Brendan O’Neill says don’t call people fascists – but he did on the Mail’s front page
He’s such a contrarian he contradicts himself
He’s such a contrarian he contradicts himself
New Quilliam report finds reform could improve security co-operation
If this massacre could happen in once-integrated Bosnia, it could happen anywhere
The return of the Conservatives to power in Britain in 2010 has reminded us of just how negative so much of Thatcher’s legacy has been, as they attack public services and the living standards of ordinary people. Thatcher was a disaster for British society, culture and morals. Yet since her intervention of April 1993 into the debate over the former Yugoslavia nobody can justifiably assume simply that ‘left-wing is good; right-wing is bad’. The reality is more complicated.
On trial for war crimes in The Hague, Radovan Karazdic denies his crimes and even calls himself a “peacemaker”.
Seventeen years ago this week, more than eight thousand Bosnian Muslim men and boys were massacred in Srebrenica.
Just as Novak Djokovic showed off the best of Serbia with his Wimbledon win yesterday, so today the world saw the worst – war crimes suspect Ratko Mladic at The Hague.
A round-up of Serbian reaction to the arrest of Ratko Mladic and a look back at eyewitness accounts looking back of this evil man’s atrocities.
Shamik Das reflects on the capture of Bosnian Serb war crime suspect Ratko Mladic, and looks back at the bloody massacre, the genocide in Srebrenica in 1995.
Ben Fox reports from Brussels on European Union foreign affairs chief Baroness Catherin Ashton’s success in securing a deal to keep Bosnia from ethnic division.