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{{Short description|1991 massacre of civilians in Voćin, Croatia}}
{{good article}}
{{About|massacre against Croat civilians in 1991||Voćin massacre (disambiguation)}}
{{About|massacre against Croat civilians in 1991||Voćin massacre (disambiguation)}}
{{good article}}
{{Infobox civilian attack
{{Infobox civilian attack
|title = Voćin massacre
|title = Voćin massacre
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|motive=[[Anti-Catholicism]], [[anti-Croat sentiment]], [[Greater Serbia]], [[Serbianisation]]
|motive=[[Anti-Catholicism]], [[anti-Croat sentiment]], [[Greater Serbia]], [[Serbianisation]]
|timezone=
|timezone=
|type=[[Summary execution]]s, [[ethnic cleansing ]]
|type=[[Summary execution]]s, [[ethnic cleansing]]
|fatalities=43
|fatalities=43
|perps=[[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] paramilitary unit}}
|perps=[[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] paramilitary unit}}
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{{Campaignbox Croatian War of Independence}}
{{Campaignbox Croatian War of Independence}}


The '''Voćin massacre''' was the killing of 43 civilians in [[Voćin]], [[Croatia]], by the [[Serbs|Serbian]] [[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] paramilitary unit on 13 December 1991, during the [[Croatian War of Independence]]. The [[List of events named massacres|massacre]] was carried out after the unit was ordered to abandon the village before the [[Croatian Army]] (''Hrvatska vojska'' – HV) recaptured the area in [[Operation Papuk-91]]. All the victims were local Croats, save one Serb, who had tried to protect his neighbours. Gunfire was the leading cause of death, though some of the victims were killed with axes or chainsaws, or were burned to death. The victims exhibited signs of torture and were left unburied. On the night of 13–14 December, the White Eagles dynamited a 550-year-old church in the village.
The '''Voćin massacre''' was the killing of 43 civilians in [[Voćin]], [[Croatia]], by the [[Serbs|Serbian]] [[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] paramilitary unit on 13 December 1991, during the [[Croatian War of Independence]]. The massacre was carried out after the unit was ordered to abandon the village before the [[Croatian Army]] (''Hrvatska vojska'' – HV) recaptured the area in [[Operation Papuk-91]]. All the victims were local Croats, save one Serb, who had tried to protect his neighbours. Gunfire was the leading cause of death, though some of the victims were killed with axes or chainsaws, or were burned to death. The victims exhibited signs of torture and were left unburied. On the night of 13–14 December, the White Eagles dynamited a 550-year-old church in the village.


The HV secured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December, the Serb population having left the previous night. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes belonging to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village. The area was toured shortly afterwards by then-[[US Congressman]] [[Frank McCloskey]], who publicised the killings at a news conference held in [[Zagreb]] the next day, calling them [[genocide]]. He persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the [[University of Southern California]] [[LAC+USC Medical Center|Los Angeles County Hospital Medical Center]] to take part in the investigation of the killings.
The HV secured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December, the Serb population having left the previous night. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes belonging to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village. The area was toured shortly afterwards by then-[[US Congressman]] [[Frank McCloskey]], who publicised the killings at a news conference held in [[Zagreb]] the next day, calling them [[genocide]]. He persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the [[University of Southern California]] [[LAC+USC Medical Center|Los Angeles County Hospital Medical Center]] to take part in the investigation of the killings.


The [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY) later charged [[Slobodan Milošević]] with the killings and [[Vojislav Šešelj]] with the deportation of non-Serbs from Voćin. In 2015, the [[International Court of Justice]] ruled that the massacre in Voćin was not an example of genocide, and stated that Croatia had failed to prove that the killings had even occurred.
The [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY) later charged [[Slobodan Milošević]] with the killings and [[Vojislav Šešelj]] with the deportation of non-Serbs from Voćin. In 2015, the [[International Court of Justice]] ruled that the massacre in Voćin was not an example of genocide, and stated that Croatia has not produced sufficient evidence to substantiate its claim that Croats were killed by Serb forces in that locality in December 1991.


==Background==
==Background==
{{main|1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia}}
{{main|1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia}}
Within the [[1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia]], the 5th ([[Banja Luka]]) Corps of the [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (''Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija'' – JNA) was tasked with advancing north through western [[Slavonia]], from [[Okučani]] to [[Daruvar]] and [[Virovitica]], and with a secondary drive from Okučani towards [[Kutina]].{{sfn|Marijan|2012|p=262}} This task was essentially consistent with the line expected to be reached by the main thrust of the JNA advancing from eastern Slavonia in about a week. The linkup was designed to facilitate a further advance west to [[Zagreb]] and [[Varaždin]].{{sfn|Marijan|2012|p=261}}
Within the [[1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia]], the 5th ([[Banja Luka]]) Corps of the [[Yugoslav People's Army]] (''Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija'' – JNA) was tasked with advancing north through western [[Slavonia]], from [[Okučani]] to [[Daruvar]] and [[Virovitica]], and with a secondary drive from Okučani towards [[Kutina]].{{sfn|Marijan|2012|p=262}} This task was essentially consistent with the line expected to be reached by the main thrust of the JNA advancing from eastern Slavonia in about a week. The linkup was designed to facilitate a further advance west to [[Zagreb]] and [[Varaždin]].{{sfn|Marijan|2012|p=261}}


