- UN General Assembly commemorated the 30th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide on July 9.
- Survivors, including Munira Subašić, shared painful testimonies of loss and called for continued justice.
- UN officials emphasized the importance of countering denial, hate speech, and historical revisionism.
- The massacre killed over 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys in July 1995.
- UN Secretary-General warned that “dangerous currents” from the past are resurfacing today.
At the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday, global leaders, diplomats, and survivors came together to mark the 30th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide, the worst mass atrocity in Europe since World War II. More than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys were killed in July 1995 in the so-called “UN safe area” of Srebrenica.
Genocide in a UN-Protected Zone
The Srebrenica massacre was carried out by Bosnian Serb forces under General Ratko Mladić. The town had been declared a UN safe area, but lightly armed Dutch peacekeepers were overwhelmed. The killings have since been recognized as genocide by both the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY).
Last year, the General Assembly designated 11 July as the International Day of Reflection and Commemoration of the 1995 Genocide in Srebrenica.
A Global Responsibility to Remember
UN Secretary-General António Guterres, in a message delivered by Chef de Cabinet Courtenay Rattray, emphasized the need to honor victims and defend historical truth. “Only by recognizing the suffering of all victims can we build mutual understanding, trust, and lasting peace,” he said.
Philémon Yang, President of the General Assembly, warned against glorifying war criminals and said “education remains our strongest defence against the erosion of memory.”
The Lingering Pain of Loss
Mirela Osmanović, a young professional at the Srebrenica Memorial Center, spoke of how her family still lives with the trauma. Two of her brothers were killed. “My parents forbade themselves any joy while their sons lay somewhere in the ground, incomplete, scattered across mass graves,” she said.
She questioned whether the promises of “Never Again” have truly been honored. “Justice, if it comes too late or only on paper, cannot restore trust. And peace without dignity is not peace at all.”
A History Etched in Horror
The genocide at Srebrenica unfolded during the brutal Bosnian War (1992–1995), where close to 100,000 people were killed and over 2 million displaced. The Bosnian Serb forces, following the breakup of Yugoslavia, aimed to ethnically cleanse the region, primarily targeting Bosniak Muslims.
On July 11, 1995, Ratko Mladić’s forces entered Srebrenica, forcibly separating men from women and children. Over 8,000 men and boys were summarily executed in the days that followed. To hide their crimes, bodies were dumped in mass graves, many of which were later disturbed and moved to secondary and tertiary locations.
The remains of more than 6,000 victims have been recovered and buried at the Potocari Memorial Center, but over 1,000 people are still missing. The youngest victim buried this year was 16-year-old Azmir Osmanović; the oldest, 63-year-old Husein Kurbasic.
The Death March
According to Srebrenica Memorial Center, the night of 11 July 1995 marked the beginning of what would later be known as The Death March—a desperate 63-mile journey by Bosniak men seeking to reach the free territory of Tuzla.
At 4:15PM, General Ratko Mladić and Serbian forces entered Srebrenica to claim the town. By 4:30PM, Dutchbat troops declared their base full, leaving more than 20,000 civilians outside with no protection. As night fell and hope of international intervention vanished, Dutch troops began abandoning their positions.
By midnight, 15,000 Bosniak men had assembled on Buljim Hill. As they began their trek through hostile terrain, Serbian forces opened fire. The rear of the column collapsed as panic spread and men scattered into the surrounding forests. Hundreds were killed in the first hours.
Serbian soldiers, using stolen UN uniforms and communication equipment, posed as peacekeepers to deceive hidden survivors. They encouraged Bosniak men to call for their relatives to surrender. One such moment was captured in the harrowing story of Ramo and Nermin Osmanović, both of whom were executed after surrendering.
On 13 July, the column was ambushed again on Kamenica Hill, where the heaviest losses occurred. The Serbian military once again used deception, promising aid before killing more than 1,000 men that day alone.
