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Plitvice Lakes incident

Coordinates:44°52′48″N15°36′36″E / 44.88000°N 15.61000°E /44.88000; 15.61000
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Armed clash at the beginning of the Croatian War of Independence

Plitvice Lakes incident
Part of theCroatian War of Independence
Plitvice Lakes is located in Croatia
Plitvice Lakes
Plitvice Lakes
Date31 March 1991
Location
ResultCroatian victory
Belligerents
CroatiaCroatiaSAO KrajinaSAO Krajina
Commanders and leaders
CroatiaJosip LucićSAO KrajinaMilan Martić
Strength
c. 300 troopsc. 100 troops
Casualties and losses
1 killed
7 wounded
1 killed
13 wounded
29 captured
1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

ThePlitvice Lakes incident (Croatian:Krvavi Uskrs na Plitvicama orPlitvički krvavi Uskrs, both translating as "Plitvice Bloody Easter") was an armed clash at the beginning of theCroatian War of Independence. It was fought between Croatian police and armed forces from theCroatian Serb-establishedSAO Krajina at thePlitvice Lakes inCroatia, on 31 March 1991. The fighting followed the SAO Krajina's takeover of thePlitvice Lakes National Park and resulted inCroatia recapturing the area. The clash resulted in one killed on each side and contributed to the worsening ethnic tensions.

The fighting prompted thePresidency of Yugoslavia to order theYugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) to step in and create abuffer zone between the opposing forces. The JNA arrived at the scene the following day and presented Croatia with an ultimatum requesting the police to withdraw. Even though thespecial police units which captured the Plitvice Lakes area did pull out on 2 April, a newly established Croatian police station, staffed by 90 officers, remained in place. The police station was blockaded by the JNA three months later, and captured in late August 1991.

Background

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See also:Log Revolution

In 1990, following theelectoral defeat of the government of theSocialist Republic of Croatia, ethnic tensions worsened. TheYugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) confiscated Croatia'sTerritorial Defence (Teritorijalna obrana – TO) weapons to minimize resistance.[1] On 17 August, the tensions escalated into anopen revolt of theCroatian Serbs,[2] centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of theDalmatian hinterland aroundKnin,[3] parts of theLika,Kordun,Banovina regions andeastern Croatia.[4] They established a Serbian National Council in July 1990, to coordinate opposition toCroatian PresidentFranjo Tuđman's policy of pursuingindependence for Croatia.Milan Babić, a dentist from the southern town of Knin, was elected president. Knin's police chief,Milan Martić, established paramilitary militias. The two men eventually became the political and military leaders of theSAO Krajina, a self-declared state incorporating the Serb-inhabited areas of Croatia.[5]

In the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. In an effort to bolster its defence, Croatia doubled the size of itspolice force to about 20,000. The most effective part of the force was the3,000-strong special police that were deployed in 12battalions adopting military organisation. In addition there were 9,000–10,000 regionally organised reserve police. The reserve police were set up in 16 battalions and 10companies, but they lacked weapons.[6]

In an effort to consolidate territory under their control,[7] Croatian Serb leaders organised a political rally at thePlitvice Lakes on 25 March 1991, demanding the area be annexed to the SAO Krajina. Three days later, on 28 March, SAO Krajina special police seized the area,[8] and with the help of armed civilians, removed the Croatian management of thePlitvice Lakes National Park.[7] The force deployed by the SAO Krajina to the Plitvice Lakes was estimated to be approximately 100-strong.[9] The region was relatively sparsely populated and there was no obvious threat to Serbs there. JournalistTim Judah suggests that the move may have been motivated by a desire to control a strategic road that ran north–south through the park, linking the Serb communities in the Lika and Banovina regions.[10]

Timeline

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Croatian police convoy after the ambush at the Plitvice Lakes, 31 March 1991

Croatia deployed special police forces, specifically theLučko, Rakitje and Sljeme special police units based in and aroundZagreb, supported by additional police forces drawn fromKarlovac andGospić to retake the Plitvice Lakes area.[8] The Croatian police force, commanded byJosip Lucić, used several buses and passenger cars, as well as anarmoured personnel carrier, to approach the Plitvice Lakes area.[11] The main 180-strong group of the Rakitje Special Police Unit (SPU), directly commanded by Lucić, arrived in dense fog, along themain road from Zagreb via theKorana River bridge. The bridge was secured by the Lučko unit shortly before midnight on 30/31 March 1991.[12] An auxiliary force approached the Plitvice Lakes viaLičko Petrovo Selo, while the Kumrovec SPU was deployed in the area between the lakes and Gospić, where it captured the Ljubovo Pass to secure the right flank of the main effort.[13] The total attacking force comprised approximately 300 troops.[14]

