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Survivors of the 1992–95 siege of Sarajevo are renewing their calls for justice as Italian prosecutors open an investigation into allegations of so-called “sniper tourism” — claims that foreign civilians paid to shoot at residents during the Bosnian war.

The probe follows new testimonies highlighted in the documentary Sarajevo Safari and legal action pursued by former Sarajevo Mayor Benjamina Karic. Retired Bosnian intelligence officers, eyewitnesses, and filmmakers describe accounts of foreigners — including Italians — allegedly taken to Bosnian Serb army positions overlooking the city to fire at civilians.

While the Milan investigation currently names no suspects and remains preliminary, it has revived painful memories for Sarajevo residents and renewed pressure on Bosnian authorities to pursue accountability. More than 11,000 civilians were killed during the siege, one of the darkest chapters of the Balkan conflict.

#italy #apt #snipertourism

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00:00This is a very lonely place for me to be here.
00:05If you like this video, please share my video with your friends.
00:10I'm sorry I'm sorry.
00:12I'm sorry.
00:13I'm sorry.
00:15I'm sorry.
00:16I'm sorry.
00:17I'm sorry.
00:19I'm sorry.
00:21I'm sorry.
00:23I'm sorry.
00:25I'm sorry.
00:27In the event of Sarajevo Safari, I was recognized in 1993.
00:54I made an analysis of a strongman, a strongman from Serbia,
01:03who was recognized about the arrival of the military on the battle in Sarajevo
01:08and who, many others, were not soldiers, but civilians from the West,
01:16in this case, from Italy.
01:19What has been given to us is that it is very specific that
01:25on the war lines of civilians appear with hunting
01:31and very sophisticated equipment.
01:46We realized that there is a safari on people,
01:51and that people who came to the village of Sarajevo
01:55were paid for this issue,
01:57and that they were paid for the rest of the people
02:00who were paid for the day and day,
02:02and they were paid for the rest of the Serbskih snaga.
02:06To be a new phenomenon,
02:08and regardless of the fact that they were from Italy,
02:12we recognized the administrative services of Italy
02:16who were then in the UMPRFOR in Sarajevo.
02:19We gave them the information
02:21and we were looking for this case.
02:24And very quickly, at the beginning of 1994,
02:28we agreed on that there is a place in Italy
02:31where everything is organized
02:33and where it is organized
02:34and that the intervention of the Italian government
02:36was prohibited.
02:42In the August of 2025,
02:56I contacted the Italian journalist
02:58Ecio Gavecani,
03:00who had tried his investigation
03:02in Milan
03:03and decided to start this case
03:05in Milan.
03:07I was excited to have my clients
03:09the situation
03:10that I was wanted to make it
03:12to Milan,
03:15as I did not make it
03:16to Milan,
03:17which I did not make it.
03:18I felt this very special sentiment
03:21for the moment.
03:23I genuinely wanted to hear it,
03:24and I just wanted to see it.
03:25Which I wanted to meet your colleagues
03:26and I wanted to see it.
03:28I feel a special sentiment for this case.
03:35I want to be sure that the event of the event and the opening of the event
03:40in Milan will help the event and the event of the case
03:45that is leading before Bosnia and Herzegovina.
03:49I believe in the truth, I believe in the institution
03:52and I believe that after 30 years
03:55we will finally bring the victims to the truth.
04:25The first thing I have said was that it doesn't matter Slovenia,
04:40it doesn't matter Bosnia.
04:42Let's see, let's see.
04:49Predtemi obstajalo eno pričevanje, ki je dokumentirano in ki obstaja,
04:56to je enega nekdanjega Marinca Johna Jordana,
05:00in the Haško sodišče, he told us about these people,
05:04because he was in the time of the war in Sarajevo,
05:08and he was on the one and the other side,
05:11and he was in the description,
05:13he was named Tourist Shooters,
05:16that he was called for the same phenomenon.
05:18He said that he didn't see anybody shooting,
05:21but he was in the same position,
05:23and he was in the same position,
05:25and he was in the same position.
05:27It's hard to see a Sarajevo in Sarajevo,
05:29but he was in the same position,
05:31and he was in the same position.
05:33We, sorry, that John Jordan,
05:35or, we didn't know,
05:37when we filmed the film,
05:39that this story of the story is not possible.
05:41So we have to be able to write our film
05:43on two main stories,
05:45and one of the ones,
05:47who is working for the American American
05:51service,
05:53and one of the ones,
05:55and then he was in the role of a
06:01and he was in the grid where
06:23He told us how he was going to be able to travel from Serbia to Sarajevo in a group in an autobus,
06:32where there were 5 Italian tourists.
06:53I don't know.
07:23I don't know.
07:53I don't know.
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