Survivors eventually reached the Konjević Polje intersection, a fork toward Bratunac or Tuzla. Narrowly avoiding detection by a Serbian tank, many continued toward Baljkovica Valley. Here, survivor Hasan Hasanović reportedly hid in a stream for two hours during another attack before reaching safety in Nezuk village.
After six days and five nights of walking through hostile terrain under fire, a fraction of the original column finally arrived in Tuzla. Journalists described their arrival as “an army of ghosts.”
Of the estimated 10,000 to 15,000 men who fled that night, fewer than 3,000 survived. Each year, the tragedy is remembered through the Mars Mira—the Peace March—tracing the same path in honor of the victims and survivors of the Death March.

Timeline: The Fall of Srebrenica and the 1995 Genocide
Date & Time | Event |
---|---|
6 April 1993 | UN Security Council passes Resolution 819, declaring Srebrenica a United Nations Safe Area. |
5 July 1995 | Shelling erupts in southern Srebrenica. |
8 July 1995 – 7:00AM | Bosnian Serbs capture UN Observation Post Foxtrot. |
8 July – 3:15PM | Bosniaks block retreating Dutchbat troops; a grenade kills one Dutch soldier. |
9 July – 8:00AM | Constant shelling as refugees flee south. |
9 July – 4:00PM | Road to Srebrenica clears; 30 Dutchbat soldiers taken hostage. |
10 July – 8:55AM | Colonel Karremans requests NATO air support. |
10 July – 11:00AM | General Janvier rejects air support request as Serbs shell Dutch positions. |
10 July – 6:30PM | General Mladić appears above Srebrenica; new air support request submitted. |
10 July – 9:40PM | Air support authorized for next morning. Serb attacks pause. |
11 July – Midnight | Karremans promises town leaders that 50 NATO planes will strike at 6AM. |
11 July – 9:00AM | Air support request rejected due to wrong form. NATO planes run out of fuel. |
11 July – 10:30AM | Serbs shell again; 20,000+ civilians flee to Dutch base at Potočari. |
11 July – 12:05PM | Air support finally authorized—three hours late. |
11 July – 2:40PM | Two Dutch F-16s drop bombs. Serbs threaten hostages; further airstrikes abandoned. |
11 July – 4:15PM | Mladić enters Srebrenica and claims the town. |
11 July – 4:30–11:30PM | Thousands stranded outside base; Serbs arrive; Mladić meets Dutch commander. |
12 July – Morning | Mladić threatens, “Allah can’t help you. But Mladić can.” Men aged 12–77 are separated and detained. |
12 July – 7:45PM | Men are removed; their belongings burned; Serbs attack escaping civilians in the woods. |
13 July – 10:00AM | 400 men beaten in warehouse; Serbs disguise as UN troops to lure in more. |
13 July – 12:00PM | Dutch begin forced expulsion of 5,000 refugees from their base. |
13 July – 4:00PM | Thousands of men from The Column are massacred; 8,372 die in total. |
16 July 1995 | Survivors of The Column reach Tuzla after 5-day march. Thousands perished. |
21 July 1995 – 9:00AM | Dutchbat troops leave Srebrenica. Mladić gives Karremans gifts. First reports of genocide emerge. |
Commemorations Across the Globe
As part of Srebrenica Memorial Week, ceremonies and educational events were held across the United Kingdom and Europe, reminding the world of the horrific cost of hate and division. The UK’s national ceremony commemorated the 19 newly identified victims being laid to rest at Potocari in 2025.
UN officials stressed that remembrance is not enough. “The same dangerous currents that led to genocide are rising again,” said Guterres, referencing the global surge in hate speech, misinformation, and extremism.
As survivors continue to demand justice and truth, the international community is reminded that words must be backed by action, vigilance, and education to ensure that “Never Again” truly means never again.
With inputs from UN News, Srebrenica Memorial Center, and international agencies.
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