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Croatia Star Earns Rave Revue For Match-Winning Display Off The Bench In River Plate 0-2 Inter Milan Win
Croatia Star Earns Rave Revue For Match-Winning Display Off The Bench In River Plate 0-2 Inter Milan Win

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Croatia Star Earns Rave Revue For Match-Winning Display Off The Bench In River Plate 0-2 Inter Milan Win

Croatia Star Earns Rave Revue For Match-Winning Display Off The Bench In River Plate 0-2 Inter Milan Win Petar Sucic is winning plaudits for his performance off the bench for Inter Milan in their 2-0 Club World Cup win over River Plate. Today's print edition of Turin-based newspaper Tuttosport, via FCInterNews, hail the 21-year-old Croatian international's display. Advertisement Petar Sucic made his third straight substitute appearance for Inter Milan at the Club World Cup against River Plate. The Croat had already appeared against the likes of Monterrey and Urawa Red Diamonds. And once again Sucic was a player who Cristian Chivu turned to to try and inject new life into Inter's midfield. Petar Sucic Praised For Performance In River Plate 0-2 Inter Milan Win Welcome Petar Sucic Article Image In the view of Tuttosport, it was an outstanding performance by Petar Sucic. The Croat did exactly what was needed to turn the match in Inter's favour. Sucic had the energy and strength to keep up in what was already a very intense physical battle in midfield. Advertisement Meanwhile, the former Dinamo Zagreb midfielder's technique was impeccable. He did very well to hold onto the ball and dictate the tempo in midfield. Moreover, Sucic was the player who assisted Francesco Pio Esposito for Inter's opener. This could very well have been a performance that earned Sucic a place in the Nerazzurri starting eleven for their round of sixteen clash with Brazilian giants Fluminense.

Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax
Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax

Norwich City have signed defender Jakov Medic from Dutch club Ajax for an undisclosed fee, on a three-year contract with an option for a further 12 months. The 26-year-old Croat spent last season on loan in Germany's Bundesliga, making 23 appearances for Bochum and scoring one goal. Advertisement He began his career with Istra 1961 and also had spells with Nuremberg, SV Wiesbaden and St Pauli before joining Ajax on a five-year deal in 2023. Medic, who can also play in a holding midfield role, is Norwich's second defensive signing of the summer following Harry Darling from Swansea City. "We were clear on what we needed to add defensively in order to improve this coming season and Jakov is a key part of that," said Canaries sporting director Ben Knapper. "He's a great age and comes with a significant amount of experience during his time playing in both Germany and the Netherlands, in some big games. Advertisement "His profile is well-suited to the Championship and our style of play, and he is someone who has the right attributes and mentality to be a real success here." Norwich will find out their first opponents for next season when the English Football League fixtures are announced on Thursday. "I've always had a wish to play here in England, so I didn't think so much about this decision to become a player at Norwich," said Medic, who will complete his move on 1 July.

Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax
Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Norwich sign defender Medic from Ajax

Norwich City have signed defender Jakov Medic from Dutch club Ajax for an undisclosed fee, on a three-year contract with an option for a further 12 26-year-old Croat spent last season on loan in Germany's Bundesliga, making 23 appearances for Bochum and scoring one began his career with Istra 1961 and also had spells with Nuremberg, SV Wiesbaden and St Pauli before joining Ajax on a five-year deal in 2023., externalMedic, who can also play in a holding midfield role, is Norwich's second defensive signing of the summer following Harry Darling from Swansea City. "We were clear on what we needed to add defensively in order to improve this coming season and Jakov is a key part of that," said Canaries sporting director Ben Knapper. "He's a great age and comes with a significant amount of experience during his time playing in both Germany and the Netherlands, in some big games. "His profile is well-suited to the Championship and our style of play, and he is someone who has the right attributes and mentality to be a real success here."Norwich will find out their first opponents for next season when the English Football League fixtures are announced on Thursday."I've always had a wish to play here in England, so I didn't think so much about this decision to become a player at Norwich," said Medic, who will complete his move on 1 July.

