How bloody are the Bloody Balkans really?
10 Star
Share This Post
Edward , London: May 29 2008
Made Popular May 30 2008

Early this morning, a local man in Tuzla, one of the main cities in the Bosnian-Croatian Federation entity of Bosnia-Hercegovina, went on a gun rampage killing six people and seriously injuring one other. Taking place in the small village of Gornja Lipnica, the man went into two family homes and a bus during his murderous spree. This is a truly unpleasant event, but unfortunately the message it will send out to the outside world will be even worse. Since it took place in Bosnia, readers who come across the story on websites such as BBC will read about murder, guns and Bosnia, collate the three themes and shake their heads with what they deem to be a knowing shame, but what those of us with a better understanding for the region will realise is nothing but patronising ignorance. It will be all too easy for people to look at a story such as this one and ask “Oh those primitive Balkan people, they don’t belong in Europe, when will they ever stop killing each other?”. For starters, there is no evidence yet as to whether this crime was ethically motivated, but secondly, even if it were, would this make it in any way typical of the geographical region of the Balkan peninsular? Clearly not.
tuzlakillings_lbsmb_15990
Whilst the 1990s were bloody years for Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia, these were war years, and it is fairly hard to find a long list of countries that haven’t been involved in wars at some point in their relatively recent history. To further debunk the ethnic argument attributed to the region, described by people who know nothing of the history such as John Major with his “ancient ethnic hatreds”, the more we look at the causes of ethnic cleansing we see that they were politically motivated rather than through any sort of primitive blood lust endemic to the region. If we accept that there were wars on, and go on to accept that they were bloody, it should therefore also be accepted that now that there are no wars in the region it is not bloody. If the shooting today in Tuzla was to indeed be shown to be ethnically motivated, although at this stage it appears this was not the case, then this would not give credence to the bloodiness of the region. This was a gun massacre, and from scouring news websites and the international sections of newspapers we can quickly build up a picture showing that the region is actually no more dangerous in this respect that other parts of the world. The motivation for the killings, whatever they might be, are not relevant since all massacres will have particular reasons and causes.

The United States does have a justly deserved infamy for gun crime, and a quick perusal of the most elementary figures shows that this is indeed with good reason, whilst any such similar claim made against the Balkan region is undeserved. In America the massacres seem to be part of a trend which repeats with worrying regularity and is matched by gun based murders, robberies and other such crimes on a daily basis. In the Balkans, whilst the gun was evidently the weapon of choice during the wars, such crimes are so rare as to be of no concern to average citizens and usually only entail mafiaesque hits against politicians, Ivan Stambolic for example, and other even more shady types, such as Arkan.

The United States can stand with blind pride as it defends the right to carry arms with one side of its face while mourning the victims of massacres such as Virginia Tech, Columbine, Waco, Thurston, Platte Canyon, Lane Bryant, Oklahoma City Bombing, West Nickel Mines... the list goes on seemingly forever. In its moment of respite it can cast a glance over the Atlantic to the filthy Balkans and question why the people there are so primitive, so prone to killing each other and why they can’t just get along. It is not just the United States that has seen more than enough massacres to dispel any right to patronise the Balkans on its levels of violence. Finland is widely regarded as a country with a wonderful standard of living yet last year it saw the massacre of nine students at a school in the town of Jokela. Britain too has seen its own fair share of mass killings, the Dunblane massacre carried out by Thomas Hamilton with 18 victims and the Hungerford massacre carried out by Michael Ryan where 17 people died.

Earlier this year, Croatia saw a spree of murders in its usually peaceful Zagorje region in the north of the country. These were quickly attributed to the retired army General Ivan Korade. During his time in the army Korade had distinguished himself as a strong and respected leader and commanded the unit which reclaimed Knin during Operation Oluja. Unable to re-adapt to life outside of the army, Korade suffered from bouts of anger and was a heavy drinker, all too often ending up in brawls but seemingly receiving meagre punishments because of his respected role in the liberation of Croatia. In a bizarre chain of events, Korade killed four residents of his village, including a teenage boy, an elderly woman and his former assistant. The police were baffled and began to search for the retired General who was nowhere to be found. Sightings came in of a man fitting his description and the Croatian media became obsessed with wall-to-wall coverage of each twist in the story, speculating on motives and attempting to find reason. Once they discovered Korade’s hideout deep in a forest, a special police unit descended on the area and a shoot-out took place in which one policeman was killed and Korade took his own life. Whilst this was a senseless event it should be noted that it shocked the Croatian public, showing that in no way was Korade’s behaviour representative of the country as a whole. Whilst Croatia has made good efforts to look after its retired army personnel, the Korade case goes to show that there is probably a need to spend more time with those who are so affected by their former lives that they have slipped through the net that has already been cast out by the state.

