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ANOTHER DEBATE ON HOMELAND WAR OPENED IN SABOR

ZAGREB, Feb 27 (Hina) - Italian minority MP Furio Radin's claim that Croatian Serbs were subjected to ethnic cleansing in the first half of the 1990s opened yet another debate about the Homeland War in the Croatian parliament on Friday.
ZAGREB, Feb 27 (Hina) - Italian minority MP Furio Radin's claim that Croatian Serbs were subjected to ethnic cleansing in the first half of the 1990s opened yet another debate about the Homeland War in the Croatian parliament on Friday.#L# "I will now say something that some people may not like, and that is that not only Jews, Roma, Italians and Germans were subjected to ethnic cleansing during or in the wake of World War II, but Serbs, too, were (subjected to ethnic cleansing) in the first half of the 1990s," Radin said on behalf of the minority club of deputies during a discussion about a draft state budget for 2004. Anto Djapic of the Croatian Party of Rights (HSP) reacted to the statement, requesting that the chairman of the session, Darko Milinovic of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), reprimand Radin. Claiming that he had overheard Radin's statement, Milinovic ordered a 20-minute break, after which Djapic said that this was the gravest accusation about the Homeland War and the creation of the Croatian state uttered in the parliament. He requested the HDZ to voice its position on Radin's statement, as the strongest parliamentary party whose government was supported by minority deputies, and that other minority deputies on whose behalf Radin spoke distance themselves from his statement. Parliament President Vladimir Seks said Radin had suggested that Serbs in Croatia in the 1990s were the victims of the Croatian state policy, which he resolutely dismissed. He called on Radin to explain his statement and to refrain from provoking situations in which the parliament was forced to react. Radin said that his statement represented his personal opinion and not that of the minority club of deputies and that he did not want to make any blanket accusations, but only state the fact that 300,000 citizens had disappeared from Croatia and never returned. A representative of the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS), Milorad Pupovac, said that "a discussion on such a painful issue should be approached seriously out of respect for the victims" and that "if that discussion is opened in the Sabor, it will not be academic and scientific but exclusively political". At Pupovac's and Seks's urging, the MPs resumed the debate on the draft budget. (Hina) rml sb

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