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STATEMENTS CONFIRMING CRIMES COMMITTED BY LT. GEN. (RET.) LEWIS MACKENZIE

STATEMENTS CONFIRMING CRIMES COMMITTED BY LT. GEN. (RET.) LEWIS MACKENZIE

 

SHOCKING ACCOUNTS BY RAPED BOSNIAK WOMEN AND CRIMINAL UNDERTAKINGS OF Lt. Gen. (ret.) LEWIS MACKENZIE

 

Dear friends of truth and justice,

 

It is in the name of truth and justice, the brightest stars lighting the path of humanity and civilization, Canadian – Bosniak Community wishes to inform the public at large, about certain statements made by Bosniak women and men, which statements, beyond a shadow of a doubt, corroborate that Lt. Gen. (ret.), Lewis Mackenzie, stayed at the rape-camp “Kod Sonje” (At Sonia’s) and was party to committing crimes against women. It is not the prerogative of the Congress of North American Bosniaks to judge. It is the job of the judiciary and the system of justice of Bosnia and Herzegovina to do so. The Canadian – Bosniak Community wishes, by way of publishing these statements, to inform the world community in general, and the Canadian public in particular, about the moral and ethical traits of a person who was sworn, trusted and charged with leading the peacekeeping forces of the United Nations, while the aggression and genocide against Bosnia and Herzegovina was being committed. By publishing these witness accounts, the Canadian – Bosniak Community is sending a message to all those who aspire to committing war crimes - your crime will not be allowed to be hidden and to go unpunished. And it is also sending a message to all the victims of war crimes - truth and justice must, and will, be victorious as they are “conditio sine qua non”. Truth and justice are the fundamental reasons for the very existence of humanity and civilization.

 

 

1.A witness account corroborating regular visitations of Lt. Gen. (ret.) Mackenzie, to the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”

 

This is an extract from a witness statement given by a Bosniak male, at the time held at the Semizovac barracks, and subsequently at the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”. This witness was also sexually abused.

 

“I am regularly, every day, being taken (out of the cell), beaten, interrogated. On one evening, at about 11:00 PM, three Chetniks (Serbian ultranationalist paramilitary formations) whom I have not known, took me out. They took me to the railroad, tied my hands behind my back and ordered me to lay down with my neck on the rail. I did so. They first wanted to slit my throat. They held me there for some 15-20 minutes saying things like: “We won’t do it tonight. We’ll slit your throat tomorrow”. Then they took me back to “Kod Sonje”. The next day they started bringing in men. Every day they would bring in men of all ages.

 

I remember that I saw these (captives) at the camp “Kod Sonje”:

 

1. Ahmet Hido, now living in Svrake

2. Alija Halilovic, now living in Svrake

3. Esad Muracevic, now living in Svrake

4. Suljo Duric, now living in Svrake

5. Hamid Simsic, deceased

6. Ismet Besirevic, killed

7. Ekrem Piknjaca, now living in Svrake

8. Taib Kodzaga, now living in Semizovac

9. Serif Balesic, now living in Vogosca

10. Hata Balesic, Serif’s wife, now living in Vogosca

11. Armin (Serfe) Balesic, and many others whose names I cannot recall now.

 

I also saw women being brought to the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”. I recognized the following:

 

1. Sahida Senderovic, from Vogosca

2. Soka Jozic, from Vogosca

 

I saw Soka on the day when General Mackenzie came to the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”. I was then taken (from the cell) by the Chetniks who forced me to prepare barbecued lamb for Mackenzie. I don’t know where Soka is today, but I knew her well as she worked in the same firm as I did, in UNIS, Hospitality Division “Biokovo”. In June of 1992, I was, again, ordered by the guards at the rape-camp “Kod Sonje” to prepare a lamb on the spit. As I was cooking the lamb, I was being watched over by a certain Ignjatije Dragovic, himself of Vogosca. He asked me:”Do you know who you are barbecuing this lamb for?”. I said:”I don’t know”. He said:”You are barbecuing this lamb for General Mackenzie”. When the lamb was done, a certain Ahmed Hido (a camp captive, now living in Svrake), helped me bring the lamb inside, into the restaurant of the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”. At that time I saw (military) transporters with the letters UN on it. One was a wheeled transporter and the other was a track transporter. I was brought into the kitchen to carve the meat. Then Soka Jozic entered. I could hear music. Soka went from the restaurant and came into the kitchen. She wore an apron. She was about 35 years of age, with short blonde hair and of medium build and height. She started bringing the roasted lamb and drinks into the dining room. I was then taken back into the rape-camp. As I was exiting the restaurant, under escort by the guards, I saw that the transporters were still parked outside.

