Bosnia Wants Croatia To Prosecute Operation Flash Commanders

Total Croatia News

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Patrik Macek / PIXSELL
Patrik Macek / PIXSELL

This was confirmed by the ministry’s state-secretary, Josip Salapić, to Nova TV on Saturday evening.

He said the ministry would forward the cases to the State Attorney’s Office, which would decide in an independent investigation what to do about them.

“We are confident that in the next few days, the State Attorney’s Office, in line with the law, will inform the public as to what exactly this is about,” he added.

“The historical facts about the Homeland War, all our liberation operations, all our soldiers, the army, are under special protection and a special national interest. As a responsible state and government, we can’t allow the Homeland War to be criminalised nor bringing into question any legal, constitutional and internationally legal Croatian Armed Forces military operation in the liberation of Croatian territory,” said Salapić.

According to Nova TV, the Bosnian Prosecutor’s Office list names 14 senior Croatian officers, including wartime commander generals Pavao Miljavac, Mladen Markač, Marijan Mareković, Davor Domazet Lošo and Luka Džanko, as well as deceased generals Petar Stipetić, Imra Agotić and Ivan Basarac.

“I heard it’s about Flash, but I have no idea what the war crime would be. In Flash, we didn’t cross the Croatian border,” said retired general Vinko Vrbanac.

Miljavac said Flash “was a legitimate Croatian Army operation and there were no special intentions to endanger BiH.”

“They are getting into what they shouldn’t be. We helped them a lot and when they needed it most, and they should be grateful for everything the Croatian Army did to help the neighbouring BiH,” said Džanko, adding that this “is all orchestrated.”

“This is all hear-say. In my opinion, it’s even politically motivated given Croatia’s initiative to help Croats in BiH a little. Even the Pelješac Bridge,” Miljavac said, adding, “I know about these indictments, they are 15 years old. Why now?”

President Zoran Milanović said on Thursday those were unproven acts and that Croatia would protect its wartime commanders.

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