Almost 27 years after the fall of Srebrenica and the subsequent murder of more than eight thousand Muslim men, the cabinet will recognize on Saturday that the Dutch soldiers of Dutchbat III were sent on a mission without a chance. Antoon van de Wiel (67) from Oisterwijk was one of them and can’t wait for the apologies. “I am going to Schaarsbergen full of hope.”
–
Written by
Sven de Laet
—
The images are still full of misery etched on Antoon’s retina. “I happened to watch Schindler’s List about World War II a week before my broadcast. I never expected to see the same misery with my own eyes four months later.”
The consequences of that disaster are still felt every day. “I like to read books. Now I give up after five pages. Same with movies. I don’t have the concentration for it anymore.”
And then it is still relatively easy for Antoon. “I know men who still absolutely do not want and dare to go back to Bosnia. They cannot handle that mentally and physically. And at least ten boys committed suicide later. What happened there in Bosnia has affected literally everyone.”
–
“You can’t knock down an elephant with a capping pistol.”
The reactions after returning home also played a major role. “We were accused of standing there watching, but doing nothing. And I still hear it sometimes. ‘Oh, you were one of those from Srebrenica?’ Full of contempt. I don’t respond to it, because then my voice goes up. It’s not worth it.”
Because Antoon himself knows very well what happened around the fall of the enclave. “When you send a unit out to protect something or someone, you have to give them the right equipment.” That didn’t happen. “You can’t knock down an elephant with a cap gun.”