Dada Vujasinović | |
---|---|
Born |
Čapljina, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia |
10 February 1964
Died | 8 April 1994 Belgrade, Serbia, FR Yugoslavia |
(aged 30)
Education | University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology |
Occupation | Reporter for Duga |
Website | http://www.dadavujasinovic.com |
Radislava "Dada" Vujasinović (Serbian Cyrillic: Дада Вујасиновић; 10 February 1964 – 8 April 1994) was a Serbian journalist and reporter for the news magazine Duga, published in Belgrade. She covered the early stages of Yugoslav wars and frequently visited front lines, including the city of Sarajevo while it was under siege. In 1992 she announced that she would no longer report from battlefields because she could not bear writing about the destruction of cities and the killing of children.
She returned to Belgrade and started reporting on politics. One of her most famous pieces is a piece about Željko Ražnatović, aka Arkan, in which she describes how a criminal came to be promoted as a national prophet. The piece was written with much sarcasm and irony.
She was found dead in her apartment on 8 April 1994. The police ruled it a suicide, but most evidence disputes this. She was active the day before and made many plans for the future. The diaries of Ratko Mladić mentioned that he knew who murdered Dada and this may help reopen an investigation into her death. Serbian government began a review in January 2013 of several suspicious cases involving murders of journalists in the 1990s, including Dada Vujasinović, Slavko Ćuruvija, and Milan Pantić.
In 2014, Hleb Teater (Belgrade) created the performance "Dada - an Essay in Movement", based on Vujasinović's life, work and death.