Vilina Vlas

Vilina Vlas is a health spa that served as one of the main detention facilities where Bosniak prisoners were beaten, tortured and sexually assaulted during the Bosnian War, it is located about seven kilometers south-east of Višegrad, on the way to Gorazde.[1][2]

After the war, Vilina Vlas spa was re-opened as a tourist facility.

Contents

The camp

In 1992 the concentration and rape camp at the Vilina Vlas hotel was one of the Višegrad area's main detention facilities[2]. It was established by the Uzice Corps at the end of April 1992 and played a significant role in the ethnic cleansing of the area's Bosniak population[2]. The hotel served as a camp "brothel"[2]. Bosniak women and girls, including many not yet 14 years old, were brought to the camp by police officers and members of the paramilitary groups the White Eagles and Arkan's and Seselj's men[2].

Milan Lukić, leader of a local group of paramilitaries referred to variously as the White Eagles (Beli Orlovi), the Avengers or the Wolves, established his headquarters at the Vilina Vlas Hotel, one of various locations where local Bosniaks were detained. The group, with ties to the local police and Serb military units, played a prominent role in the ethnic cleansing of Višegrad, committing numerous crimes including murder, rape, torture, beatings, looting and destruction of property.

Many rapes in the Višegrad area were allegedly perpetrated in an apparently systematic fashion. Reports to the United Nations Commission of Experts to the Security Council (the Bassiouni Commission) state that victims were rounded up and transported to places like Vilina Vlas and the Hotel Višegrad apparently for the purpose of being detained and raped.[3]

One report to the Bassiouni Commission estimated that 200 women, primarily Bosniak, were detained at Vilina Vlas and sexually assaulted. The hotel was known as a place where only young, beautiful women were detained and in testimony given to the Bassiouni Commission it is claimed that women brought to this camp had been chosen to bear "Chetnik" children and were "selected" carefully[2]. It was claimed that younger girls were taken to the hotel while older women were taken to other locations, such as occupied or abandoned houses, and raped. The number and consistency of the reports were considered to provide reasonable confirmation that a large number of rapes did in fact occur at the hotel.[4][5]

The prisoners were raped repeatedly and beaten with batons[2][6]. Many of the women were killed while others were exiled, became insane or committed suicide[2]. Only a handful of the women prisoners survived - fewer than ten according to the Association of Women Victims of War, an organisation which works with women survivors and campaigns for the prosecution of the perpetrators. Most of the women prisoners were either killed or took their own lives.[7]. The bodies of the victims have not been found and are alleged to have been buried in concealed locations and then reburied[8].

One woman survivor reported Lukić raping her several times while she was a prisoner at the hotel. The President of the Association of Women Victims of War, Bakira Hasečić, has severely criticised the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia at The Hague for failing to include rape among the charges against Milan Lukić when he was brought to trial [7].

During the Sjeverin massacre, 16 Bosniaks were abducted by Milan Lukić while travelling on a bus from Serbia to Bosnia and were taken to Vilina Vlas, where they were tortured and murdered.[9]

The camp was eventually closed once its existence became known outside Bosnia and the surviving detainees removed to an unknown fate.

Along with Milan Lukić and Risto Perisić, Dusko Andrić, the director of Vilina Vlas, was reported as having been one of the perpetrators of rape at the hotel[10][11]. Dusko Andrić is a pensioner still living in Višegrad. He has never been charged with any offences.

Art and Culture

A stay at Vilina Vlas during a visit to Višegrad inspired the Australian performance artist Kym Vercoe's work "seven kilometres north-east: A performance about geography, tourism and atrocity". [12] [13]

See also

References

External links