The eighteen-car passenger train drew into the small station
at Palic, northern Serbia, halted with a screech, then disgorged the
eighteen hundred men, women, and children who had been confined to it
for four days. They were inhabitants of the village of Kozluk in eastern
Bosnia.
Late in June
1992, two Yugoslav Army tanks rolled into the village center and pointed
menacingly at the comfortable houses there. Villagers were offered the
choice: leave or have their village destroyed from under them. After signing
away their property to Serb authorities, many walked across the nearby
Drina bridge into neighboring Serbia, where border guards told them they
could not return to Bosnia. Others boarded buses to the Serbian town of
Samac, where they were transferred to the train. The government of Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic had provided the trains of the Yugoslav state
railways with the intention of deporting the Kozluk residents to Austria,
but so few had travel documents that Hungary refused to allow them transit
through to Austria.
Individual
or mass deportations are war crimes and crimes against humanity as defined
at the Nuremberg Tribunals following World War II, and war crimes under
the 1949 Geneva Conventions. If there is enormous loss of life, deportation
may constitute genocide, namely the intent to kill or injure, in whole
or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group, according
to legal scholar Alfred de Zayas of Rutgers University.
Deportation
was not explicitly banned prior to World War II. The 1907 Hague Conventions
omitted mention, because mass expulsions were "generally rejected as falling
below the minimum standard of civilization and, therefore, not requiring
express prohibition," wrote legal scholar Georg Schwarzenberger.
Hitler's
Nazi regime had expelled over 100,000 French from Alsace-Lorraine into
Vichy France, and over 1 million Poles from western parts of occupied
Poland into the German-run "Government-General of Poland." Germany also
deported as many as 12 million non-Germans to work for the German war
economy as compulsory labor.
The Nuremberg
Tribunal repeatedly condemned the practice of "Germanizing" occupied or
annexed territories, that is, transferring in part of the German population,
as well as deporting civilians from one occupied region to another or
to Germany. It stated that deportations into Germany for purposes of slave
labor was "not only in defiance of well-established rules of international
law, but in complete disregard of the elementary dictates of humanity."
But the victorious
Allies in States taken over by the Communists-Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Romania, Yugoslavia, and East Germany-adopted Nazi practices and expelled
some 15 million ethnic Germans to the West after World War II. An estimated
2 to 3 million died as a result.
The Fourth
Geneva Convention of 1949 explicitly forbids deportations in conditions
of war. "Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations
of protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the Occupying
Power or to that of any other country, occupied or not, are prohibited,
regardless of their motive." Also forbidden is the common practice of
the occupying power deporting or transferring parts of its own civilian
population into the territory it occupies. The convention allows the "total
or partial evacuation" of any area where either "the security of the population
or imperative military reasons" require, even outside the occupied territory,
"when for material reasons it is impossible to avoid such displacement,"
but the evacuated civilians must be returned to their homes "as soon as
hostilities in the area have ceased."
Iraq's deportation
of Kuwaitis into Iraq and resettlement of Iraqis in Kuwait was singled
out for condemnation by the UN Security Council. Serb "ethnic cleansing"
in Bosnia from 1992-1995 also qualifies as a crime against humanity and
a war crime. Israel's deportation of Palestinians from occupied territories
also violates the Geneva Conventions, in the view of the United States,
the UN Security Council and General Assembly, and the International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC). Israel says the convention has no legal bearing
on its conduct in the territories but that it has voluntarily applied
the "humanitarian provisions" of its own free will, although without specifying
which provisions it has in mind.
The five
thousand residents of Kozluk were among the most fortunate of all Bosnian
Muslims, for most survived their expulsion. Many families finally made
it to Austria where they lived as refugees, and the men returned to fight
on the side of the Bosnian government.Their departure was never intended
to be a "temporary evacuation." As of mid-1998, none had returned to their
homes in Kozluk.
Roy Gutman
is the International Security reporter at the Washington Bureau of Newsday.
He is coeditor ofCrimes of War: What the Public Should Know (W.W. Norton,
1999) and President of the Crimes of War Project Board of Directors.
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