The JNA was stopped by the [[Croatian National Guard]] (''Zbor Narodne Garde'' – ZNG) between [[Novska]], [[Nova Gradiška]] and [[Pakrac]], although [[SAO Western Slavonia]] [[Territorial Defense Forces (Yugoslavia)|Territorial Defense Forces]] (''Teritorijalna odbrana'' – TO) units took positions on the [[Bilogora]] and [[Papuk]] north of Pakrac, near Virovitica and [[Slatina, Croatia|Slatina]] with no JNA support.{{sfn|CIA|2002|p=102}} The TO was supported by [[List of Serbian paramilitary formations|Serbian paramilitaries]] deploying to the village of [[Voćin]] on the Papuk Mountain in October.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=94}}
The JNA was stopped by the [[Croatian National Guard]] (''Zbor Narodne Garde'' – ZNG) between [[Novska]], [[Nova Gradiška]] and [[Pakrac]], although [[SAO Western Slavonia]] [[Territorial Defense Forces (Yugoslavia)|Territorial Defense Forces]] (''Teritorijalna odbrana'' – TO) units took positions on the [[Bilogora]] and [[Papuk]] north of Pakrac, near Virovitica and [[Slatina, Croatia|Slatina]] with no JNA support.{{sfn|CIA|2002|p=102}} The TO was supported by [[List of Serbian paramilitary formations|Serbian paramilitaries]] deploying to the village of [[Voćin]] on the Papuk Mountain in October.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=94}}


The paramilitaries were the [[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] under the control of [[Vojislav Šešelj]]. He visited Voćin in the following month and incited the paramilitaries to persecute the Croat population.{{sfn|Kearney|2007|p=217}} According to testimonies of surviving residents of Voćin, the White Eagles and several local Serbs terrorised the Croat population,{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=7}} reduced to 80 by late 1991.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} Prior to the war, ethnic Serbs formed eighty percent of the village's population.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}}
The paramilitaries were the [[White Eagles (paramilitary)|White Eagles]] under the control of [[Vojislav Šešelj]]. He visited Voćin in the following month and incited the paramilitaries to persecute the Croat population.{{sfn|Kearney|2007|p=217}} According to testimonies of surviving residents of Voćin, the White Eagles and several local Serbs terrorised the Croat population,{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=7}} reduced to 80 by late 1991.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} Prior to the war, ethnic Serbs formed eighty percent of the village's population.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}}
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The killing of civilians living in Voćin and two nearby smaller villages began on 13 December at noon. The White Eagles infantry, supported by at least one tank, moved through Voćin bombing Croat-owned houses and killing civilians. The killings and the destruction took twelve hours and claimed the lives of 43 civilians.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}} The bodies of the victims were mutilated and left on display, presumably as a warning to others, outside Voćin itself, to flee or perish.{{sfn|Gow|2003|pp=163–164}} All the victims were Croat civilians, except one 77-year-old Serb who had tried to protect his neighbours from the paramilitaries. Most of the victims were elderly, including twelve women aged 56–76 and eleven men aged 60–84.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|pp=6–7}}
The killing of civilians living in Voćin and two nearby smaller villages began on 13 December at noon. The White Eagles infantry, supported by at least one tank, moved through Voćin bombing Croat-owned houses and killing civilians. The killings and the destruction took twelve hours and claimed the lives of 43 civilians.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}} The bodies of the victims were mutilated and left on display, presumably as a warning to others, outside Voćin itself, to flee or perish.{{sfn|Gow|2003|pp=163–164}} All the victims were Croat civilians, except one 77-year-old Serb who had tried to protect his neighbours from the paramilitaries. Most of the victims were elderly, including twelve women aged 56–76 and eleven men aged 60–84.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|pp=6–7}}


Many of those killed were tortured, beaten using chains and burned.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} Most of the victims were killed by gunshots, but the cause of death proved hard to establish for eight victims whose bodies were severely burned.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} A couple was bound with chains and burned alive,{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} two women were killed using axes or similar sharp objects,{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} one of them by several axe blows to her head. Another couple was beheaded and their heads were placed in bags.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} One victim was cut by a chain saw while still alive, and another died trapped in her house which was torched by the paramilitaries.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} The Serb civilian who attempted to protect the others was also beaten, tortured using lighted cigarettes and heated chains, and then [[Flaying|flayed]].{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=42–44}}
Many of those killed were tortured, beaten using chains and burned.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} Most of the victims were killed by gunshots, but the cause of death proved hard to establish for eight victims whose bodies were severely burned.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} A couple was bound with chains and burned alive,{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} two women were killed using axes or similar sharp objects,{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} one of them by several axe blows to her head. Another couple was beheaded and their heads were placed in bags.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} The Serb civilian who attempted to protect the others was also beaten, tortured using lighted cigarettes and heated chains, and then [[Flaying|flayed]].{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=42–44}}


