When will Western massacres be revealed?
We burned down all Muslim villages and all the properties except for animals, grains and grasses. We eradicated all Muslim people indiscriminate of their gender and age. About 1,200 men and 8,000 women and children were killed, namely the whole residents were exterminated. The morale of our units is quite high. The maneuvers of certain units and commanders during this operation deserve every kind of appreciation, Serb Chatnik commander colonel Dyurisich said in a report dated Feb. 13, 1943.
Murat Ylmaz
Wars cause crucial breaking points and significant changes in the world history. According to a research done by a Norwegian sciences academy, 3,640,000,000 people have been killed in 14,361 wars since 3600 B.C. and these wars served as reason for new ones. When looked at the last 7000 years of world history, it can be seen that people are caught in wars for 87 years of every century and in peace for 13 years. The influence, prevalence and destructiveness of wars increase as civilization advances though the opposite is expected. Wars, oppressive regimes and the tendency to resist recognizing the existence of the other have resulted in widespread human rights violations. Compared to the past, the current world order humanity is experiencing presents a world where more mass killings are committed, more people are sent on exile, more human rights violations that go beyond logic are made and unbearable crimes against humanity are committed rather than a more prosperous life.
Wars and desire to kill one another, which are as old as the history of humanity, mostly leave marks on history that are not desired to mention. Roman, Mongolian, Crusades, British and US attacks turned the world into the hell and resulted in the injury and death of millions of people and forced many others to immigrate. These attacks and the desire to kill other people continued with Jerusalem, Bagdad, Kigali, Plovdiv, Benghazi, Algeria, Akyap, Halabjah, Grozny and Srebrenitsa massacres, in which humanely feelings and conscience were turned a deaf ear on.
In this framework, genocide can be defined as an attempt to kill members of an ethnic, racial or religious group, to inflict serious corporal and mental damage on group members, to intentionally create special conditions for the group or to prevent births in order to exterminate part of or the whole group. Plotting conspiracy to commit genocide, explicitly and publicly campaigning in favor of genocide, attempting genocide or forming alliances can be cited among genocide-related crimes. The term genocide is made up of the Greek word genos, which mean ethnicity, nation or race, and the Roman suffix cide, which mean to kill.
American historian Justin McCarty wrote in his book entitled Death and Exile that over five million Muslims were banished from Balkan and Caucasian countries and 5.5 million other were subjected to genocide or died from famine and diseases between 1821 and 1922. During the Ottoman-Russian war in 1877-78, 1.5 million Muslims were forced to immigrate to Rumelia and Anatolia and 17 percent of them, 261,937 people, died or faced genocide during the migration. According to a research by McCarty, the number of people living in Ottoman lands in Europe, except for Albania, dropped from 2,315,293 to 1,445,185, a decline of 62 percent. Only 812,777 people survived the migration from the Ottoman lands in Europe. The remaining 632,408 people died. A large number of 27 percent Muslim population in the occupied Ottoman lands in Europe faced genocide. Here is a picture of events in Bosnia:
Little children were taken from their mothers or sisters and killed immediately. To underestimate their crimes, Murderers said they had to use knives, because there were too many victims saying they would otherwise use rifles. Muslim clerics were imprinted cross on their foreheads and their beards were plucked. A numb