"I have no reason to hide anything, regardless of the fact that this is a rigged process," Glavas told Hina on his way from Zagreb to Osijek.
"I will answer all of the judge's questions and defence is also the defence of dignity (...). I will prove that Osijek was not defended on crime, as Ivo Sanader and his clique would like to prove, but on 1,260 victims in this city on the Drava river," Glavas said.
The Croatian Parliament's Credentials and Privileges Commission stripped independent deputy Branimir Glavas of his parliamentary immunity on Monday following a request by the Chief Public Prosecutor's Office (DORH).
The request was prompted by a proposal from the Osijek County Prosecutor's Office, which suspects Glavas of involvement in the murders of Serb civilians in the eastern city of Osijek in late 1991.
The parliamentary commission decided that an investigation into the case could be launched and that Glavas may be placed in custody for fear of tampering with witnesses and considering the gravity of the crimes he is suspected of.
The County Court in Osijek reported earlier that investigating judge Mario Kovac would hear Glavas as early as this evening if Glavas returned from Zagreb and that he would decide whether to accept or overrule the request of the County State Prosecutor's Office to launch an investigation and place Glavas into custody.