Tourists ‘paid £70,000’ to shoot innocent people in ‘human safari’ hunting trips to Sarajevo

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

The siege of Sarajevo was watched by the West with horror in the early 1990s, as Serb-Bosnian militants shot at innocent civilians in ‘human safaris’.

More than 30 years later, prosecutors in Milan have opened an investigation into Italian tourists who are accused of paying £70,000 to join this ‘human safari’, shooting and killing innocent Bosnians.

Prosecutors allege these ‘tourists’, many of whom had ties to far-right circles, paid the Bosnian Serb army for weekend trips to Sarajevo, where they shot from rooftops at the city below.

They paid an additional fee to kill children with the sniper rifles, according to the court filing.

The shooting in the city was so bad that two main streets, Ulica Zmaja od Bosne and Meša Selimović Boulevard, were dubbed ‘sniper alley’.

A French U.N. soldier stands alongside a group of Sarajevans seeking shelter behind a French U.N. armoured personnel carrier from sniper-fire after being rescued from their van by French U.N. peacekeepers at a dangerous Sarajevo intersection Thursday June 8, 1995. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Sarajevans lived in terror for four years during the siege (Picture: AP)
A French Army sniper keeps watch from his position overlooking front line positions in Sarajevo Friday, January 19, 1996. The warring parties are to have withdrawn from the front lines and zone of separation Jan. 19, one month after NATO forces took over from the United Nations. (AP Photo/Santiago Lyon)
Snipers surrounded the city on hilltops, shooting as they pleased. Above, a French Army sniper takes watch after the siege ended (Picture: AP)

Milan-based writer and journalist Ezio Gavazzeni said: ‘We are talking about wealthy people, with reputations – businessmen – who during the siege of Sarajevo paid to kill unarmed civilians.

‘They left Trieste for a manhunt and then returned to their respectable daily lives,’ he alleged.

There could be more than 100 ‘tourists’ who jetted off to the warzone and may be called to give evidence in the trial.

There are also allegations that Bosnian intelligence had proof of Italians in the hills surrounding Sarajevo.

The Bosnian consul in Milan, Dag Dumrukcic, told la Repubblica: ‘We are eager to uncover the truth about such a cruel matter and settle accounts with the past. I am aware of some information that I will contribute to the investigation.’

Sarajevo residents run through an intersection known for sniper activity after a shell fell in the center of the city on June 20, 1992. Continuing clashes have left the June 15 ceasefire in tatters, with the head of the UN peacekeeping forces calling on Serbs and Bosnians to respect a truce for at least 48 hours before going ahead with plans to open the capital's airport. AFP PHOTO CHRISTOPHE SIMON (Photo by CHRISTOPHE SIMON / AFP) (Photo by CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP via Getty Images)
Some of the city’s intersections were so infamous, they were called ‘sniper alley’ (Picture: AFP)
SARAJEVO, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA - JUNE 18: In what is becoming a common sight, pedestrians dash across an intersection 18 June in Sarajevo in order to avoid sniper fire. Eight people died and 14 were wounded when a mortar shell exploded in a Sarajevo suburb, shattering a period of relative calm in the capital. AFP PHOTO (Photo credit should read PIERRE VERDY/AFP via Getty Images)
Running to and from shops, work and to home became the norm (Picture: AFP)

During the siege, Sarajevo’s electric, gas and water supplies were cut off – leaving those within the city with no access to vital infrastructure.

Former Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic and the commander of the Bosnian Serb Army’s Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, Stanislav Galic, were both found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the Hague over the attack.

Both were eventually handed sentences of life imprisonment. Karadzic is serving his sentence in the UK, while Galic was taken to Germany.

The siege ended in 1995, leaving 13,952 people dead. 5,434 of these casualties were civilians. 

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *