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This is a list of massacres of ethnic Bosniaks.
| Name | Date | Location | Perpetrators | Victims (highest estimate) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Šahovići massacre | 9-10 November 1924 | Šahovići | Orthodox Christian mob | 900 |
| Genocide of Bosniaks in World War II | 1941-45 | Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sandžak | c. 100,000[1] | |
| Artovac massacre | 28
June 1941 |
Avtovac | 47[2] | |
| Drvar massacre | 27 July 1941 | Drvar | 200[3] | |
| Višegrad massacres (1941) | July–August 1941 | Višegrad | Serb villagers | 500[4] |
| Berkovići massacre | 26-28 August 1941 | Berkovići | 300[5][6] | |
| Zaklopača massacre | August 1941 | Srebrenica | 81[7] | |
| Plana masssacre | 3 September 1941 | Plana | 425[8] | |
| Kulen Vakuf massacre | 6-8 September 1941 | Kulen Vakuf | c. 3,000 (captured soldiers and civilians)[9] | |
| Rogatica massacre | October 1941-January 1942 | Rogatica | 2,000[10] | |
| Prača massacre | Mid November 1941 | Prača | 63[10] | |
| Koraj massacre | 28 November 1941 | Koraj, near Brčko | 100+ | |
| Čajniče massacre | December 1941 | Čajniče | 418[11] | |
| Divin massacre | December 1941 | Divin | 423[11] | |
| Sopotnik massacre | December 1941 | Sopotnik, near Zvornik | 86[12] | |
| Foča massacre (1941) | 5 December 1941–January 1942 | Foča | 2,000[13][14] | |
| Goražde massacre | 30 December 1941 – 26 January 1942 | Goražde | 2,050[11][15] | |
| Žepa massacre | late 1941 | Žepa | c. 300[16] | |
| Čelebić massacre | January 1942 | Čelebić | 54[16] | |
| Srebrenica massacre (1942) | January 1942 | Srebrenica and surrounding areas | c. 1,000[17] | |
| Višegrad massacre (1942) | January 1942 | Višegrad | 1,000+[16] | |
| Drakan massacre | 3 March 1942 | Drakan | 42[17] | |
| Resnik massacre | 5 March 1942 | Resnik | 51[10] | |
| Foča massacre (1942) | August 1942 | Foča | c. 3,000[4][14] | |
| Ustikolina massacre | August 1942 | Ustikolina | 2,500[6] | |
| Bijelo Polje massacres | January 1943 | Bijelo Polje | c. 1,000 | |
| Massacres in Pljevlja, Priboj, Čajniče and Foča | January–February 1943 | Pljevlja, Priboj, Čajniče, Foča districts and surrounding villages | c. 9,200[18][19] | |
| Bukovica massacre | 4-7 February 1943 | Bukovica, Pljevlja | 576+ | |
| Kasidoli massacre | February 5, 1943 | Kasidoli, Priboj | 227[20] | |
| Goražde massacre (1943) | March 1943 | Goražde | 500[21] | |
| Višegrad massacre (1943) | 5 October 1943 | Višegrad | 2,000+[22] | |
| Goažde massacre (1944) | May 1944 | Goražde | c. 50[23] | |
| Bosnian genocide | 1992-1995 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | c. 34,000[24] | |
| Sanski Most ethnic cleansing | 1992-1995 | Sanski Most | 842[25] | |
| Doboj ethnic cleansing (1992) | April–October 1992 | Doboj | 322 | |
| Bijeljina massacre | 1-2 April 1992 | Bijeljina | 78 | |
| Foča ethnic cleansing | 7 April 1992-January 1994 | Foča | 2,707 | |
| Snagovo massacre | 29 April 1992 | Snagovo | 36 | |
| Vlasenica | May–September 1992 | Vlasenica | 279[26] | |
| Glogova massacre | 9 May 1992 | Glogova | 64 | |
| Suha massacre | 10 May 1992 | Suha | 38[27] | |
| Zaklopača massacre | 16 May 1992 | Zaklopača and Milići | 83 | |
| Nova Kasaba massacre | 17 May 1992 | Nova Kasaba | 29[28] | |
| Zvornik massacre | April–July 1992 | Zvornik | 700 (includes some Romani civilians) | |
| Višegrad massacres | April–August 1992 | Višegrad | 3,000 | |
| Bosanska Jagodina massacre | 26 May 1992 | Crnčići | Yellow Wasps, |
17 |
| Zijemlje massacre | June 1992 | Zijemlje | 100[29] | |
| Bijeli Potok massacre | 1 June 1992 | Bijeli Potok | Yellow Wasps, |
675 |
| Ahatovići massacre | 14 June 1992 | Ahatovići (Novi Grad Sarajevo) | 47 | |
| Pionirska Street fire | 14 June 1992 | Višegrad | 59; victims were women and children locked in a house and burned alive | |
| Paklenik massacre | 15 June 1992 | Rogatica | 50 | |
| Bikavac fire | 27 June 1992 | Bikavac | 60; victims were mostly women and children, burned alive in their homes by Serb troops | |
| Biljani massacre | 10 July 1992 | Biljani | 150[30] | |
| Barimo massacre | 2 August 1992 | Barimo | 26; village burnt down, Islamic religious buildings destroyed | |
| Mičivode massacre | 20 September 1992 | Mičivode | 42 | |
| Novoseoci massacre | 22 September 1992 | Novoseoci | 45; local mosque destroyed, many women raped | |
| Sjeverin massacre | 22 October 1992 | Sjeverin | White Eagles | 16 |
| Grabovica massacre | November 1992 | Grabovica, Kotor Varoš | 150[31] | |
| Duša killings | 7 January 1993 | Duša | 7; Bosniak homes burnt down following HVO takeover of the village | |
| Ahmići massacre | 16 April 1993 | Ahmići | 120; nearly all Bosniak homes burned down, several Islamic religious buildings destroyed, 2 mosques mined deliberately and 1 destroyed with explosives laid at the base of its minaret | |
| Sovići and Doljani killings | 17 April 1993 | Sovići and Doljani | 18; Bosniak homes and mosques burned down | |
| Zenica massacre | 19 April 1993 | Zenica | 16 | |
| Kiseljak massacre | 12-16 June 1993 | Kiseljak | 78 | |
| Vrbanja massacre | 17-28 July 1993 | Vrbanja (Bugojno) | 45 | |
| Mokronoge massacre | 10 August 1993 | Mokronoge, near Tomislavgrad | 9 | |
| Stupni Do massacre | 23 October 1993 | Stupni Do | 37; several Muslim women raped, children and men beaten, robbed of every possession, some burned alive | |
| Markale massacres | 5 February 1994 | Sarajevo | 68 | |
| Tuzla massacre | 25 May 1995 | Tuzla | 71 | |
| Srebrenica massacre | 11-31 July 1995 | Srebrenica | 8,372; only massacre in Europe recognized as genocide since the Second World War | |
| Trnova massacre | 20 September 1995 | Trnova, Sanski Most | 11[32] |