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- <text id=93TT1300>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: A Convert Among the Dying
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 39
- A Convert Among the Dying
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a frozen Muslim enclave, a French general changes his mind
- and stands bravely with the people of a besieged town
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by James L. Graff/Vienna,
- Michael Montgomery/Belgrade and Frederick Painton/Paris
- </p>
- <p> In his six months as commander of the U.N. peace force in
- Bosnia, French General Philippe Morillon earned a maverick
- reputation. He struck observers as unpredictable, impulsive,
- eccentric; one senior U.N. official called him "a loose cannon"
- in constant need of being "reined in." He held strange formal
- dinners while Serbian shells fell on Sarajevo: stories of
- waiters in tails serving guests in white gloves and full dress
- uniforms scandalized the city. No one thought he was inclined
- toward heroics until last week, when he surprised his
- colleagues, and perhaps himself. He risked his life, his honor
- and the U.N.'s dwindling credibility to stand with the thousands
- of people, mostly Muslim refugees, caught in the Serb siege of
- Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> "The Serbs say I'm a human shield," the general conceded
- in an interview conducted by ham radio. "Yes, I am a shield. I
- will remain in Srebrenica as long as I consider the safety of
- the inhabitants at risk." Those were brave words from a soldier
- who up to then had had few admirers. He had drawn criticism from
- the U.N. contingent in the Bosnian capital for hobnobbing with
- Serbian militia chiefs, like Ratko Mladic, dubbed the "Butcher
- of Sarajevo," and for not forthrightly denouncing Serbian
- aggression. His orders from the U.N. were not to use force and
- not to take sides, and he stuck firmly--perhaps too firmly--to those instructions.
- </p>
- <p> On a trip to the now fallen Muslim village of Cerska
- earlier this month the general shocked others on the scene by
- saying he had not "smelled the odor of death" there. When he
- returned to the area last week, it was all around him. Serbian
- shells rained down, one a second at times, and 20 or more people
- died every day. Morillon drove in over a snow-covered mountain
- track and encountered the reality of Srebrenica: refugees
- trudging south from captured towns had swollen the population
- from 9,000 to as many as 80,000. Everywhere there were ragged,
- hungry crowds, sleeping in the snow, huddling around sputtering
- bonfires in sub-zero temperatures.
- </p>
- <p> On the Serbian-Bosnian border, in spite of repeated
- promises, Serbian forces continued to block a U.N. convoy of 16
- trucks bound for Srebrenica with 175 tons of food and medicine.
- No trucks had gone through to the town since Dec. 9, and the
- only supplies to arrive there were those parachuted in by U.S.
- Air Force C-130 cargo planes. Several people were stabbed in
- struggles over the dropped bundles. Morillon spent eight days
- futilely trying to open the road for the convoy and start the
- evacuation of sick and wounded. "We absolutely need this
- convoy," he said.
- </p>
- <p> Face to face with the hungry Muslims in Srebrenica,
- watching as they grimly confronted death, waiting as they
- surrounded his vehicles for 36 hours, Morillon underwent a
- conversion. He walked off by himself, then returned to speak to
- the crowd from the balcony of the local post office, assuring
- them he would remain until help arrived. "I have decided to
- stay," he shouted through a megaphone, "to calm your anguish and
- try to save you." He proclaimed the post office his command
- post, called his 13-man escort to attention and, amid a burst
- of cheers, had the U.N. flag hoisted.
- </p>
- <p> The standoff continued throughout the week. Serbian troops
- promised again to allow the convoy to proceed but each time
- halted it. In a radio message to his Sarajevo headquarters,
- Morillon termed the situation "unbearable" and said "people are
- dying right in front of me." On Friday, his frustration boiled
- over. He drove to the border and demanded an end to the
- stalling. He accepted Serbian terms that he travel without his
- escort of two Canadian armored personnel carriers and headed
- back to Srebrenica in his command car--followed this time by
- the trucks of the relief convoy.
- </p>
- <p> Before he returned Friday evening, the town had been
- engulfed in gunfire. Serbian troops had launched a full-scale
- attack, firing rockets from the south and tank guns from the
- north. "It appears to be the final assault on Srebrenica," said
- one U.N. official. The Serbs closed to within a mile of the
- town, then held their fire. Though residents and refugees
- joyously crowded around the huge white relief trucks, shouting
- and weeping, the shipment did not carry enough to provide for
- all of them. "We need to get another one in right away," said
- a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
- Meanwhile, Morillon began trying to talk the Serbs into allowing
- 2,000 sick and wounded citizens to leave.
- </p>
- <p> Another supply caravan was already being organized. It
- could reach the town this week, but that may be too late. The
- lightly armed Bosnian-army defenders are not strong enough to
- withstand a determined Serbian onslaught. Said a U.N. official:
- "It's not a matter of whether Srebrenica will fall, but when."
- </p>
- <p> By taking his stand in the snow of eastern Bosnia,
- Morillon turned up the world spotlight brightly enough to force
- Serbian leaders to reconsider. They backed down under all the
- attention and let the stalled supply convoy enter Srebrenica.
- But food and medicine will not save the town or its people from
- being overrun and "ethnically cleansed." Like the humanitarian
- efforts of the West throughout the country, Morillon's
- intervention provides a momentary respite but does nothing to
- rescue Bosnia from the fate the Serbs have decided for it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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