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Biography | |||
Sergej Trifunović was born in September 2, 1972 in Mostar in family of actor Tomislav Trifunović and lawyer Slobodanka. His younger brother is actor Branislav Trifunović. Sergej's father in his career has often moved, so Sergej lived in Mostar, Užice, Kruševac and Belgrade. In 1990 Trifunović enrolled in Belgrade Faculty of Dramatic Arts in class of professor Vladimir Jevtović. His fellow students were Nataša Ninković, Vojin Ćetković and Nebojša Glogovac. | |||
Filmography | |||
Films | |||
* Srpski film (2009) | |||
* Mamarosh (2009) as Policeman | |||
* Viko (2009) as Ivan | |||
* Serbian Scars (2008) as Beni | |||
* Turneja (2008) as The Panters' leader | |||
* War, Inc. (2008) as Ooq-Mi-Fay Taqnufmini | |||
* Maska (2007, TV) as Branko Radičević | |||
* In the Name of the Son (2007) as Tarik | |||
* Next (2007) as Mr. White | |||
* Sve džaba (2006) as Skladistar | |||
* Uslovna sloboda (2006) as the Driver | |||
* Karaula (2006) as Ljuba Paunović | |||
* Aporia (2006) as Zoran | |||
* Love (2005) as Vanya Nevakovich | |||
* Pogled sa Ajfelovog tornja (2005) | |||
* Kad porastem biću Kengur (2004) as Braca | |||
* Profesionalac (2003) as Tihi ludak | |||
* Ko čeka dočeka (2002, TV) | |||
* Treći kanal od sunca (2001, TV) | |||
* Munje! (2001) as Pop | |||
* 3 A.M. (2001) as Rasha | |||
* Lovers (1999) as Dragan | |||
* Bure baruta (1998) as the young man chewing gum who takes the bus hostage | |||
* Savior (1998) as Goran | |||
* Stršljen (1998) as Miljaim | |||
* Ljubinko i Desanka (1998, TV) as Ljubinko | |||
* Ubistvo s predumišljajem (1995) as Krsman Jakšić | |||
* Someone Else's America (1995) as Lukass | |||
* Raj (1993, TV) | |||
TV Series | |||
* Bitange i princeze (2 episodes, 2007) as Kocka, the manager | |||
* Sleeper Cell (1 episode: Home, 2006) | |||
* Crni Gruja (10 episodes, 2003) as Crni Gruja | |||
'''Darko Trifunović''' ({{lang-sr|Дарко Трифуновић}}) is a lawyer and professor at the Faculty of Security Studies of the ], where he has specialised in the study of ].<ref name="hayat05jan08">"Bosnian Muslims object to Serb terrorism expert addressing European conference". Report from TV Hayat, Sarajevo, 1800 GMT, 5 January 2008. Via BBC Monitoring.</ref> He prepared a widely criticised report for the ] (]) government which denied that there had been a ] during the ]. | '''Darko Trifunović''' ({{lang-sr|Дарко Трифуновић}}) is a lawyer and professor at the Faculty of Security Studies of the ], where he has specialised in the study of ].<ref name="hayat05jan08">"Bosnian Muslims object to Serb terrorism expert addressing European conference". Report from TV Hayat, Sarajevo, 1800 GMT, 5 January 2008. Via BBC Monitoring.</ref> He prepared a widely criticised report for the ] (]) government which denied that there had been a ] during the ]. | ||
Revision as of 23:14, 20 June 2009
Darko Trifunović (Template:Lang-sr) is a lawyer and professor at the Faculty of Security Studies of the University of Belgrade, where he has specialised in the study of Islamic terrorism. He prepared a widely criticised report for the Republika Srpska (Bosnian Serb) government which denied that there had been a massacre at Srebrenica during the Bosnian War.
Srebrenica massacre report controversy
In September 2002, the Bosnian Serb government's Bureau for Relations with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia issued Report about case Srebrenica: The First Part. The report, prepared by Trifunović, asserted that the Srebrenica massacre of August 1995 had never happened, that only about 1,800 Bosniaks had died at Srebrenica (in combat rather than in a massacre) instead of the 7,000-8,000 reported by international investigators and that only about 100 had been killed in summary executions. The report was strongly criticised by the international community and human rights institutions. The ICTY had ruled a year earlier that nearly 8,000 Muslims had been murdered in an act of genocide and convicted General Radislav Krstić for his involvement in the crime. Two years after the report was issued, the Bosnian Serb government finally admitted the scale of the killings.
References
- "Bosnian Muslims object to Serb terrorism expert addressing European conference". Report from TV Hayat, Sarajevo, 1800 GMT, 5 January 2008. Via BBC Monitoring.
- "Brief Record". US Library of Congress. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
- "Report about Case Srbrenica (The First Part)" (PDF). slobodan-milosevic.org. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
- "Imaginary Massacres?", Anes Alic and Dragan Stanimirovic, Transitions Online, 2002
- "Imaginary Massacres?" TIME magazine, 11 September 2002
- "General guilty of Bosnia genocide". BBC News Online, 2 August 2001.
- "Serbs admit Srebrenica death toll". BBC News Online, 14 October 2004