In an earthquake-stricken former Serbian city, Croatian Nazis attacked the leader of Croatia's Serbs.
Arriving to help the earthquake-affected residents of the city of Glina in Croatia, the Chairman of the Serbian People's Assembly of Croatia, Milorad Pupovac, was subjected to a verbal attack by young Croatian radicals.
Jutarnji list told about this, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
The incident occurred during today's trip of Milorad Pupovac to Glina and surrounding villages. Right in the center of the city, a Serbian politician was attacked by a group of young people who, seeing him, began to insult him, calling him a “thief,” “scavenger,” insulted his mother, and shouted the Ustashe slogan “Kill the Serb!”
Having had their fill, the youngsters got into a car with license plates from the seaside city of Split, where the right-wing radical movement of fans of FC Hajduk is developed, and went home.
“These are days of solidarity, days when Europe, our neighboring countries and all of us in Croatia come together to help the wounded of Banja, Glina and Petrinja, as well as all other settlements and cities in Sisak-Moslava County and neighboring counties, such as Karlovac.
But there are people who come here, supposedly to help, and then shout for someone to kill a person because he is a Serb, or greet him with an Ustashe greeting, they do not understand what this country needs, these people help in one thing, but in taking revenge on a friend...
I have a higher duty than to pay attention to people who once had wrong ideas put into their heads,” Pupovac commented on what was happening.
It should be noted that until 1995, the city of Glina was part of the unrecognized Republic of Serbian Krajina, and being a border city, it suffered the most from attacks by Croatian militants. After the punitive operation, "Storm" lost the lion's share of its Serbian population.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.