Komasovic, who used to work in the farm owned by Todor Bukinac where the horses are now placed, accuses the owner Bukinac of starving the horses.
The paper's reporters also carried a story about neglected animals in the farm.
"The herd of underfed horses the newspaper crew has seen at the Novo Naselje farm seem to be left to shift for themselves. At the temperature of 40 centigrade, about 50 through-bred horses that are now skin and bones eat what they find. Some of them have open wounds that have not been treated," the paper reported.
Komasovic, who had first worked for the Lipik stud farm, had transported the horses from Croatia via Bosnia to Serbia in 1991 in order, he said, to save those animals from the war. A few days ago, he wrote to Croatian and Serbian officials urging them to help the animals.
In 2004, officials of the Croatian and Serbian agriculture ministries reached agreement on transferring back those Lippizaner horses to Lipik.
However, Todor Bukinac, did not accept the terms of the agreement as he had insisted on being reimbursed for keeping the horses on his farm.
Croatia insists that it should be given back 88 Lippizaner horse as so many horses had been taken from Lipik.
Lippizaners owe much of their fame to the centuries-year-old Royal Spanish Riding School in Vienna. The Lippizaner originated in the 16th century in southeastern Europe, the result of selective crossbreeding of Arab and Spanish breeds.