Survivors Of Bosnia 'Rape Camps' Come Forward 30 Years On
Survivors Of Bosnia 'Rape Camps' Come Forward 30 Years On

Int'l Business Times

time17-06-2025

  • Int'l Business Times

Survivors Of Bosnia 'Rape Camps' Come Forward 30 Years On

It took years for Zehra Murguz to be able to testify about what happened to her and other Muslim women in the "rape camps" run by Serb forces during the war in Bosnia. One of the awful memories that drove her to give evidence was of seeing a girl of 12 "with a doll in her arms" dragged into one of them. Murguz felt she was also speaking "in the name of all the others, of that girl of 12 who will never talk... who was never found". The horror began for her in the summer of 1992 when Serb forces took the mountain town of Foca and Murguz was taken to the Partizan gym, one of several notorious rape camps the Serbs ran. For months dozens of Muslim women and girls were gang raped and forced into sexual slavery there. Others were sold or killed. At least 20,000 people suffered sexual violence across Bosnia as Yugoslavia collapsed into the worst war Europe had then seen since 1945. Most victims were Bosnian Muslims, but Serbs and Croat women also suffered. In 2001 the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia became the first court in Europe to recognise rape as a crime against humanity in an historic verdict against three Bosnian Serb army officers from Foca. While a handful of survivors driven by a thirst for justice continue to collect thousands of testimonies, many remain locked in silence more than three decades on. Murguz, 61, began her judicial journey when she returned to Bosnia in 2011 -- after years living in exile in Montenegro, Serbia and Croatia -- to bring her neighbour to book for raping her during the war. "If I don't speak, it will be as if the crime never happened," she told herself. He was still living in Foca and "wasn't hiding", she said. He was arrested and tried in the local court in 2012. Going there was "like going back to 1992", to the "agony" of that time, Murguz recalled. "I came face to face with him, we looked each other in the eye, and justice won out," she said. The man was jailed for 14 years, a "light sentence", said Murguz "for the murder of three people and a rape". But the conviction at last "stamped him with his true identity -- war criminal", she told AFP from a sewing workshop in Sarajevo run by the Victims of the War Foca 1992-1995 group. Around her other survivors wove fabric together, a form of collective therapy. "To this day, only 18 verdicts have been delivered for crimes of sexual violence committed in Foca," said the group's president, Midheta Kaloper, 52. "Three trials are ongoing. A lot of time has passed, and witnesses are exhausted." She herself was a victim of "an unspeakable, inexplicable crime" in Gorazde, the "worst torture a girl can endure", she said. She still hopes the suspect will be tried in Bosnia, not in Serbia where he now lives. But Kaloper warned that things have "stagnated" over the last five years, with 258 cases involving 2,046 suspects still needing to be judged, according to figures from the High Council of Magistrates. Bosnian judges had tried 773 war crime cases by the end of last year -- over a quarter involving sexual violence -- according to the OSCE monitoring mission. It said there had been "significant delays" in hundreds of others where the suspects have yet to be identified. "What kills us most is the excessive length of these proceedings," said Kaloper. "We have been fighting for 30 years, and our only real success has been obtaining the law on civilian war victims," under which survivors can be given a pension worth about $400 a month, she said. However, the law only covers the Muslim-Croat half of Bosnia and those living there, and not those living in the self-governing Serb Republika Srpska (RS) and the small mixed Brcko District in the northeast, which have different judicial systems. Around 1,000 survivors have obtained war victim status in the Muslim-Croat federation and some 100 more in the RS and Brcko, said Ajna Mahmic, of the Swiss legal NGO Trial International. Rape, she said, still carries a particular stigma. "Unfortunately, as a society we still put the blame and shame on the victims rather than the perpetrators. "Many of the survivors do not feel secure," Mahmic told AFP. "Some of the perpetrators are still living freely and some are working in public institutions," some in positions of authority. Not to mention the continued glorification "of war criminals (in the Balkans) and the minimisation of the suffering we have endured", Kaloper added. Nearly half of ongoing cases are held up because the accused are abroad, an OSCE report said in January. Another "worrying trend is the widespread failure of courts to grant victims compensation" in criminal cases, the OSCE added. While witnesses could testify anonymously in The Hague, there is nothing to protect their identity in civil compensation proceedings in Bosnia. "Even today it is very difficult for victims to speak," said Bakira Hasecic, 71, head of the Women Victims of War group, and they keep the "weight of this tragedy in their hearts". Many follow what their former torturers are up to on social networks. It is an emotional "timebomb that can explode at any moment and drives some to call us", she said. Though over 30 years have passed, 15 more victims stepped forward needing to talk in the last few months alone, Hasecic said. Bakira Hasecic: 'Even today it is very difficult for victims to speak' AFP Stitching her life back together: Zehra Murguz AFP Bosnian rape survivors weave together in a therapy centre in Sarajevo AFP Glorifying guilty men: a monument to Bosnian Serb fighters in Foca AFP

