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The New Age of Genocide and the Science of Large-Scale Human Identifications |
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by John Crews
Introduction and background
The 1995 signing of the Dayton Peace Accords affecting Croatia,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Serbia, and the subsequent NATO occupation of
Kosovo in 1999, brought an end to armed conflict within the former
Yugoslavia. By the end of the wars, an estimated 250,000 persons were
dead and another 40,000 were missing and presumed dead. In 1996, the
International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) was created at the
G-7 Summit in Lyon, France to help resolve the fate of missing persons
within the former Yugoslavia.
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