12 November 1991: Croatian political leaders in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Mate Boban and
Dario Kordić signed a document about a common Croatian state: "the Croatian people in Bosnia and Herzegovina must finally embrace a determined and active policy which will realise our eternal dream – a common Croatian state".[3]
18 November 1991: The
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) party branch in Bosnia and Herzegovina, proclaimed the existence of the
Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia, as a separate "political, cultural, economic and territorial whole," on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[4]
1992
April
8 April 1992: The
Croatian Defence Council (Hrvatsko vijeće obrane, HVO) was established in
Grude as the official military formation of the Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia.[5]
10 April 1992: Mate Boban decreed that the
Bosnian Territorial Defence (TO), which had been created the day before, was illegal on territory of the Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia.[6]
21 April 1992: Croatian Crisis Staff took over the powers of the
Kiseljak Municipal
Assembly, although under the
constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, only the Municipal Assembly is entitled to exercise those powers, which led to many discriminatory measures against the Bosnian Muslim authorities and
population in Kiseljak.[8]
May
6 May 1992: The
Graz agreement between
Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadžić and
Bosnian Croat leader Mate Boban. It was meant to stop the conflict between Serb and Croat forces. The two sides ultimately parted ways, without signing any agreement.[9]
10 May 1992: Croats issued an ultimatum to all Bosnian military units in
BusovaÄa calling on them to surrender their weapons and to place themselves under Croat command.[11]
11 May 1992:
Tihomir Blaškić declared the Bosnian Territorial Defence (TO) illegal on the territory of the
Kiseljak municipality.[3]
22 May 1992: Bosnian state organs in the BusovaÄa municipality were abolished. Bosniaks were forced to sign an act of
allegiance to the Croat authorities, fell victim to numerous attacks on shops and businesses and, gradually, left the area out of
fear that they would be the victims of mass crimes.[11]
June
June 1992: Croat military formations took over the
headquarters in Vitez and the Municipal Assembly building and raised the
flags of Herzeg-Bosnia and of Croatia.[12]
15 June 1992: Croatian Crisis Staff imposed the
Croatian dinar "on the territory of the Kiseljak municipality as the
currency of account" and ordered that "all commercial service companies [were] obliged to display the prices of products and services in Croatian dinars".[8]
19 June 1992: Short armed confrontation between the ARBiH and HVO occurred in Novi Travnik.[13]
July
1 July 1992: The
Croatian Defence Council (HVO) took over all civilian and military power in
Vareš and prohibited all Territorial Defence (TO) activities.[14]
3 July 1992: The Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia was formally declared in an amendment to the original decision from November 1991.[15]
August 1992: The HVO launched attacks on the
villages of Duhri, Potkraj, Radanovići and Topole in the
municipality of Kiseljak, which involved more violent incidents, including setting fire to homes where Bosnian Muslims lived and vandalising their businesses.[16]
9 August 1992: HOS Commander Blaž Kraljević was killed at a checkpoint in the village of Kruševo by the HVO.[17]
23 August 1992: HVO and HOS leaders in Herzegovina agreed to incorporate the HOS into the HVO.[17]
August 1992: In
Travnik, Dario Kordić and Ignac Koštroman addressed Croat troops with the message that those who do not wish to live in the Croatian
provinces of Herzeg-Bosnia are all enemies and must be fought with both political and military means.[18]
August 1992: In Vitez, the gist of Kordić's speech was a statement to the Muslims of the
Lašva Valley that this was Croat land and that they had to accept it.[18]
September
5 September 1992: Presidency of the
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) in
Travnik stated that the Croats in the municipality refused unitary State of Bosnia and Herzegovina and accepted only the HVO government.[18]
7 September 1992: On 7 September, HVO demanded that the Bosniak militiamen withdraw from Croatian suburbs of Stup, Bare, Azići, Otes, Dogladi and parts of Nedzarici in Sarajevo and issued an ultimatum.