 

2. A witness account attesting to the visit, by Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis Mackenzie, to the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”, and corroborating the act of crime against humanity - crime against a Woman - the crime of rape:

 

Two Chetniks from my town, Boro Radic and Zarko Milic, tossed me and my children into an armored vehicle bearing the insignia of “International Red Cross” and took us to the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”. We were taken to the interrogation area. There, they interrogate me, demand the keys to the car and the apartment. I told them:” You have it all, I don’t have it”. They kept me, my two daughters Azema and Zinaida, and son Edis, in that room the whole night. That night I could hear commotions, crying and cries for help. The next morning a neighbour of mine, Dujo Jovanovic, who drove a car with the insignia of Red Cross, came and took me and the children away. I did not see who the people that were crying and begging for help were. Dujo Jovanovic said:” I saw the list and on the list it says that your daughters have to be taken to Zuc“. He then took me to the creek and Vaso’s meat monger store and told me to walk down the creek to the village of Ugljesici. He also said:” Don’t’ cross the bridge, it has been mined in the village, there is nobody there, they (Chetniks) killed everybody they could and chased out the rest, take that meadow and you will get to Ugorski, to your people”. And I got (back) to my Bosniaks. There we were welcomed and taken to the Faculty of Transportation, where they gave us food and beverages and then they took us to a certain Hamdo where I and my children slept in the basement. I wish to emphasize the following: When, in the end, I was set free to leave the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”, I went to a friend of mine, a certain Maso Ramovic, of Mosa Pijade Street, Sarajevo, across the street from the Stomatological Faculty of the Sarajevo University. There I asked amateur ham-radio operators for help to locate my husband. A certain Amir Klapuh responded and said:” Ema, sister, do not look for Medo. I was told by Goran Rgoje that Dragan Damjanovic slit his throat last night and that he, Goran, tried to protect him but was not able to”. I was told by the people who were set free after I left the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”, that there were women and girls raped, men beaten and murdered. That girls, in particular, were being rounded up for General MacKenzie and that a certain Aida, from Vogosca, committed suicide by jumping out of the window. I was told these, and other, things as people would be set free.

 

3. A witness account by a Bosniak woman attesting to statements corroborating the rape of women at the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”:

 

In the period of time when I exited to obtain an exit permit to leave Vogosca, for me and my children, I was told that General MacKenzie would frequently visit Vogosca, and I also saw transporters (white, with UN insignia). I also was told that a Bosniak was murdered in Vogosca, his name was Izan. He was murdered because he helped Bosniaks. One evening they (Chetniks) threw a bomb into his apartment and the following night he was taken and I was told that he was murdered on the railroad. I gave a statement to CSB as quoted here. When I came (back) to Sarajevo, I was told that women and girls were raped at the rape-camp “Kod Sonje” and that General MacKenzie was there. I also heard the same statements from those who were driven out of Vogosca.

 

4. A witness statement by a mother and a daughter who were jointly raped while imprisoned in a home in Vogosca, and then in the rape-camp “Kod Sonje”:

 

I was told that General MacKenzie was there. I was told that he raped girls and women. There was also a certain Goga, who married a Muslim, and who lived in Vogosca, who prepared food for MacKenzie. She knows everything, she knows who those women and girls are, who were raped. She now works at the market in Vogosca.