At 3:00 a.m., the paramilitaries demolished the [[Roman Catholic]] church of the Pilgrimage to the Blessed Virgin Mary in Voćin. They used the 550-year-old structure as an ammunition depot. In the wake of the explosion, a single wall of the structure remained standing.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}} It is estimated that several tons of explosives were used for the purpose.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|pp=94–95}} At the same time, approximately 20 other Croat inhabitants of villages of [[Bokane]], Krašković, Miokovićevo and [[Novo Zvečevo|Zvečevo]], further to the south, were reportedly killed.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}}
At 3:00 a.m., the paramilitaries demolished the [[Roman Catholic]] church of the Pilgrimage to the Blessed Virgin Mary in Voćin. They used the 550-year-old structure as an ammunition depot. In the wake of the explosion, a single wall of the structure remained standing.{{sfn|The New York Times|19 December 1991}} It is estimated that several tons of explosives were used for the purpose.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|pp=94–95}} At the same time, approximately 20 other Croat inhabitants of villages of [[Bokane]], Krašković, Miokovićevo and [[Novo Zvečevo|Zvečevo]], further to the south, were reportedly killed.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}}


==Aftermath==
==Aftermath==
The HV captured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December,{{sfn|Nazor|2007|p=145}} the village's Serb population having withdrawn the night before. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes that belonged to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village.{{sfn|Duijzings|2000|p=55}} One of the first to arrive in the village following its re-capture was McCloskey, in Croatia on a [[fact-finding]] mission.{{sfn|Bartrop|2012|p=203}}
The HV captured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December,{{sfn|Nazor|2007|p=145}} the village's Serb population having withdrawn the night before. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes that belonged to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village.{{sfn|Duijzings|2000|p=55}} Following the withdrawal of the Serb forces and arrival of Croatian forces, crimes against the remaining Serb civilian population took place.<ref name="snv">{{cite web |title=Voćin |url=https://snv.hr/en/zlocini/vocin/ |website=snv.hr |publisher=Serb National Council}}</ref> According to the Croatian NGO [[Documenta – Center for Dealing with the Past]], [[Voćin killings|40 Serb civilians were killed]] during the takeover.<ref name="documenta1">{{cite web |title=Zločini u Voćinu – Sjećanje na sve žrtve |url=https://www.documenta.hr/assets/files/objave/Zlocini%20u%20Vocinu%20-%20Sjecanje%20na%20sve%20zrtve%2C%2013.12.2013.%20Documenta%20-%20Centar%20za%20suocavanje%20s%20prosloscu%20.pdf |website=documenta.hr |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180921153410/https://www.documenta.hr/assets/files/objave/Zlocini%20u%20Vocinu%20-%20Sjecanje%20na%20sve%20zrtve,%2013.12.2013.%20Documenta%20-%20Centar%20za%20suocavanje%20s%20prosloscu%20.pdf |archive-date=21 September 2018 |date=13 December 2013}}</ref>


McCloskey asked an aide to arrange a press conference in [[Zagreb]] the next day, while the aide persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the [[LAC+USC Medical Center]], sent to Croatia to investigate alleged use of [[chemical weapons]], to take part in the investigation of the killings.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} At the conference, McCloskey called the killings [[genocide]].{{sfn|Bartrop|2012|p=203}} [[CNN]] reporter Mark Dalmish refused to attend the press conference as the network mistrusted reports of the killings, and reportedly only became interested in the event once Blaskovich's involvement was announced.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}}
One of the first to arrive in the village following its re-capture was McCloskey, in Croatia on a [[United Nations fact-finding mission|fact-finding]] mission.{{sfn|Bartrop|2012|p=203}} McCloskey asked an aide to arrange a press conference in [[Zagreb]] the next day, while the aide persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the [[LAC+USC Medical Center]], sent to Croatia to investigate alleged use of [[chemical weapons]], to take part in the investigation of the killings of Croatian civilians.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} At the conference, McCloskey called the killings [[genocide]].{{sfn|Bartrop|2012|p=203}} [[CNN]] reporter Mark Dalmish refused to attend the press conference as the network mistrusted reports of the killings, and reportedly only became interested in the event once Blaskovich's involvement was announced.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}}


