NATO bombing of Belgrade streets | |
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Location | Belgrade, Serbia |
Date | May 1, 1999 3:00 AM |
Target | Unknown |
Attack type | Missile attack |
Injured | 2 |
Perpetrator(s) | NATO |
The bombing of Belgrade streets was a missile attack occurring on May 1, 1999 during the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. The attack was directed at the central Belgrade residential area in Vračar.
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Homes on Vardarska Street were completely destroyed. According to eyewitnesses, a bomb landed in a space between two homes and two family members were injured and taken to an Emergency Medical Center. They recovered from their injuries and survived. The bomb made a two-meter-deep crater between the houses and destroyed the asphalt entry way, with the only thing remaining being a pillar with a street name sign on it.
Due to the powerful detonation, a white Yugo passenger car was thrown onto the ruins of the house - a pile of rafters, roof tiles and bricks. The missile exploded near the street water pipe, causing a temporary flood in a part of the Vardarska street.[1][2]
NATO states it targeted the headquarters of the army, special police and the Ministry of Defense builidng in Belgrade. Additionally, NATO admitted one missile hit a residential area but said they were not aware of the civilian casualties reported by the Yugoslav media.[3]
Strategic Bombardment in the Kosovo War
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