The report continues by outlining Europe's direct response to the war in Bosnia. It is explained how by April of 1992, frustration with the inability to understand the conflict caused mediators, peacekeepers, aid workers, and journalists to leave Sarajevo. General helplessness of the European Community to solve the Bosnia conflict is then outlined by stating that the organization which holds itself responsible for European stability was the first to leave Bosnia, immediately followed by UN forces whose headquarters for Croatia were set up in Sarajevo. It is then explained that the Red Cross left after one of their convoys was ambushed, killing their new Sarajevo representative. The report states that more journalists and cameramen were killed or wounded in Croatia and Bosnia than in any other war. According to the report, the leaving of international monitors resulted in even worst shelling of Sarajevo, which was captured only by SKY News, and which shocked the world. The report then outlines Western efforts to find a solution for the Bosnia crisis, beginning with an act of political showmanship where French President Francois Mitterand toured the streets of Sarajevo with Bosnian President Alija Izetbegović. The report states that instead of ending the war, the world chose to send in peacekeeping troops to support the humanitarian aid effort, which the international community decided to make in Bosnia. UN soldiers were to control the Sarajevo airport, and escort the food, medicine, and clothing shipped into Sarajevo. The presence of UN soldiers is explained as not resulting in the end of the siege, but rather a blaze of publicity as politicians, such as British parliament member Douglas Heard, who flew into Sarajevo and then disappeared into armored vehicles for talks with warring leaders. According to the report, these talks went nowhere and no cease-fire was ever held. The report then details the London Conference, which was organized by Britain’s Prime Minister John Major who organized the UN and most of Europe for a two-day conference dealing with Bosnia. The only results of the conference were that one mediator, Lord Carrington, was replaced by two new ones: Cyrus Vance for the UN, and Lord David Owen for the EU. The report then gives an outline of the trouble humanitarian aid distributors have experienced in Bosnia. At the end of the summer an incident where an Italian cargo flight was shot down while leaving Sarajevo is given as example of how susceptible to attack the lightly armed UN troops are. The report explains that inside Sarajevo, people have been given aid roughly once every two weeks, even though both the queue and the bureaucratic procedures are lengthy. It is further noted that even though not enough food is given out, Sarajevo is lucky compared to other areas of Bosnia where many of the UN aid convoys were halted by Bosnian Serb who would not let the UN feed Bosnian Serb enemies. According to the report, some of the walls were created by Bosnian Serb commanders, other by widows, mothers, and sisters who’ve lost husbands, sons, and brothers. Srebrenica is given as example of being hit the hardest because it was cut off for seven months. It is explained that even after an agreement was reached with the Bosnian Serb military and political leadership, it proved worthless for three days as local Bosnian Serb commanders refused to let the trucks go through and organized another wailing barricade dressed in black. The report concludes that the insistence of Western leaders on a policy based only on talks and delivery of humanitarian aid resolved nothing, as food aid was always too little and too late, and the case fire was never adhered to. The report shows Sarajevo's firemen turn up regardless of the shelling and the snipers; but even as they overcome a fire on one side of a building, another fire starts at the other side. The report finishes by stating that the world keeps looking on as Sarajevo and its most prized treasures disappear in flames. Statements by Britain’s Prime Minister John Major, Lord David Owen, a female civilian, UN aid worker Larry Hollingworth, and UN Commander in Bosnia General Philip Morrillon. Other footage available: landscapes of Sarajevo, UN vehicles with bullet holes in their windshields, destroyed UN headquarters in Sarajevo, destroyed UN trucks, Sarajevo being bombed at dusk, UN trucks entering Sarajevo, UN soldiers unloading a cargo plane, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milošević at the London Conference, UN cargo plane landing in Sarajevo, the remains of the Italian plane that was shot down, Bosnian Serb women wailing at a gravesite, UN trucks lined up in front of Srebrenica, residents looking on as their apartment building is burning, the body of a dead child, and Bosnian TV footage of the National Library up in flames.