 

5. A statement by a Bosniak woman - a witness protected by The Haag Tribunal – a victim of multiple rapes in the camp at Lukavica, in the “Slavise. V. Cice” barracks:

 

One afternoon, as I was cleaning up the garbage around the barracks, Mackenzie arrived in a transporter. They rolled out a red carpet, all the way to Mackenzie’s transporter. He saw me bruised and bloodied, opened the door of the transporter and showed me in. He said :”We must not give (them) Marija”. He put his hand on his chest and said “I am now responsible”. I saw that he was inebriated, I put my two palms together and pointed to the two men who were with me. They were a certain Damir, who died, and also a student from Hadzici whose name I do not recall. MacKenzie said:” Let them into the transporter too”. He had a translator with him.The transporter brought us to PTT (Post, Telegraph, Telephone) “Inzenjering”, where Mackenzie called on the police to take us to our homes. I could not go back to Grbavica as it was occupied, so they took me to my sister’s at Kosevo, and they took the two men to wherever they lived. On June 2, 1992, I arrived in the liberated territories under the control of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

 

An excerpt from the book “I begged them to kill me - a crime against the Woman of Bosnia and Herzegovina”, published by the Centre for Research and Documentation of the Association of Imprisonment Camp Survivors of Bosnia and Herzegovina

 

A statement which confirms the crime against humanity - the crime against a Woman - the crime of rape committed by Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis Mackenzie:

 

… I woke up around six in the morning, confused, not knowing what was happening, not knowing where my infant child was, if he was given any care, if I would ever see him again. Around one o’clock a military policeman brought me food. I spent the whole day in that room, alone. Around eight o’clock in the evening a certain Maj. Vlado, of Vogosca, came in and ordered me to get ready and to go with him. He brought me a bag containing clean, but already worn, women’s underwear. When I readied myself he took me to his Jeep in which he and two other soldiers took me to a larger cottage. He told me that if I wanted to be reunited with my baby again I ought to be very smart as I would be visited, in that cottage, by a gentleman, a foreigner, who could be of great help to me if I were to be nice to him.

 

He then locked me inside that cottage which consisted of a rather large room, a bathroom in the basement and three smaller bedrooms in the attic. There was a TV set and a radio there as well.

 

I was scared for myself and even more frightened about my baby. Shortly thereafter, an older officer entered, accompanied by two in his escort. I recognized General Lewis Mackenzie, who approached me with his hand straight out, and addressed me “miss” (in English). In his right hand he held a red rosebud and he clumsily pressed it into my hands - I was terrified. As he was doing that, the two escort left the room and locked the door. General Mackenzie asked me what my name was, where I came from…

 

I was silent and I pretended I could not understand anything he was saying. I just pulled my shoulders together and retreated, as General Mackenzie was saying, in English:” Miss, you can speak English very well and you understand everything. I am here to help you. That is in your interest. And love, led by interest, is the strongest love”. I knew what situation I was in. Imprisoned and separated from my nine-months old baby. Both, my baby and I, were helpless and imprisoned. Any resistance would have been irrational. Had I have been alone, without a child depending on me, I would have resisted. This way, I only thought of my infant son and for him I was prepared to be subjected to any kind of torture, humiliation, physical and mental pain and suffering. I only wanted to be reunited with him, even in a prison camp, and with all insecurities the imprisonment brings.With a trashy Serbian music emanating from that radio in the background, the General admitted to his passion, while I defended my imprisoned infant boy. With my jaws clenched, with my heart shut…

 

It lasted, with shorter intervals, some twenty minutes. The General visited me seven or eight more times. I asked him to intervene with the Chetniks to give me my baby back and to let us go. He would always say:” Tomorrow, tomorrow, be patient”. After some twenty days I was taken, by two soldiers, from that cottage and they took me to Vogosca and to Maj. Vlado. Mackenzie did not use his fists to force me to have sex with him. He did not throw me down on my back. I laid down myself. He did not beat me or force me - but he had me as a helpless imprisoned woman that I was. As he played to be a gentleman bearing roses, the blinds in that room were down and the house was surrounded by the Chetnik guards. I am making this statement without any coercion and in order to breathe out, as it were, and in order to find solace in my desire to meet General Lewis Mackenzie again, and to ask him, on public television, a few questions and to look into his eyes, the eyes of a great friend of Serbian-Chetnik war criminals”.

