risto ratković
epa08529984 (FILE) - Former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic appears in a courtroom before the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (MICT), which handles outstanding war crimes cases for the Balkans and Rwanda, in The Hague, The Netherlands, 24 April 2018 (reissued 06 July 2020). A quarter of a century ago, the world witnessed the worst mass murder on European soil since World War II. Some 7,000-8,000 Bosniaks were slaughtered and 20,000 civilians were forcibly displaced in an act of ethnic cleansing perpetrated in the small eastern Bosnian village of Srebrenica, whose name will forever be linked to the infamous 1995 massacre. Today, 25 years after the massacre, the memory of its victims is kept alive by several institutions, such as the Museum of Crimes Against Humanity and Genocide in Sarajevo or a permanent exhibit at the 'Memorial Center Srebrenica-Potocari' that now occupies the former headquarters of the Dutch UNPROFOR Battalion. EPA/YVES HERMAN/POOL ATTENTION: This Image is part of a PHOTO SET/Yves Herman/Pool
Ćorović objasnio odluku
Radovanu Karadžiću simbolično oduzeta nagrada u Crnoj Gori: Kulturno i moralno distanciranje
Formalno-pravno oduzimanje nagrade nije u nadležnosti Savjeta. Tu odluku mora da donese Skupština opštine Bijelo Polje, kao osnivač ustanove, objašnjava Ćorović