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Writ of summons - Van Diepen Van der Kroef

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NIOD. This Report is referred to as ‘the Dutch Parliamentary Enquiry’ (see,Lower House, Assembly Year 2002-2003, 28506);- Moreover, a team <strong>of</strong> Dutch and Bosnian lawyers has spoken in detail with survivingrelatives <strong>of</strong> the men, women and children mur<strong>der</strong>ed in the Safe Area, as well as withother concerned parties and witnesses. Furthermore, these lawyers together with some<strong>of</strong> the surviving relatives have repeatedly visited Srebrenica and Potočari where asignificant part <strong>of</strong> the facts to be described below took place.Eleven persons made a statement about what they experienced at the fall <strong>of</strong>Srebrenica. Those statements are appended to this writ <strong>of</strong> <strong>summons</strong> as Exhibits 1through 11.I.1. The war in the former Yugoslavia6. The former Yugoslavia was occupied during the Second World War by national-socialistand fascist powers. A civil war was then also raging. The parties accused each other <strong>of</strong>dreadful crimes. More than 1 million persons out <strong>of</strong> a population <strong>of</strong> 16 million lost theirlives. When one views the victims by republic, then Bosnia Herzegovina was the worstaffected with approximately10.3 % <strong>of</strong> its population dead (see page 65 <strong>of</strong> the NIODReport).7. In the post-war Yugoslavia un<strong>der</strong> Tito nationalism was discouraged whether or not byforce and the emphasis lay on the unity <strong>of</strong> the communist state. With the exception <strong>of</strong> arelatively calm period from 1945 to 1980, the ethnic groups remained conscious <strong>of</strong> theirseparate identities.8. The Socialist Fe<strong>der</strong>al Republic Yugoslavia (literally: South Slavia) consisted <strong>of</strong> sixrepublics from 1945 to 1990, namely, Bosnia Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia,Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia. These republics were populated by divergent ethnicgroups who sometimes formed the majority in the particular republic. For example,Serbia was populated in particular by Serbs, and Croatia in particular by Croats. InBosnia Herzegovina, the area in which Srebrenica lay, several population groups wererepresented before the war in Yugoslavia, namely, Bosniacs (44%), Serbs (31%), Croats© <strong>Van</strong> <strong>Diepen</strong> <strong>Van</strong> <strong>der</strong> <strong>Kroef</strong> Advocaten 2007www.vandiepen.com11

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