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  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998.jpg
  • Vukovar's nickname 'Croatian Stalingrad' stems from being devastated by Serb-dominated army forces in the early days of Croatia's war for independence from the ex-Yugoslavia. It suffered a three-month long siege before being captured by Serb forces in November 1991.
    Vukovar-war-destruction-1998
  • Siege of Sarajevo (1992-96) Exact figures of casualties are still disputed but it is estimated that approx. 19,000 people died, 10% of them children.<br />
<br />
18,000 Serbian troops stationed in the hills surrounding city, besieged the 340,000 citizens with its constant artillery, mortar,  sniper rifles and heavy machine-gun fire. <br />
<br />
Aside from the human cost of war, the cities infrastructure  also suffered greatly - buildings, roads, waterworks, power supplies. A recent report suggests that the Serb forces caused an estimated $18.5billion of damage.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-rebuilding-...jpg
  • Bombed building and land mines,  Sarajevo, 1998
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers targeted the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers target the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998
  • Vukovar's nickname 'Croatian Stalingrad' stems from being devastated by Serb-dominated army forces in the early days of Croatia's war for independence from the ex-Yugoslavia. It suffered a three-month long siege before being captured by Serb forces in November 1991.
    Vukovar-war-destruction-1998
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers targeted the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    Sarajevo-war-destruction-1998.jpg
  • Daily life. Group of young boys playing table football in the street. Refugee Camp of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__53.jpg
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Young boy scrambling over debris, Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__74.jpg
  • Portrait of elderly man. Palestinian Refugee Camp of Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Make shift homes. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-27.jpg
  • An MSF mobile team at a make shift doctors surgery in Ostrovo, Croatia. MSF provided curative health care to elderly and vulnerable populations in 12 remote villages in the region until March 1998.The patients were mainly elderly Serbs.
    Blood-pressure-war-1998-Ostrovo-Croatia
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    scan0002.jpg
  • Daily market. Shatila Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    scan0001 copy 3.jpg
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    scan0005.jpg
  • Two small children amongst the rubble. Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian-Refugee-Camp-Beirut.jpg
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra a...jpg
  • Young girl carrying coffee to a group of men. Shatila refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Market day. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Friends. Shatila Refugee Camp, Beirut, 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Fruit and veg stall. Shatila Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Rotting garbage, Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestian camp_05.jpg
  • Man smoking on the street. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut,1998.
    Palestinian Man-smoking-Sabra-Shatil...jpg
  • Young boy. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-31.jpg
  • Old verses new. Bombed out building with the newly rennovated Municipal Stadium in the background. Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-6.jpg
  • Young man repairing a motorbike. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-4.jpg
  • Young child selling cockerel. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998. Boy holding a rooster.
    98-628-1-3.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__38.jpg
  • From 1992, the city of Sarajevo, capital of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, came under siege and was subjected to daily shelling and sniper attacks from Serbian forces in and around the city. The siege of Sarajevo lasted from April 6, 1992 to February 29, 1996. Its now known as the longest siege in modern history. <br />
<br />
Cemetery, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, January 1998. Approx. 11,541 people were killed in Sarajevo during the siege, including 643 children.
    bosnia graves copy.jpg
  • Mother and children begging on the streets of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
    98_650_1.17_2.jpg
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers target the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    98_650_1.14_19.jpg
  • Siege of Sarajevo (1992-96) Exact figures of casualties are still disputed but it is estimated that approx. 19,000 people died, 10% of them children.<br />
<br />
18,000 Serbian troops stationed in the hills surrounding city, besieged the 340,000 citizens with its constant artillery, mortar,  sniper rifles and heavy machine-gun fire. <br />
<br />
Aside from the human cost of war, the cities infrastructure  also suffered greatly - buildings, roads, waterworks, power supplies. A recent report suggests that the Serb forces caused an estimated $18.5billion of damage.
    98_650_1.14_7.jpg
  • From 1993-2002  MSF bore witness to the war stricken former Yugoslavia, marked by ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and a neglectful international community.<br />
<br />
MSF first began work in Srebrenica (in Bosnia and Herzegovina) as part of a UN convoy in 1993, one year after the Bosnian War had begun.<br />
<br />
Throughout the war in the former Yugoslavia, Doctors Without Borders ran surgery programs, distributed medical supplies and drugs to hospitals and clinics, operated mobile clinics, and worked in refugee camps.
    98_650_1.12_29.jpg
  • The Balkan conflict left its mark on the town of Vukovar. Vukovar's nickname 'Croatian Stalingrad' stems from being devastated by Serb-dominated army forces in the early days of Croatia's war for independence from the ex-Yugoslavia. It suffered a three-month long siege before being captured by Serb forces in November 1991.
    98_650_1.12_20.jpg
  • Fahro Bascelija School is in the Muslim town of Gorazde. The project, ‘Special Classrooms for Children with Disabilities’ was established in 1997 by UNICEF (Bosnia and Herzegovina) with Medicins du Monde, a French government organisation.
