‘Look! Green smoke! Muslim colour! It’s Muslim smoke! It should be red smoke – Serbian colour … proves you’re pro-Muslim!’ roared the inspectors, laughing their heads off and winking at Nick. They were enjoying themselves immensely.
‘Mike, for fuck’s sake! Get them to stop throwing stones … pitch is covered in FOD. It’ll be thrown up when we take off !’ George was hugely under-impressed with the proceedings. I grabbed one of the inspectors and urged him to tell the crowd to stop throwing stones. He shrugged his shoulders, ambled off half-heartedly and said something to the crowd, which responded with more hissing, booing and cries of MORION LAZE! It was hopeless. One thing was clear: Zvornik was the dead weight which would sink the day. I forgot about going to Srebrenica and resolved to stay with Nick in the hope of sweet-talking the Serbs before the Pumas reappeared. There was also the problem of Brian Hulls and Maggie O’Kane to resolve. As they hadn’t been carted off perhaps there was still a chance that we might slip them onto the Tuzla-bound Puma. There was just a small group of French soldiers left, one more lift with room for two journalists.
‘Nick! Who’s the boss here? Who is actually in charge?’
Nick was holding his own and they were half way through finishing with the third Sea King. ‘Colonel Pandjic. An air force colonel from Han Pijesak. He’s in one of the offices in the clubhouse. I think he’s had enough of the chaos out here!’
I climbed the steps to the journalists. ‘You two all right?’ I asked.
‘Not really …’ mumbled Hulls, ‘… they’ve arrested us.’
‘I’m aware of that. I’m going to try and have a chat with their boss. I can’t promise anything, but I’ll try.’ The pair of them were pretty uncommunicative.
‘No, they’re spies!’ Pandjic was adamant.
‘They’re not spies, Colonel. They’re journalists. They’re just doing their jobs.’
‘No! They’re spies. We’ve inspected the film and he was filming our positions.’ There wasn’t much I could say to that. That bit of it was true. But it wasn’t spying.
‘Look, Colonel, it was a mistake. They shouldn’t have been here. We can just throw them onto the French helicopter and fly them back to Tuzla. You can keep the film.’ It didn’t sound very convincing.
The Colonel sighed heavily. ‘It’s out of my hands. Pale has ordered me to hold them for questioning. They’ve got no press accreditation here and so an investigation has to be conducted. Sorry.’ I sensed that he’d have loved to be rid of them. He was as much a victim of old-style Communist bureaucracy, secrecy and paranoia as the two journalists. ‘They won’t come to any harm. If they’re innocent they’ll be released. But an investigation must take place.’
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