What is 'sniper tourism'?
'Sniper tourism' refers to the alleged practice of wealthy foreigners paying Bosnian Serb forces for the opportunity to shoot at civilians during the siege of Sarajevo.
News / World News
Italian prosecutors have launched an investigation into alleged 'sniper tourism' during the Bosnian War, where wealthy foreigners reportedly paid Bosnian Serb forces for the opportunity to shoot at civilians during the siege of Sarajevo. Th...
The investigation into 'sniper tourism' in Sarajevo has uncovered chilling details about the alleged involvement of wealthy foreigners in the Bosnian War. According to reports, these individuals paid Bosnian Serb forces for the opportunity to shoot at civilians during the siege of the city. The motives behind these actions ranged from sympathy for the Serbian cause to sheer bloodthirstiness.
The investigation was triggered by a legal complaint submitted by writer Ezio Gavazzeni, who gathered evidence after watching the documentary *Sarajevo Safari*. The documentary featured claims of westerners shooting at the civilian population from the hills around Sarajevo, which were vehemently denied by Serbian war veterans.
The main street running into Sarajevo, Meša Selimović Boulevard, was nicknamed 'Sniper Alley' because it became extremely dangerous but unavoidable, serving as the primary route to Sarajevo airport. Trams and buses had their windows shot out, and sniper warning signs were ubiquitous.
Prosecutors are examining the testimony of a former Bosnian intelligence officer who claimed that Italians paid to fire sniper rifles on the front line. A former US Marine also testified to the United Nations-led ad hoc international criminal tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in 2007 about 'tourist shooters' who travelled to Sarajevo to take pot shots at civilians for their own gratification.
'Sniper tourism' refers to the alleged practice of wealthy foreigners paying Bosnian Serb forces for the opportunity to shoot at civilians during the siege of Sarajevo.
The investigation was sparked by a documentary, *Sarajevo Safari*, and a legal complaint submitted by writer Ezio Gavazzeni.
More than 10,000 people were killed in Sarajevo by constant shelling and sniper fire between 1992 and 1996.
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