    98_650_1.7_8.jpg
  • Fahro Bascelija School in Gorazde. The project, ‘Special Classrooms for Children with Disabilities’ was established in<br />
1997 by UNICEF (Bosnia and Herzegovina) with Medicins du Monde.
    98_650_1.5_23a.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4 copy 2.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4.jpg
  • An MSF mobile team at a make shift doctors surgery in Ostrovo, Croatia. MSF provided curative health care to elderly and vulnerable populations in 12 remote villages in the region until March 1998.The patients were mainly elderly Serbs.
    98_650_1.2_33.jpg
  • Fahro Bascelija School is in the Muslim town of Gorazde. The project, ‘Special Classrooms for Children with Disabilities’ was established in 1997 by UNICEF (Bosnia and Herzegovina) with Medicins du Monde, a French government organisation.
    School-Bosnia.jpg
  • 58 year old Catholic Croat. Praying outside his bombed out home, Ostrovo, Croatia. He's describes his place "as not fit for a dog to live in" 1998
    Praying-man-bombed-home-Croatia.jpg
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers target the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    98_650_1.145.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98-650-1-14.jpg
  • Fahro Bascelija School in Gorazde. The project, ‘Special Classrooms for Children with Disabilities’ was established in<br />
1997 by UNICEF (Bosnia and Herzegovina) with Medicins du Monde.
    98_650_1.7_13a.jpg
  • Snow covered cemetery, showing mass killings in 1993, Sarajevo, 1998
    98-650-1-1a.jpg
  • Hungarian couple having coffee in their home, Korod, Croatia, 1998
    98-650-1-11a.jpg
  • Mother and children begging on the streets of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
    98_650_1.17_2.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4.jpg
  • Mother and young child, Vukovar, easternmost edge of Croatia,1998
    98_650_1.12_1.jpg
  • Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Scan-161111-0009.jpg
  • From 1992, the city of Sarajevo, capital of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, came under siege and was subjected to daily shelling and sniper attacks from Serbian forces in and around the city. The siege of Sarajevo lasted from April 6, 1992 to February 29, 1996. Its now known as the longest siege in modern history. <br />
<br />
Cemetery, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, January 1998. Approx. 11,541 people were killed in Sarajevo during the siege, including 643 children.
    bosnia graves copy.jpg
  • 58 year old Catholic Croat. Lit only by candles, the walls are adorned with pin up girls, Ostrovo, Croatia. 1998
    Croatia-war-home-pin-ups
  • During the 1992-1995 war, Grbavica was occupied early by the Army of Republika Srpska and remained under Serb control throughout the siege. From the tall residential buildings, Serb snipers target the Sarajevo populace along Sniper Alley. The neighbourhood was heavily looted and destroyed.
    98_650_1.17_29.jpg
  • 58 year old Catholic Croat. Praying outside his bombed out home, Ostrovo, Croatia. 1998
    98_650_1.16.1atif_1.jpg
  • Siege of Sarajevo (1992-96) Exact figures of casualties are still disputed but it is estimated that approx. 19,000 people died, 10% of them children.<br />
<br />
18,000 Serbian troops stationed in the hills surrounding city, besieged the 340,000 citizens with its constant artillery, mortar,  sniper rifles and heavy machine-gun fire. <br />
<br />
Aside from the human cost of war, the cities infrastructure  also suffered greatly - buildings, roads, waterworks, power supplies. A recent report suggests that the Serb forces caused an estimated $18.5billion of damage.
    98_650_1.14_5.jpg
  • In January 1998. A small group of Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders) carry out their work in Bosnia-Hercegovina. Despite the fact that this was two years after the war had ended the images still depicted a country ripped apart by war. <br />
<br />
An MSF mobile team at a make shift doctors surgery in Ostrovo, Croatia. MSF provided curative health care to elderly and vulnerable populations in 12 remote villages in the region until March 1998.The patients were mainly elderly Serbs.
    Elderly-Aftermath-War-Bosnia
  • From 1993-2002  MSF bore witness to the war stricken former Yugoslavia, marked by ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and a neglectful international community.<br />
<br />
MSF first began work in Srebrenica (in Bosnia and Herzegovina) as part of a UN convoy in 1993, one year after the Bosnian War had begun.<br />
<br />
Throughout the war in the former Yugoslavia, Doctors Without Borders ran surgery programs, distributed medical supplies and drugs to hospitals and clinics, operated mobile clinics, and worked in refugee camps.
    98_650_1.12_29.jpg
  • In 1992, Sarajevo came under a 1,425-day siege, and the Holiday Inn, located on "Sniper Alley,"  was one of the most dangerous places in the city, due to its proximity to the front line. During the 1992-5 war it became the epic centre for the world's media.
