Victory and Exile: Operation Oluja Still Dividing Croatia and Serbia, 30 Years On
11 Articles
11 Articles
Victory and exile: Operation Oluja still dividing Croatia and Serbia, 30 years on
To Croatia and Serbia, Operation Oluja means very different things. For Croatians, it is a moment of victory and celebration. For Serbians, it brings memories of war crimes and forced displacement.
The blockaders from Niš issued a statement on the 30th anniversary of the criminal operation "Storm" and said that politicians, whom they do not divide into "Croatian" and "Serbian", are guilty of war and crimes and that they "do not deserve forgiveness".
Delegations from the Green-Left Front and the Movement of Free Citizens attended a commemoration on Sunday marking the 30th anniversary of Operation Storm, held in the village of Donji Žirovac, in the municipality of Dvor na Uni.
Thirty years after the Operation "Tormenta", thousands of Serbs remain without justice or recognition. Why does Croatia deny what happened?
Croatia celebrates on Tuesday the 30th anniversary of the end of Operation Storm, a military offensive that ended the rebel 'Serbian Republic of Krajina', which occupied one third of the country's territory, and marked the definitive independence of the country of the former Yugoslavia.
The main ceremony in Croatia on Victory, Homeland Gratitude and Veterans Day, as well as the 30th anniversary of the military operation Storm, was held in Knin today. The entire state leadership gathered in the city, which became a symbol of victory on August 5, 1995, and Prime Minister Andrej Plenković reminded in his address that they are still searching for 1,744 missing people.
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