The Hague’s kumbaya prison

The international community may have finally succeeded in creating a safe space where people from all the Balkans’ ethnic groups can live together in harmony and respect each others’ cultures. The trouble is, it’s in a prison for ruthless war criminals awaiting trial at The Hague: Released inmates say the ethnic rivalries that drove them ...

By , a former associate editor at Foreign Policy.

The international community may have finally succeeded in creating a safe space where people from all the Balkans' ethnic groups can live together in harmony and respect each others' cultures. The trouble is, it's in a prison for ruthless war criminals awaiting trial at The Hague:

The international community may have finally succeeded in creating a safe space where people from all the Balkans’ ethnic groups can live together in harmony and respect each others’ cultures. The trouble is, it’s in a prison for ruthless war criminals awaiting trial at The Hague:

Released inmates say the ethnic rivalries that drove them to fratricide in the bloody wars that accompanied the break-up of Yugoslavia have faded within the walls of the prison.

Now the detainees, who in 2006 had an average age of around 52, enjoy their common language, cook Balkan food together in the corridor kitchens, watch television and play board games.

[…]

"We Muslims from Bosnia and Kosovo celebrated our religious holidays with the Serbs and Croats," former inmate, Bosnian Muslim general Naser Oric, has said.

Serb nationalist leader Vojislav Seselj and Bosnian Croat paramilitary leader Mladen Naletilic were the unit’s biggest jokers, he added.

Radovan Karadzic will join the party when he is extradited early next week.

Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating

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