 

A personal comment:

 

What can be said about a person who insisted on providing armoured catering services to a people, civilians, whom he would not protect from heavily armed aggression - not even in order for them to be able to consume that “last supper” which he so valiantly and heroically provided. Or did he? What can be said about a coward, who spent the first six months of his tour of duty cowering in a Sarajevo bunker, only to emerge as the Canadian national hero! The groundhog day circus! What can be said about a career soldier, whose reporting line eventually ends in the hands of an elected civilian, who decides that it is his God-given right to stare down, berate and humiliate, publicly, an elected president of an independent country - and at the time when that president was defending all of the people in that country? Former Chief of Staff of Canada’s Department of Defence, General John de Chastelain, eloquently spoke about the most honorable duty of a uniformed soldier being to succumb to the will and the authority of the civilians elected into their positions of government by the people. That concept Lt. Gen. Mackenzie (ret.) does not seem to be able to grasp. There seems to be a character flaw - in his case, as evident from the brutally moving account of his “passion”, he is bent on making others, especially defenceless and helpless women, succumb to him. What can be said other than that it is cowardice. The same cowardice he displayed when he befriended Radovan Karadzic, the world-leading terrorist, as he ate, drank and danced at Karadzic’s daughter’s wedding, while the maniacal genocidal men under Karadzic’s command were committing murder in first degree, a murder on a scale of massive proportions, of civilians in Sarajevo. The cowardice that he displayed, together with the then Prime Minister Brian Mulroney

and the then Minister of External Affairs Barbara McDougall, when they jointly and cowardly cancelled a live televised debate scheduled by the CBC in May of 1992. The three of them were scheduled to debate me - a person nominated for that debate by the Bosnia and Herzegovina Information Office. A civilian. A member of the Canadian electorate. A Canadian citizen by choice and determination. A Bosnian by birth and heart. The general, as well as his civilian bosses, did not have the guts to stare me across a debating table, in a public forum. They knew then that they had no weapons good enough to counter truth and justice. In those days, the CBC ran a government advertisement inviting people to vote, saying :…votes are stronger than the bullets…”. In one of my public speeches I dismissed that mythology saying:” The electoral majority of Bosnia and Herzegovina voted and they are now being murdered for the way they voted. And they won the vote!”. That advertisement was pulled from the air and never seen again. What a cowardice!

 

The truth, General Mackenzie, is that you are a coward, just as those are who are still trying to protect you from due process and justice. Just as those were who dispatched youto Bosnia and Herzegovina and then did nothing to prevent and punish the crime of genocide. My name is Zeljko Milicevic. I live in Ottawa. And I am not a cowar.

 

 

An excerpt from the book “I begged them to kill me - a crime against the Woman of Bosnia and Herzegovina”, published by the Centre for Research and Documentation of the Association of Imprisonment Camp Survivors of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

A statement which confirms the crime against humanity - the crime against a Woman - the crime of rape committed by Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis MacKenzie:

… I woke up around six in the morning, confused, not knowing what was happening, not knowing where my infant child was, if he was given any care, if I would ever see him again. Around one o’clock a military policeman brought me food. I spent the whole day in that room, alone. Around eight o’clock in the evening a certain Maj. Vlado, of Vogosca, came in and ordered me to get ready and to go with him. He brought me a bag containing clean, but already worn, women’s underwear. When I readied myself he took me to his Jeep in which he and two other soldiers took me to a larger cottage. He told me that if I wanted to be reunited with my baby again I ought to be very smart as I would be visited, in that cottage, by a gentleman, a foreigner, who could be of great help to me if I were to be nice to him.

He then locked me inside that cottage which consisted of a rather large room, a bathroom in the basement and three smaller bedrooms in the attic. There was a TV set and a radio there as well.

I was scared for myself and even more frightened about my baby.

Shortly thereafter, an older officer entered, accompanied by two in his escort. I recognized General Lewis MacKenzie, who approached me with his hand straight out, and addressed me “miss” (in English). In his right hand he held a red rosebud and he clumsily pressed it into my hands - I was terrified. As he was doing that, the two escort left the room and locked the door. General MacKenzie asked me what my name was, where I came from… I was silent and I pretended I could not understand anything he was saying. I just pulled my shoulders together and retreated, as General MacKenzie was saying, in English:” Miss, you can speak English very well and you understand everything. I am here to help you. That is in your interest. And love, led by interest, is the strongest love”. I knew what situation I was in. Imprisoned and separated from my nine-months old baby. Both, my baby and I, were helpless and imprisoned.

