Bosnia Mayor and Serbian PM Appeal for Peace

As tensions rise in Bosnia and the Balkans, the Mayor of the Bosnian town of Srebrenica and Serbia's Prime Minister spoke together in New York on Tuesday on the difficulty of promoting relationships between Bosniaks and Serbs.

At a Clinton Foundation panel discussion, Mayor Camil Durakovic said it had not been easy to hug Prime Minister Aleksander Vucic at the Potocari memorial to the Srebrenica massacre - where dignitaries gather every July 11 to commemorate more than 7,000 people killed in the town by Bosnian Serbs in 1995.

"Maybe it was not a good thing [politically] for me to hug Vucic in the middle of 7,000 graves, as the Mayor of Srebrenica and as a Bosniak survivor of the genocide. But I did, because we're both brave," said Durakovic.

Admitting he had received criticism for this, he added: "All people in the Balkans who think that peace has [an] alternative - they don't know."

Vucic, meanwhile, told the New York audience that the outlook for peace in the region had worsened.

"[It] is not easy at all. It's even more difficult today than it was last year, than it was 20 years ago. And it's becoming more and more difficult," he said.

Vucic, who spoke slowly and appeared troubled, said Bosniaks and Serbs would need to work and live together, or face disaster together. "Otherwise I'm very much afraid for the future of the Western Balkans once again," he said.

Former US president Bill Clinton, who moderated the discussion, praised both Vucic and Durakovic for their courage.

Their display of unity came the same day as Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic - also speaking from New York, where he is attending the UN General Assembly - warned that Belgrade would "certainly not allow" military...

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