Anti-fascists organisations and activists took to the streets of the city to protest against the religious service.

Bosnia: Protesters condemn Mass for WWII Croat Nazi collaborators..

A protester in front of police in Sarajevo holds a placard that reads: "It doesn't take that many fascists to make fascism". Photo: 16 May 2020
Police stand guard as protesters march in Sarajevo, Bosnia. Photo: 16 May 2020
People march past a poster that shows Nazi victims during World War Two
Anti-fascist protesters in Sarajevo's city centre. Photo: 16 May 2020
Police put barriers around Sarajevo's Sacred Heart Cathedral. Photo: 16 May 2020
People attend a memorial event in Zagreb, Croatia. Photo: 16 May 2020

Security has been stepped in Bosnia-Herzegovina’s capital Sarajevo ahead of a Mass to honour Croatia’s Nazi collaborators in World War Two.

Anti-fascists organisations and activists took to the streets of the city to protest against the religious service.

The annual event, usually held in Austria at the site of the Croatia’s pro-Nazi Ustasha regime’s last stand in the town of Bleiburg, was moved to Bosnia because of coronavirus restrictions.

Thousands of people marched in Sarajevo, as police closely watched. There were no reports of violence.

The fascist Ustasha regime ruled Croatia as a puppet regime of Nazi Germany from 1941 to 1945, their country having been expanded to include all of Bosnia and some parts of Serbia.

During that period, they set about exterminating the Serb, Jewish, and Gypsy inhabitants.

Big crowds later gathered in the city centre, as the Mass was condemned by Sarajevo’s mayor, the president of Croatia, and the World Jewish Congress. The Nazi-hunting Simon Wiesenthal Center described the event as a “travesty of memory and justice”.

Police sealed off the area around the Sacred Heart Cathedral, where the Mass was held on Saturday morning. Sarajevo Archbishop Vinko Puljic, who led the service, rejected all the accusations and said praying for victims’ souls did not mean approval of their acts.

A similar memorial event was held in Croatia’s capital Zagreb. Tens of thousands of Nazi-allied Croatian soldiers and their families fled to Austria at the end of World War Two. But British forces handed them over to Yugoslav partisans, who killed many of them at Bleiburg and on a forced march back to Yugoslavia.

One comment

  1. Ashamed of people I live with in the same country… Instead of being proud that we were on the right side in WWII and liberated ourselves from the Nazis, we still have to fight them..

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