THERE'S STILL SOMEONE IN THE WOODS
It happened in the heart of Europe, just a two-hour flight from Barcelona, where we were euphoric with the Olympics. Sarajevo had hosted them a few years earlier. Suddenly, images of concentration camps in Bosnia and Herzegovina appeared on the TV news, alongside the Olympic medal counts. It has been three decades since that war, where between 25,000 and 50,000 girls and women were raped as an ethnic cleansing strategy. The spotlights and cameras are no longer there. But has the war ended for the surviving women and the children born of those rapes? And where were we, the international community, while this was happening? Where are we now?