Any resistance would have been irrational. Had I have been alone, without a child depending on me, I would have resisted. This way, I only thought of my infant son and for him I was prepared to be subjected to any kind of torture, humiliation, physical and mental pain and suffering. I only wanted to be reunited with him, even in a prison camp, and with all insecurities the imprisonment brings.

With a trashy Serbian music emanating from that radio in the background, the General admitted to his passion, while I defended my imprisoned infant boy. With my jaws clenched, with my heart shut…

It lasted, with shorter intervals, some twenty minutes.

The General visited me seven or eight more times. I asked him to intervene with the Chetniks to give me my baby back and to let us go. He would always say:” Tomorrow, tomorrow, be patient”.

After some twenty days I was taken, by two soldiers, from that cottage and they took me to Vogosca and to Maj. Vlado.

MacKenzie did not use his fists to force me to have sex with him. He did not throw me down on my back. I laid down myself. He did not beat me or force me - but he had me as a helpless imprisoned woman that I was. As he played to be a gentleman bearing roses, the blinds in that room were down and the house was surrounded by the Chetnik guards.

I am making this statement without any coercion and in order to breathe out, as it were, and in order to find solace in my desire to meet General Lewis MacKenzie again, and to ask him, on public television, a few questions and to look into his eyes, the eyes of a great friend of Serbian-Chetnik war criminals”.

The letter of Lewis MacKenzie to the Congress of North American Bosniaks

 

Permit me to introduce myself. I am retired Major General Lewis MacKenzie  and from March to end July 1992 I served with UNPROFOR, first as chief of  staff and lastly as the first commander of Sector Sarajevo during which time  the UN opened the Sarajevo airport for the delivery of humanitarian aid to the citizens of Sarajevo. In July of 1992 I requested that I be replaced as the sector commander as my  officers, including my deputy, a Russian colonel and some of my solders were  frequently threatened with death by execution by members of the Bosnian Army
primarily due to my personal unpopularity within the Bosniak community in  Sarajevo at that time. Following my departure to Canada on the first of  August 1992 and immediately thereafter following my appearance as a witness  before a number of US Congressional committees I was subjected to a number of false accusations including rape and murder by the Bosnian authorities.
With my encouragement the UN Secretary General launched a thorough investigation of all the accusations against me and subsequently concluded in writing to me that all the allegations were unfounded. The investigation revealed that I had departed Bosnia, "approximately one month prior to any alleged incident". Any suggestion that the UN would automatically try to protect me from such allegations are ridiculous as I am extremely unpopular at the UN as a result of my outspoken criticism of their failures in multiple security operations including their efforts in Bosnia.
It appears that the allegations originated from media interviews with the captured Bosnian Serb soldier, Borislav Herak who claimed to have murdered and raped Bosnian Muslim women. During the interview he indicated that I had frequently visited Sonya's café in Sarajevo, selected captured Muslim girls, raped them and subsequently murdered them. It was subsequently revealed that Herak's evidence was a fabrication having been well coached and his description of myself, my rank badges and vehicle bore no relationship with reality.During the past decade as

these libelous accusations reappear in the media it is frequently stated that I have been

approached by the Bosnian authorities to be questioned and that I have refused. That sir is blatantly untrue. I have never been asked if I would agree to be questioned and frankly I would be happy to respond to questioning here in Canada. It is also stated that the UN and Canada have been approached to permit me to be interrogated and both have refused. To the best of my knowledge this has not happened as I assume that I would have been notified of such a request.
On the 12th of October 2006, Sarajevo county prosecutor Oleg Cavka repeated the unfounded allegations against me yet again to AFP and the comments received international attention. . He again stressed my visitations to Sonja's Café, a location I have never seen let alone visited. Friends who have served in Bosnia more recently tell me that the Bosnian judiciary has made