30 September 1992: Croat leadership in
Kakanj municipality met with Dario Kordić, as vice-president of Herzeg-Bosnia, who stated that they would not take Kakanj by force but it would be given to them because Muslims were losing morale and they wouldn't be strong enough to confront realisation of the Croatian political platform.[20]
19–26 October 1992: The conflict between
Croatian Defence Council (HVO) and
Bosnian Army (ARBiH) broke out again in
Novi Travnik when the HVO attacked a Bosnian Army unit in the
fire brigade building. It is assumed that the cause of the conflict was a
demand by the HVO to be allowed to take over the Bratstvo
ammunitionfactory which the Bosnian Army refused.[21]
19 October 1992: During the early part of the conflict in Novi Travnik, the local TO, on orders from their superiors, put up a
barricade in
Ahmići in the Vitez municipality on the main road through the Lašva Valley in order to prevent HVO reinforcements reaching Novi Travnik.[22]
20 October 1992: Early in the morning the HVO attacked the Ahmići barricade. The
houses were set on fire, the
minaret of the
mosque was hit and a 16-year-old boy was killed. The attack lasted all morning until the people manning the barricade ran out of
ammunition and the checkpoint was then removed.[22]
22 October 1992: A general
cease-fire for the Vitez municipality was signed.[22]
23 October 1992: Croat forces attacked Bosnian Muslims in Prozor town and started
ethnic cleansing which included different forms of violence.[24][25]
24 October 1992: Croat forces attacked Paljike, a predominantly Bosniak village approximately one kilometer south of Prozor town, deliberately destroyed houses and property, killed some of the
villagers, and the next day transferred the others to the Ripci primary school where Bosnian Muslims from Prozor were detained.[4]
24 October 1992: On the evening, an area HVO commander reported that Prozor town was "ethnically pure" and "the Muslim population having been detained or having fled".[4]
24–25 October 1992: Shortly after Croat forces attacked Bosnian Muslims in neighbouring Prozor municipality, the HVO and Bosnian Army engaged in fighting in
Gornji Vakuftown, and the HVO seized control of several factories and the Ministry of Interior building.[4]
4 November 1992:
Jajce, a town north-east of
Travnik, which had been under siege by the
Serb forces and which was defended by a combined Bosniak and Croat force, had fallen, releasing a flood of
refugees into the area of Travnik and
Zenica.[23]
December
December 1992: The Croat forces had taken control of the municipalities of the Lašva Valley and had only met significant opposition in Novi Travnik and Ahmići. Much of Central Bosnia therefore was in the hands of the Croat forces.[23]
1993
January
2 January 1993: The Vance–Owen peace plan was proposed in
Geneva.[26]
11 January 1993: Clashes between the HVO and the ARBiH started in
Gornji Vakuf.
18 January 1993:
Duša killings, 7 Bosniak civilians killed during the HVO shelling of village
Duša.[27]
24 January 1993: 2 HVO soldiers killed in an ambush by the ARBiH.[28]
26 January 1993: The ARBiH killed 6 Croats and a Serb civilian in the village of Dusina near Zenica.[29]
March
28 March 1993: Tuđman and Izetbegović sign an agreement to establish a joint Croat-Bosniak military in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[30]
April
13 April 1993: Four HVO soldiers were kidnapped by the mujahideen outside
Novi Travnik.[31]
14 April 1993: Conflict between ARBiH and HVO escalates in Konjic and Jablanica.[32]
15 April 1993: The mujahideen kidnapped HVO commander Živko Totić in Zenica and killed his escort. A joint ARBiH-HVO commission was formed to investigate the case.[33]
16 April 1993:
Ahmići massacre, HVO troops killed at least 103 Bosniak civilians.[34]
16 April 1993:
Trusina killings, ARBiH troops killed 18 Croat civilians and 4 POWs in the village of
Trusina.[35]
24 April 1993: Four Croat civilians killed by the mujahideen upon taking the village of Miletići near Travnik.[29]
May
6 May 1993: Bosnian Serbs reject the Vance–Owen plan on a referendum.[36]
9 May 1993: Fierce fighting escalates in
Mostar.[37]
10 May 1993: HVO captures the Vranica building in Mostar, 10 Bosniak POWs were killed.
June
4 June 1993: ARBiH troops attack HVO positions in Travnik.[38]
8 June 1993: Mujahideen forces killed at least 24 Croat civilians and POWs near the village of Bikoši.[39]
10 June 1993: Eight Croat children were killed in a playground during the ARBiH shelling of Vitez.[40]
10 June 1993: Convoy of Joy incident, Croat refugees and HVO soldiers block and ambush an aid convoy heading for Tuzla. Eight Bosniak drivers and two HVO soldiers were killed.[41]
12 June 1993: HVO Kiseljak and the Serb forces from Ilidža in village Grahovci (between Kiseljak and Ilidža) kill 37 Bosniak civilians.
