Sarajevo bread line massacre
The massacre was filmed and the scenes of murdered, wounded and maimed Sarajevans traveled the world and significantly contributed to the public at large sympathizing with the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and against the Bosnian Serbs who were heavily criticized by the Western press on that occasion.[2] On 30 May 1992, the massacre was given as a reason for the United Nations Security Council passing the Security Council Resolution 757 which banned all international trade, scientific and technical cooperation, sports and cultural exchanges, air travel, and travel of government officials from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[3] The Serbian side denied responsibility for the war crime, attributing it to the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and interpreting it as a false flag operation, claiming that mortar shells were fired from positions that at the time of the event were held by forces loyal to the Bosnian government in Sarajevo.[4] The Ferhadija attack was not listed as one of the indictments that Ratko Mladić charged with, but was still referred to during his trial, as an example of artillery terror being used against Sarajevan civilians during the Bosnian Serb siege.[5][6] The Mladić defence witness, Zorica Subotić, a defence ballistics expert from Belgrade, argued that Bosnian Serb forces were not responsible for several deadly artillery attacks against civilians, including both the Ferhadija attack and the Markale massacres, and attributed blame to Bosniak forces.