Magazine "Rolling Stone”, along with several investigative journalists have published a detailed investigation on one of the many war crimes committed thirty years ago by Arkan's tigers.

According to Bosnian media, Telegrafi reports, in the text of the three investigative journalists, documents have been published that are said to have not been published before, proving that one of Arkan's tigers was active as a DJ - many years after their crimes.


In fact, Srđan Golubović has been "spinning records" in European festivals and clubs for the last decades, writes Rolling Stone magazine.

"Dzenita Mulabdić fell to the ground, the sound of gunfire was heard. A 20-year-old pregnant Bosnian woman and her husband Muhamed were hiding behind a closed basement door with their child. Belgrade commandos jumped over the fence and entered their house in Bijeljina (Bosnia and Herzegovina)," the magazine writes.

They refer to April 2, 1992, the beginning of the war in Bosnia, when Arkani entered Bijeljina with his paramilitary forces.

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"In the early 1990s, Yugoslavia fell apart. Serbia's ultra-nationalist president, Slobodan Milosevic, capitalized on the myths of 'Greater Serbia' and the mistreatment of Serbs. Yugoslav republics declared their independence one after another, including Bosnia and Herzegovina. Milosevic's propaganda encouraged Serbs to fight, and Arkan's men carried that message into the war," this magazine writes, according to Telegraph.

And American photographer Ron Haviv recorded the penetration of Arkan's units into Bijeljina and the carnage they wrought on that occasion.

Haviv previously met the Tigers in Croatia, where he photographed them in destroyed Vukovar.

A particularly popular photograph of Arkan was one of him posing in front of his men in uniform with a tiger cub in one hand and a gun in the other.

Thus, on April 2, 1992, Haviv was allowed to film Tigers in Bijeljina, Telegrafi reports.

Award-winning photographer Haviv took some of the first photographs showing visible war crimes in the Bosnian war.

Among them is a photo of Arkan's men kicking a body lying on the ground.

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Haviv hoped that these photos would alarm the world public and bring the perpetrators to justice.

But even today, 30 years after the massacre in Bijeljina, many of Arkan's tigers still roam freely around the world.

One of them actually leads a public life and you can meet him in European clubs, writes the magazine.

Sasha, a former techno music enthusiast, now in his forties, who often attended Belgrade demonstrations in the nineties, and other electronic fans did not know at the time that one of the promising young DJs on the scene , Srđan Golubović, previously wore the uniform of the Arkan Tigers.

"The local media and the public will accuse him of being the young man in uniform who was photographed by Haviv in 1992, kicking the bloody body of Tife Shabanovic."

According to some sources, members of the Arcane Tigers called him Max. At the Belgrade holidays, they called him "Captain Max".

"At events and concerts there was DJ Max, with whom he still performs today, although his performances are not so frequent anymore," writes Rolling Stone magazine.

Golubovic was, as some call him, a "weekend warrior."

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There is a story, says an acquaintance, that Golubovic was once transferred by helicopter from the war to a club in Belgrade and that he returned to Bosnia after the event.

Golubovic was a co-owner of Ultra Groove Records. He performed in clubs in Belgrade and in venues across Serbia, including the EXIT festival.

However, he has declined several interview requests to respond to allegations that he participated in the mass killings in Bijeljina.

"I don't agree that my name or photo is mentioned in your article," Golubovic replied via Viber.

Despite everything, the magazine in question points out, Srđan Golubović walks freely around Belgrade.

He continues to perform.

But the interviewee of the magazine, Xhenita Mulabdiq, states that Golubovic will get what he deserves.

"I don't think he sleeps peacefully. But he's not the only one." /Telegrafi/