Methods of execution
1. Concentration - urge Serb residents of the city to leave, while surrounding the town and bombarding it with artillery fire.
2. Decapitation - execute the leaders and intelligentsia of the town.
3. Separation - separate the women, children, and old men from the men of “fighting age.”
4. Evacuation - move women, children, and old men to concentration camps or national borders.
5. Liquidation - execute the men of “fighting age.”
Brutal Massacres. In July, 1995 Serb General Ratko Mladic marched into Srebrenica, separated the women and children from the men, and murdered 7,000 Bosniak men. People not killed in the initial massacres were sent to one of 381 concentration or detention camps in Bosnia. Inhumane living conditions, beatings, torture, and mass executions were daily occurrences at these camps and eventually claimed the lives of around 10,000 people. Women were often taken to rape camps.
Bombardments of civilian populations (Sarajevo and villages), massacres, forced evacuations, illegal internment of civilians in concentration camps, torture, systematic rape, summary executions, appropriation and pillage of civilian property, systematic destruction of cultural and religious, using detainees as human shields, starvation of citizens who resisted, blocking of humanitarian aid,
2. Decapitation - execute the leaders and intelligentsia of the town.
3. Separation - separate the women, children, and old men from the men of “fighting age.”
4. Evacuation - move women, children, and old men to concentration camps or national borders.
5. Liquidation - execute the men of “fighting age.”
Brutal Massacres. In July, 1995 Serb General Ratko Mladic marched into Srebrenica, separated the women and children from the men, and murdered 7,000 Bosniak men. People not killed in the initial massacres were sent to one of 381 concentration or detention camps in Bosnia. Inhumane living conditions, beatings, torture, and mass executions were daily occurrences at these camps and eventually claimed the lives of around 10,000 people. Women were often taken to rape camps.
Bombardments of civilian populations (Sarajevo and villages), massacres, forced evacuations, illegal internment of civilians in concentration camps, torture, systematic rape, summary executions, appropriation and pillage of civilian property, systematic destruction of cultural and religious, using detainees as human shields, starvation of citizens who resisted, blocking of humanitarian aid,