The victims' bodies were taken to the nearby town of [[Slatina, Croatia|Slatina]] for forensic examination on 17 December.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} Mackley contacted Croatian authorities and obtained permission to document the [[Autopsy|autopsies]] of the victims, but was denied access by authorities in Slatina. Mackley telephoned [[Ministry of Defence (Croatia)|Croatian Defence Minister]] [[Gojko Šušak]] asking him to intervene on his behalf, but the local police allegedly disobeyed Šušak. The [[Croatian special police order of battle in 1991–95|special police]] was deployed to Slatina to enforce Šušak's order to cooperate, almost causing an armed clash over the issue. To settle matters, a team was sent to Slatina by [[Zagreb University]]'s Institute for Forensic Medicine to perform autopsies, retrieve bodies and perform the rest of the procedures in Zagreb.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}}
The victims' bodies were taken to the nearby town of [[Slatina, Croatia|Slatina]] for forensic examination on 17 December.{{sfn|Amnesty International|1992|p=6}} Mackley contacted Croatian authorities and obtained permission to document the [[Autopsy|autopsies]] of the victims, but was denied access by authorities in Slatina. Mackley telephoned [[Ministry of Defence (Croatia)|Croatian Defence Minister]] [[Gojko Šušak]] asking him to intervene on his behalf, but the local police allegedly disobeyed Šušak. The [[Croatian special police order of battle in 1991–95|special police]] was deployed to Slatina to enforce Šušak's order to cooperate, almost causing an armed clash over the issue. To settle matters, a team was sent to Slatina by [[Zagreb University]]'s Institute for Forensic Medicine to perform autopsies, retrieve bodies and perform the rest of the procedures in Zagreb.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}}
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Survivors who took shelter in basements or cornfields, as well as a captured member of the paramilitary forces, later testified about the killings and identified the White Eagles as the perpetrators.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} In addition, the withdrawing paramilitaries left critical evidence behind, including personnel records, which confirmed that the force had been White Eagles associated with Šešelj. An American war crimes investigator for the United Nations [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY), Special Agent John Cencich, corroborated the information in an interview with a high-level inside witness linking [[Slobodan Milošević]], then president of [[Socialist Republic of Serbia|Serbia]] to the killings.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} The ICTY charged Milošević with the deaths of 32 civilians in Voćin.{{sfn|BBC News|29 October 2001}} Milošević was subsequently arrested and [[Trial of Slobodan Milošević|tried]], but he died before his trial was completed.{{sfn|ICTY IT-02-54|p=8}} The ICTY also charged Šešelj with involvement in the forced deportation of non-Serb civilians from Voćin.{{sfn|BBC News|24 February 2003}} Šešelj was ultimately acquitted of all charges.
Survivors who took shelter in basements or cornfields, as well as a captured member of the paramilitary forces, later testified about the killings and identified the White Eagles as the perpetrators.{{sfn|Blaskovich|1997|pp=37–41}} In addition, the withdrawing paramilitaries left critical evidence behind, including personnel records, which confirmed that the force had been White Eagles associated with Šešelj. An American war crimes investigator for the United Nations [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] (ICTY), Special Agent John Cencich, corroborated the information in an interview with a high-level inside witness linking [[Slobodan Milošević]], then president of [[Socialist Republic of Serbia|Serbia]] to the killings.{{sfn|Cencich|2013|p=95}} The ICTY charged Milošević with the deaths of 32 civilians in Voćin.{{sfn|BBC News|29 October 2001}} Milošević was subsequently arrested and [[Trial of Slobodan Milošević|tried]], but he died before his trial was completed.{{sfn|ICTY IT-02-54|p=8}} The ICTY also charged Šešelj with involvement in the forced deportation of non-Serb civilians from Voćin.{{sfn|BBC News|24 February 2003}} Šešelj was ultimately acquitted of all charges.


In March 2014, Croatia alleged before the [[International Court of Justice]] (ICJ) that the massacre in Voćin was part of a larger campaign of genocide targeting the Croat population of Slavonia. In 2015, the ICJ ruled that Serb forces had not committed genocide in Croatia, and stated that the Croatian legal team had failed to prove that any mass killing had taken place in Voćin.<ref>[http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/118/18422.pdf Judgement re Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161213060252/http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/118/18422.pdf |date=2016-12-13 }}, dated 3 February 2015, page 82; accessed 25 April 2015.</ref>
In March 2014, Croatia alleged before the [[International Court of Justice]] (ICJ) that the massacre in Voćin was part of a larger campaign of genocide targeting the Croat population of Slavonia. In 2015, the ICJ ruled that although the material presented raises ground for grave suspicion about what occurred in Voćin, it is not sufficient to confirm that Croats were killed by Serb forces in that locality.<ref name="icj">{{cite web |date=2015 |title=Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia) |url=http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/118/18422.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161213060252/http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/118/18422.pdf |archive-date=13 December 2016 |publisher=icj |page=82}}</ref>


