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The UN used convoys of
trucks to ferry hundreds of refugees out of the
city |
1993: UN makes Srebrenica 'safe
haven' |
England have
The United Nations has voted to make the Bosnian town of Srebrenica a
safe haven, as the town teeters on the brink of falling to Bosnian
Serb forces.
In a late-night emergency session, the UN Security Council voted to
back the stand taken by the UN's commander in Bosnia, General Philippe
Morillon, and offer its protection to the besieged city.
Under the proposal, Srebrenica would become a centre for Bosnian Muslim
refugees seeking safety from Bosnian Serb aggression. However, the details
of how such a safe haven would be defended are unclear.
Tens of thousands of civilians trapped in the town are said to be in a
state of panic tonight as Serbian forces close in on what may be a final
offensive to take the town.
Under siege
Srebrenica has been under siege for 11 months, and UN officials say it
is unlikely to hold out for much longer.
"The Muslim forces have few weapons and even less ammunition," warned a
UN military source.
Bosnian radio said the Serbs had moved to within a mile (1.6km) of the
town itself.
Conditions in Srebrenica are said to be appalling. The town's normal
population has been swollen by thousands of refugees, fleeing the
advancing Serb forces.
Hundreds are wounded, and many are dying for lack of medical
facilities.
Government appeal
The Bosnian government has urged the world to act swiftly.
"We appeal to you on behalf of the people of Srebrenica who are
threatened with extinction," it said in a statement. "Thousands of women,
children and elderly are going to be massacred ."
The leader of the Bosnian Serbs, Radovan Karadzic, warned the town's
defenders that if they did not give up their weapons the Serbs would
advance.
"We are not going to enter Srebrenica, we just want to pacify
Srebrenica," he said.
Last month General Morillon declared Srebrenica under UN protection,
pledging to stay in the town himself as a gesture of solidarity.
The UN's efforts to evacuate the wounded have caused chaotic scenes in
which several have died, crushed to death in the scramble to get on board
the convoys of trucks.
The last group of 800 refugees left on UN trucks just three days ago.
Srebrenica is one of the last Muslim strongholds in eastern Bosnia, an
area where all the main towns had a Muslim majority before the
war.