This Is Insane: Italian Prosecutors Investigate ‘Weekend Snipers’ in Sarajevo Siege

They call it the Sarajevo Safari — a chilling criminal network that, across Europe in the 1990s, allegedly sold “war vacations” in the Balkans, where wealthy clients paid huge sums to shoot unarmed civilians for sport. The macabre story hit headlines yesterday after the Milan Public Prosecutor’s Office opened an investigation following a report by Italian investigative writer Ennio Gavezzeni, who has spent years digging into the case.

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According to Gavezzeni’s findings, the organisation arranged for groups of so-called weekend snipers to travel to Bosnia, in areas controlled by Bosnian Serbs, on short “war vacations,” paying to shoot civilians for sport. Long dismissed as rumour, the phenomenon appeared in 1990s media reports and later resurfaced in testimonies and documentaries. During the 2007 trial of Bosnian Serb commander Ratko Mladić, US volunteer firefighter John Jordan testified that he encountered “tourist snipers” among the attackers, describing outsiders armed and dressed like foreigners. The Hague tribunal documented over 11,000 civilian deaths during the 1992–1996 siege of Sarajevo.

Today, however, for the first time, a prosecutor’s office has opened a case, aiming to investigate the Italian snipers involved in these so-called “safaris.” The files remain classified. An investigative source with whom Brussels Signal spoke confirms that individuals from across Europe are believed to have been involved. If this is proven, the investigation could soon extend to other countries.

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