13 June 1993: ARBiH had taken control of
Travnik and the surrounding villages.
16 June 1993: The ARBiH takes control over
Kakanj.[42]
2 July 1993: ARBiH attacks and captures
Fojnica.[44]
25 July 1993: Battle of Bugojno ends, ARBiH takes control of the city.[45]
August
1 August 1993: ARBiH takes control over most of Gornji Vakuf, HVO remains in the southwestern part of the town.[46]
September
7 September 1993: the
Parliament of Croatia recognized Herzeg-Bosnia as a possible form of sovereignty for Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[47]
8–9 September 1993:
Massacre in Grabovica, at least 13, and as many as 35 Croats were killed in the village of Grabovica by members of the ARBiH.
14 September 1993: ARBiH attacked the village of
Uzdol during the
Uzdol massacre in which 29 Croat civilians and one HVO prisoner were killed by the Prozor Independent Battalion.[48]
October
22 October 1993: Tuđman instructed Šušak and Bobetko to continue to support Herzeg-Bosnia, believing that "the future borders of the Croatian state are being resolved there."[49]
9 November 1993: Old Bridge in Mostar was destroyed by the HVO.
December
22–22 December 1993:
KrižanÄevo Selo killings, dozens of Croats were killed during the attack by the Bosnian Army.
1994
January
9 January 1994: Massacre in Buhine Kuće, near
Vitez: Bosniak forces killed 26 Croat civilians, including 8 children.[50]
24 January 1994:
Operation Tvigi 94, HVO forces claimed the village of
Here from the ARBiH.
February
23 February 1994: The Croat-Bosniak war officially ended when the Commander of HVO, general Ante Roso and commander of Bosnian Army, general Rasim Delić, signed a ceasefire agreement in Zagreb. In March 1994 a peace agreement mediated by the USA between the warring Croats (represented by Republic of Croatia) and Bosnia and Herzegovina was signed in Washington and Vienna which is known as the Washington Agreement. Under the agreement, the combined territory held by the Croat and Bosnian government forces was divided into ten autonomous cantons, establishing the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
^Lukic, Reneo; Lynch, Allen (1996). Europe From the Balkans to the Urals: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
Oxford University Press. p. 215.
^ICTY – Kordic and Cerkez judgment – II. PERSECUTION: THE HVO TAKE-OVERS C. The HVO Take-Over in Other Municipalities –
[1]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^ICTY – Blaskic Judgement – A. The Lasva Valley: May 1992 – January 1993 – c) The municipality of Kiseljak
[2]Archived 2011-06-06 at the
Wayback Machine
^
abcICTY: Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – III. EVENTS LEADING TO THE CONFLICT – A. July – September 1992 – 1. The Role of Dario Kordic –
[3]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^ICTY – Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – 2. Ruling of the BiH Constitutional Court
[4]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^"ICTY: Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – III. EVENTS LEADING TO THE CONFLICT – A. July – September 1992 – 1. The Role of Dario Kordic"(PDF).
Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2010. On 30 September 1992 Kordic, as Vice-President of HZ H-B, was present at a meeting of the Presidency of the Kakanj HVO, a neighbouring municipality to Vares. The minutes of the meeting record Kordic as saying that the HVO was the government of the HZ H-B and what they were doing with the HZ H-B was the realisation of a complete political platform: they would not take Kakanj by force but "it is a question of time whether we will take or give up what is ours. It has been written down that Vares and Kakanj are in HZ H-B. The Muslims are losing morale and then it will end with 'give us what you will'".
^"SENSE Tribunal: ICTY – EVICT, BURN AND EXPEL". The Prozor main street was "a mess", there were signs of shelling everywhere, almost every fifth house had been burned down, and the soldiers were busy looting the shops. In those events in Prozor, Vuillamy recognized the "pattern of ethnic cleansing" he had seen as a war correspondent in the operations the Serb forces had launched in eastern Croatia and north-western Bosnia. He summed up the pattern as follows for the judges: "Evict them, burn them and expel them!"
