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  • 8 months ago
Sadik Selimovic, a survivor of the 1995 Srebrenica massacres, tells AFP about how searching for the missing remains of his family led him to become an investigator at the Bosnian Institute for Missing Persons. More than 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed within a matter of days in July 1995 after Bosnian Serb forces captured Srebrenica. Three decades on, the remains of around 1,000 of the victims have yet to be found.
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00:29For the last three years, I was able to figure out how many locations I bought.
00:53I bought 62 locations.
00:55It was like an example of a dog, a dog, a dog, a dog, a dog.
01:02They all know.
01:04Why can't they live with these knowledge,
01:08so they can find someone in their near future.
01:11Someone is looking for it, and they hear me.
01:14I can't see those people.
01:16There were people who said to me.
01:19I can't say that.
01:25I can't see them.
01:28I can't see them.
01:30I can't see them.
01:32I can't see them.
01:35It's a very hard time.
01:42We're going to find a lot of people who are living with mass bombs.
01:47If they're living with mass bombs, we're going to find it.
01:50How is that?
01:52Is there something to find?
01:55The near the river is Drina.
01:58The most massive bombs is Drina.
02:01We're going to have this all.
02:05This year we identified more than 6.800 people.
02:25There are more than 50 people who have a profile of the DNA, but their families don't want to identify and identify.
02:37The biggest reason for this is not completely skeletal remains.
02:41As a result, we may have only 10% of the cases we have complete the body.
02:48In other cases, we have complete the body.
02:51So, thanks to the DNA analysis, we can connect different locations, different cases and complete them.
03:00business.com
03:07We'll see you next time.
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