DID YOU KNOW?  -- Three years before the 1995 Srebrenica Genocide, Serbs torched Bosniak villages and killed at least 3,166 Bosniaks around Srebrenica. In 1993, the UN described the besieged situation in Srebrenica as a "slow-motion process of genocide." In July 1995, Serbs forcibly expelled 25,000 Bosniaks, brutally raped many women and girls, and systematically killed 8,000+ men and boys (DNA confirmed).

29 May, 2012

SERB ARRESTED & DEPORTED ON BOSNIAN GENOCIDE CHARGES

In this photo provided by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, former Bosnian-Serb police commander tied to Srebrenica genocide Dejan Radojkovic, 61, arrives at McCarran Airport in Las Vegas, for the initial leg of his removal flight back to Sarajevo. The former Bosnian Serb police commander accused of playing a leading role in the Bosnian Genocide in Srebrenica has been deported to his native country. Photo: U.S. Immigration And Customs Enforcement


A man accused of commanding a police squad that rounded up more than 8000 Bosnian Muslims [Bosniaks] for slaughter in 1995 made a new life in Las Vegas as a modest grocery shop owner before being arrested and deported to his native country, US officials said.

Dejan Radojkovic, 61, arrived in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, after an overnight commercial flight from Las Vegas accompanied by federal agents, Bosnian authorities and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.

Prosecutors say Radojkovic commanded a special police brigade that rounded up about 200 Bosniak men in July 1995 in the Konjevic Polje region for execution.

Radojkovic was arrested in January 2009 for failing to disclose his wartime history when he entered the US, said Nicole Navas, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman in Washington DC.

Documents identify him as an ethnic Serbian refugee. An immigration judge in late 2009 ordered him deported on multiple grounds, finding that he ordered or participated in "extrajudicial killing". Court documents show Radojkovic was accused of failing to report that he had been a commander in the Republika Srpska Special Police Squad.

US and Bosnian authorities said Radojkovic was handed over to police at the Sarajevo airport on Thursday for prosecution based on evidence collected by investigators from the ICE Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Centre, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia at The Hague and prosecutors from Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Bosnia's 1992-95 war following the break-up of the former Soviet republic of Yugoslavia left more than 100,000 dead.

Court documents show Radojkovic and his family were granted refugee status and admitted to the United States in June 1999. Radojkovic's wife Radojka died in a car crash in Las Vegas in September 2000. A newspaper obituary said she was 43. His daughter, Ranka Shaw, divorced and moved last year to Bosnia. A son, Ranko Radojkovic, lives in Las Vegas.

Radojkovic, who became a permanent US resident in January 2002, used money from an insurance settlement following the crash to open the grocery shop. The business closed after Radojkovic was arrested in January 2009. He remained in US custody for more than three years.