A truck carrying coffins with the remains of 136 victims of Europe’s worst mass killing since the Holocaust: the 1995 Srebrenica massacre. <br /><br /> The recently identified remains are en route to a town in the east of Bosnia: their final resting place.<br /><br /> “I feel awful, especially because we waited for this for such a long time, 20 years,” said Mirza Bektic who will bury his brother. “Only a few of his bones were found.”<br /><br /> “I never found my father,” said Zijada Hajdarevic. “I buried my grandfather, my husband’s brothers, their children, my sister’s husband…”<br /><br /> Some 8,000 Muslim boys and men were slaughtered by Bosnian Serb forces during five days in 1995. <br /><br /> Two decades on, more than one thousand victims have yet to be found.<br /><br /> That lack of closure casts dark shadow over Bosnia. <br /><br /> Human remains are still being found scattered around the area’s farmland and forests. <br /><br /> Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend the commemoration on Saturday marking the massacre.