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Miodrag Linta said today that dozens of Croats should have been sentenced to decades in prison for killing Serbs in Gospi.
Source: Tanjug
Photo: Screenshot / B92
Linta, who is president of the Serbian Alliance, says that at least 124 Serbs were murdered in Gospi between August and December 1991, and that almost half of them were taken from their houses and apartments and killed on October 17 and 18, and that the remains of only 50 victims were found and buried, while the rest are still being sought.
According to Linta, only the then secretary of the Operational Tab in Gospi, Tihomir Orekovi, was sentenced to 15 years in prison, the then commander of the 118 Brigade, Mirko Norac, to 12 years, and Stjepan Grandi, to 10 years, for the mentioned massive and organized crime of the Gospian Serbs.
Linta also notes that while serving his prison sentence, General Norac led a normal life, worked, married, built a house and organized various celebrations attended by senior state officials, and that the Serbian War Crimes Prosecutor’s Office still It has not initiated mass and organized war crimes proceedings against the Serbs in Gospi.
He recalled that the Serbs experienced terror in Gospi during World War II, in the first settlement camp that was part of the concentration camp complex in the Lika area.
In just 132 days of the Gospi-Jadovno-Pag concentration camp complex, from April to August 1941, more than 38,000 Serbs and some 2,000 Jews and others were killed.
Croatian Gospiki and Liki have never admitted to having committed genocide against Serbs, nor have they expressed remorse or demanded forgiveness, Linta said, adding that the exhumation of the slain Serbs has not yet been carried out, nor has the stratification been marked.
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