buried during Monday's ceremony, alongside 1,300 already interred there. Remains collected from 42 mass graves and stored in 7,000 body bags still await identification. While Serbian President Boris Tadic was due to attend the ceremony, many Serbs in Bosnia and Serbia play down the crime. "Still, Mr Tadic needs to explain back home what happened here and that Serbian troops took part in the massacre. And he needs to make sure that Serbia does not offer refuge and support to Mladic and other war criminals," said Munira Subasic of the Mothers of Srebrenica and Zepa Enclaves. One day after the Srebrenica commemoration, Serbs in the neighbouring town of Bratunac planned to unveil a monument to what they say are more than 3,000 Serb victims of the war. Srebrenica, mainly Muslim before the war, now has a Serb majority. Only a quarter of its pre-war population of 36,000 now lives there, in difficult conditions.