A bloody war burst out between the years of 1992 and 1995 in the dissolution process of Yugoslavia when first the Serbs and later the Croats attacked Bosnia-Herzegovina in order to occupy. The Dayton Agreement was signed with the initiative of USA and EU in 1995 and the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina was divided into the regions of Serb, Croat and Bosniak. Occupants slayed 200.000-250.000 Bosniaks in a planned and systematic way and expelled hundreds of thousands of people in the war lasting 43 months. However, the Serbs carried out the biggest violence and genocide in Srebrenica which was UN’s Safety Zone. Srebrenica was declared as “Safety Zone” with UN Security Council Resolution in 1993 and put under protection of UN Protection Force. Even so, Serb attacks to besieged Srebrenica continued for 3 years. The Serb forces occupied Safety Zone Srebrenica on 11 July 1995. However, the Dutch soldiers of UN Protection Force didn’t do their duty by getting out of the way of the Serbs. Serb occupants carried out the biggest genocide in and around Srebrenica after the Second World War. They slayed 8.000-12.000 Bosniaks including babies, children and women and dumped their bodies in mass graves. They also expelled around 30.000 Muslims from their houses by force, destroyed Turkish-Bosniak-Islamic work of arts and executed all sorts of violence. The aim of this study is to examine the genocide in Srebrenica within the context of process analysis
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