BLEIBURG-COMMEMORATION-Politika COMMEMORATION TO WW2 BLEIBURG VICTIMS HELD BLEIBURG, May 16 (Hina) - Wreaths were laid and respects were paid to the victims of one of the biggest tragedies in recent Croatian history at Austria's
Bleiburg field on Sunday under the auspices of the Croatian parliament.
BLEIBURG, May 16 (Hina) - Wreaths were laid and respects were paid to
the victims of one of the biggest tragedies in recent Croatian history
at Austria's Bleiburg field on Sunday under the auspices of the
Croatian parliament.#L#
Parliament President Vladimir Seks said in a speech the Bleiburg
tragedy showed there were no circumstances which could justify crimes
or those who committed them. "There is no way of hiding the truth and
historical facts," he said, adding that only a free people in their
free state could preserve the truth about their past and ensure their
own future.
Seks recalled that thousands of Croatian soldiers and civilians were
killed, without trials, at the Bleiburg field and on marches back to
the then Yugoslavia at the end of World War Two after the Allies had
turned them over to the Yugoslav partisan army. He added the former
communist authorities had tried to cover this up for decades.
Seks said that the Europe of today, with new members joining the EU,
was at the turn of two epochs, just like in 1945.
"On the road to the European Union, Croatia is reaffirming its
commitment to democracy and respect for human rights and freedoms
every day. Modern Croatia is also founded on anti-fascism which should
not be equated with communism, in whose name many crimes were
committed," Seks said, adding that Croatia rejected every form of
extremism and radicalism.
Speaking of recent Croatian history, he said the 1990s Homeland War
had been just and aimed at liberating the country from Serb
occupation.
"A people who forget their past often repeat their tragedies," Seks
concluded.
Mass was said by Lika-Senj bishop Mile Bogovic who stressed, among
other things, the need to research the truth.
The commemoration gathered about 10,000 people from Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina, including emigrants.
Speeches were also delivered by Josip Jurcevic on behalf of the
Honorary Bleiburg Platoon, Velimir Jukic, the chairman of the Bosnian
parliament's House of Peoples, and Idriz Efendi Besic on behalf of the
Islamic community in Croatia.
Wreaths were laid at the monument to the Bleiburg victims by a
Croatian parliamentary delegation headed by Seks, President Stjepan
Mesic's envoy Neven Ivak, Science, Education and Sports Minister
Dragan Primorac on behalf of the Croatian government, Croatian
Ambassador to Austria Drazen Vukov Colic, delegations of the Honorary
Bleiburg Platoon, the Bosnian House of Peoples, numerous NGOs and war
veterans associations.
Also today, a Croatian parliamentary delegation laid a wreath at the
monument to the victims of the aforementioned death marches in
Maribor, Slovenia.
(Hina) ha