The author of the film, entitled "Let the Guards be Disbanded", Boro Rkman, told reporters the film was a follow-up to the film "A Silent Cry", released four years ago, which also dealt with the fate of the families of missing Croatian Serbs.
The president of the association gathering the families of missing and abducted persons from Vukovar, Ruzica Spasic, said 92 persons, mostly civilians, were still listed as missing. In the past two years, 53 persons have been removed from the list of this association after they were identified.
Quoting data provided by the Belgrade-based association "Veritas", Spasic said that 2,666 Serbs, including 1,866 civilians, had gone missing during the war in Croatia.
"Maybe some will say that this figure is unrealistic, but the figure of 1,000 missing Serbs unfortunately is not realistic either," she said.
Spasic said that 519 Serbs killed during and after the 1995 military operations Flash and Storm had been exhumed and that 292 had been identified.
She expressed hope that exhumations of Serbs killed in the war in Croatia would continue, adding that this process had stopped in 2002.
Along with a dozen members of the association, the screening was also attended by the head of the sector for relations with governments of the International Commission for Missing Persons from Sarajevo, Jeffrey Buenger, Serbia and Montenegro's consul in Vukovar, Bojana Ristic, the president of the council of predominantly Serb municipalities, Dragan Crnogorac, and the secretary-general of the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS), Danko Nikolic.