Serbia’s War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office indicted four high-ranking Croatian Army officers for alleged war crimes. They are accused of shelling a refugee column during the military Operation Storm on 7 and 8 August 1995.
“These indictments have occurred despite our years-long attempts to convince them not to play with fire and that it will cost them. I cannot be more polite, I hope they are listening to me. Leave that alone. Otherwise, they should not be surprised by reactions by right-wing lawmakers in the Sabor. The problem is that the majority of people in Croatia think like that,” Milanović told reporters.
Asked by N1 television if he was afraid of being indicted for his speech in Glina in 1995 as a possible response to Serbia indicting four Croatian generals, Serbia’s President Aleksandar vučić said “the Serbs didn’t kill Croatians, it was the Croatians who killed Serbs.”
Milanović called on Vučić “not to do that.” “I can keep things rhetorically under control to a certain measure. But then this comes from Belgrade and how then can I explain that we pursue a well-intentioned policy?”
Milanović said that these moves by Serbia were “unintelligent behaviour” by a state that is “impoverished and degraded,” and that does not have its status resolved anywhere.
“They don’t want to join NATO, OK. They will never join the European Union this way. Who needs this? Who is pursuing this policy? Which citizens there is the prosecutor’s office addressing?” Milanović said.
He went on to say that he is convinced that 75% of citizens would support his and the Prime Minister Andrej Plenković’s common stance about Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and that just as many people in Croatia believe that “Croatian prosecutorial authorities should indict Vučić.”
Milanović however said that that should not be done because Vučić is “being tactical.” “And then we hear that nobody killed anyone, but instead the Croatians killed Serbs,” he added.
“I am sorry for every Serb who was killed. They need not have been. But a huge majority of Serbs fled straight away. That is a fact. Even the tribunal in The Hague confirmed that,” said Milanović.
“Serb brethren, come to your senses,” Milanović said, adding that he would probably now be proclaimed an “Ustasha.” “Last week I was a Serb.”
“We have to be clear and just in our relations with Serbia, articulate what we expect of them,” he added
Last week the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts called on Serbia to stop inciting animosity against Croatia and prosecuting Croatian citizens, to renounce Greater Serbia propaganda and respect its obligations in line with agreements, such as protecting the reciprocal rights of the Croat minority and ensuring for Croats free political and cultural organising, as Croatia ensures for the Serb minority.
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