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
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;Books and scientific journal articles
;Books and scientific journal articles
{{refbegin|60em}}
{{refbegin|60em}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=BleF7tl_rbUC|title=A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide|first=Paul R.|last=Bartrop|publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]]|location=Santa Barbara, California|year=2012|isbn=9780313386787}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BleF7tl_rbUC|title=A Biographical Encyclopedia of Contemporary Genocide|first=Paul R.|last=Bartrop|publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]]|location=Santa Barbara, California|year=2012|isbn=9780313386787}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=ngkIAAAACAAJ|title=Anatomy of Deceit: An American Physician's First-Hand Encounter With the Realities of the War in Croatia|first=Jerry|last=Blaskovich|publisher=Dunhill Publishing|location=New York|isbn=9780935016246|year=1997}}
*{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/anatomyofdeceita00blas|url-access=registration|title=Anatomy of Deceit: An American Physician's First-Hand Encounter With the Realities of the War in Croatia|first=Jerry|last=Blaskovich|publisher=Dunhill Publishing|location=New York|isbn=9780935016246|year=1997}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=tKiYPwudOZoC|title=The Devil's Garden: A War Crimes Investigator's Story|first=John R.|last=Cencich|year=2013|publisher=Potomac Books|location=Dulles, Virginia|isbn=9781612341729}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tKiYPwudOZoC|title=The Devil's Garden: A War Crimes Investigator's Story|first=John R.|last=Cencich|year=2013|publisher=Potomac Books|location=Dulles, Virginia|isbn=9781612341729}}
*{{cite book|ref={{harvid|CIA|2002}}|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=it1IAQAAIAAJ|title=Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 1990–1995|publisher=Central Intelligence Agency|author=[[Central Intelligence Agency]], Office of Russian and European Analysis|year=2002|oclc=50396958|isbn=9780160664724|location=Washington, D.C.}}
*{{cite book|ref={{harvid|CIA|2002}}|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=it1IAQAAIAAJ|title=Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 1990–1995|publisher=Central Intelligence Agency|author=[[Central Intelligence Agency]], Office of Russian and European Analysis|year=2002|oclc=50396958|isbn=9780160664724|location=Washington, D.C.}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.ca/books?id=D1eOpnjo9McC&printsec=frontcover|title=Religion and the Politics of Identity in Kosovo|last=Duijzings|first=Ger|year=2000|publisher=Columbia University Press|location=New York|isbn=9780231120982}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D1eOpnjo9McC|title=Religion and the Politics of Identity in Kosovo|last=Duijzings|first=Ger|year=2000|publisher=Columbia University Press|location=New York|isbn=9780231120982}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=6vbz_WMRiwEC|title=The Myth of Ethnic War: Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s|first=Valère Philip|last=Gagnon|year=2006|publisher=[[Cornell University Press]]|location=Ithaca, New York|isbn=9780801472916}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6vbz_WMRiwEC|title=The Myth of Ethnic War: Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s|first=Valère Philip|last=Gagnon|year=2006|publisher=[[Cornell University Press]]|location=Ithaca, New York|isbn=9780801472916}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=LCAbMi9yeGsC|title=The Serbian Project and Its Adversaries: A Strategy of War Crimes|first=James|last=Gow|publisher=C. Hurst & Co.|year=2003|isbn=9781850656463|location=London, England}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LCAbMi9yeGsC|title=The Serbian Project and Its Adversaries: A Strategy of War Crimes|first=James|last=Gow|publisher=C. Hurst & Co.|year=2003|isbn=9781850656463|location=London, England}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?id=iYbO7fS4v20C|title=The Prohibition of Propaganda for War in International Law|first=Michael G.|last=Kearney|year=2007|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|location=Oxford, England|isbn=9780199232451}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iYbO7fS4v20C|title=The Prohibition of Propaganda for War in International Law|first=Michael G.|last=Kearney|year=2007|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|location=Oxford, England|isbn=9780199232451}}
*{{cite journal|ref=harv|journal=Journal of Contemporary History|publisher=Croatian Institute of History|issn=0590-9597|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=133719&lang=en|title=Zamisao i propast napadne operacije Jugoslavenske narodne armije na Hrvatsku u rujnu 1991. godine|language=Croatian|trans-title=The Conception and Failure of the Offensive Operation of the Yugoslav National Army in September 1991|first=Davor|last=Marijan|volume=44|issue=2|date=November 2012|pages=251–275}}
*{{cite journal|journal=Journal of Contemporary History|publisher=Croatian Institute of History|issn=0590-9597|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=133719&lang=en|title=Zamisao i propast napadne operacije Jugoslavenske narodne armije na Hrvatsku u rujnu 1991. godine|language=Croatian|trans-title=The Conception and Failure of the Offensive Operation of the Yugoslav National Army in September 1991|first=Davor|last=Marijan|volume=44|issue=2|date=November 2012|pages=251–275}}
*{{cite book|ref=harv|url=https://books.google.hr/books?ei=MB7lUYeIDoKK4ATWqIDAAw&hl=hr&id=rPcVAQAAMAAJ|title=Počeci suvremene hrvatske države: kronologija procesa osamostaljenja Republike Hrvatske: od Memoranduma SANU 1986. do proglašenja neovisnosti 8. listopada 1991|language=Croatian|trans-title=Beginnings of the Modern Croatian State: A Chronology of the Independence of the Republic of Croatia: from 1986 SANU Memorandum to the Declaration of Independence on 8 October 1991|first=Ante|last=Nazor|publisher=Croatian Homeland War Memorial Documentation Centre|location=Zagreb, Croatia|year=2007|isbn=9789537439019}}
*{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rPcVAQAAMAAJ|title=Počeci suvremene hrvatske države: kronologija procesa osamostaljenja Republike Hrvatske: od Memoranduma SANU 1986. do proglašenja neovisnosti 8. listopada 1991|language=Croatian|trans-title=Beginnings of the Modern Croatian State: A Chronology of the Independence of the Republic of Croatia: from 1986 SANU Memorandum to the Declaration of Independence on 8 October 1991|first=Ante|last=Nazor|publisher=Croatian Homeland War Memorial Documentation Centre|location=Zagreb, Croatia|year=2007|isbn=9789537439019}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


