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- <text id=91TT2598>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: Yugoslavia:The Human Cost of War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 52
- YUGOSLAVIA
- The Human Cost of War
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After 12 failed cease-fires, Croatians and Serbs are starving
- and dying--and wondering why no one stops the bloodletting
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by James O. Jackson/Belgrade
- </p>
- <p> The scars may be just months old, but they cut deep
- enough to last a lifetime. In Dubrovnik, the architectural jewel
- of the Adriatic that has been under siege since Oct. 1, 50,000
- civilians spent last week huddled in underground cellars and
- shelters while shells tore apart their matchless city. With
- potable water and food in ever diminishing supply, terrified
- Yugoslavs subsisted on powdered milk and the forlorn hope that
- the international community might finally come to their rescue.
- </p>
- <p> To the north and east along the banks of the Danube River,
- the stench of decomposing livestock, pets and people wafted
- through the rubble-strewn streets of Vuko var. Through 12 weeks
- of fighting, 58,000 townspeople had fled. The 12,000 who
- remained behind cowered in the town's cellars and sewers,
- rolling cigarettes from tea leaves and burning strips of doused
- cloth for light. "This is hell," Vesna Vukovic, a Croatian
- television reporter, pleaded over the airwaves. "We just cannot
- stand it anymore."
- </p>
- <p> It was a cry of despair from a civilian population that
- has seen its collective lives, homes and loved ones laid waste
- by artillery and gunboat bombardments. The relentless barrages
- on Dubrovnik and Vuko var were only the most dramatic reminders
- of the human toll in this vengeful war between Europeans--the
- worst on the Continent since 1945. No one had even begun to add
- up the economic and physical damage to the country. Was anybody
- with the power to stop the carnage listening?
- </p>
- <p> Only perhaps. After almost five months of hostilities, 12
- failed truces and a death tally of more than 7,000, the Croatian
- and Serbian militias signaled last week that even they may
- finally have had enough. In the most promising bid yet for a
- true cessation of hostilities, both sides agreed to the proposed
- dispatch of United Nations peacekeeping forces. Croatia, which
- has lost control of almost a third of its territory, for the
- first time invited U.N. troops to be stationed in areas
- populated by Serbs. In exchange, the Yugoslav federal army,
- which has acted in tandem with Serbian militias, announced that
- it would withdraw from Croatian territory if the security of the
- Serbian enclaves could be assured.
- </p>
- <p> The move toward a resolution of the crisis seemed to take
- a little of the ferocity out of the fighting. In Dubrovnik,
- where the guns were stilled at midweek to permit the evacuation
- of wounded civilians and 14 European Community monitors, a
- tenuous cease-fire held from one hour to the next. In Vukovar
- the fighting also subsided, largely because the Serbs seemed to
- have subdued the Croatian forces, despite reports that an
- organized force of holdouts had taken refuge in the sewer
- system. Although the army continued to pound Vu kovar with
- rockets and artillery, a Western diplomat said, "They're not
- doing much now but making the rubble bounce."
- </p>
- <p> Silencing of the guns in Vukovar would be a symbolic
- achievement. The quaint town in the eastern Slavonian region of
- Croatia is one of two largest areas in the republic populated
- predominantly by Serbs, which gives it a significance
- disproportionate to its size and population. The federal army
- intervened in force to show that it could defend embattled
- Serbs; the Croatians dug in to demonstrate that they could hold
- out on their own soil. The results proved only how futile this
- war really is. The ill-armed paramilitary forces fielded by the
- Croatians learned they could not stand up to the overwhelming
- military superiority of the army. As for the army, it "defended"
- Serbian civilians so thoroughly that barely a single Serbian
- house is left intact.
- </p>
- <p> The months of war have touched every pocket of Croatia,
- where the lessons learned are certain to breed hatred for
- generations to come. An estimated 500,000 Croatians and Serbs
- have fled the republic since war erupted following its June 25
- declaration of independence. Zvezdana Miovic, 30, is one such
- refugee, currently living with 136 others in a children's summer
- camp south of Belgrade. The daughter of a Croatian mother and
- a Serbian father, Zvezdana and her Serbian husband had lived
- peaceably among mostly Croatian neighbors in the western town
- of Zadar until the fighting began.
- </p>
- <p> "Suddenly my neighbors refused to greet me," Zvezdana
- says. "My husband lost his job as a watchman in a factory." The
- fabric of her family life also unraveled quickly. "My uncle, my
- mother's brother, cursed the Serbs in the most awful language,"
- she says. "I can see that he had to say those things in front
- of others, but he never came to me privately to apologize. That
- hurt me very deeply." The psychological strain became so great
- that Zvezdana fled with her two children. "There is nothing in
- Zadar for me anymore," she says. "I have no contact with my
- mother." Zvez dana's husband joined the legion of jobless,
- estimated at more than 1.5 million, fully 12% of the Yugoslav
- labor force. Frustrated and angry, he has signed up with one of
- the many local paramilitary forces in a Serbian-dominated area.
- </p>
- <p> It is precisely such groups that give Serbian, Croatian
- and federal army authorities little hope that the fighting will
- soon end. Although officials reached agreement on a 13th truce
- late last week, none of them exercise full control over the
- hotheaded paramilitary forces. Major General Milav Pujic, a
- Deputy Minister of Defense, estimates that to hold territory one
- peacekeeping soldier will be needed for every 10 civilians. It
- remains an open question whether the international community has
- the manpower, the stomach or the sympathy for such a massive
- operation.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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