We can therefore clearly see that today’s massacre was a one off which will likely haunt the village in which it occurred for many years to come. This will most likely not be understood by the majority of the people who might just read the headline that a mass killing took place and presume that after having already a couple of articles about Srebrenica and Vukovar that this is just more of the same, ignorant to the fact that events such as today’s killing probably happen more often in their own country than in Bosnia. With regards to day-to-day living, the Balkans are a very safe place to live, the night-time streets of its capital cities having no areas that aren’t safe, compared with the shocking spate of knife-crimes that have rocked London in the last few months. Neighbourhoods such as Hackney, Camden and Tower Hamlets in London are far more threatening places to find oneself late at night than Tresnjevka, Dubrava or Crnomerec in Zagreb. Whilst the Balkans is for the most part out of the news coverage now that the wars are over, the unfortunate consequence is that outsiders will stop learning about the region. During the negative years many people became familiar with towns like Tuzla and Srebrenica and leaders like Milosevic and Tudman, albeit for the wrong reasons, whilst now that there are truly reasons to be happy about the overwhelming majority of people will have turned away. Nevertheless, if we assume that people will not change their habits then this lack of interest is far more favourable than the gory and morbid fascination which people held during the 1990s.

BBC article on Tuzla shootings
24 Sata article on Ivan Korade
New York Times article on Columbine and Virginia Tech killings

Add Images and Videos
Close X
Recommended Tags or Keywords
Search by Tags or Keywords
Selected Media ( You can Upload only Six media )
Manual Upload
Sorry, no media found for this combination of tags. Try to search minimum number of tags at once
1 Stars
Incognito republicaninthearts...
Boca Raton, United States
I don’t think anyone, in this day and age, would look at the shooting in Tuzla and blame it on the primitive Balkan people. Sadly, senseless violence is becoming a global phenomena, and I’m not referring to the bloody religious infighting in the middle east.

As for the U.S. and our love of guns, although I am for gun control, I am learning to understand the other side of the argument. There are those that believe that had there been someone armed, during the many different shooting massacres, perhaps there would have been fewer deaths. I still don’t buy it. For gun control to truly work, you would have to make sure that the criminals etc. had no access to guns, and this will never happen.
1 Stars
Edward balkanbaby.blogspot...
London, United Kingdom
Incognito,

With regards to your first point that people today would not have thought that the shooting had an ethnic perspective, I can tell you that they do. I can give you plenty of examples but if I am to limit it purely to the case in Tuzla then I’d flag your attention to the original BBC report on the shooting. One of the very first things mentioned was ”It is still uncertain whether the shooting had a political motive”. In this instance one must read ”political” as being identical to ”ethnic” since all of Bosnia’s political parties are drawn up along ethnic lines. For the BBC even to question whether it was ”political” motives that caused the shooting is yet one more example of the poor and biased coverage the western media gives the region.

I can actually reveal that further reports have shown that the man was a Bosnian Croat and that all of the victims were members of his own family. This shows that there was no ethnic motive because such shootings by deranged individuals take place in Bosnia, the United States, France... everywhere. I’d now like to challenge you to find the last case of a ethnically motivated massacre in Bosnia? They just aren’t that common. So, unless it is biased coverage against Bosnia and the Balkan people as a whole, why did the BBC immediately jump to the suggestion that it might be ethnically motivated?

On your second point, you say that the only way for gun control to truly work is to make sure that criminals have no access to guns. I don’t think it’s anywhere near as black and white as that. In Britain there is strict gun control, but by all accounts, getting hold of a weapon is not impossible in cities such as London and Manchester. Needless to say, some criminals do get hold of these weapons and, hence, there are shootings and armed robberies. But, these are far less frequesnt than in America.

Remember though, in my article I was talking about massacres rather than usual gun crime. If a guy wishing to perform an armed robbery in a grocery store wants to use a weapon he has immediate access to them in America. THe types of disturbed individuals, sometimes school children in cases such as Columbine, would not have had such easy access to the weapons if they were not so freely available. We’ve all seen the film Bowling for Columbine, and despite Michael Moore’s many faults, he does make the point of how easy fire arms can be obtained patently clear.

Take care,
Ed.
1 Stars
Incognito republicaninthearts...
Boca Raton, United States
Well, the BBC like our CNN always jump to conclusions from a very biased pov without delving into the situation. And I agree... post Bosnia war there haven’t been.. and frankly, pre-war they all seemed to coexist quite peacefully.

As for the gun issue was just trying to explain why some advocate for guns here. as i mentioned, i’m not really one of them, in spite of my conservative bent. But some people feel that had there been someone with a gun on the campus of Columbine, there might not have been so many killed. I have no clue. I too believe they are far too easily obtained in this country.

As for why people turn to violence (including massacres) i have no clue.. i keep thinking it’s something in the water.. or perhaps it’s just that the youth of today have become so desensitized to violence, through music, film, the news that the sanctity of life becomes unimportant. Very sad world we live in, today.

And as for Michael Moore... well, I’m sure you can imagine what I think of himm.. :-)
1 Stars
Taylor Flatt multiplayernetwork.n..
Petersburg, United States
That’s just scary that someone could easily go on a rampage like that. But then again you are right about guns being readily available to almost anyone and testament to that is in fact the school murders which all seemed to flare up in this past year. The fact that kids could obtain these guns and use them to bring terror to others lives is just horrible.

I agree on both of you that the fact that the media does jump to conclusions and I can vouch for the CNN doing that, and I have seen them on more than one occasion apologize for their actions.

I think it’s tragic what people do these days with all the killing and the reasons are usually whack. When will this world grow up?
Add your Comment