Over 10,000 Still Missing from Yugoslav Wars

To mark the International Day of the Disappeared on Tuesday, Serbian officials and missing persons associations told a press conference in Belgrade that finding the 10,653 people who disappeared during the wars in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s remains a critical priority.

The head of Serbian Commission for Missing Persons, Veljko Odalovic, claimed that the process of identifying missing persons in neighbouring countries was flawed.

He also said that more than 4,000 of the missing are Serbs.

"Serbia has faced its problem with missing persons on its territory, however Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo have not coped with this problem. We are asking that the missing persons be found and that there is no segregation of the victims," Odalovic told the press conference.

He said that a meeting with his Croatian counterparts that was planned for July did not take place, and claimed that there was no will in Croatia to find missing Serbs' bodies and prosecute those responsible for their deaths.

He also said there were problems in Bosnia and Herzegovina with finding missing persons because different institutions were controlled by different ethnic groups.

"When it comes to Kosovo, we do hope that the international community will pressurise it to be more dedicated to this problem," he added.

"The problem of missing persons needs to be resolved because it is a path towards the normalisation of relationships in the region. Serbia is sharing its information on missing persons and we do hope that others will be more cooperative," he said.

Kosovo President Hashim Thaci said on Monday that missing persons remain one of the gravest wounds that the war in Kosovo inflicted, and insisted the authorities were committed to resolving the...

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