
Unusual for the time of year, the radiant sun was setting over the picturesque city. It was the early evening of 5 April 1992, and while some Sarajevo’s residents were listening to the opera, lovers could be seen strolling along the Miljacka river. The following morning, the city woke up to bodies in the streets.
Admittedly, tensions had been rising for over a month as politicians and fascists politicised a murder at a wedding to sow hatred and division. But nobody expected it to come to this. How could a European city so rich in culture and on the road to development be torn apart by such brutal violence? Overnight, Sarajevo had become a byword for the dangers of ethnic division, ultra-nationalistic fervour, tribalism and wanton extremism.
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Birmingham Protest: innocent people in cars attacked #riots #TwoTierKier #englandriots #Breaking #birmingham #FarageRiot #Starmer #Britain #England pic.twitter.com/Q0kQRqoDBE
— (@missyellisx) August 5, 2024
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Weapons, illegal bikes, faces covered with balaclavas. Where’s the police in Birmingham?#UKRiots #englandriots #Riots #Xpic.twitter.com/rb9VtGbygD— SpeedyScoop (@SpeedyScoops) August 5, 2024
Speechless: Immigrants with Palestinian flags tonight #riots #TwoTierKier #englandriots #Breaking #birmingham #FarageRiot #Starmer #Britain #England pic.twitter.com/NDzGy0DXCJ
— (@missyellisx) August 5, 2024
