The two presidents were accompanied by Croatian parliamentary deputies, Croatian Justice Minister Drazen Bosnjakovic, representatives of the Serb minority and county officials.
The wreaths were laid at the local cemetery where 15 victims, killed on 11 and 12 December 1991 by Croatian Army members, were buried. The victims were Serbs and one Hungarian. Three more victims of the Paulin Dvor war crime were buried in Bosnia and another one in Trpinja, a village near Paulin Dvor.
Nikola Ivankovic, a member of Croatian Army reserve brigades, was convicted and sentenced to 15 years in jail for the Paulin Dvor case. In the retrial, indictee Enes Viteskic was acquitted of the charges for the Paulin Dvor war crimes, but the prosecution has the right to appeal.