Why am I talking about this now? I just had an aha! moment as I was skimming over my human rights textbook; one human right specified by international law is this: "Physical destruction includes the destruction of crops by chemical defoliants or the pollution of water reservoirs. Violations would also occur if landmines were to render agricultural areas useless...(yada yada yada)..." This is considered a war crime.
But if you drive through the Croatian countryside, through its ethnically segregated Hungarian, Serbian, Bosnian, and Croatian villages, you will notice this exact crime arrogantly branded on all the fields—all except the Croatian fields.
The Croatian government has thus far failed to remove these red, skeleton-stamped minefield signs from much of the land that could be used for cultivation, for feeding people, for giving poor rural communities the freedom to profit, flourish, work, and be free from hunger. It's not that there are necessarily leftover landmines from the Yugoslav wars in the field; in fact, most fields have been swept of them. But leaving that red sign there mandates that the field can't be cultivated, and so the Croatian government continues to exact vengeance on minorities—Bosnians, Serbs, and Hungarians—isolating them in an island of poverty and fruitlessness.
Oh, that makes me so mad. I hope you are getting seriously angry about this. Otherwise, in ten years, our indifference will ensure the continuation of this and all other human rights violations.
2 comments:
Fascinating! And quite terrible, to be sure.
It is so crazy to think that it has been about 15 years...and still people have to live in fear. Messed up and wrong.
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