Serb Kills Bosnian Official in U.N. Hands

The Washington Post
January 9, 1993

SARAJEVO, Jan. 8 – A soldier in the Bosnian Serb army assassinated Bosnian Deputy Prime Minister Hakija Turajlic today at an illegal roadblock near the Sarajevo airport, pushing aside a French U.N. commander to gun down the Muslim politician as he sat in a United Nations armored personnel carrier.

The killing, which occurred 400 yards from the French-run U.N. command post, dealt a major blow to the standing of U.N. peace-keeping forces in Bosnia and jeopardized U.N.-sponsored peace talks due to resume Sunday in Geneva.

Turajlic was returning from an airport meeting when the U.N. vehicle, which carried its normal crew of three French soldiers, was stopped by 40 Bosnian Serb soldiers, two tanks and an armored personnel carrier. After a standoff of nearly two hours, one of the Serbs abruptly pushed aside French Col. Patrice Sartre, who had rushed to the scene, and fired seven rounds from an automatic weapon at Turajlic, who was cornered inside the U.N. vehicle. He died instantly.

French Gen. Philippe Morillon, the top U.N. commander in Bosnia, said Sartre and the French soldiers had no time to react to save Turajlic. “The rule of engagement is to return fire only to save life,” Morillon said in a news conference at his residence tonight. “It was, unfortunately, too late.”

Morillon said Sartre quickly went to the roadblock with Bosnian government and Serb liaison officers when the U.N. vehicle was halted at 4:15 p.m. But during the two-hour standoff, no additional U.N. troops were sent from the nearby airport, where hundreds of French peace keepers are based.

“We were not prepared for such madness,” said Morillon. “I hope everyone recognizes that it’s better to keep calm. But peace is certainly at risk.”

Reaction from the Muslim-led Bosnian government was swift and angry. “We should not continue the Geneva negotiations until the aggressors show they are for peace,” said Vice President Ejup Ganic. “This assassination was in a United Nations APC, on a road controlled by the United Nations and under the protection of U.N. soldiers and officers. . . . The United Nations is responsible for this tragedy.”

Ganic said the Bosnian cabinet would meet late tonight to decide whether to attend the Geneva peace talks, which are scheduled to resume on Sunday. The talks had been viewed as a last chance to resolve the Bosnian conflict. The killing of a top Bosnian official under U.N. protection probably will renew calls for Western military intervention against the Serbs.

Morillon said he did not regard Turajlic’s killing as a deliberate attempt to end the Geneva talks, but as a stupid action by one soldier.

Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic, told of the assassination in Washington as he met members of President-elect Clinton’s transition team, called it “a brutal reminder of Serbian atrocities in Bosnia.”

Izetbegovic said the fact that a U.N. military escort could do little to save Turalic’s life highlighted the plight of his people. “They are sent to my country with guns but can’t use them. This is a tragedy,” he said.

{The U.N. Security Council condemned the killing as “an outrageous act of terrorism” and a “flagrant challenge to the authority” of the U.N. forces in Sarajevo, special correspondent Julia Preston reported from the United Nations. The Security Council ordered a probe into the incident.

{U.N. Undersecretary General Marrack Goulding said the killing “had been worked out in advance” and suggested it should move the United Nations to reconsider the terms under which its forces are in Sarajevo.}

It was unclear why the back door of the armored personnel carrier had been opened, revealing Turajlic’s presence and opening him up to attack. Under an agreement with the Bosnian government and Bosnian Serbs, the road from the airport is under U.N. control and neither side has the right to set up roadblocks or search U.N. vehicles.

Turajlic had met a Turkish government delegation that had flown into Sarajevo but had not been permitted by the United Nations to enter the city. He was taken to the airport under U.N. escort, as is customary with top Bosnian officials, and was returning under U.N. protection.

According to Morillon, the Serb soldiers had been sent from a command post at Lukavica, a few miles from the airport, and set up the roadblock 400 yards from its entrance. They demanded to see inside the U.N. vehicle because they claimed Turkish soldiers were being smuggled into the city.

Morillon said Col. Sartre blocked the armored vehicle’s open door, but the Serb soldier pushed him aside and fired seven rounds over the colonel’s shoulder at Turajlic, almost at point-blank range.

Morillon said the Serb soldiers withdrew immediately after the shooting. Sartre, instead of ordering his soldiers to fire back, closed the APC’s door and rushed to the U.N. military clinic in Sarajevo. Turajlic was pronounced dead on arrival. All seven bullets had hit him, three in the chest, a U.N. official said.

Morillon said he was told Bosnian Serb authorities had arrested the soldier who killed Turajlic. But Morillon demanded action against Gen. Stanislav Galic, who commands the Bosnian Serbs’ Lukavica corps. Morillon said the size and firepower of the force at the roadblock indicated Galic must have sent it. “I consider him responsible,” Morillon said.

Author: Peter Maass

I was born and raised in Los Angeles. In 1983, after graduating from the University of California at Berkeley, I went to Brussels as a copy editor for The Wall Street Journal/Europe. I left the Journal in 1985 to write for The New York Times and The International Herald Tribune, covering NATO and the European Union. In 1987 I moved to Seoul, South Korea, where I wrote primarily for The Washington Post. After three years in Asia I moved to Budapest to cover Eastern Europe and the Balkans. I spent most of 1992 and 1993 covering the war in Bosnia for the Post.