BELGRADE, March 24. /TASS/. The North Atlantic Alliance has not yet been held accountable for its assault against Yugoslavia, but Serbs will never forget the atrocities against their homeland, Serbian Prime Minister Milos Vucevic said.
"On this day, March 24, 1999, Nineteen big ones attacked Serbia, violating international law and the decisions of the United Nations Security Council. For the next 78 days they ravaged our homeland, killed our children, damaged our bridges, factories, schools and hospitals, ruined our media... We still remember the sound of air raid sirens and unceasing explosions. NATO still enjoys impunity for this offense. We are a nation that always remembers its victims and its history. We keep the memory of all those who bravely defended our country and sacrificed their lives for freedom and for the future of our children," Vucevic said on his X social media page.
"Serbia is a free and proud country! We will forget NATO's crime only if we are dead! Glory and eternity to innocent victims! Serbia remembers the tragedy and mourns!" the prime minister pointed out.
NATO's aggression against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia began on March 24, 1999, and lasted 78 days. The main reason for the NATO offensive campaign, Operation Allied Force, was to prevent the genocide of the Albanian population in Kosovo.
According to NATO, during the operation, the aviation of NATO countries carried out 38,000 military flights, with over 10,000 of them aimed at delivering bombs.
According to Serbian information, 3,500 to 4,000 people were killed and about 10,000 others were injured as a result of the bombing. Two-thirds of these people were civilians. Material damage from strikes amounted to 100 billion dollars. During the three months of bombing of Yugoslavia by NATO, 15 tons of depleted uranium had been dropped in shells on the territory of Serbia. After that, the country took the first place in the number of cancer cases in Europe. During the first ten years after the bombings, 30,000 people contracted cancer, 10,000 to 18,000 of whom died.