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For almost two years, the NJCRAC has actively opposed the systematic
violence being committed by Serbian forces against the people
of Bosnia-Herzegovina. There have been several resolutions of
the United Nations Security Council calling for an end to the
strangulation of Sarajevo and other Moslem cities and enclaves.
While a recent NATO ultimatum has produced a limited pullback
of the forces besieging Sarajevo, ending the bombardment of that
city, the siege of Sarajevo as well as of other cities in Bosnia-Herzegovina
continues. Serbia has continued to mount violence against civilians.
Serbian forces have targeted children, schools, hospitals and
ancient Mosques in an attempt to expel Moslems from the homes
in which they have lived peacefully for centuries, often among
Bosnian Serbs, Croats, Jews and other minorities.
The systematic killing of innocent civilians, including over
15,000 children, as well as mass rapings and the -destruction
of centers of Moslem culture, appear to be a Serbian national
policy. The pattern of systematic shelling and sniping, designed
to obliterate, fits the definition of genocide as delineated in
the United Nations Genocide Accord. There have been more than
250,000 casualties, and two million Bosnians, including Jews,
displaced in the "ethnic cleansing" campaigns. Over 800 mosques
have been razed and more than 200 Catholic churches have been
destroyed.
The NJCRAC calls upon the United States government to energetically
apply its influence to implement the following measures to stop
the bloodshed:
- The United States should more energetically support the
initiation of war crimes tribunals against those who ordered
and implemented atrocities such as mass rapes and summary executions,
and who promoted conditions of starvation in concentration camps
as well as other cruelties as parts of the Serbian "ethnic cleansing"
campaigns.
- The U.S. should prohibit any such persons from entering
the United States.
- The Clinton Administration should work with the UN Security
Council and with NATO to maintain the sanctions against Serbia
until peace is secured. Similar sanctions should be instituted
against Croatia, which recently invaded Bosnia, if Croatia does
not withdraw its forces.
- The U.S. should actively back the sovereignty of Bosnia-Herzegovina,
a fellow member of the United Nations.
- The discriminatory arms embargo on Bosnia-Herzegovina
should be lifted so that Bosnia may properly defend itself,
a right of every independent nation and people.
- The United States should ensure that humanitarian aid
to Bosnia is continued as needed. The UNPROFOR forces that protect
the delivery of such aid should not be withdrawn.
- The Clinton Administration should continue to support
both the UN Security Council's resolutions and the NATO commitment
of January 10, 1994, calling for all other necessary measures,
including air strikes, to break the sieges of Sarajevo, Tuzla,
and other surrounded Moslem cities.
- Mindful of the Jewish community's obligation to memory
and its historic commitment to protect those threatened by extinction,
the NJCRAC member agencies assembled at its annual policy conference
in New Orleans express their solidarity with the people of Bosnia-Herzegovina
in their struggle to remain an independent country.
Dissent
The Jewish War Veterans of the USA dissents from the language
"a// other necessary measures, including, " which in the JVWs
judgment would, by implication, authorize the inclusion and deployment
of U.S. ground forces in the former Yugoslavia.
-end-
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