The supposed murderers allegedly devoured lavish meals following a day of gunfire. Share Article Share Article Facebook X LinkedIn Reddit Bluesky Email Copy Link Link copied Bookmark Comments

For many years, unsettling accounts of the so-called ‘Sarajevo safari’ have rumbled beneath the surface, concerning affluent outsiders who supposedly paid fortunes to murder civilians for sport during the devastating siege of Sarajevo.
Wealthy visitors originating from Great Britain, Italy, Germany, Russia, and the USA purportedly paid as much as £88,000 to utilise Bosnian Serb marksman positions elevated above the surrounded metropolis to slay individuals for amusement, allocating additional funds to target youngsters or expectant mothers.
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At nighttime, they reportedly feasted on roasted pig and mutton, gulping down whisky and brandy whilst celebrating their slayings. A previous volunteer within a Bosnian Serb tank division, Aleksandar Licanin, stated he witnessed the foreign shooters directly.
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“All of the marksmen were simply utter sadists,” he expressed.
Following each day’s slaying, Licanin recounted the wealthy foreigners would go to cafes to gorge themselves.
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“We would depart: we desired no contact with them,” he confided to The Times. “They were commemorating the killing of people. I cannot fathom how you can coexist with murdering a child.”
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It supposedly transpired throughout the siege of Sarajevo, which endured for almost four years from April 1992 until February 1996, rendering it the most prolonged blockade of a capital in contemporary battle. Over 10,000 souls were killed during the sanguinary 1,425 days.
Following Italian officials commencing an investigation into assertions that Italian hunters were among those implicated in overseas killing holidays, Licanin conveyed he felt capable of stepping forward.
He detailed his engagement in the war commencing in 1993, coinciding with his Bosnian Serb community separating from the Muslim Bosniaks as ethnic and religious strains intensified. He relocated to the Serb-overseen territory of Sarajevo, where he enlisted in a Bosnian Serb tank unit.
He specified his unit shared a strategic point towering over the city with a 200-strong Serb militia, governed by former postal employee Slavko Aleksic.
“They were shooting at women, children and the elderly. They lacked self-control, and Aleksic was evidently a psychopath; one could perceive it in his eyes.”
While Licanin indicated his unit received official targeting coordinates, he alleged that Aleksic’s snipers designated their own victims.
The visitors purportedly remitted funds to secure superior viewing positions in elevated structures, while Croatian investigative journalist Domagoj Margetic asserted he was informed the depraved shooters would “pay extra to shoot children and pregnant women”.
Margetic articulated that militia contacts apprised him that shooters originated from Russia, Romania, Greece, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, the USA, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
The assertion that women were among the bloodsport sightseers was substantiated by Zlatko Miletic, the then chief of police in Sarajevo, who managed an anti-sniper squad.
“I recall a woman from Romania who must have eliminated more than ten individuals,” he imparted to Balkan news channel N1 this month.
“Those overseas snipers were extensively entrenched in concrete trenches, rendering it arduous to neutralise them,” Miletic avowed, who presently serves as a member of parliament in Bosnia.
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“They killed dozens of children and women,” he communicated, further stating: “We possessed information that [the Aleksic militia] was accommodating these individuals for compensation and that the majority of them came from Italy.”
Allegations of the foreign killings have been firmly refuted. Aleksic passed away in December, but immediately prior to his demise, he denied accommodating overseas marksmen.
