Filter by Categories
Audit Reports
Awards
Blog
Calendar
Criminal Justice
Criminal complaints
Dossiers
Joint proceedings
Vetting
War crime trials
ICTY trials and before the courts in the other post-Yugoslav states
Before the internationalised courts in Kosovo
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatia
Montenegro
Transcripts
War crime trials in Serbia
Analysis
Individual Cases
Zone of (non)responsibility
Dajte potpis
Documentation
Dokumentovanje i pamcenje
Donatori
Education
Education
National School of Transitional Justice
Regional School of Transitional Justice
HLC Annual Report
HLC Archives
HLC Governing Board
HLC YouTube Channel
Human Losses
Data Base
Human Losses in Kosovo
Human losses in NATO bombing of Serbia and Montenegro
Human Losses in the armed conflict in Macedonia
Human losses of Serbia and Montenegro in the armed conflicts in Slovenia, Croatia and B&H
Kosovo Memory Book
Register of Croatian citizens of Serbian ethnicity, killed in the armed conflict in Croatia
Internships
Justice
Koalicija za REKOM
Kontakt
Linkovi
Memory
O nama
Others about HLC
Podcast
Pravda i reforma institucija
Public Information
Bulletin through ACCESSION towards JUSTICE
Conferences
HLC Video Production
Library
Magazine Forum on Transitional Justice
News
Press Releases
Reports
Transitional justice in focus
Video documents
Publications
Reparations
Financial Reparations
Symbolic Reparations
Reports on Transitional Justice
Search the Data Base of Human Losses of Serbia and Montenegro in the Period 1991-1995.
The RECOM Process
Transkripti
Uncategorized
Uncategorized @en
Vacancies
Video produkcija
28.09.2017.

War Crimes Documentation Centre Opens in Kosovo

BalkanInsight_logoThe Humanitarian Law Centre has opened a war crimes documentation centre in Pristina with information from five Kosovo-related trials at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

The Humanitarian Law Centre Kosovo said it opened the new documentation centre in Pristina so people can become better informed about crimes committed during the 1998-99 war in Kosovo.

“Even though we always hear people saying that they know what happened during the war, if you ask for more details, only few of them know the exact data,” Bekim Blakaj, the executive director of HLC Kosovo, told BIRN.

“Nowadays the war topic is being generalised, [in phrases] such as ’20,000 raped women’, ‘thousands killed’, but nothing more than that. We can’t create a collective memory about the war based on facts in this way,” Blakaj said.

War photos on display at the new war crimes documentation centre in Pristina. Photo: Sense Agency.

He added that apart from victims’ relatives, very few people know the exact data or facts about the war’s victims.

Photograph by Wade Goddard taken during the Kosovo war, exhibited at the documentation centre. Photo: BIRN.

“We hope that through this centre, information about war victims will be memorialised in a detailed way,” he said.
The films’ narrative was produced by the SENSE Transitional Justice Centre, and explains how the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia investigated, reconstructed and prosecuted the crimes committed in Kosovo in 1998 and 1999.The documentation centre’s first material was nine short films of 10-12 minutes, based on data from five trials at the Hague Tribunal – the cases against Slobodan MilosevicVlastimir DordevicNikola SainovicRamush Haradinaj and Fatmir Limaj.

“These films are divided into different topics such as ‘A Crime That was Waiting to Happen’, ‘The Delayed Crime Scene Investigation’, ‘The Last Exodus of the 20th Century’, ‘Survivors from Kosovo’s Killing Fields’, ‘No Corpse – No Crimes’, ‘Beyond Reasonable Doubt’, ‘Too Many Obstacles, Too Little Evidence, and ‘A Chain of Command without Commanders’,” Blakaj explained.

The documentation centre opened with two temporary exhibitions.

One features pictures taken during the war in Kosovo by the photographer Wade Goddard from New Zealand, and the other contains sculptures made from guns by Kosovo-based sculptor Ismet Jonuzi.

A helicopter made from weapons by sculptor Ismet Jonuzi. Photo: BIRN.

He also encouraged war survivors who want their stories to be heard to visit the centre and have them documented.“The centre will always be open to anyone who thinks that they can contribute, be involved in a project in any active way, such as with any publication or artistic work,” Blakaj said.

“This is the right place for war survivors who want to share their stories or for those who have items from wartime,” he said.

He said that when the new Kosovo Specialist Chambers, set up to try former Kosovo Liberation Army ex-guerrillas for wartime and post-war crimes, begins to hold hearings in The Hague, these will also be documented at the centre.

Tagovi:

Podržali:

Pogledajte još...

We use cookies to provide a better user experience and to enable the functioning of this presentation in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.