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| WASHINGTON - November 19 - Human Rights
Watch today released the results of a 2-year investigation of allegations that a chemical
agent was used against Bosniaks fleeing Srebrenica during the war in Bosnia and
Hercegovina in July 1995. Short of conclusive evidence that a chemical agent was used,
Human Rights Watch called today for a broader international investigation of the
allegations in order to bring justice to the victims, strengthen international controls
over the proliferation of chemical weapons, and prevent a dangerous arms race in the
former Yugoslavia. While the 54-page report, Chemical
Warfare in Bosnia? The Strange Experiences of the Srebrenica Survivors, does not present
conclusive proof substantiating the allegations, Human Rights Watch has documented the
following:
In the summer of 1995, shortly after the fall of the United
Nations-designated "safe area" of Srebrenica, survivors emerged from a long trek
to safety with accounts that they had been attacked during their flight with some type of
chemical weapon, possibly an incapacitating agent called BZ. (This agent was originally
developed by the United States in the 1960s but was never used). Their column had been
attacked by Bosnian Serb forces commanded by Gen. Ratko Mladi.
- Survivors gave consistent descriptions to Human Rights Watch
of mortar shells that produced a "strange smoke" of various colors which did not
rise but spread out slowly. Following these attacks, some of the marchersthe numbers
are unclearbegan to hallucinate and behave in an irrational manner, with some even
killing their friends or themselves. So far the behavior following these attacks has
defied explanation, including by experts on war-related stress.
- The army of the former Yugoslavia, the Yugoslav People's
Army (JNA), is known to have possessed incapacitating agents, including BZ, and to have
developed doctrine and delivery systems for BZ. The situation that confronted the people
fleeing Srebrenica matched the scenario for which the use of incapacitating chemical
agents was prescribed in a JNA military manual.
- The United States government apparently took the allegations
seriously enough to conduct an investigation, reported to have taken place in late 1996 or
early 1997. The results of this investigation have not been made public, but in late 1996
or early 1997 the U.S. intelligence community was reported to have information suggesting
that chemical weapons may have been used in Srebrenica. The U.S. government's refusal to
release the findings may, according to a U.S. official interviewed by Human Rights Watch,
be based on a belief that making this information public might hurt the international
effort to effect peace in the former Yugoslavia.
Following interviews with some thirty-five survivors
as well as U.N. and other international personnel in the former Yugoslavia, and a review
of documentation available in 1996-97 relating to events at Srebrenica, Human Rights Watch
has found the evidence, while suggestive of the use of BZ or a similar chemical
incapacitant, still incomplete. Most of those reported to have been affected by the
"strange smoke" apparently never reached Tuzla and could therefore not be
interviewed; they are presumed dead. Physical evidence, including chemical traces in
shells or the clothes of people who died during the march and whose bodies were exhumed
subsequently, has remained elusive.
In a March 1997 report, Clouds of War: Chemical Weapons in
the Former Yugoslavia, Human Rights Watch disclosed that it had uncovered evidence that
the JNA had an extensive and sophisticated chemical weapons program prior to the breakup
of Yugoslavia in 1991 that included nerve and mustard gasses, but also incapacitating
agents like BZ; that the army of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and
Montenegro) inherited much of this program; and that the army of Bosnia and Hercegovina
produced crude chemical munitions during the Bosnian war (1992-95). Human Rights Watch
also revealed that it had strong indications that the army of the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia was continuing to maintain an offensive chemical weapons capability throughout
the 1990s. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is the only state in Europe not to have
signed the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention.
As sponsor of the Dayton Accords, the international
community has a vital stake in the accords' success. Silence on the question whether Serb
forces used chemical weapons will give the perpetrators a sense of impunity, and may
therefore encourage them to resort to chemical weapons again in any future fighting.
Moreover, Yugoslavia's failure to sign the Chemical Weapons Convention may undermine
treaty compliance by other Balkan states.
Human Rights Watch calls on the international community to
investigate allegations that chemical weapons were used in Srebrenica. The U.N. Security
Council should instruct U.N. agencies, such as the Organization for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, and the
Office of the United Nations Secretary-General, to do so. It should also call for the
release of all information on the development, production, stockpiling, and use of
chemical weapons in the former Yugoslavia which international alliances and their member
states, including troop contributors of the now-defunct United Nations Protection Force
(UNPROFOR) and NATO-led Implementation Force (IFOR), as well as the Stabilisation Force
(SFOR) and the International Police Task Force (both currently operating in Bosnia), may
have in their possession.
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