Dokument #1348162
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
In a telephone interview on 9 January 1995,
a representative of the London-based War Resisters International,
an international pacifist network, provided the following
information. The obligation to perform military service, and the
subsequent possibility of serving on the front lines would be
unaffected by a reservist's or regular's mixed ethnic background.
There are periodic call-ups for military service and men under the
age of 40 would probably be called up every year.
In telephone interviews on 9 and 10 January
1995, a Zagreb representative of the Anti-War Campaign, a
non-governmental human rights organization with seven offices
throughout Croatia, provided the following information. There is no
exemption from military service on the basis of ethnicity, and all
regulars and reservists are required, if necessary, to go to the
front lines. The representative stated that there are provisions
for exemption for conscientious objectors, and that the government
is "fairly cooperative" in granting this exemption from military
service to young reservists. The representative added that former
regulars or reservists may be subject to repeated mobilization.
This response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
Anti-War Campaign, Zagreb. 10 January
1995. Telephone interview with representative.
_____. 9 January 1995. Telephone
interview with representative.
War Resisters International, London. 9
January 1995. Telephone interview with representative.