Several shells fired from the Croatian Defence Council’s positions located in Putićevo village, about 16 km (9.9 mi) west of Zenica, killed 16 and injured over 50 civilians in a large crowd.[1][2] At the time, there was significant commercial activity in the center of the city, with about two to three thousand men, women and children in the area ultimately hit by shells.[8] The Trial Chamber acquitted general Blaškić of all counts of the charges by which he was accused of the crime.[8] In order to remember the people killed after the crime of 19 April 1993, city square in Zenica became known as Stone Sleeper [bs] (translation of Kameni spavač, name of Mak Dizdar's work); it is a memorial park with large curved memorial sculpture with names of killed Zenicans, one fountain and memorial plate referring to Dizdar.[citation needed] Also, the date of massacre is commemorated as a civilian victims' day of Bosnian War in Zenica.