From: Boris Pribich                                      6/3/95
        (Address deleted for posting)

To: Elton Gallegly, Congressman Fax: Washington D.C.

Dear Mr. Gallegly,

I am a Serbian American from western Slavonia where several weeks ago Croats massacred an undetermined number of my family. The U.N. did nothing to stop them, just stated that Croats committed atrocities.

Being a matter of record that all sides are committing atrocities in this civil war, no side can legally claim recognition. Any country that recognizes Bosnian or Croatian governments is violating the Human Rights of Serbs and must answer for it in a court of law.

Pressing Yugoslavia to recognize Bosnia is against this country's own law. Without any national or security interests, taking sides vio- lates the Civil Rights of Serbs. Aggravating circumstances of offering President Milosevic lifting of illegally imposed sanctions triples the legal liability by adding bribery based on fraud and deceit.

In order to protect my rights under the Constitution of the United States, I will take legal action against anyone tampering with those rights. Several days ago, on CNN, Tom Lantos referred to Dr. Karadzic as a "local thug". Please inform that jackass that Dr. Karadzic is a democratically elected official and the only defender of Human and Ci- vil Rights of Serbs isolated from Yugoslavia under U.S. pressure.

United States policy on Bosnia must be democratic, able to survive any legal challenge, instead of one based on rhetoric of "high ranking U.S. officials speaking on conditions of anonymity". The policy on Cy- prus as set forth in 22 USCS § 2373 is a good model.

While writing this letter, I heard jackass Gingrich refer to Serbs as thugs. Millions of Serbian Americans have ethnic and family ties to those "thugs". Ask your colleagues to take the business of policy mak- ing seriously and stop taking sides. That is not the American way.

Sincerely,

Boris Pribich
[signature]

cc: Senator Dianne Feinstein, Washington D.C. Senator Barbara Boxer, San Francisco, Cal. Dr. Radovan Karadzic, President, Pale, via Tanjug Cabinet of President Milosevic, Belgrade, via Tanjug Serbian American Affairs Council, Washington D.C. Yugoslav Embassy, Washington D.C. White House comment Fax, Washington D.C.

Serbian-American Civil Rights Unlimited
documenting Jewish Genocides on Serbs