Survivors of Bosnia 'rape camps' come forward 30 years on
Survivors of Bosnia 'rape camps' come forward 30 years on

France 24

time17-06-2025

  • France 24

Survivors of Bosnia 'rape camps' come forward 30 years on

One of the awful memories that drove her to give evidence was of seeing a girl of 12 "with a doll in her arms" dragged into one of them. Murguz felt she was also speaking "in the name of all the others, of that girl of 12 who will never talk... who was never found". The horror began for her in the summer of 1992 when Serb forces took the mountain town of Foca and Murguz was taken to the Partizan gym, one of several notorious rape camps the Serbs ran. For months dozens of Muslim women and girls were gang raped and forced into sexual slavery there. Others were sold or killed. At least 20,000 people suffered sexual violence across Bosnia as Yugoslavia collapsed into the worst war Europe had then seen since 1945. Most victims were Bosnian Muslims, but Serbs and Croat women also suffered. In 2001 the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia became the first court in Europe to recognise rape as a crime against humanity in an historic verdict against three Bosnian Serb army officers from Foca. While a handful of survivors driven by a thirst for justice continue to collect thousands of testimonies, many remain locked in silence more than three decades on. Triple murder and rape Murguz, 61, began her judicial journey when she returned to Bosnia in 2011 -- after years living in exile in Montenegro, Serbia and Croatia -- to bring her neighbour to book for raping her during the war. "If I don't speak, it will be as if the crime never happened," she told herself. He was still living in Foca and "wasn't hiding", she said. He was arrested and tried in the local court in 2012. Going there was "like going back to 1992", to the "agony" of that time, Murguz recalled. "I came face to face with him, we looked each other in the eye, and justice won out," she said. The man was jailed for 14 years, a "light sentence", said Murguz "for the murder of three people and a rape". But the conviction at last "stamped him with his true identity -- war criminal", she told AFP from a sewing workshop in Sarajevo run by the Victims of the War Foca 1992-1995 group. Around her other survivors wove fabric together, a form of collective therapy. "To this day, only 18 verdicts have been delivered for crimes of sexual violence committed in Foca," said the group's president, Midheta Kaloper, 52. "Three trials are ongoing. A lot of time has passed, and witnesses are exhausted." She herself was a victim of "an unspeakable, inexplicable crime" in Gorazde, the "worst torture a girl can endure", she said. She still hopes the suspect will be tried in Bosnia, not in Serbia where he now lives. But Kaloper warned that things have "stagnated" over the last five years, with 258 cases involving 2,046 suspects still needing to be judged, according to figures from the High Council of Magistrates. Bosnian judges had tried 773 war crime cases by the end of last year -- over a quarter involving sexual violence -- according to the OSCE monitoring mission. It said there had been "significant delays" in hundreds of others where the suspects have yet to be identified. "What kills us most is the excessive length of these proceedings," said Kaloper. 'Timebomb' "We have been fighting for 30 years, and our only real success has been obtaining the law on civilian war victims," under which survivors can be given a pension worth about $400 a month, she said. However, the law only covers the Muslim-Croat half of Bosnia and those living there, and not those living in the self-governing Serb Republika Srpska (RS) and the small mixed Brcko District in the northeast, which have different judicial systems. Around 1,000 survivors have obtained war victim status in the Muslim-Croat federation and some 100 more in the RS and Brcko, said Ajna Mahmic, of the Swiss legal NGO Trial International. Rape, she said, still carries a particular stigma. "Unfortunately, as a society we still put the blame and shame on the victims rather than the perpetrators. "Many of the survivors do not feel secure," Mahmic told AFP. "Some of the perpetrators are still living freely and some are working in public institutions," some in positions of authority. Not to mention the continued glorification "of war criminals (in the Balkans) and the minimisation of the suffering we have endured", Kaloper added. Nearly half of ongoing cases are held up because the accused are abroad, an OSCE report said in January. Another "worrying trend is the widespread failure of courts to grant victims compensation" in criminal cases, the OSCE added. While witnesses could testify anonymously in The Hague, there is nothing to protect their identity in civil compensation proceedings in Bosnia. "Even today it is very difficult for victims to speak," said Bakira Hasecic, 71, head of the Women Victims of War group, and they keep the "weight of this tragedy in their hearts". Many follow what their former torturers are up to on social networks. It is an emotional "timebomb that can explode at any moment and drives some to call us", she said. Though over 30 years have passed, 15 more victims stepped forward needing to talk in the last few months alone, Hasecic said. © 2025 AFP

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