Liplje camp

It was set up for Bosniak men, women and children, in an effort to ethnically cleanse the area of all non-Serb residents.At the start of the Bosnian War armed Serb peasants from the nearby village of Snagovo overran Liplje on 1 May 1992 and, by 25 May, turned it into a concentration camp with the Bosniak residents becoming prisoners.[2][3] Between 420 and 460[4] people were imprisoned; men, women and children were beaten, raped repeatedly and killed by Serbs.Escapees organized resistance groups in the towns of Cerska and Kamenica.On the night of 1–2 June 1992,[6] about 300 Bosniaks armed with 27 rifles liberated the Liplje concentration camp.
Concentration campCoordinatesLipljeBosnia and HerzegovinaBosniaksSerbo-CroatianArmy of Republika SrpskaZvornikBosnian WarBosniakethnically cleanseCerskaRadio SarajevoYugoslav WarsArmy of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina1st Corps2nd Corps3rd Corps4th Corps5th Corps6th Corps7th CorpsPatriotic LeagueGreen BeretsCroatian Defence ForcesBosnian mujahideenCroatian Defence Council1st Krajina CorpsWolves of VučjakWhite EaglesSerb Volunteer GuardScorpionsYellow WaspsNational Defence of the Autonomous Province of Western BosniaMilošević–Tuđman Karađorđevo meetingZulfikarpašić–Karadžić agreementRAM PlanSerb Autonomous RegionsBosanska KrajinaHerzegovinaNorth-East BosniaRomanijaCroatian Community of Herzeg BosniaRepublika SrpskaBosnia and Herzegovina independence referendumSarajevo wedding attackRepublic of Bosnia and HerzegovinaBattle of Bosanski BrodSijekovac killingsBijeljina massacre1992 anti-war protests in SarajevoBattle of KupresSiege of SarajevoKazani pit killingsFoča ethnic cleansingBosanski Šamac ethnic cleansingSiege of SrebrenicaZvornik massacreSnagovo massacrePrijedor ethnic cleansingSarajevo column incidentSiege of GoraždeGraz agreementGlogova massacreLašva Valley ethnic cleansingTuzla column incidentZaklopača massacreSiege of DobojBradina massacreSarajevo bread line massacreBijeli Potok massacrePionirska Street fireOperation JackalVišegrad massacresBosanska JagodinaPaklenikBarimoSjeverinČemerno massacreSiege of BihaćAhatovići massacreCroat–Bosniak WarOperation Vrbas '92Operation Corridor 92Bikavac fireKillings in Bratunac and SrebrenicaAgreement on Friendship and Cooperation between Bosnia and Herzegovina and CroatiaKorićani Cliffs massacreMičivode massacreNovoseoci massacreGornja Jošanica massacreKravica attackDuša killingsSkelani massacreŠtrpciSiege of MostarSrebrenica shellingAhmići massacreTrusina massacreSovići and Doljani killingsZenica massacreVranica caseDobrinja mortar attackBattle of ŽepčeBattle of Travnik (1993)Battle of BugojnoOperation IrmaOperation Neretva '93Grabovica massacreMokronoge massacreAutonomous Province of Western BosniaIntra-Bosnian Muslim WarStupni Do massacreOperation Deny FlightKrižančevo Selo killingsOperation Tvigi 94First Markale massacreBanja Luka incidentWashington AgreementFederation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaOperation BøllebankAttack on Spin magazine journalistsOperation TigerOperation "Breza '94"Operation AmandaScandinavian Airlines System Flight 347Operation SpiderOperation Winter '94Operation VlašićOperation Leap 1Battle of OrašjeOperation Leap 2Split AgreementOperation Summer '95Pale air strikesTuzla shellingBattle of Vrbanja BridgeSrebrenica massacreKravicaBattle of VozućaOperation MiracleOperation StormSecond Markale massacreNATO bombing campaignOperation Mistral 2Operation SanaOperation UnaOperation Southern MoveExodus of Sarajevo SerbsDayton AgreementManjačaVilina VlasOmarskaKeratermTrnopoljeSušicaČelebićiMusalaBatkovićDreteljUzamnicaHeliodromGabelaKamenica campEthnic cleansingmassacresBosnian genocideBosnian genocide denialInternment campsPeace plansNATO interventionForeign supportForeign fightersTimeline of the Bosnian WarTimeline of the Croat–Bosniak War