ROUGH CUT (NO REPORTER NARRATION)
STORY: The bodies of 66 Bosnian Muslims, murdered and dumped in the Drina river 20 years ago, were buried in Visegrad in eastern Bosnia on Saturday.
Nestled in the river valley, Visegrad is indicative of Bosnia's unhealed wounds. Muslims made up two-thirds of the town's 21,000 population before the war, but were driven out by Bosnian Serb forces. Just a few hundred have returned to live.
Several thousand flocked to the town on Saturday and gathered in the rain at the joint burial of the 66 victims, whose remains were recovered from the nearby Perucac lake two years ago.
The bodies had floated downstream and into the pumps of the Bajina Basta power plant, where they were discovered during repair work. They included five children, the youngest killed at the age of three.
Coffins draped in green cloth were lowered into graves in the local cemetery, before mourners threw 3,000 roses - one for every Muslim from Visegrad killed during the war - into the Drina from the town's 16th century Ottoman bridge.
They were victims of a wave of ethnic cleansing in villages and towns near Bosnia's eastern border with Serbia in spring 1992, as Bosnian Serb forces under General Ratko Mladic seized 70 percent of the country.
Arrested a year ago in Serbia after 16 years as a fugitive, Mladic went on trial in The Hague this month accused of genocide.
About 100,000 people died in the war and 2 million were displaced. A 1995 peace deal split the country into two, ethnically-based regions, joined by a weak central government in an unwieldy, joint state.
STORY: The bodies of 66 Bosnian Muslims, murdered and dumped in the Drina river 20 years ago, were buried in Visegrad in eastern Bosnia on Saturday.
Nestled in the river valley, Visegrad is indicative of Bosnia's unhealed wounds. Muslims made up two-thirds of the town's 21,000 population before the war, but were driven out by Bosnian Serb forces. Just a few hundred have returned to live.
Several thousand flocked to the town on Saturday and gathered in the rain at the joint burial of the 66 victims, whose remains were recovered from the nearby Perucac lake two years ago.
The bodies had floated downstream and into the pumps of the Bajina Basta power plant, where they were discovered during repair work. They included five children, the youngest killed at the age of three.
Coffins draped in green cloth were lowered into graves in the local cemetery, before mourners threw 3,000 roses - one for every Muslim from Visegrad killed during the war - into the Drina from the town's 16th century Ottoman bridge.
They were victims of a wave of ethnic cleansing in villages and towns near Bosnia's eastern border with Serbia in spring 1992, as Bosnian Serb forces under General Ratko Mladic seized 70 percent of the country.
Arrested a year ago in Serbia after 16 years as a fugitive, Mladic went on trial in The Hague this month accused of genocide.
About 100,000 people died in the war and 2 million were displaced. A 1995 peace deal split the country into two, ethnically-based regions, joined by a weak central government in an unwieldy, joint state.
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