Bosnian Serb Brigade Commander’s Trial Opens in Belgrade

The trial of the former commander of Bosnian Serb Army's Sana Brigade, Branko Basara, who is accused of war crimes against Bosnian civilians in the Sanski Most area from April to September 1992, opened at Belgrade Higher Court on Monday.

Basara is indicted on 21 accounts, accused of bearing responsibility for killings, forcible relocations, imprisonment and attacking the civilian population in the settlements of Mahala, Muhici, Otoka, Brisevo, Stara Rijeka, Stari Majdan, Hrustovo, Vrhpolje, Lukavice, Begici and Kenjari. The indictment names a total of around 200 victims.

Basara pleaded not guilty, insisting that his brigade was only involved in fighting in Mahala and Hrustovo and in the Golaja forest in the Sanski Most area.

"In the other villages, we did not participate, we did make arrests or take people away - I have no idea who did that," Basara told the court.

Basara confirmed that his unit attacked both settlements, claiming it was a disarmament operation ordered by the command of the Bosnian Serb Army's First Krajina Corp.

He also claimed that in Mahala and Hrustovo, he gave time to civilians to leave before the fighting started.

One of crimes in the indictment happened on May 31, 1992 after Bosnian Serb forces entered the hamlet of Begici and took its civilian residents to Vrhpolje Bridge.

The indictment alleges that Basara then participated in the murders of civilians by ordering them to jump off the bridge, and while they were falling into the water, his troops they shot at and killed them.

Sixteen people's remains were later exhumed from the Vrhpolje Bridge I and II mass grave sites.

Basara claimed he was not in that exact area at the time of the killings. He said that he heard shots, but...

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