giant strides in the past decade and has earned a reputation for fairness and honesty. It is with these facts in mind that the professional misconduct of Mr Cavka is so troubling. I was shocked that Mr Cavka would go to the media with the presumably confidential and "untested" contents of an investigation file and make public that information against myself while admitting that I have not been indicted. It is bad enough that I had no opportunity to defend myself; however, the clear inference of Mr Cavka's statement that, "he has not been indicted because he has not been
questioned" is that, but for the questioning, I would have been indicted. This conclusion on the part of Mr Cavka demonstrates a clear absence of impartiality. Furthermore, he usurps the function of a court or judge in the indictment process i. e. a prosecutor brings or files an indictment, a judge rejects or confirms and indicts.I wish to formally complain regarding the unprofessional and irresponsible conduct of Mr Oleg Cavka.
Lewis W. MacKenzie Date: 23 October 2006

 

The letter of the Congress of North American Bosniaks to His Excellency, Kofi Atta Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations

His Excellency, Kofi Atta Annan,

Secretary General of the United Nations

The United Nations Organization,

New York City, NY,

United States of America

Your Excellence,

Reference is made to Your Excellence's investigation of 1993, with respect to the allegations of crimes committed by a certain Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis MacKenzie while on his tour of duty as Commander of the UNPROFOR in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks represents the interests of 350,000 Bosniaks who live in Canada and the United States and is acting on behalf of the association A Woman-Victim of War, and of behalf of those thousands of women who were raped during the act of aggression and genocide against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks has been advised by Mr. MacKenzie himself, that Your Excellence had, in 1993, conducted an investigation and cleared him of any wrongdoing.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks politely requests and hopes that Your Excellence will make available to The Congress of North American Bosniaks complete contents of that file.

Respectfully yours,

Emir Ramic,

President of the The Congress of North American Bosniaks

 

The letter of the Congress of North American Bosnniaks to Her Excellence, Michaelle Jean, Governor General of Canada

Her Excellence, Michaelle Jean,

Governor General of Canada

Rideau Hall

1 Sussex Drive

Ottawa, ON K1A 0A1

Your Excellence,

The Congress of North American Bosniaks, the umbrella organization representing the interests of the 350,000 Bosniaks who live in Canada and the United States, is now seeking your support on behalf of the association of A Woman-Victim of War, and on behalf of those thousands of women who were raped during the act of aggression and genocide against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks, acting in the name of truth and justice, raises its voice and demands that Canada’s ordained and decorated national hero, and a member of the Order of Canada, one Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis MacKenize, be made accessible to the system of justice in Bosnia and Herzegovina so that he can properly defend himself from the serious allegations of committing, or being party to the commitment thereof, of crimes against women as well as of crimes committed during an act of war.

The State Prosecutor of the Sarajevo Canton made to act by and within proper authority, has commenced an investigation based upon now rather substantive and numerous allegations.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks invites Her Excellence to use Her Excellence’s good offices in support of truth and justice so as to render Lt. Gen (ret.) Lewis MacKenzie available in order to face his accusers in a court of law.

Respectfully yours,

Emir Ramic,

President, of the The Congress of North American Bosniaks

It is Time to Bring Gen. Lewis Mackenzie into a Court of Law

Open letter of the Institute for Research of Genocide Canada {IRGC}

The Hon. Stephen Harper, Prime Minister of Canada

The Hon. Dr. Bakir Izetbegovic, The B&H Presidency Member

The Hon. Zeljko Komsic, The B&H Presidency Member

The Hon. Nebojsa Radmanovic, The B&H Presidency Member

Your Excellency,

Maj.Gen. Lewis Mackenzie (ret.) defended himself, in 1997, before the Somalia Commission of Inquiry (dealing with the murder of a Somalia while in custody of Canada’s military). In particular, he was accused of : “exercising poor and inappropriate leadership”, “failure to ensure that steps were taken to investigate and remedy the significant leadership and discipline problems of which he was aware”, and, most notably, as per item 6, “(failing) to ensure that all Land Force Central Area (LFCA) personnel in Canadian Joint Force Somalia were adequately trained and tested in the Law of War or the Law of Armed Conflict including the four 1949 Geneva Conventions for the protection of victims of armed conflict”. (Quotes are from Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada, 1997).

