Skip links
Skip to Content
play
Live
Show navigation menu
Navigation menu
News
Show more news sections
Middle East
Africa
Asia
US & Canada
Latin America
Europe
Asia Pacific
Israel War on Gaza
Features
Opinion
Video
More
Show more sections
Economy
Ukraine war
Coronavirus
Climate Crisis
Investigations
Interactives
In Pictures
Science & Technology
Sport
Podcasts
play
Live
Click here to search
search
In Pictures
Gallery
Open wounds of Bosnia Herzegovina
Residents of the Bosnia Herzegovina city of Sarajevo welcomed the news of wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic's arrest [AFP]
Published On 24 Jul 2008
24 Jul 2008
facebook
twitter
whatsapp
copylink
Relatives of victims at a funeral marking the Srebrenica massacre's 10th anniversary in Bosnia Herzegovina in July 2005 [Getty Images]
Karadzic was a close ally of Ratko Mladic, the wartime Bosnian Serb commander, who continues to be on the run [EPA]
Despite the passage of time, the wounds are still fresh for the survivors of the massacres of Muslims in Bosnia Herzegovina. [Getty Images]
Many Serbians oppose the arrests of wartime Bosnian Serb leaders charged with genocide by a UN tribunal at The Hague [AFP]
Karadzic managed to elude arrest for 13 years and, when he was held in Belgrade on Monday, he was sporting a New Age appearance [AFP]
Protests in Belgrade against Karadzic's arrest testified to his continued popularity among Serbian nationalists [AFP]
Karadzic, who was practising alternative medicine at the time of his arrest, faces charges of genocide and crimes against humanity [AFP]
A mass grave in Kamenica, one of the many left by the Srebrenica massacre allegedly masterminded by Karadzic [EPA]
Bosnian Muslims buried the remains of the Srebrenica victims during a funeral in 2003 [AFP]
A file photo shows Muslim Bosnian refugees from Srebrenica in March 1993 [AFP]