Yahoo – AFP,
Rusmir Smajilhodzic, 20 May 2014
A photo
shows houses over a ravine after a landslide occurred in the flooded
village of
Kosova, near the northern Bosnian city of Doboj, on May 19, 2014
(AFP
Photo/Elvis Barukcic )
|
Zepce
(Bosnie-Herzégovine) (AFP) - When Ibro Begic decided to tackle the hazardous
mountain road to reach those stricken by record floods near his Bosnian town,
he was also challenging deep ethnic divisions left over from the brutal
conflict of the 1990s.
When news
reached him last week that the Serb-populated town of Doboj had been inundated,
Begic immediately called on 10 friends to put together a relief operation.
It was a
generous move, made remarkable by the fact that Begic is a Bosnian Muslim and a
former soldier who fought the Serbs during the country's horrific civil war
between 1992 and 1995.
"During
the war, we were in enemy armies," he told AFP. "But the war is
history. Humanity is something else."
Villagers
inspect damaged road after a
landslide in the flooded village of Kosova,
near
the northern Bosnian city of Doboj,
on May 19, 2014 (AFP Photo/Elvis
Barukcic )
|
He says the
response he received from the Serbs in Doboj, one of the worst-hit towns where
at least 20 people have died or are missing from the floods, was immense
gratitude mixed with "shock".
"God
asks us all to help each other in need. I am certain that the Serbs would do
the same," Begic said.
'A
turning point'
It is
certainly not the only instance in Bosnia where the difficult legacy of the war
-- which has left the country politically divided between Serbs, Croats and
Muslims -- was put to one side during the devastating flooding of the past
week.
The small
town of Zepce, around 30 kilometres (18 miles) further south from Tesanj, is
mostly populated by Croats.
When a
stream of Muslims began to arrive here from villages dotted around the region,
few expected a warm welcome. The experience was a painful reminder of the war
when tens of thousands were expelled from their homes by both Croats and Serbs.
But this
time around, they were met with nothing but friendship.
A local
high school gym in Zepce was ready to shelter the first group of evacuees from
the Muslim village of Zeljezno Polje.
One of the
villagers, Elvir Cizmic, a soldier during the war, told AFP: "Honestly, I
did not expect such a solidarity. In just a few hours, people brought food,
clothes and offered their homes to the families."
Around 30
to 40 people, mainly elderly women, were sheltering in the school when AFP
visited, while dozens of young volunteers moved between them offering
assistance.
"No
one asked us for our name or our religion. They helped us in a way that I would
not expect even from Muslims," Hanifa Masic, a 68-year-old evacuee, told
AFP.
She hugged
one of the young volunteers, a Croat called Ivana Grlic, who looked happy to
help.
For Cizmic,
the disaster marks a "turning point in relations between the three
communities".
"I
believe it will greatly help to regain trust between the people who had been
pushed into the war," he said.
'Solidarity'
Like
nothing else in the past two decades, the natural disaster has allowed people
to ignore the divisive nationalism spouted by many of their political leaders.
Even Milorad Dodik, the fiercely nationalist president of the Bosnian Serb entity, had to express his gratitude to the Muslims who came to help their Serb neighbours in the northern town of Samac.
"I
thank you on behalf of all residents of Samac to whom aid was brought by the
(mainly Muslim) town of Gradacac, which provided inflatable boats and
rescuers," Dodik said.
The compliment
was returned by Edhem Camdzic, an Islamic mufti from the northern town of Banja
Luka, who said he had come across an "honourable man, a Serb, who has been
rescuing people with his inflatable boat regardless of their ethnicity"
during a tour of Muslim villages.
"Amid
this tragedy, I am so delighted to see this solidarity between people who
generously helped each other," said Camdzic.
More than a
quarter of Bosnia's 3.8 million population has been affected by the worst
floods in a century.
The Bosnian
war claimed some 100,000 lives and displaced two million people, almost half
the country's pre-war population.
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