Bosniaks will never forget the statement that Gen. Mackenzie made during an interview with the Canadian Business Journal, when he boasted how he bullied Mr. Alija Izetbegovic, President of the independent, sovereign, internationally recognized country – Bosnia and Herzegovina.

A uniformed soldier, whose fundamental duty was to execute orders while succumbing himself to the civilian oversight, he took great pleasure in humiliating President Izetbegovic as follows : “If you don’t sign this now, I will fry your ass on the CNN tonight!”. This shameless display of arrogance was in relation to a massacre of citizens of Sarajevo at a local market.

In spite of all of these significant failings, Gen. Mackenzie was decorated, then proclaimed a national hero, and, subsequently, inducted by Her Majesty into The Order of Canada.

The IRGC is of opinion that it is time to finally bring Gen. Mackenzie into a court of law to answer the charges, registered against him by M. Bisic, Military Prosecutor of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Prosecutor Bisic has long been demanding international assistance to formally serve Gen. Mackenzie with court papers accusing him of raping four Bosniak women. Witnesses have testified that Gen. Mackenzie committed rape of those women at the motel “Kod Sonje” in Vogosca, just outside of Sarajevo.

The IRGC is of opinion that it is time to establish, openly and publicly, what kind of friendship existed between Gen. Mackenzie and the criminals the like of Karadzic and Mladic, who committed crimes against humanity and who planned and executed genocide and aggression against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The so-called free world and, especially, Canada’s establishment, are quiet about all of this although they know that Gen. Mackenzie ate, drank and danced at the Karadzic’s daughter’s wedding.

The IRGC is of opinion that it finally is the time to take away the layers of protection that the government of Canada bestowed upon Gen. Mackenzie. Up until now his protectors have successfully defended him in the court of public opinion because of those layers of protection.

Carla del Ponte, Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia, declined, in a personal letter to a Bosniak living in Canada, to prosecute Gen. Mackenzie as the news media reports, published in numerous papers of the day, were, according to her, based upon rumours?.

Is it not a duty of every prosecutor to investigate even rumours?

In closing, the IRGC is of opinion that it finally is the time to investigate why Mike Harris, former Premier of Ontario, wanted to install Gen. Mackenzie as his personal advisor on terrorism at the time. And also to find out why he did not do it, although he made a public proclamation about that appointment. Was it because he received an email from a Bosniak who warned him about Gen. MacKenzie and his ultranationalist Serbian friends?

 

The letter of the Institute for Research of Genocide Canada {IRGC}

Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women,

Feminist Alliance for International Action (FAFIA),

National Action Committee on the Status of Women,

National Association of Women and the Law (NAWL),

Native Women's Association of Canada , Status of Women Canada,

Metro Action Committee on Public Violence Against Women and Children (METRAC),

Women's Law Association of Ontario , Women's Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF),

WHRnet (Women's Human Rights Net),

Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)

Ontario Women's Action Coalition

 

To whom it may concern:

IRGC  is now seeking your support on behalf of the association of A Woman-Victim of War, and on behalf of those thousands of women who were raped during the act of aggression and genocide against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Congress of North American Bosniaks, acting in the name of truth and justice, raises its voice and demands that Canada’s ordained and decorated national hero, and a member of the Order of Canada, one Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis Mackenzie, be made accessible to the system of justice in Bosnia and Herzegovina so that he can properly defend himself from the serious allegations of committing, or being party to the commitment thereof, of crimes against women as well as of crimes committed during an act of war.

The State Prosecutor of the Sarajevo Canton, made to act by and within proper authority, has recently commenced an investigation based upon now rather substantive and numerous allegations.

Attached is a witness account, prima fascia, in an excerpt from a book published in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The raped women of Bosnia and Herzegovina need your support in order to remove the layers of immunity which successive governments of Canada have bestowed upon Lt. Gen. (ret.) Lewis MacKenzie so that he can be brought to Bosnia and Herzegovina and face due process.

This case is seen to be a landmark and of paramount importance in seeking justice and redress for thousands of raped women of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Thank you for supporting the women of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Vijesti: