Milačić: Montenegro must deal with Murina, and only then with crimes in other countries

It was announced from Prava Montenegro that "Milačić, together with his colleagues and the president of the Plav committee of Prava Montenegro, Siniša Radenović, laid flowers at the memorial fountain in Murin, paying tribute to the innocent victims of NATO aggression 25 years ago."

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Milačić, Photo: Real Montenegro
Milačić, Photo: Real Montenegro
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

Montenegro must deal with Murina, and only then with crimes in other countries, announced the president of Prava Montenegro, Marko Milačić.

Prava Montenegro announced that "Milačić, together with his colleagues and the president of the Plav board of Prava Montenegro, Siniša Radenović, laid flowers at the memorial fountain in Murin, paying tribute to the innocent victims of NATO aggression 25 years ago."

On the wreath is written "live forever".

"Today, on the eve of Easter, we remember with sadness and pain the crime that forever marked our small town of Murino. With my colleagues, I laid flowers at the memorial fountain, paying tribute to the innocent souls of Julia, Olivera and Miroslav, who were torn from their parents' arms too soon by bombs , but also to the innocent victims of aggression Milka, Manojlo and Vukić," Milačić pointed out on that occasion.

He added that Murino remains a symbol of sadness, but also of the strength of faith in eternity.

"As we remember this painful event, we are reminded that policies and ideologies can pass away, but the truth of Murina will always shine as a signpost of redemption for the sins of the past. That is why Montenegro has, first of all, a human, and then every other obligation to deal with To Murina and the families of the victims. If the authorities in Montenegro had invested as much interest and energy in Murina as they did for crimes in other countries, today the families of the victims in Murina would have been justly compensated, Murina would have been a developed town, and the national and organized memory of this crime would be unquestionable. "Montenegro has to deal with Murin, and only then with crimes in other countries," Milacic said.

In the NATO bombing of Murina on April 30, 1999, six civilians were killed, including three children, while a store, a cultural center and other civilian objects were damaged.

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