1992

Wounded man from Maglaj, Zenica hospital
Zenica
I sat on the front steps of the Franciscan monastery in Jajce with Reijo, the Finnish writer I was working with, and we could hear Luna rockets flying overhead on their way to someplace. It was more of a sensation of something large and fast going over. A few days later we were in Zenica and a large number of people wounded in Maglaj were brought into the hospital. This man had a piece of metal in his head.
1993

Shelter at the power plant near Kakanj, Bosnia
Croats driven out of the Kakanj area by the seventh brigade and the 16th Krajisnici were savvy enough to read the situation in the Lasva Valley. A large group headed for the Kakanj electrical generating facility and begged the UN, or more accurately, the French Foreign Legion, for protection. The Legion was assigned to protect the power plant from those who would have otherwise wrecked it. They let the refugees in and made them as comfortable as possible. This was against UN policy, but no UN bureaucrat had the guts to protest. There were these huge rooms with pipes and generators with people sleeping all over the floor. If the Legionaires thought the media was a little too aggressive they would ask us to "be respectful." This war would have been over in two months if the conduct of it had been handed over to the British Army and the French Foreign Legion. With Otto von Hapsburg in charge

Croatian refugees near Kakanj, Bosnia
This man and his daughters were run out of their home near Kakanj. They found safety at the local electricity generating plant, which was being protected by the French Foreign Legion. The Legion made the large group of refugees as comfortable as possible. The Kakanj people were now safe from the Muslim extemists, and as long as the Foreign Legion could keep them, also safe from the Croatian extremists running the Lasva Valley.