It was on this day, 25 years ago, a mortar shell fell on Sarajevo’s most busy Markale market, killing 68 people and wounding 144 others. On that fateful Saturday afternoon, February 5th 1994, the 120 mm calibre mortar shell was fired by the Army of the Republic of Serbia from the villages in the area of Mrkovici.
As the busiest marketplace in Sarajevo during the Bosnian war, Markale market was a vitally important location for the supply of the city’s besieged population. During the siege, Markale had also become a meeting place for friends as well as a place to create new acquaintances and renew old ones.
Although the wish of the Army of Republic of Serbia was to kill innocent civilians, the people of Sarajevo’s desire for life and survival proved stronger. Nevertheless, the horror began at 12:15pm.
A relatively quiet day
Amongst the chaotic scene of intertwined bodies of wounded and dying citizens, broken stalls, strewn market produce, children’s toys and other things, he found himself alive, as he says, only by sheer luck which saved him from certain death or injury. “I was only a few meters from the massacre,” Samir Fazlagic recalls.
There, he says, he saw a sight that left him without words. That same image haunted him for many years in his thoughts and dreams.
“I remember a scene that left me speechless and which will be etched in my memory for a lifetime. There were bodies scattered all over the place; people were stopping cars, trucks, any means by which they could transport the bodies,” recalls Fazlić.
Day of Remembrance for the victims
After the end of war in BiH, February 5th was declared a Day of Remembrance for all those citizens who died in the period from 1992-1995 in Sarajevo.
Unfortunately, there are still the advocates for the revitalization of those crimes, those who are trying to deny the brutal killing of civil population on the Markale market.
Sarajevo Times