^SENSE Tribunal: ICTY – "THE MOST POWERFUL MEN IN THE HERCEG BOSNA PROJECT" ON TRIAL –
"SENSE Tribunal : ICTY". Archived from
the original on 2007-11-10. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
12 November 1991: Croatian political leaders in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Mate Boban and
Dario Kordić signed a document about a common Croatian state: "the Croatian people in Bosnia and Herzegovina must finally embrace a determined and active policy which will realise our eternal dream – a common Croatian state".[3]
18 November 1991: The
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) party branch in Bosnia and Herzegovina, proclaimed the existence of the
Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia, as a separate "political, cultural, economic and territorial whole," on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[4]
1992
April
8 April 1992: The
Croatian Defence Council (Hrvatsko vijeće obrane, HVO) was established in
Grude as the official military formation of the Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia.[5]
10 April 1992: Mate Boban decreed that the
Bosnian Territorial Defence (TO), which had been created the day before, was illegal on territory of the Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia.[6]
21 April 1992: Croatian Crisis Staff took over the powers of the
Kiseljak Municipal
Assembly, although under the
constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, only the Municipal Assembly is entitled to exercise those powers, which led to many discriminatory measures against the Bosnian Muslim authorities and
population in Kiseljak.[8]
May
6 May 1992: The
Graz agreement between
Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadžić and
Bosnian Croat leader Mate Boban. It was meant to stop the conflict between Serb and Croat forces. The two sides ultimately parted ways, without signing any agreement.[9]
10 May 1992: Croats issued an ultimatum to all Bosnian military units in
BusovaÄa calling on them to surrender their weapons and to place themselves under Croat command.[11]
11 May 1992:
Tihomir Blaškić declared the Bosnian Territorial Defence (TO) illegal on the territory of the
Kiseljak municipality.[3]
22 May 1992: Bosnian state organs in the BusovaÄa municipality were abolished. Bosniaks were forced to sign an act of
allegiance to the Croat authorities, fell victim to numerous attacks on shops and businesses and, gradually, left the area out of
fear that they would be the victims of mass crimes.[11]
June
June 1992: Croat military formations took over the
headquarters in Vitez and the Municipal Assembly building and raised the
flags of Herzeg-Bosnia and of Croatia.[12]
15 June 1992: Croatian Crisis Staff imposed the
Croatian dinar "on the territory of the Kiseljak municipality as the
currency of account" and ordered that "all commercial service companies [were] obliged to display the prices of products and services in Croatian dinars".[8]
19 June 1992: Short armed confrontation between the ARBiH and HVO occurred in Novi Travnik.[13]
July
1 July 1992: The
Croatian Defence Council (HVO) took over all civilian and military power in
Vareš and prohibited all Territorial Defence (TO) activities.[14]
3 July 1992: The Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia was formally declared in an amendment to the original decision from November 1991.[15]
August 1992: The HVO launched attacks on the
villages of Duhri, Potkraj, Radanovići and Topole in the
municipality of Kiseljak, which involved more violent incidents, including setting fire to homes where Bosnian Muslims lived and vandalising their businesses.[16]
9 August 1992: HOS Commander Blaž Kraljević was killed at a checkpoint in the village of Kruševo by the HVO.[17]
23 August 1992: HVO and HOS leaders in Herzegovina agreed to incorporate the HOS into the HVO.[17]
August 1992: In
Travnik, Dario Kordić and Ignac Koštroman addressed Croat troops with the message that those who do not wish to live in the Croatian
provinces of Herzeg-Bosnia are all enemies and must be fought with both political and military means.[18]
August 1992: In Vitez, the gist of Kordić's speech was a statement to the Muslims of the
Lašva Valley that this was Croat land and that they had to accept it.[18]
September
5 September 1992: Presidency of the
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) in
Travnik stated that the Croats in the municipality refused unitary State of Bosnia and Herzegovina and accepted only the HVO government.[18]
7 September 1992: On 7 September, HVO demanded that the Bosniak militiamen withdraw from Croatian suburbs of Stup, Bare, Azići, Otes, Dogladi and parts of Nedzarici in Sarajevo and issued an ultimatum.
