Please imagine that you and your loved one were taken to an unknown camp and divided into groups based on your gender. Please imagine the terrible screams of children and their parents refusing to live with their families. There may not be any special reasons for genocide worldwide, but it still has a major impact on our past. Massacre in Bosnia is an example of the extinction of a group of certain people due to hatred and anger. Massacre in Bosnia occurred approximately between 1992 and 1995 (200 thousand died in Bosnia and Herzegovina from 1992 to 1995).
The Bosnians were organized primarily in Armia Republike Bosne i Hercegovine (ARBiH) as the army of the Republic of Bosnia and the Republic of Herzegovina. The troops of the Republic of Bosnia and the Republic of Herzegovina are divided into five troops. The first corps work in the Sarajevo and Golladas region, while the powerful fifth corps is located in the western pocket of Bosanska Krajina, working with Bihac and its surrounding HVO forces. The Bosnian government forces are not equipped enough and are not prepared for war.
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnia and Herzegovina) was the first country to adopt the Information Freedom Act on the Balkans. On 17th November 2000, the Bosnia-Herzegovina Parliament adopted the "Freedom of Information Act" or the "Freedom of Information Act". In 2001, the Republic Srpska Republic and the two Federal agencies of the Bosnia and Herzegovina federation respectively adopted the Information Disclosure Act and acquired the Information Disclosure Act of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Act on Information Disclosure of the Republic respectively.
Between 1991, the institutions in Bosnia and Herzegovina began studying the new Constitution of the Republic. In November 1991 a draft Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina was created. The problem is the self-determination approach applied in the Republic. The Bosnia-Herzegovina Constitutional Council has asked for the work on the new Constitution, but it faces the same dilemma and difficulties in the type of self-determination that has already been broadcast in public opinion. These dilemmas focus on two issues: the status of Bosnia and Herzegovina as a federal state of Yugoslavia and then the status of the constituent states in the future redefinition of the internal structure of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Serbian Democratic Party (SDS) strongly supports the inclusion of Bosnia-Herzegovina in Milosevic's Yugoslavia