[wzslider autoplay=”true”] Muhamed Sacirbey reminded the world of the tragedy that Sarajevo survived in the Washington Post and urged Western powers to help Aleppo.
Muhamed Sacirbey, the first Ambassador of BiH to the United Nations and former Minister of Foreign Affairs, wrote for the Washington Post that military intervention of Western countries could end the tragedy of Aleppo in the same way they helped to save lives in BiH.
Citizens of the largest Syrian city of Aleppo are experiencing horror similar to that which struck the citizens of the capital of BiH, says Washington Post.
Syria’s largest city is on the edge of starvation. More than two million people are under the siege, and the city is daily exposed to bombings of extremists.
More than 20 years ago, the capital of BiH was in a similar situation. Then 400,000 citizens of Sarajevo was surviving their biggest nightmare.
Citizens of Aleppo are in a similar situation today. Life under the siege, without food, water and electricity under constant bombarding and sniping.
400,000 citizens of Sarajevo survived the horrors, but not because the aggressor forces gave up on their plans, but because of the intervention of NATO.
Aleppo needs similar kind of help from world powers today.
They need an intervention that would dramatically reduce the number of fatalities and led the Syrian regime’s forces to the negotiating table, as well as laid the foundations for a political solution that Syrians desperately need.
(Source: faktor.ba)


