(9 Jul 2005) SHOTLIST
Sarajevo
1. Wide shot of presidency building
2. Plaque on building
3. Various of women wearing scarves outside building
4. Bosnian Muslim member of presidency, Sulejman Tihic (centre), standing with officials
5. Police cars at front on convoy
6. Trucks containing remains of victims drives past women
7. Women and children watching from street
8. Close up of mother and child
9. SOUNDBITE: (Bosnian) Sabra Mujic, war widow:
"My older son is on those trucks. I'm still missing my husband and my younger son. I wish they would be here together."
10. Various of trucks passing women
11. Trucks driving along street
Potocari, Srebrenica
1. Wide shot of graveyard at Potocari where bodies will be buried
2. Trucks arrive carrying bodies
3. Grieving women looking as bodies arrive
4. Wide shot of truck turning
5. Wide shot of families looking on as back of truck is uncovered to reveal wrapped bodies
6. Close up of grieving women wipe tears from their faces
7. Zoom into bodies being unloaded from truck
8. Bodies being passed along by men
9. Various of bodies being unloaded by men
10. Close up of grieving woman
11. Body being passed along by men
12. Close up of elderly woman clutching handkerchief, families looking on
13. SOUNDBITE: (Bosnian) Mula Hafizovic, war widow:
"I lost a husband and a brother but I did not find them here, I am so sad. We hope that one day all our husbands, fathers and sons will be found."
Outer Srebrenica
16. Walkers' camp
17. Various of genocide survivors retracing their steps
STORYLINE
The cries of widows and mothers who lost their sons 10 years ago broke the mournful silence as hundreds of relatives watched the arrival of 610 bodies at a memorial site for victims of Europe's worst massacre since World War II.
Thousands of mourners in Bosnia lined Sarajevo's main street on Saturday to pay tribute as trucks drove past carrying the bodies for reburial at the site of the slaughter.
The trucks, which departed from an identification centre in the central town of Visoko, stopped in front of the Bosnian presidency building en route to the east Bosnian town of Srebrenica.
Male relatives of victims unloaded the bodies from trucks and carried them into a windowless, war-scarred warehouse outside the Bosnian town of
Srebrenica as women said Muslim prayers for the dead.
The building, which was the wartime base of Dutch UN peacekeepers, is just across the road from the memorial site where the bodies will be buried
on Monday, the 10th anniversary of the massacre of thousands of Muslims in Srebrenica.
Among those who paid tribute was the Bosnian Muslim member of the country's multi-ethnic presidency, Sulejman Tihic.
Neither the Serb nor the Croat members of the presidency came to pay their respects.
Some eight thousand Muslims - mostly boys and men - were slaughtered in Srebrenica in July 1995 by Bosnian Serb soldiers who had overrun the eastern town.
The killings, in what was then a UN-protected zone, came shortly before the end of the country's 1992-95 war.
The bodies were dumped in mass graves across the countryside and are still being found. Thousands are still missing.
Some surviving family members waited at a cemetery in Potocari, a suburb of Srebrenica, hoping to find their loved ones among the corpses which had been exhumed.
Forensic experts have so far found five thousand bodies in 60 mass graves in the Srebrenica area. DNA sampling and other forensic methods have led to the identification of 2,079 remains.
The two remain at large 10 years after their indictments.
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