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Eva KlonowskiMonday 11 March 2002
On 12 February 2002 Slobodan Milosevic, the former president of Yugoslavia, went on trial in The Hague, accused of crimes against humanity and genocide. It is estimated that his trial will take at least two years.

In the meantime investigators are busy tracking down leads and compiling evidence. Dr. Eva Klonowski, a forensic anthropologist from Iceland, is one of them. She works in Bosnia for the International Committee of Missing Persons. She is currently working on a site in the Jakarina Kosa area, the largest mass grave in Bosnia so far.
At a recent exhumation, she uncovered the bodies of 372 people. She tells Anna McNamee about the harrowing business of providing these people with an identity.


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