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Italian prosecutors have formally identified and summoned an 80-year-old man as the first suspect in an investigation into alleged "sniper tourism" carried out during the 1992-95 siege of Sarajevo.
The Milan office opened the probe in November 2025 after a complaint by author Ezio Gavazzeni, spurred by the 2022 documentary Sarajevo Safari.
Authorities say foreigners, including Italians and nationals from several European countries, paid organized groups to shoot at civilians from hills around Sarajevo; payments were reported to have reached the equivalent of €80,000-€100,000.
The elderly suspect, a former truck driver from near Pordenone, has been called to testify and faces multiple counts described by Italian media as premeditated or repeated voluntary homicide, with prosecutors considering aggravating "abhorrent motives." Carabinieri searches reportedly uncovered several legally owned firearms.
The inquiry is understood to have links to parallel probes in France, Switzerland and Belgium; prior testimony has alleged participants from the United States and Russia and suggested awareness by Serbian services, which deny involvement.
Some 11,000 civilians were killed by shelling and sniper fire around Sarajevo during the war.
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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)Italy probes suspect in Sarajevo ‘sniper tourism’ during Bosnia war: Report



















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