SARAJEVO, Nov 22 (Hina) - Ten years after the signing of the DaytonAgreement, light has not been shed on the fate of 14,000 people whowent missing during the war in Bosnia and the country has not yetreceived a unified list of missing
and identified persons,participants in a meeting of a working group for missing persons inBosnia said in Sarajevo on Tuesday.
SARAJEVO, Nov 22 (Hina) - Ten years after the signing of the
Dayton Agreement, light has not been shed on the fate of 14,000 people who went
missing during the war in Bosnia and the country has not yet received a
unified list of missing and identified persons, participants in a meeting of a
working group for missing persons in Bosnia said in Sarajevo on Tuesday. The working group, whose activities are coordinated by the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), was founded after the 1990s war as a
multilateral forum for the exchange of information about the fate of missing
people and progress. It is comprised of representatives of Bosnian authorities,
the international community and representatives of the governments of Croatia
and Serbia and Montenegro.
The Croatian delegation at the 18th session of this body was led by
assistant Minister for family Affairs, War Veterans and Inter-Generational
Solidarity, Ivan Grujic.