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Locked Down in Olovo Page 12 |
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Olovo is in a very narrow valley in a very mountainous part of Bosnia, just north of Sarajevo on the main highway to Tuzla. The area is thinly populated and rather desolate. The fighting was heavy here, so the area is even more thinly populated and desolate than usual. Olovo is in bad shape. Nearly all the buildings have been damaged: most have been tattooed by bullets, many are missing roofs and windows. Olovo is abandoned because the Serbs vacated the area rather than live under Bosnian government rule. They even dug up their departed ancestors rather than let them rest in enemy territory.
That was in December, right after the Dayton accord was signed. At the time I said the same thing would happen in the Serb suburbs of Sarajevo. The newspapers -- with typically myopic, hand-holding, teaching-the-world-to-sing, feel-goodism -- thought they would stay. But I put myself in the shoes of the locals: guilt by association. If I was a Muslim whose friends and family had been ethnically cleansed by the Serbs, I would not be too particular about which Serbs I would take it out on. And if I was a Serb I would not want to risk the safety of my family on the possibility that the Muslims would not take undeserved revenge on me. And so it has come to pass: 50,000 Serbs are in the process of fleeing Sarajevo.
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