On Sunday, October 18, 1998 at 9:00:00 AM UTC+2, Anonymous wrote:
used without permission, for "fair use" only --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our Existence is a Crime
by Dubravko Horvatic
Hrvatsko Slovo, Zagreb, Croatia, March 22 1996
What kind of evil have the Croats inflicted on Muslims (who in the Kallay manner
are calling themselves Bosniaks, as if that regional name did not belong to the
whole population of Bosnia, equally to Croats, Serbs, Jews and others), what kind
of evil have they inflicted on Muslims when the Muslims, not only bar Croats from
those territories which have been taken over from the Serbs, but are also expelling
them from those areas from where neither Muslims nor Serbs had managed earlier to
dislodge the Croatian population. A part of Croatian opposition "knew" as early as
1993 what was going on there and wrote about it in an "Open letter to the president
of Croatia, Dr. Franjo Tudman," which was initially published in the "European
weekly edition" of the Sarajevo daily Oslobodenje. The letter was signed by six
insignificant personalities, who think of themselves highly, so much so that they
called on the president of the state, a man who had been elected by the majority of
the people, to resign. Briefly, they claimed that the president "with his long term
orientation towards the division of Bosnia-Hercegovina," enabled ," the tragic
split of this thousands year old, multicultural and desirable state." Next, they
accused "Hercegovina oligarchy," (which is according to the six authors of the
letter "supervised" by Dr. Tudman) of "pushing us in a war against the Muslims."
None of the six authors (and as far as I know, four of them were loyal sons of the
[Communist] Party!) remembered at the time slimy statements by Alija Izetbegovic
about the assistance he expected from the Yugoslav Peoples Army, after the experience from Vukovar and Ravno [place in Hercegovina where, according to the
Croats "the Serb aggression on Bosnia-Hercegovina" begun], none of them remembered
Izetbegovic's rejection of Croatian military assistance, nor his statements made in
Turkey during Summer 1993, that Serbs and Croats were exterminating "the Bosniak
nation"; above all, all those who accused Croats for the aggression against Muslims
forgot about the "Islamic Declaration" by a former Serb Alija Izetbegovic and his
group, from 1974; there, among other, one can find these words: "There can be no
peace and coexistence between the Islamic faith and non-Islamic social and political institutions." In accordance with these words, Izetbegovic's regime attacked in 1993, in the operation "Tito", Croatian settlements in central Bosnia
and carried out a genocide against Croats; today those same authorities print anti-Croat textbooks, publish historical forgeries in Ljiljan in addition to political programs according to which Sarajevo (were Croats were 35% of population
in 1910) would become the European center for 15 million of European Muslims; further the Muslim authorities continue to harass Croats in every possible way;
they even send out those international robbers, the Mojahedeen, to attack Croats.
It is obvious what is the Croat crime: Croats live on their ancestral land and
their very existence is a crime. Obviously, they are an obstacle to realization
of an old dream of Izetbegovic and his [former wife] Melika Salihbegovic (today
she calls herself Melika Salihbeg Bosnawi) who in the early 70's wrote to ayatollah
Homeini that she couldn't wait for the formation of the state "which will spread
from Teheran to Slavonski Brod [town on Croatian-Bosnian border]." Let us not forget those words, nor the "Islamic Declaration" because they are not only behind
the persecution of Croats in Bosnia, but also behind the demands for a free trade
zone in Ploce [Croatian port; before the war major conduit for transport of Bosnian
goods; Bosnian government has been negotiating with Croatia in order to secure
independent access to the port facilities].
'Melika Salihbegovic (today
she calls herself Melika Salihbeg Bosnawi) who in the early 70's wrote to ayatollah
Homeini that she couldn't wait for the formation of the state "which will spread
from Teheran to Slavonski Brod [town on Croatian-Bosnian border''
My mother never wrote or said anything like that but feel free to continue living your miserable little Fascist life. Also, my father was a Croat, you poor little Fascist degenerate.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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