Bosnia arrested five ethnic Serbs on Tuesday for suspected involvement in the killing of more than 60 Muslim civilians, including children, during the country's 1990s war, state prosecutors said.
The five men, former members of the Bosnian Serb police and army, are accused of taking part in a deadly attack on Zaklopaca village in eastern Bosnia on May 16, 1992.
A day after the massacre the victims were buried in mass graves, the prosecutors' statement said, adding that the remains of 54 of them have so far been found.
The suspects, now aged between 51 and 70, were arrested in eastern Bosnia in the municipalities of Vlasenica, where the attack took place, and Milici.
A sixth suspect was arrested last week after questioning before a war crimes tribunal in Sarajevo, where he was being tried in another war crimes case.
The attack victims were among 2,600 Muslims from Vlasenica who were killed during Bosnia's 1992-1995 inter-ethnic war, according to victims' associations.
Bosnia's war between its Croats, Muslims and Serbs claimed around 100,000 lives.

