream media.

Null points all around for peddling old propaganda and personal puff pieces and not having learnt anything.

by: Dennis Nilsson from: Planet Earth
February 15, 2012 07:54
A great story of hope and sanity, and not hate and insanity.

"But tomorrow we will meet again and live our lives"
In Response

by: Lilia from: California
February 17, 2012 17:43
So true...rather do it today...

Just would love to visit my only known from the past Yugoslavia... yet with many languages, ethnicities and culture.. I am a child of USSR... and was never able to travel there... one day!!! I have no tolerance to any kind of WARs!!!
Live in peace...learn how to accept your history… your neighbors…

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