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{{refbegin|60em}}
{{refbegin|60em}}
*{{cite news|ref={{harvid|The New York Times|19 December 1991}}|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=19 December 1991|first=Stephen|last=Engelberg|title=Villagers in Croatia Recount Massacre by Serbian Forces|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/12/19/world/villagers-in-croatia-recount-massacre-by-serbian-forces.html}}
*{{cite news|ref={{harvid|The New York Times|19 December 1991}}|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=19 December 1991|first=Stephen|last=Engelberg|title=Villagers in Croatia Recount Massacre by Serbian Forces|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/12/19/world/villagers-in-croatia-recount-massacre-by-serbian-forces.html}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|BBC News|29 October 2001}}|publisher=[[BBC News]]|date=29 October 2001|title=Milosevic Indictment: Text|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/354561.stm}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|BBC News|29 October 2001}}|work=[[BBC News]]|date=29 October 2001|title=Milosevic Indictment: Text|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/354561.stm}}
*{{cite news|ref={{harvid|The New York Times|30 August 2013}}|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=30 August 2013|first=Marlise|last=Simons|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/31/world/europe/international-judge-is-removed-from-case-over-apparent-bias.html|title=International Judge Is Removed From Case Over Apparent Bias}}
*{{cite news|ref={{harvid|The New York Times|30 August 2013}}|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=30 August 2013|first=Marlise|last=Simons|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/31/world/europe/international-judge-is-removed-from-case-over-apparent-bias.html|title=International Judge Is Removed From Case Over Apparent Bias}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|BBC News|24 February 2003}}|publisher=BBC News|date=24 February 2003|title=The charges against Vojislav Seselj|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2795235.stm}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|BBC News|24 February 2003}}|work=BBC News|date=24 February 2003|title=The charges against Vojislav Seselj|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2795235.stm}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


;Other sources
;Other sources
{{refbegin|60em}}
{{refbegin|60em}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|ICTY IT-02-54}}|url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/slobodan_milosevic/cis/en/cis_milosevic_slobodan_en.pdf|format=PDF|title=Case Information Sheet – Kosovo, Croatia & Bosnia (IT-02-54) – Slobodan Milošević|publisher=[[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]]}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|ICTY IT-02-54}}|url=http://www.icty.org/x/cases/slobodan_milosevic/cis/en/cis_milosevic_slobodan_en.pdf|title=Case Information Sheet – Kosovo, Croatia & Bosnia (IT-02-54) – Slobodan Milošević|publisher=[[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]]}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|MORH}}|url=http://www.morh.hr/hr/dan-osrh-2013/povjesnica.html|language=Croatian|title=Povjesnica|trans-title=A History|publisher=Ministry of Defence (Croatia)}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|MORH}}|url=http://www.morh.hr/hr/dan-osrh-2013/povjesnica.html|language=Croatian|title=Povjesnica|trans-title=A History|publisher=Ministry of Defence (Croatia)|access-date=2013-12-17|archive-date=2013-11-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131130121057/http://www.morh.hr/hr/dan-osrh-2013/povjesnica.html|url-status=dead}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|Amnesty International|1992}}|publisher=[[Amnesty International]]|date=March 1992|title=Yugoslavia: further reports of torture and deliberate and arbitrary killings in war zones|url=http://repository.forcedmigration.org/show_metadata.jsp?pid=fmo:850}}
*{{cite web|ref={{harvid|Amnesty International|1992}}|publisher=[[Amnesty International]]|date=March 1992|title=Yugoslavia: further reports of torture and deliberate and arbitrary killings in war zones|url=http://repository.forcedmigration.org/show_metadata.jsp?pid=fmo:850|access-date=2013-10-14|archive-date=2016-03-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306111819/http://repository.forcedmigration.org/show_metadata.jsp?pid=fmo:850|url-status=dead}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Vocin Massacre}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Vocin Massacre}}
[[Category:1991 in Croatia]]
[[Category:1991 in Croatia]]
[[Category:Massacres in 1991]]
[[Category:Serbian war crimes in the Croatian War of Independence]]
[[Category:Serbian war crimes in the Croatian War of Independence]]
[[Category:Mass murder in 1991]]
[[Category:Massacres in Croatia]]
[[Category:Massacres in Croatia]]
[[Category:December 1991 events in Europe]]
[[Category:December 1991 events in Yugoslavia]]
[[Category:1991 crimes in Croatia]]
[[Category:1991 crimes in Croatia]]
[[Category:1991 murders in Europe]]
[[Category:1991 murders in Europe]]
[[Category:1990s murders in Croatia]]
[[Category:1990s murders in Croatia]]
[[Category:Massacres of Croats]]
[[Category:Massacres in the Croatian War of Independence]]

