-
Continue reading →: Convicted Serb rapists from Vukovar 1991 – flee Croatia
This is the stuff horror movies are made of. Only, horror movies are usually fiction. It is incredulous that persons charged of mass rapes during the Serb aggression in Croatia (early 1990’s) are still allowed to roam the streets freely over almost two decades, while charges are being heard in…
-
Continue reading →: Mishka Gora launches her book “Fragments of War”
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: I am pleased to announce that my debut novel Fragments of War is now available direct from the publisher CreateSpace (discount code FKMD96HA), and also from the following retailers: Amazon France, Amazon UK, and Amazon USA. It is an auspicious day to be…
-
Continue reading →: Fragments of War interview with author Mishka Gora
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: Yesterday, I was interviewed by Zoran Stupar of Dnevno. Here is an English version of that interview. Mishka Gora: Remembers with disgust those who did not respond forcefully to Serbian aggression. I believe the only moral response to what happened in Croatia and…
-
Continue reading →: General Ante Gotovina: must be found not guilty at ICTY Appeal
I do not apologise if my posts on the Croatian Generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac ICTY processes render my readers giddy. If the Generals can suffer incarceration pining for liberty and justice they deserve, tolerating with dignity the exasperating concoctions of theories the prosecution keeps churning out like there’s…
-
Continue reading →: A convicted person is not a plaything of justice, says Croatian General Mladen Markac’s defence
On 31 August Croatian General Mladen Markac’s defence has filed its full reply to the ICTY Prosecution’s Brief that Generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac, in case the Appeal Chamber found no case for joint criminal enterprise (JCE) and therefore no case for deportation of Serbs from Croatia associated with…
-
Continue reading →: Fragments of War, a book by Mishka Gora
Just released. A book by Mishka Gora “Fragments of War”. Just a glimpse through the pages of the book promises to take us on a captivating and heart-clenching journey among the hope, despair, love, compassion, merciless existence…that were, during Croatia’s war of 1990’s and into Bosnia and Herzegovina. It’s the…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia: major warfare within Serb minority
A major warfare within the Serb minority in Croatia has gained messy and alarming proportions during the past few days pointing to corruption and shady dealings within that community. That which started as a public row and mud slinging between Croatia’s president Ivo Josipovic and the president of the Independent…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia: government’s deafening silence for victims of totalitarian regimes
August 23rd was/is the European Day for the Remembrance of the Victims of Totalitarian Regimes (Nazi, Communist and Fascist regimes alike). The silence from the Croatian government and Croatian president (all of whom are from the former Yugoslav communists breed) on that day was so painfully deafening that it took…
-
Continue reading →: Reblog: Playing Us For Fools
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: ‘The Tribunal of Fools’ The Prosecution in the cases of Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markač (currently on appeal) must think we are fools. Their August 17 response to the Gotovina Motion challenging the jurisdiction of the Appeals Chamber to consider an alternative mode…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia: Josipovic’s helter-skelter politics
The palpably ever-present helter-skelter in the Croatian left-wing politics have shown their unsavoury face during the past week, again. It’s blatantly obvious that the head of the Croatian state, President Ivo Josipovic, just like his predecessor Stjepan Mesic has absolutely no visible strategy or ordered plan for the integration of…
-
Continue reading →: 1,700 mass graves: 90% victims of Communist crimes
In Blato, on the Island of Korcula, in Croatia, a mournful, dignified event interred August 16 the earthly remains of three men who were thrown into the Paklenica pit (Hell pit) on the feast of St Rocco, 16 August 1943, as victims of the communist totalitarian regime. This event serves…
Ina Vukic: I was born in Croatia and live Australia. I have been described as a prominent figure known for my contribution to the Croatian and wider societies, particularly in the context of Croatia’s transition from communism to democracy, as well as for my many years of work as a clinical psychologist and Chief Executive Officer of government-funded services for people with disabilities, including mental health services, in Australia. In 1995, the President of the Republic of Croatia awarded me two Medals of Honor, the Homeland War Memorial Medal and the Order of the Croatian Trefoil for her special merits and her contribution to the founding of the Republic of Croatia. I have been a successful blogger since 2011 and write extensively in the English-language on issues related to Croatian current affairs and democracy, as well as the challenges Croatia faced and still faces in its transition from communism. My goal is to raise awareness of these connections and issues worldwide.