30 September 1992: Croat leadership in
Kakanj municipality met with Dario Kordić, as vice-president of Herzeg-Bosnia, who stated that they would not take Kakanj by force but it would be given to them because Muslims were losing morale and they wouldn't be strong enough to confront realisation of the Croatian political platform.[20]
19–26 October 1992: The conflict between
Croatian Defence Council (HVO) and
Bosnian Army (ARBiH) broke out again in
Novi Travnik when the HVO attacked a Bosnian Army unit in the
fire brigade building. It is assumed that the cause of the conflict was a
demand by the HVO to be allowed to take over the Bratstvo
ammunitionfactory which the Bosnian Army refused.[21]
19 October 1992: During the early part of the conflict in Novi Travnik, the local TO, on orders from their superiors, put up a
barricade in
Ahmići in the Vitez municipality on the main road through the Lašva Valley in order to prevent HVO reinforcements reaching Novi Travnik.[22]
20 October 1992: Early in the morning the HVO attacked the Ahmići barricade. The
houses were set on fire, the
minaret of the
mosque was hit and a 16-year-old boy was killed. The attack lasted all morning until the people manning the barricade ran out of
ammunition and the checkpoint was then removed.[22]
22 October 1992: A general
cease-fire for the Vitez municipality was signed.[22]
23 October 1992: Croat forces attacked Bosnian Muslims in Prozor town and started
ethnic cleansing which included different forms of violence.[24][25]
24 October 1992: Croat forces attacked Paljike, a predominantly Bosniak village approximately one kilometer south of Prozor town, deliberately destroyed houses and property, killed some of the
villagers, and the next day transferred the others to the Ripci primary school where Bosnian Muslims from Prozor were detained.[4]
24 October 1992: On the evening, an area HVO commander reported that Prozor town was "ethnically pure" and "the Muslim population having been detained or having fled".[4]
24–25 October 1992: Shortly after Croat forces attacked Bosnian Muslims in neighbouring Prozor municipality, the HVO and Bosnian Army engaged in fighting in
Gornji Vakuftown, and the HVO seized control of several factories and the Ministry of Interior building.[4]
4 November 1992:
Jajce, a town north-east of
Travnik, which had been under siege by the
Serb forces and which was defended by a combined Bosniak and Croat force, had fallen, releasing a flood of
refugees into the area of Travnik and
Zenica.[23]
December
December 1992: The Croat forces had taken control of the municipalities of the Lašva Valley and had only met significant opposition in Novi Travnik and Ahmići. Much of Central Bosnia therefore was in the hands of the Croat forces.[23]
1993
January
2 January 1993: The Vance–Owen peace plan was proposed in
Geneva.[26]
11 January 1993: Clashes between the HVO and the ARBiH started in
Gornji Vakuf.
18 January 1993:
Duša killings, 7 Bosniak civilians killed during the HVO shelling of village
Duša.[27]
24 January 1993: 2 HVO soldiers killed in an ambush by the ARBiH.[28]
26 January 1993: The ARBiH killed 6 Croats and a Serb civilian in the village of Dusina near Zenica.[29]
March
28 March 1993: Tuđman and Izetbegović sign an agreement to establish a joint Croat-Bosniak military in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[30]
April
13 April 1993: Four HVO soldiers were kidnapped by the mujahideen outside
Novi Travnik.[31]
14 April 1993: Conflict between ARBiH and HVO escalates in Konjic and Jablanica.[32]
15 April 1993: The mujahideen kidnapped HVO commander Živko Totić in Zenica and killed his escort. A joint ARBiH-HVO commission was formed to investigate the case.[33]
16 April 1993:
Ahmići massacre, HVO troops killed at least 103 Bosniak civilians.[34]
16 April 1993:
Trusina killings, ARBiH troops killed 18 Croat civilians and 4 POWs in the village of
Trusina.[35]
24 April 1993: Four Croat civilians killed by the mujahideen upon taking the village of Miletići near Travnik.[29]
May
6 May 1993: Bosnian Serbs reject the Vance–Owen plan on a referendum.[36]
9 May 1993: Fierce fighting escalates in
Mostar.[37]
10 May 1993: HVO captures the Vranica building in Mostar, 10 Bosniak POWs were killed.
June
4 June 1993: ARBiH troops attack HVO positions in Travnik.[38]
8 June 1993: Mujahideen forces killed at least 24 Croat civilians and POWs near the village of Bikoši.[39]
10 June 1993: Eight Croat children were killed in a playground during the ARBiH shelling of Vitez.[40]
10 June 1993: Convoy of Joy incident, Croat refugees and HVO soldiers block and ambush an aid convoy heading for Tuzla. Eight Bosniak drivers and two HVO soldiers were killed.[41]
12 June 1993: HVO Kiseljak and the Serb forces from Ilidža in village Grahovci (between Kiseljak and Ilidža) kill 37 Bosniak civilians.