The approaching convoy was ambushed at a barricade set up by the SAO Krajina force near Plitvice Lakes before 7:00 in the morning ofEaster Sunday, 31 March 1991. The SAO Krajina force attacked the vehicles carrying the Croatian police and held their position until they fell back to the national park post office two and a half hours later. The Croatian advance, additionally hindered by deep snow, was achieved at a cost of six wounded. The attacking force secured its objectives by 11:00 am. As the attacking operation reached its completion, theCroatian military sustained its first combat fatality of theCroatian War of Independence, whenJosip Jović was killed by a machine gun covering retreating SAO Krajina troops. Shortly afterwards, theYugoslav Air Force dispatched aMil Mi-8 helicopter to attend to wounded on both sides, and it left the area after an hour and a half. The helicopter was dispatched byColonel GeneralAnton Tus, head of the Yugoslav Air Force at the time, following a request byJosip Boljkovac,Interior Minister of Croatia.[15] As the fighting around Plitvice ended, sporadic gunfire was reported nearTitova Korenica, to the south.[16] The same afternoon, a Croatian police station was established at the Plitvice Lakes and Tomislav Iljić was appointed its commanding officer.[8] The station was staffed by approximately 90 police officers who were redeployed from Gospić.[14]

ThePresidency of Yugoslavia met in an emergency session the same evening to discuss the clash. At the insistence ofSerbia's representative on the Presidency,Borisav Jović, the JNA was ordered to intervene, gain control in the area and prevent further combat.[17] The Serbian parliament also met in an emergency session, treating the clashes as a virtualcasus belli and voting to offer the Krajina Serbs "all necessary help" in their conflict with Zagreb.[10] The following day, the SAO Krajina adopted a resolution to the effect that the territory was incorporated into Serbia, whose constitution and laws were adopted for use in the Serb-held areas of Croatia.[18] Croatian authorities accused Serbia's president,Slobodan Milošević, of stage-managing the unrest in order to break Croatia's resolve to declare independence unlessYugoslavia was transformed into a loose confederation. They also accused him of attempting to coax the JNA to overthrow Croatian government.[16]

JNA intervention

[edit]

On 1 April, the JNA established abuffer zone to separate the belligerents at Plitvice Lakes, deploying elements of the 1st and the 5th Military Districts. Those were an armoured battalion of the 329th Armoured Brigade based inBanja Luka, a battalion of the 6th Mountain Brigade based inDelnice, a reconnaissance company and a mechanised battalion of the 4th Armoured Brigade based inJastrebarsko and Karlovac, a battalion of the 306th Light Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment based in Zagreb, a signals company of the 367th Signals Regiment based inSamobor, a company of the 13th Military Police Battalion based inRijeka and ananti-aircraft artillery battery drawn from the 13th Proletarian Motorised Brigade based in Rijeka. Finally, the 5th Military District set up a forward command post at the Plitvice Lakes.[19] The JNA force at the Plitvice Lakes was commanded byColonel Ivan Štimac.[20][21]

The commanding officer of the 5th Military District,Major GeneralAndrija Rašeta, in overall command of the JNA intervention, told the media that his men were not protecting either side and were there only to prevent ethnic confrontations for an indeterminate period. However, theCroatian government reacted furiously to the JNA move. Tuđman's aide, Mario Nobilo, claimed that the JNA had told Croatian officials that it would engage the police if they did not leave Plitvice. In a radio address, Tuđman said that the JNA would be regarded as a hostile army of occupation if its course of action remained unchanged.[10] On 2 April, the JNA handed the Croatian authorities an ultimatum, requesting the police leave Plitvice.[22] The special police left Plitvice the same day, but the 90 officers staffing the newly established police station remained in place.[14]

Aftermath

[edit]
Memorial toJosip Jović, the first Croatian policeman killed in action

Police officer Josip Jović was the only Croatian fatality in the incident.[11] The SAO Krajina force also suffered one killed in the fighting—Rajko Vukadinović, who was the first Croatian Serb combat fatality in the war.[19] A total of 20 people were wounded,[23][24] seven of whom were the Croatian police.[11] The Croatian forces captured 29 SAO Krajina troops,[17] 18 of whom were formally charged withinsurgency.[25] Among the prisoners wasGoran Hadžić, later to become the President of theRepublic of Serbian Krajina,[10] although he was quickly released. Hadžić's release was explained as a goodwill gesture by the authorities,[8] but Boljkovac claims he was released because he was collaborating with the Croatian authorities in 1991.[26] Approximately 400 tourists, most of them Italian, were evacuated from the Plitvice Lakes after the fighting.[15]

