PRESS RELEASE THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE PIONIRSKA STREET AND BIKAVAC FIRE

 

The Association for Social Research and Communication (UDIK) reminds the public of the anniversary of
the war crimes that took place in Pionirska Street and Bikavac in Višegrad in June 1992.
In the Pionirska Street Fire, on June 14, 1992, a group of Bosniak civilians were locked en masse in the
house of Adem Omeragić in Višegrad. The house was set ablaze and the occupants were left to burn to
death. About seventy Bosniak women, children and elderly men, most of them from the village of
Koritnik, were confined in a house in Pionirska Street by cousins Milan and Sredoje Lukić, leaders of the
paramilitary unit called Avengers. The youngest victim was two days old. A similar scenario happened on
June 27, when approximately seventy Bosniak civilians were forced into one room in the house of Meho
Aljić in the settlement of Bikavac. After the captives were robbed, the house was set on fire and the
occupants were burned alive. According to the testimony of Zehra Turjačanin before ICTY, there were
many children in the house, the youngest less than one year old. Such crimes were repeated at several
other locations in Višegrad.

For war crimes in Višegrad the ICTY sentenced Milan Lukić to life imprisonment, Sredoje Lukić to twenty-
seven years, and Mitar Vasiljević to fifteen years in prison. The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina

convicted Boban Šimšić, Dragan Šekarić, Mićo Jovičić, Miloš Pantelić, Momir Savić, Momir Tasić, Nenad
Tanasković, Oliver Krsmanović, Petar Kovačević, Predrag Milisavljević, Predrag Tasić, Radomir Šušnjar,
Vitomir Racković, Vuk Ratković and Željko Lelek. The Cantonal Court in Sarajevo sentenced Novo Rajak to
five years in prison. In March 2024, the State Court issued a first-instance verdict in which Milomir Đuričić
was sentenced to five and Vukadin Spasojević to eleven years in prison for the crimes committed against
the Bosniak population in the Uzamnica camp in 1992 and 1993.
As a result of monstrous crimes committed by members of various formations of the Army of Republika
Srpska (VRS), Višegrad became known as the city of femicides and child killers. The site of mass crimes
against the Bosniak civilian population. Unfortunately, today it serves as an example of a local community
that, instead of facing the war past, chooses to create false narratives and glorify war criminals. Višegrad
is presented as an important tourist potential of Republika Srpska, but the fact is that there is no place
for the truth in that place, but only for the denial of war crimes.

ADDRESS: Grbavička 51, BA-71000 Sarajevo, TEL: 033 978 600, FAX: 033 978 605, E-MAIL: official.udik@outlook.com, WEB: www.udik.org
CENTRAL REGISTER OF MONUMENTS (CES): prijavispomenik@gmail.com; PRESS: Tel: 061 603 820, E-mail: official.udik@gmail.com
We are once again appealing to the witnesses of the war events in Višegrad to reveal the whereabouts of
the remains of those killed in Pionirska Street and Bikavac, as well as other locations. The process of
dealing with the past should start from ourselves by showing more will and effort for the suffering of
others instead of self-victimization. More than three decades is a small historical period, but it is too long
for the families of the murdered who are waiting to bury their loved ones.
On the occasion of the thirty-second anniversary, we remember the civilian war victims from Višegrad.
The Association for Social Research and Communications (UDIK) helps post-Yugoslav societies to establish the rule of law and to
accept the legacy of massive human rights violations in order to identify the criminal responsibility of perpetrators, to meet
justice and prevent the repetition of such crimes. It is the affirmation of the value of an open civil society, with clearly defined
priorities in terms of promotion and protection of human rights, as well as youth involvement in social and political processes
through peace activism.

PRESS SERVICE