( Editorial: --> 9248 )
ZAGREB, July 22 (Hina) - The investigating judge at the Zagreb
County Court on Wednesday examined Vladimir Cvija, a witness in a
trail against Dinko Sakic.
Sakic was the commander of a Croatian World War Two concentration
camp in Jasenovac.
Cvija, born 1919, was arrested as a communist in Zagreb in May 1942
and was sent to Jasenovac. In spring 1943 he was transferred to a
concentration camp in Stara Gradiska, then returned to Jasenovac in
mid 1944, where he remained until January 15, 1941, when he was
exchanged in Pisarovina.
The witness said he had seen the accused twice at the Jasenovac
camp. Sakic was "dressed up" and was said to be "youthfully
ambitious and cruel", the witness said, but could not testify that
Sakic had committed or been present at a crime.
Cvija assessed the time at the Jasenovac camp while Sakic was
commander as a "golden age" for the inmates, as no mass killings
took place, the food was better, hygiene had improved, packages
could be received, even a camp orchestra was put up in which the
witness himself played.
Cvija spoke about mass killings of Jasenovac inmates in the autumn
of 1942, at the Granik location. He said he heard the people's cries
as he lived in the attic of a building for carpentry which had no
roof insulation.
The witness said he could not remember many things because he had
tried to forget a lot.
(hina) ha jn
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