    98_650_1.10_10.jpg
  • Vrbanja bridge, Sarajevo. Re- named the Suada and Olga Bridge, after Admira Ismić and Boško Brkić. The couple were natives of Bosnia and Herzegovina living in the city of Sarajevo. She was Muslim, and he a Serb. They were killed by snipers on 19 May 1993, in broad daylight while trying to cross the Vrbanja bridge to the Serb-occupied territory of Grbavica. Bosko was shot by sniper fire, and died. Ismic, also wounded by sniper fire, crawled to her childhood sweetheart, put an arm around him, and died at his side, never trying to escape to safety herself.<br />
<br />
Their tragic story was told worldwide over the next week as Serbs and Muslims argued over who was responsible for shooting them, and which side should risk the treacherous journey onto the bridge to recover the bodies and bury them.<br />
<br />
The couple's bodies laid side by side on the bridge for eight days, until finally the Serbian side went in under cover of night to drag the corpses away. Muslim prisoners later claimed they were tethered by their Serbian captors and forced to go out on the bridge to drag the by-then decaying bodies back.
    98_650_1.7.jpg
  • Land mines were used extensively during the war by all sides in the conflict: about 1.5 million were laid across the country between 1991-95.<br />
<br />
In 1997, more than 600,000 refugees still remained outside the country; landmines have impeded the return of many. Those who do return often find that their land has become a minefield. These returning refugees have little mine awareness, and, having been away from their communities, they do not know the location of minefields.<br />
<br />
There are thought to be still between 51,000 and 100,000 mines covering a 310-square-mile area across the country.  At least 509 people have been killed and another 1,466 wounded by the devices in Croatia since the war ended.<br />
<br />
It is hoped that by 2019 all suspected minefields will be cleared.
    98_650_1.4 copy 2.jpg
  • All that remains. Hungarian Reformed Church, Laslovo/Szentlászló, Croatia.<br />
Built in 1878, destroyed in October 1991.
    Church-bombed-war-Croatia-1998
  • During the Battle of Vukovar, the water tower was hit more than 600 times during the siege. It is one of the most famous symbols of the Croatian War of independence.<br />
It will not be restored but will remain as a memorial to the pain and suffering that Vukovar endured.
    Vukovar-war-water-tower-Croatia-1998
  • Hungarian in his home, Korod, Croatia, 1998
    98_650_1.2_4.jpg
  • Piljic Niko, 58 year old Catholic Croat.<br />
Praying outside his bombed out home, Ostrovo, Croatia. January 1998
    bosnia 2 copy.jpg
  • Man shot in the eye during unrest in Palestinian refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon
    Shot in the eye.jpg
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra a...jpg
  • Elderly man selling second hand clothes. Shatila Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra a...jpg
  • School children. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Man shot in the eye during unrest in Palestinian refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Young man carrying rabbit. Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Young boy. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Market day, book selling. Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Children salvaging items to sell from the rubbish piles within the Refugee Camp of Shatila, Beirut, 1998.
    Palestinian Refugee Camps - Sabra an...jpg
  • Daily life. Two children having fun inside the Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    Children-playing-Palestinian Refugee...jpg
  • Make shift homes. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-28.jpg
  • Child running. Inside the Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-23.jpg
  • Palestinian man sitting on the ground next to his market stall surrounded by smelling garbage. Refugee Camp of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-1.jpg
  • Young boy running down alleyway. Palestinian Refugee Camps of Sabra and Shatila, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    98-628-1.15-2.jpg
  • Permanent slum. Children rummage amongst the rubbish. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__78.jpg
  • Abandoned vehicles. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__73.jpg
  • Abandoned vehicles. Shatila refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__72.jpg
  • Rotting garbage. Shatila refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__69a.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__63.jpg
  • Man shot in the eye by snipper during the  Sabra and Shatila massacre 1982. Palestinian refugee camp, Beirut, Lebanon
    97_590__57.jpg
  • Writing on the wall. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__50.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__52.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__45.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__47.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__37.jpg
  • Reduced to rubble. Shatila refugee camp and the adjacent neighborhood of Sabra, Beirut, Lebanon 1998.
    97_590__35.jpg
  • During the Battle of Vukovar, the water tower was hit more than 600 times during the siege. It is one of the most famous symbols of the Croatian War of independence.<br />
It will not be restored but will remain as a memorial to the pain and suffering that Vukovar endured.
    Vukovar-war-water-tower-Croatia-1998.jpg
  • Hungarian couple having coffee in their home, Korod, Croatia, 1998
    98-650-1-11a.jpg
  • 58 year old Catholic Croat. Praying outside his bombed out home, Ostrovo, Croatia. He's describes his place "as not fit for a dog to live in" 1998
    98-650.jpg
  • An MSF mobile team at a make shift doctors surgery in Ostrovo, Croatia. MSF provided curative health care to elderly and vulnerable populations in 12 remote villages in the region until March 1998.The patients were mainly elderly Serbs.
    98-650-1-10a.jpg
  • Snow covered cemetery, showing mass killings in 1993, Sarajevo, 1998
    98-650-1-1a.jpg
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