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A file photo of a Bosnian woman walking by a mosque destroyed by Serbs.
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SARAJEVO,
August 21, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Several
thousand Muslims gathered in the southeastern Bosnian town of Visegrad
on Saturday, August 20, to celebrate the inauguration of a historical
mosque, the first to be rebuilt since the end of the 1992-1995 war.
"May
this mosque become a symbol for future tolerance in our town,"
the Serbian mayor of Visegrad, Miladin Milicevic, told a crowd of over
3,000 people who had traveled from across Bosnia to attend the
ceremony, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
old mosque -- built in the 15th century under the Ottoman Empire --
was destroyed by Serb forces during the bloody war.
As
children in white stood among rows of coffins, survivors commemorated
on Monday, July 11, the 10th anniversary of Srebrenica massacre, while
the West regretted its failure to prevent Europe's worst atrocity
since World War II.
At
least 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed in 1995 when Bosnian Serb
forces and irregular Serbian police units backed by Belgrade overran
the town, which was supposed to be a UN-protected "safe
area".
Return
Senior
Muslim politicians from across Bosnia and a representative from the
Serbian Orthodox Church showed up for the ceremony.
Sulejman
Tihic, the Muslim member of Bosnia's tripartite presidency, encouraged
Muslims to return to their homes in the region of Visegrad, from which
they were expelled during the war.
"We
must reconstruct our state together with our Serbian and Croat
neighbors," he said.
The
peace deal that ended Bosnia Hercegovina's war left the country split
into two semi-autonomous halves, the Muslim-Croat Federation and the
Serbs' Republika Srpska.
At
the beginning of the war, hundreds of civilians -- many of them
Muslims -- were killed by Bosnian Serb forces in Visegrad, according
to the Hague-based International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia.
Before
the war, more than 13,000 Muslims lived in the Visegrad area -- making
up more than 60 percent of the town's total population.
As
of today, only some 2,000 Muslims have returned to the area.
In
Srebrenica, the majority of its 28,000 Muslim pre-war inhabitants
still live elsewhere, but few of them opted to return home.
Serbs
woke up on June 9 to a gruesome video showing members of Serbian
paramilitary units executing Muslim civilians near Srebrenica.
For
the first time since the end of the Bosnian war, the shocking video
avalanched countless reactions among the citizens, until then mainly
denying Serb forces' involvement in the killings and contesting the
civilian status of the victims.