Korićani Cliffs massacre

The Korićani Cliffs massacre (Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian: Korićanske Stijene) was the mass murder of more than 200 Bosniak and Croat men on 21 August 1992, during the Bosnian War, at the Korićani Cliffs on Mount Vlašić in central Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The victims were former detainees from the Bosnian Serb-run concentration camp at Trnopolje separated out from a larger group of civilians being taken to Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina-controlled territory in central Bosnia. The massacre was carried out by members of the special response team of the Public Security Center (CJB) of Prijedor, a Bosnian Serb reserve police unit.

The massacre was investigated and the names of the victims reported in a series of articles published in the Bosnian Serb newspaper Nezavisne Novine. In 1999 the newspaper's editor Željko Kopanja who had worked on the story was maimed in a bombing attempt on his life.

In trials at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina members of the group who carried out the killings, including their leader, Darko Mrđa, were convicted and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.

In the final major trial at the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, on 21 December 2010 Zoran Babić, Milorad Škrbić, Dušan Janković and Željko Stojnić, all employed at the Public Security Center in Prijedor during the war, were found guilty and between them sentenced to 86 years imprisonment for war crimes committed against 150 Bosniak and Croat civilians in the Korićani Cliffs massacre.

The suspected chief organizer of the massacre, Simo Drljača, the chief of police at Prijedor, was shot dead during an attempt to arrest him

The victims were among more than 3,500 non-Serbs killed during the ethnic cleansing campaign in the Prijedor area in 1992. The unit behind the Korićani Cliffs massacre was alleged to have committed many other crimes in the area, including some against local Serbs.

Even after a systematic investigation of the site in 2009 most of the victims' remains have never been recovered.

The massacre
On August 21, 1992, a large group of about 1,200 civilian detainees released from the Bosnian Serb-run Trnopolje camp were being transported to Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina-controlled territory in central Bosnia. After the convoy reached Mount Vlašić, about 200-250 men were selected and separated from the main group by a group of paramilitary policemen from Prijedor, the so-called "Intervention Squad", also known as "Mice" and "Red Berets", and crammed onto two buses. According to the survivor Medo Sivac (18-year old at the time), when the rest of the convoy left for Travnik, "they took everything valuable from us, jewelry, money, watches." The separated men were told they were going to be exchanged for prisoners held by the Bosnian government forces, but instead they were taken on a 15-minute journey to the edge of a ravine at Korićani Cliffs.

When the buses arrived at the cliffs, the prisoners on the first bus were taken off and killed one-by-one by being shot while kneeling at the edge of the ravine. After about half the men had been taken off the bus, the rest were taken to be executed in groups of three. Before leaving, the police officers also fired down on the bodies and threw hand grenades at them. Sivac, who was on the second bus, reported how all the passengers from that bus were unloaded together and were then ordered to line up along the cliffs and kneel there:

"Then the horrible shooting started. I was falling into the abyss. I didn’t loose consciousness, but suddenly I felt that the fall was over, because of the bushes attached to the cliff. I took refuge there, going as far as possible into the bush during the night. In the morning I stepped down somehow to find refuge in the nearby forest. I heard when some people came to burn the corpses."

Twelve of the victims survived the shootings and the fall into the ravine. Seven of them were found by members of the Army of the Republika Srpska (VRS), who filed a report on the "terrible crime against civilians," but the prisoners were not immediately released and some suffered further abuse while being treated for their wounds at the Hospital for Eye Diseases in Paprikovac. They were eventually handed over to the ICRC on October 1.

The initial Bosnian Serb investigation
Appearing as a prosecution witness at the trial of members of the unit in 2009, Jefto Jankovic, former investigative judge with the Basic Court in Banja Luka, told how on August 23, 1992, after receiving a call from the Public Safety Station in Banja Luka, he went to Korićanske Stijene to conduct a crime-scene inspection:

"We arrived there at about 3 p.m. We saw that the area was rocky, the canyon was about 100 to 300 meters deep. I saw two piles of corpses at the bottom of the canyon. The corpses were lying there one on top of the other. It was a frightening scene. It was something I had never seen in my life. As it was impossible to approach them, I asked our crime technician to record it using a video camcorder. This is all that we did during the course of the crime-scene inspection."

Jankovic was then taken to the Staff Headquarters of the VRS 22nd Brigade in Knezevo, where he spoke to two survivors, Medo Sivac and Midhat Mujkanovic, who told him how they had managed to survive by jumping down when the shooting started. He drove them personally to Banja Luka and later on they were transferred to the Islamic Humanitarian Association Merhamet. Jankovic said that because of the large number of victims he referred the case to the Public Safety Station in Banja Luka for further investigation and claimed that he did not know any further details concerning the perpetrators or victims.

Arrests and the trials in the Hague and in Bosnia
The leader of the group that carried out the killings, Darko Mrđa, was been arrested by SFOR in 2002 and tried by ICTY. In 2004 he was convicted on two counts of crimes against humanity (extermination and inhumane acts) and one count of violations of the laws or customs of war (murder) and sentenced to 17 years in prison.

Mrđa is believed to have been ordered to commit the crime by Simo Drljača, the chief of police of Prijedor, who was shot and killed by SFOR soldiers while resisting an attempt to arrest him in 1997.

In May 2009, eight former members of the Public Safety Station in Prijedor and the Emergency Police Squad charged with crimes committed at Korićanske Stijene were brought to trial before the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Damir Ivankovic, Zoran Babić, Gordan Djuric, Milorad Radakovic, Milorad Škrbić, Ljubisa Cetic, Dusan Jankovic and Zeljko Stojnic were charged with crimes against humanity, as the Prosecution charged them with having participated in organizing and escorting the convoy of Croat and Bosniak civilians who were supposed to be exchanged on August 21, 1992, from which about 200 men had been separated before being shot with automatic weapons at Korićani Cliffs.

Following exhumations at the ravine in August 2009, two more former members of the Intervention Squad and a Territorial Defense unit, Branko Topola (a serving police officer) and Petar Civic, were also arrested on suspicion of taking part in the massacre.

On 21 December 2010 the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina's first instance verdict pronounced Zoran Babic, Milorad Skrbic, Dusan Jankovic and Zeljko Stojnic guilty of participating in a joint criminal enterprise in Prijedor municipality conducted with the aim of persecuting, robbing and killing non-Serb civilians during the course of 1992.

Babic and Skrbic were sentenced to 22 years' imprisonment and Stojnic to 15 years in prison for the murder of more than 150 male civilians committed at Koricanske stijene on August 21, 1992. All were former members of the Interventions Squad at the Public Safety Station in Prijedor. The former Commander of the Public Safety Station, Dusan Jankovic, was found guilty of having ordered the murders and sentenced to 27 years in prison.

Milorad Radakovic was acquitted of all charges because it was found that he had participated in the convoy as a medical worker, had not been part of the plan to separate and kill the victims and because he had remained on the bus could not have taken part in the executions. The sentences were influenced by Babic's "severe health condition", testimony that Skrbic had "protected some civilians in the bus he escorted" and Stojnic's age (as he was under 21 years old he could not be sentenced to long-term imprisonment.

Three other accused had previously admitted their guilt. Damir Ivankovic who agreed to testify against the other indictees; was sentenced to 14 years imprisonment. Gordan Djuric who had testified that he had not wanted to participate in the shooting of civilians and had sheltered behind a cliff but did obey orders to stand guard securing the location where the executions took place was sentenced to eight years imprisonment. Ljubisa Cetic also admitted his guilt and was sentenced to 13 years in prison.

Dusan Jankovic, who had been released from prison under restrictive conditions in November 2009, failed to attend the hearing. When he failed to appear his attorney Ranko Dakic told the Court he been informed that "the car broke down". The State Court ordered Jankovic's arrest as a fugitive from justice.

Location of the remains
Although some remains were located by experts in 2003 thanks to testimony from survivors and a confession by Damir Ivankovic, until 2009 the whereabouts of most of the victims remained unknown. The bodies were thought probably to have been buried in mass graves in various locations of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Following the failure of After no serious investigation to locate the missing persons or bodies has been undertaken by the authorities, in September 2008 the Advocacy Center - TRIAL (ACT) Project lodged six individual applications before the European Court of Human Rights in relation to the disappearance of eight Bosniak men during the massacre at Mount Vlasic, on behalf of their relatives.

In July/August 2009 the Bosnian Institute for Missing Persons (IMP) investigated a mass grave site at the Korićani Cliffs. By the end of August 2009, the remains of at least 60 individuals had been exhumed from the deep ravine. Some of the bodies were burned and it was believed that others had been moved in order to hide the traces of the crime According to Amor Mašović of the IMP, these are the dead from one of the buses.

In popular culture
An account of the massacre was portrayed in Safe Area Goražde.