13 June 1993: ARBiH had taken control of
Travnik and the surrounding villages.
16 June 1993: The ARBiH takes control over
Kakanj.[42]
2 July 1993: ARBiH attacks and captures
Fojnica.[44]
25 July 1993: Battle of Bugojno ends, ARBiH takes control of the city.[45]
August
1 August 1993: ARBiH takes control over most of Gornji Vakuf, HVO remains in the southwestern part of the town.[46]
September
7 September 1993: the
Parliament of Croatia recognized Herzeg-Bosnia as a possible form of sovereignty for Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[47]
8–9 September 1993:
Massacre in Grabovica, at least 13, and as many as 35 Croats were killed in the village of Grabovica by members of the ARBiH.
14 September 1993: ARBiH attacked the village of
Uzdol during the
Uzdol massacre in which 29 Croat civilians and one HVO prisoner were killed by the Prozor Independent Battalion.[48]
October
22 October 1993: Tuđman instructed Šušak and Bobetko to continue to support Herzeg-Bosnia, believing that "the future borders of the Croatian state are being resolved there."[49]
9 November 1993: Old Bridge in Mostar was destroyed by the HVO.
December
22–22 December 1993:
KrižanÄevo Selo killings, dozens of Croats were killed during the attack by the Bosnian Army.
1994
January
9 January 1994: Massacre in Buhine Kuće, near
Vitez: Bosniak forces killed 26 Croat civilians, including 8 children.[50]
24 January 1994:
Operation Tvigi 94, HVO forces claimed the village of
Here from the ARBiH.
February
23 February 1994: The Croat-Bosniak war officially ended when the Commander of HVO, general Ante Roso and commander of Bosnian Army, general Rasim Delić, signed a ceasefire agreement in Zagreb. In March 1994 a peace agreement mediated by the USA between the warring Croats (represented by Republic of Croatia) and Bosnia and Herzegovina was signed in Washington and Vienna which is known as the Washington Agreement. Under the agreement, the combined territory held by the Croat and Bosnian government forces was divided into ten autonomous cantons, establishing the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
^Lukic, Reneo; Lynch, Allen (1996). Europe From the Balkans to the Urals: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
Oxford University Press. p. 215.
^ICTY – Kordic and Cerkez judgment – II. PERSECUTION: THE HVO TAKE-OVERS C. The HVO Take-Over in Other Municipalities –
[1]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^ICTY – Blaskic Judgement – A. The Lasva Valley: May 1992 – January 1993 – c) The municipality of Kiseljak
[2]Archived 2011-06-06 at the
Wayback Machine
^
abcICTY: Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – III. EVENTS LEADING TO THE CONFLICT – A. July – September 1992 – 1. The Role of Dario Kordic –
[3]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^ICTY – Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – 2. Ruling of the BiH Constitutional Court
[4]Archived 2012-06-29 at the
Wayback Machine
^"ICTY: Kordic and Cerkez Judgement – III. EVENTS LEADING TO THE CONFLICT – A. July – September 1992 – 1. The Role of Dario Kordic"(PDF).
Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2010. On 30 September 1992 Kordic, as Vice-President of HZ H-B, was present at a meeting of the Presidency of the Kakanj HVO, a neighbouring municipality to Vares. The minutes of the meeting record Kordic as saying that the HVO was the government of the HZ H-B and what they were doing with the HZ H-B was the realisation of a complete political platform: they would not take Kakanj by force but "it is a question of time whether we will take or give up what is ours. It has been written down that Vares and Kakanj are in HZ H-B. The Muslims are losing morale and then it will end with 'give us what you will'".
^"SENSE Tribunal: ICTY – EVICT, BURN AND EXPEL". The Prozor main street was "a mess", there were signs of shelling everywhere, almost every fifth house had been burned down, and the soldiers were busy looting the shops. In those events in Prozor, Vuillamy recognized the "pattern of ethnic cleansing" he had seen as a war correspondent in the operations the Serb forces had launched in eastern Croatia and north-western Bosnia. He summed up the pattern as follows for the judges: "Evict them, burn them and expel them!"
^SENSE Tribunal: ICTY – "THE MOST POWERFUL MEN IN THE HERCEG BOSNA PROJECT" ON TRIAL –
"SENSE Tribunal : ICTY". Archived from
the original on 2007-11-10. Retrieved 2012-01-28.