The clash at the Plitvice Lakes worsened the overall situation in Croatia and led to an escalation of the conflict.[27] Even though the Croatian and Serb forces were separated by the JNA at the Plitvice Lakes, the situation in the area continued to deteriorate following the clash. In nearbyPlaški, Croatian police personnel left the local police station and were replaced by Serb officers.[28] Both SAO Krajina and Croatian forces set up severalroadblocks on theSaborsko–Lička Jasenica–Ogulin road. By summer, the blockades were extended to the north of Plaški and south ofSaborsko,[29] where Croatian authorities established another 30-strong police station on 2 April. Only JNA vehicles were permitted to pass the roadblocks,[30] and that brought about a shortage of food, medicine and electricity in the area.[29]

On 2 May, theSerb Democratic Party, the ruling party in the SAO Krajina, organised aprotest march to the Plitvice Lakes and a political rally demanding the Croatian police withdraw from Plitvice. The march, led by Babić andVojislav Šešelj, was prevented from reaching the Plitvice Lakes by the JNA and forced to return to Titova Korenica.[31] The JNA imposed a blockade of the Plitvice Lakes police station on 1 July, on the pretext that the Croatian police had abducted and imprisoned two JNA officers. By 6 July, the SAO Krajina forces and the JNA commenced attacks on the Ljubovo Pass southeast of the Plitvice Lakes, on theTitova Korenica–Gospić road, driving theCroatian National Guard back and capturing the pass by the end of the month.[32] Throughout the summer, the JNA continued to engage Croatian forces in Lika using the units deployed to the Plitvice Lakes in April. The fighting escalated further on 30 August, when the JNA captured the Plitvice Lakes police station and the following day when theBattle of Gospić began.[33]

Jović is largely viewed in Croatia as the first casualty of the Croatian War of Independence. A monument dedicated to him was erected in his birthplace ofAržano in 1994.[34] After the war, a monument was erected at the site of his death, where annual commemorations of the clash are held.[35] The clash and Jović's death are commemorated annually at the Plitvice Lakes.[36]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hoare 2010, p. 117.
  2. ^Hoare 2010, p. 118.
  3. ^The New York Times & 19 August 1990.
  4. ^ICTY & 12 June 2007.
  5. ^Repe 2009, pp. 141–142.
  6. ^CIA 2002, p. 86.
  7. ^abCIA 2002, p. 90.
  8. ^abcdNazor 2007, p. 60.
  9. ^Mesić 2004, p. 211.
  10. ^abcdJudah 2009, pp. 175–176, 244.
  11. ^abcVečernji list & 29 March 2013.
  12. ^Hrvatski vojnik & October 2012.
  13. ^MUP 2010, p. 26.
  14. ^abcHMDCDR 2007, p. 104.
  15. ^abJutarnji list & 30 March 2006.
  16. ^abThe New York Times & 1 April 1991.
  17. ^abWachtel & Bennett 2012, p. 40.
  18. ^Armatta 2010, p. 462.
  19. ^abMarijan 2006, p. 225.
  20. ^Slobodna Dalmacija & 30 March 2001.
  21. ^Bennett 1995, p. 150.
  22. ^Meier 2013, p. 171.
  23. ^Goldstein 1999, p. 220.
  24. ^Crnobrnja 1996, p. 157.
  25. ^MUP & 29 March 2011.
  26. ^Večernji list & 30 May 2011.
  27. ^Grandits & Leutloff 2003, pp. 36–37.
  28. ^ICTY & 12 June 2007, pp. 72–73.
  29. ^abICTY & 12 June 2007, p. 73.
  30. ^ICTY & 12 June 2007, p. 79.
  31. ^Marijan 2006, p. 226.
  32. ^Marijan 2006, p. 228.
  33. ^Marijan 2006, p. 229.
  34. ^Večernji list & 31 March 2013 (a).
  35. ^Novi list & 31 March 2012.
  36. ^Večernji list & 31 March 2013 (b).

Sources

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Books

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Scientific journal articles

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News reports

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Other sources

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