Latest revision as of 04:18, 6 August 2024

Voćin massacre
Part of the Croatian War of Independence
Voćin on the map of Croatia. Territories controlled by Serb or JNA forces in late December 1991 are highlighted in red.
StandortVoćin, Croatia
Coordinates45°37′11″N 17°32′52″E / 45.619861°N 17.547813°E / 45.619861; 17.547813
Date13 December 1991
TargetMostly Croat civilians
Attack type
Summary executions, ethnic cleansing
Deaths43
PerpetratorsWhite Eagles paramilitary unit
MotiveAnti-Catholicism, anti-Croat sentiment, Greater Serbia, Serbianisation

The Voćin massacre was the killing of 43 civilians in Voćin, Croatia, by the Serbian White Eagles paramilitary unit on 13 December 1991, during the Croatian War of Independence. The massacre was carried out after the unit was ordered to abandon the village before the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska – HV) recaptured the area in Operation Papuk-91. All the victims were local Croats, save one Serb, who had tried to protect his neighbours. Gunfire was the leading cause of death, though some of the victims were killed with axes or chainsaws, or were burned to death. The victims exhibited signs of torture and were left unburied. On the night of 13–14 December, the White Eagles dynamited a 550-year-old church in the village.

The HV secured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December, the Serb population having left the previous night. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes belonging to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village. The area was toured shortly afterwards by then-US Congressman Frank McCloskey, who publicised the killings at a news conference held in Zagreb the next day, calling them genocide. He persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the University of Southern California Los Angeles County Hospital Medical Center to take part in the investigation of the killings.

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) later charged Slobodan Milošević with the killings and Vojislav Šešelj with the deportation of non-Serbs from Voćin. In 2015, the International Court of Justice ruled that the massacre in Voćin was not an example of genocide, and stated that Croatia has not produced sufficient evidence to substantiate its claim that Croats were killed by Serb forces in that locality in December 1991.

Background

[edit]

Within the 1991 Yugoslav campaign in Croatia, the 5th (Banja Luka) Corps of the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) was tasked with advancing north through western Slavonia, from Okučani to Daruvar and Virovitica, and with a secondary drive from Okučani towards Kutina.[1] This task was essentially consistent with the line expected to be reached by the main thrust of the JNA advancing from eastern Slavonia in about a week. The linkup was designed to facilitate a further advance west to Zagreb and Varaždin.[2]

The JNA was stopped by the Croatian National Guard (Zbor Narodne Garde – ZNG) between Novska, Nova Gradiška and Pakrac, although SAO Western Slavonia Territorial Defense Forces (Teritorijalna odbrana – TO) units took positions on the Bilogora and Papuk north of Pakrac, near Virovitica and Slatina with no JNA support.[3] The TO was supported by Serbian paramilitaries deploying to the village of Voćin on the Papuk Mountain in October.[4]

The paramilitaries were the White Eagles under the control of Vojislav Šešelj. He visited Voćin in the following month and incited the paramilitaries to persecute the Croat population.[5] According to testimonies of surviving residents of Voćin, the White Eagles and several local Serbs terrorised the Croat population,[6] reduced to 80 by late 1991.[7] Prior to the war, ethnic Serbs formed eighty percent of the village's population.[8]

On 29 October, the ZNG launched Operation Hurricane-91 against positions held by the JNA and the TO near Novska and Nova Gradiška,[9] and Operation Swath-10 against the TO positions on the Bilogora Mountain south of Virovitica.[10] Aiming to exploit the success of Operation Swath-10 and recapture Papuk area, Croatian forces, renamed the Croatian Army (Hrvatska vojska or HV) on 3 November,[11] launched Operation Papuk-91 on 28 November.[12]

Killings

[edit]
Church of the Pilgrimage to the Blessed Virgin Mary in Voćin, rebuilt after the war

The HV began advancing in the area of Đulovac, located approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) west of Voćin, on 12 December,[13] and the TO were forced to retreat from the area.[8] In turn, the White Eagles were to abandon Voćin, but were ordered to take no prisoners.[4] They were also instructed to ensure the evacuation of the Serb population. Those who refused to leave were threatened and one man was killed in front of his home.[14]

The killing of civilians living in Voćin and two nearby smaller villages began on 13 December at noon. The White Eagles infantry, supported by at least one tank, moved through Voćin bombing Croat-owned houses and killing civilians. The killings and the destruction took twelve hours and claimed the lives of 43 civilians.[8] The bodies of the victims were mutilated and left on display, presumably as a warning to others, outside Voćin itself, to flee or perish.[15] All the victims were Croat civilians, except one 77-year-old Serb who had tried to protect his neighbours from the paramilitaries. Most of the victims were elderly, including twelve women aged 56–76 and eleven men aged 60–84.[16]

Many of those killed were tortured, beaten using chains and burned.[17] Most of the victims were killed by gunshots, but the cause of death proved hard to establish for eight victims whose bodies were severely burned.[18] A couple was bound with chains and burned alive,[7] two women were killed using axes or similar sharp objects,[18] one of them by several axe blows to her head. Another couple was beheaded and their heads were placed in bags.[17] The Serb civilian who attempted to protect the others was also beaten, tortured using lighted cigarettes and heated chains, and then flayed.[19]

