Biserko, Sonja (ed.), The Warp of the Serbian Identity, Belgrade: Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia The Role of the Serbian and Russian Orthodox Churches in Shaping Governmental Policies 2016 • Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia Annual Report: Serbia 2006 HUMAN RIGHTS: HOSTAGE TO THE STATE’S REGRESSION PUBLISHER: Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia FOR PUBLISHER: Sonja Biserko * * * TRANSLATED BY: Dragan Novaković Ivana Damjanović Mira Gligorijević Vera Gligorijević Ivan Obradović Spomenka Grujičić

bulletin HESINKI COMMITTEE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN SERBIA neutral position was almost ideal for media-tion between the West and Russia.2 However, this neutrality turns to be growingly unsustain-able. Generating confusion, it makes both sides more and more suspicious of Belgrade. This was more than evident in the case of the Great

CHRONICLES 33. Conflict in Numbers. Edited by Ewa Tabeau. Casualties of the 1990s Wars in the Former Yugoslavia (1991-1999) The chronologically earliest demographic expert report appeared in a court hearing at ICTY in June 2000.
SERBIA WORRIED. Belgrade, 2 October 2023. The Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia urges the police to urgently investigate the attack on Ruhan Muharemi from Medveđa. According to his son, a group of 15 people threw stones at his parents' house and cars on Saturday night while singing nationalist songs. Helsinki HELSINKI COMMITTEE bulletin FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN SERBIA address: Kralja Milana 10, Belgrade, Serbia tel. +381-11-3032-408; fax. 2639-437; Hd8Au6. 301 272 251 408 261 154 53 49 140

helsinki committee for human rights in serbia