Top Stories
Search for tornado survivors
Twenty children are among 91 killed when a huge tornado ripped through an Oklahoma City suburb leaving the area looking more like a war zone.
- Explainer: How do tornadoes form?
- Australia 'should help Dubai fraud man'
- 'One in five kids' talk to strangers online
- Syria, Israel exchange fire over border
- Treasury stands by budget forecasts
- Obama to take first major Africa trip
- Saudi Arabia executes five Yemenis
- Dagestan blasts kill four
- Explainer: Ocean energy in Australia
-
-
Are cracked iPhone screens a thing?
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Cross Promotions with Andy Park
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Male-dominated industries attracting women
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Live betting odds to be banned on free TV
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Unions call for minimum wage rise
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
PM vows to help Aussie jailed in Dubai
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Oklahoma tornado toll rises above 90
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Crisis summitt hopes to solve suicide issue
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Custody Hotline facing the axe
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Dante's Inferno inspires Dan Brown's latest novel
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Powerful tornado rips through Oklahoma
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Insight: Arranged Marriage preview
17 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 1
20 May 13 | 10:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 2
20 May 13 | 10:00
-
-
Insight: Arranged Marriage - Naveen on a suitable age to marry
16 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
SBS 10:30 News - 20 May part 3
20 May 13 | 8:00
-
-
Living Black: S18 Ep11 - Bourke Crime preview
16 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Oklahoma tornado toll rises above 90
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Syrian forces bombard rebel held city of Qusayr
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Childhood ADHD linked to adult obesity
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Bodies recovered from Oklahoma school
21 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
On the ground in Oklahoma City
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Dante's Inferno inspires Dan Brown's latest novel
21 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Robbie Deans extended interview
20 May 13 | 5:00
-
-
Syria refugees face Lebanon sanitation issues
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Lebanon provides schooling for Syria refugees
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Denmark claims Eurovision Contest
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Do companies have the right to patent human genes?
20 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Abbott's budget reply: Full speech
16 May 13 | 28:00
-
-
Stem cell breakthrough causes a stir
16 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Australia halts transfers to Afghan jail
16 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
GP bills 'may rise' under budget changes
15 May 13 | 1:00
-
-
Federal budget: SBS gets extra funding
15 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
Federal budget: What Australians think
15 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Mastectomy patient shares life experience
15 May 13 | 7:00
-
-
Budget analysis: Shane Oliver extended interview
15 May 13 | 7:00
-
-
Behind the scenes of the federal budget
14 May 13 | 0:00
-
-
Photography exhibition chronicles Indigenous culture
13 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
Rooftop beekeeping on the rise in Australia
13 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
NDIS : Rosemary King extended interview
13 May 13 | 3:00
-
-
Indigenous thriller opens SSF: Aaron Pedersen Interview
09 May 13 | 2:00
-
-
In Conversation: High Speed Rail
09 May 13 | 4:00
Radio News Bulletin
- Latest Bulletin
Tue 21st May 2013 6:41PM - Featured Stories
Wed 30th Nov -0001 12:00AM - TB concerns spread in Torres Strait
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM - The science beneath the vaccination debate
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM - Australians 'should make plans for final days'
Tue 21st May 2013 12:00AM
Blogs
More Blogs-
-
End of parity: Experts say A$ heading south
17 May 2013, 18:13 PM
-
-
The winning costs of Eurovision 2013
14 May 2013, 17:40 PM
-
-
Benghazi questions just won't go away
14 May 2013, 8:25 AM
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Video of US plane crash in Afghanistan believed to be authentic
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- Xenophon warns of Malaysia election fraud
- Malaysian elections expose serious divides
- Labor to take disability tax rise to poll
- Family's plea: Aussie facing Saudi terrorism charges
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- India sex crime laws not tough enough: UN
- Will Malaysians vote for change?
- At-a-glance: Same-sex marriage around the world
- Is Tony Abbott wrong to talk of 'illegals'?
- Comment: Declining sense of grief over Anzac
- Murrawarri people take sovereignty campaign to UN
- Australia rejects calls to boycott Sri Lanka meet
- Comment: Why are we debating 'blackface' in 2013?
- Made in Bangladesh 'a label of concern'
- Analysis: 'Illegals' and the erosion of empathy
- Polio survivor: I wish there had been a vaccine
- How young is too young to change sex?
Promote Advertisement
Srebrenica outcome uncertain in Bosnia
As Bosnia voted in local polls on Sunday, all eyes were on the eastern town of Srebrenica, where 8,000 Muslim men were massacred in 1995.
ercegovina, Oct 08 AFP - As Bosnia voted in local polls on Sunday, all eyes were on the eastern town of Srebrenica, where 8,000 Muslim men were massacred in 1995, amid fears that Serbs could take power in the once Muslim-majority city.
New electoral rules have paved the way for the Serbs to win office in Srebrenica, a move that has fuelled inter-ethnic disputes in the town that became a gruesome symbol of Bosnia's 1992-95 war.
But the outcome of the vote was still uncertain as the state electoral commission said it would delay its projections on preliminary final results till Monday at (midnight AEDT).
Nevertheless, local electoral commission official Nemir Alivukovic told AFP that the Serb mayoral candidate Vesna Kocovic was slightly ahead, but insisted that almost one third of total ballots cast were yet to be counted.
However, the Muslim candidate, incumbent mayor Camil Durakovic, said he was ahead of Kocovic, insisting that votes remaining to be counted were mostly from Muslims living abroad, securing his victory.
Durakovic, himself a massacre survivor, said Sunday's vote would be "the most important one since the end of the (1992-1995) war" in Bosnia.
In his tiny campaign office in the centre of the once flourishing mining town, the 33-year-old Durakovic said the vote "is not a fight for my personal victory".
"This is a fight between two politics that dominate our country: those denying genocide and those who do not, between good and evil."
Although Bosnian President Milorad Dodik, who visited Srebrenica during the election campaign, has denied the 1995 massacre constituted genocide, Kocevic avoided the term while acknowledging that war crimes had been committed.
"Muslims have nothing to fear if I win, and I am convinced I am able to do more to rebuild confidence between the two communities," Kocevic told AFP.
Some 14,000 registered voters are divided almost equally between Muslims and Serbs.
Bosnian Serb forces executed some 8,000 Muslim men and boys after they captured the town in July 1995. Two international courts have ruled the massacre a genocide.
The Muslims who survived were expelled and most of them never returned to Srebrenica, which now lies in the Serb-dominated part of the Balkan country.
For almost 17 years, Srebrenica Muslims who fled the town were allowed to vote in local elections, assuring them of a Muslim mayor.
But this year, they have been stripped of that right after voting laws were reformed, prompting fears that Serbs, who have a slight majority in the town, can now vote in their candidate as mayor.
Muslim retiree Hasan Mesanovic, 64, said of the vote: "What the Serbs failed to obtain with their ethnic cleansing, by genocide, they would do now if they win."
VideoNEW
Podcasts
Blogs