At 3:00 a.m., the paramilitaries demolished the Roman Catholic church of the Pilgrimage to the Blessed Virgin Mary in Voćin. They used the 550-year-old structure as an ammunition depot. In the wake of the explosion, a single wall of the structure remained standing.[8] It is estimated that several tons of explosives were used for the purpose.[20] At the same time, approximately 20 other Croat inhabitants of villages of Bokane, Krašković, Miokovićevo and Zvečevo, further to the south, were reportedly killed.[18]

Aftermath

[edit]

The HV captured Voćin on the night of 14/15 December,[13] the village's Serb population having withdrawn the night before. Afterwards, Croatian soldiers torched many homes that belonged to the Serbs who had once inhabited the village.[21] Following the withdrawal of the Serb forces and arrival of Croatian forces, crimes against the remaining Serb civilian population took place.[22] According to the Croatian NGO Documenta – Center for Dealing with the Past, 40 Serb civilians were killed during the takeover.[23]

One of the first to arrive in the village following its re-capture was McCloskey, in Croatia on a fact-finding mission.[24] McCloskey asked an aide to arrange a press conference in Zagreb the next day, while the aide persuaded Dr. Jerry Blaskovich, an Associate Clinical Professor at the LAC+USC Medical Center, sent to Croatia to investigate alleged use of chemical weapons, to take part in the investigation of the killings of Croatian civilians.[7] At the conference, McCloskey called the killings genocide.[24] CNN reporter Mark Dalmish refused to attend the press conference as the network mistrusted reports of the killings, and reportedly only became interested in the event once Blaskovich's involvement was announced.[7]

The victims' bodies were taken to the nearby town of Slatina for forensic examination on 17 December.[18] Mackley contacted Croatian authorities and obtained permission to document the autopsies of the victims, but was denied access by authorities in Slatina. Mackley telephoned Croatian Defence Minister Gojko Šušak asking him to intervene on his behalf, but the local police allegedly disobeyed Šušak. The special police was deployed to Slatina to enforce Šušak's order to cooperate, almost causing an armed clash over the issue. To settle matters, a team was sent to Slatina by Zagreb University's Institute for Forensic Medicine to perform autopsies, retrieve bodies and perform the rest of the procedures in Zagreb.[7]

Survivors who took shelter in basements or cornfields, as well as a captured member of the paramilitary forces, later testified about the killings and identified the White Eagles as the perpetrators.[7] In addition, the withdrawing paramilitaries left critical evidence behind, including personnel records, which confirmed that the force had been White Eagles associated with Šešelj. An American war crimes investigator for the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Special Agent John Cencich, corroborated the information in an interview with a high-level inside witness linking Slobodan Milošević, then president of Serbia to the killings.[17] The ICTY charged Milošević with the deaths of 32 civilians in Voćin.[25] Milošević was subsequently arrested and tried, but he died before his trial was completed.[26] The ICTY also charged Šešelj with involvement in the forced deportation of non-Serb civilians from Voćin.[27] Šešelj was ultimately acquitted of all charges.

In March 2014, Croatia alleged before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that the massacre in Voćin was part of a larger campaign of genocide targeting the Croat population of Slavonia. In 2015, the ICJ ruled that although the material presented raises ground for grave suspicion about what occurred in Voćin, it is not sufficient to confirm that Croats were killed by Serb forces in that locality.[28]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Marijan 2012, p. 262.
  2. ^ Marijan 2012, p. 261.
  3. ^ CIA 2002, p. 102.
  4. ^ a b Cencich 2013, p. 94.
  5. ^ Kearney 2007, p. 217.
  6. ^ Amnesty International 1992, p. 7.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Blaskovich 1997, pp. 37–41.
  8. ^ a b c d The New York Times & 19 December 1991.
  9. ^ Nazor 2007, p. 134.
  10. ^ Nazor 2007, p. 136.
  11. ^ MORH.
  12. ^ Nazor 2007, p. 147.
  13. ^ a b Nazor 2007, p. 145.
  14. ^ Gagnon 2006, p. 152.
  15. ^ Gow 2003, pp. 163–164.
  16. ^ Amnesty International 1992, pp. 6–7.
  17. ^ a b c Cencich 2013, p. 95.
  18. ^ a b c d Amnesty International 1992, p. 6.
  19. ^ Blaskovich 1997, pp. 42–44.
  20. ^ Cencich 2013, pp. 94–95.
  21. ^ Duijzings 2000, p. 55.
  22. ^ "Voćin". snv.hr. Serb National Council.
  23. ^ "Zločini u Voćinu – Sjećanje na sve žrtve" (PDF). documenta.hr. 13 December 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2018.
  24. ^ a b Bartrop 2012, p. 203.
  25. ^ BBC News & 29 October 2001.
  26. ^ ICTY IT-02-54, p. 8.
  27. ^ BBC News & 24 February 2003.
  28. ^ "Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia)" (PDF). icj. 2015. p. 82. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2016.

References

[edit]
Books and scientific journal articles
News reports
Other sources