-
Continue reading →: Croatia: No-Serbian Cyrillic On Public Buildings Gains Meritorious Momentum
The Croatian parliament had July 15 decided to hand the sensitive matter of whether or not to hold a referendum against the use of the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet on state offices in the city of Vukovar to the Constitutional Court. Referendum supporters say that Cyrillic symbolically represents the utter terror…
-
Continue reading →: Croatian MEP Joins Urge For Stepping-Up Dealing With Communist Crimes
With the new European Union Parliament on the way since elections in May 2014 and the election last week of Jean-Claude Juncker as the European Commission President there is a movement that caught my attention from the European Peoples’ Party (EPP) to make stronger steps forward regarding doing something…
-
Continue reading →: Salona – the ancient capital of DalmatiaOriginally posted on Go Hvar: Driving into Split on the main road from Trogir, you pass by what appears to be a large municipal park with some ruins. Most people are probably too busy watching the traffic to pay much attention. But these ruins are what’s left of Salona, Dalmatia’s…
-
Continue reading →: Same-Sex Life Partnership – A Step Forward In Croatian Democracy
Homophobia was the social norm in communist Yugoslavia The significant levels of homophobia that regrettably still exist in Croatia (as it does in other countries) are not solely the product of Catholic indoctrination over the years as many, including the current communist-nostalgic government, would like to claim but…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia: Benghazy Scrubber Scrubs Western Balkans
Lately, Victoria Nuland, US Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Eurasia, is best known, or, rather, notorious, for her role in objecting to the initial set of the Benghazi attack talking points when she reportedly asked that references to al Qaeda and previous CIA warnings about threats posed…
-
Continue reading →: Towards A Croatian Entity In Bosnia And Herzegovina
When US diplomat Richard Holbrooke and former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt gathered Bosnian Muslims (Bosniaks), Serbs and Croats together in 1995 at an American air force base near Dayton, Ohio, harassing them into a deal that would end years of terror, genocide and ethnic cleansing that became the…
-
Continue reading →: On the Nineteenth Anniversary of Srebrenica
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: Genocide denial has such a beguilingly pleasant façade. It’s nothing like what I imagined as a child. I grew up thinking that ‘deniers’ were skinheads or crackpots who collected Nazi paraphernalia. The reality is, of course, far more uncomfortable. I have lost count…
-
Continue reading →: Croatian Serb War Crimes Indicted Goran Hadzic – An Ordinary Family Man From Hell
A significant war crimes case at the Hague against Goran Hadzic has last week Thursday 3 July reached its defence stage. In 1992, Goran Hadzic was elected President of the self-proclaimed Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK), a territory seized from Croatia by Serbs in rebellion against Croatia’s declaration of…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia: Antifascists Vilify Veterans To The Disgrace Of The Nation
On 9 May of this year the mayor of the city of Split, Ivo Baldasar (a Social Democrat) presided over the unveiling of the monument to the 9th HOS Battalion Rafael Vitez Boban. Croatia’s communist lot, who boldly call themselves antifascists even though no antifascist organisation in the world protect…
-
Continue reading →: Croatia’s 2014 Dalmacija Wine Expo: Three Things I Learned
Originally posted on Uncorking Croatia: By Cliff Rames © 2014 Sensory overload. That is how I would describe any one of my whirlwind visits to Croatia. I mean it in a positive way. The country is simply brimming with vinous, culinary and natural delights. Gnarly old grapevines improbably clinging to sun…
-
Continue reading →: Croatian Campaign “Don’t Touch The Children” Goes Global
On April 23 of 2014 the United Nations granted special consultative status at the Economic and Social Council of the UN (ECOSOC) to the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction. It is held that this status gives the Kinsey Institute an important voice in global…
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.