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#ustasha — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #ustasha, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #Croatia #Ustasha #WWII #history #vergangenheitsaufarbeitung

    "Thousands march in Croatia against far-right surge and WWII revisionism
    Europe

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the Nazi-allied Ustasha regime established during World War II. Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia's capital on Sunday in an anti-fascist march protesting the rise of World War II revisionism and far-right views in the country.

    In recent months, Croatia has been seeing right-wing nationalists increasingly trying to impose their agenda, with subsequent incidents targeting the ethnic Serb minority and the use in public of the country's World War II pro-Nazi regime salute.

    In early November, masked men disrupted a Serb cultural event in Croatia's second largest city of Split, replicating the Ustasha salute.

    Relations with ethnic Serbs remain fragile since Croatia's 1990s war with Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs who opposed its independence."

    france24.com/en/europe/2025113

  2. #Croatia #Ustasha #WWII #history #vergangenheitsaufarbeitung

    "Thousands march in Croatia against far-right surge and WWII revisionism
    Europe

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the Nazi-allied Ustasha regime established during World War II. Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia's capital on Sunday in an anti-fascist march protesting the rise of World War II revisionism and far-right views in the country.

    In recent months, Croatia has been seeing right-wing nationalists increasingly trying to impose their agenda, with subsequent incidents targeting the ethnic Serb minority and the use in public of the country's World War II pro-Nazi regime salute.

    In early November, masked men disrupted a Serb cultural event in Croatia's second largest city of Split, replicating the Ustasha salute.

    Relations with ethnic Serbs remain fragile since Croatia's 1990s war with Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs who opposed its independence."

    france24.com/en/europe/2025113

  3. #Croatia #Ustasha #WWII #history #vergangenheitsaufarbeitung

    "Thousands march in Croatia against far-right surge and WWII revisionism
    Europe

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the Nazi-allied Ustasha regime established during World War II. Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia's capital on Sunday in an anti-fascist march protesting the rise of World War II revisionism and far-right views in the country.

    In recent months, Croatia has been seeing right-wing nationalists increasingly trying to impose their agenda, with subsequent incidents targeting the ethnic Serb minority and the use in public of the country's World War II pro-Nazi regime salute.

    In early November, masked men disrupted a Serb cultural event in Croatia's second largest city of Split, replicating the Ustasha salute.

    Relations with ethnic Serbs remain fragile since Croatia's 1990s war with Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs who opposed its independence."

    france24.com/en/europe/2025113

  4. #Croatia #Ustasha #WWII #history #vergangenheitsaufarbeitung

    "Thousands march in Croatia against far-right surge and WWII revisionism
    Europe

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the Nazi-allied Ustasha regime established during World War II. Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia's capital on Sunday in an anti-fascist march protesting the rise of World War II revisionism and far-right views in the country.

    In recent months, Croatia has been seeing right-wing nationalists increasingly trying to impose their agenda, with subsequent incidents targeting the ethnic Serb minority and the use in public of the country's World War II pro-Nazi regime salute.

    In early November, masked men disrupted a Serb cultural event in Croatia's second largest city of Split, replicating the Ustasha salute.

    Relations with ethnic Serbs remain fragile since Croatia's 1990s war with Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs who opposed its independence."

    france24.com/en/europe/2025113

  5. Thousands marched in Croatia against a far-right revival and WWII revisionism.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the country’s WWII pro-Nazi Ustasha regime.

    Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    mediafaro.org/article/20251130

    #Croatia #Protests #Politics #Farright #Nazis #WW2 #Ustasha #History #Zagreb #Rijeka #Pula #Zadar

  6. Thousands marched in Croatia against a far-right revival and WWII revisionism.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the country’s WWII pro-Nazi Ustasha regime.

    Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    mediafaro.org/article/20251130

    #Croatia #Protests #Politics #Farright #Nazis #WW2 #Ustasha #History #Zagreb #Rijeka #Pula #Zadar

  7. Thousands marched in Croatia against a far-right revival and WWII revisionism.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the country’s WWII pro-Nazi Ustasha regime.

    Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    mediafaro.org/article/20251130

    #Croatia #Protests #Politics #Farright #Nazis #WW2 #Ustasha #History #Zagreb #Rijeka #Pula #Zadar

  8. Thousands marched in Croatia against a far-right revival and WWII revisionism.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the country’s WWII pro-Nazi Ustasha regime.

    Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    mediafaro.org/article/20251130

    #Croatia #Protests #Politics #Farright #Nazis #WW2 #Ustasha #History #Zagreb #Rijeka #Pula #Zadar

  9. Thousands marched in Croatia against a far-right revival and WWII revisionism.

    Several thousand people rallied in Croatia’s capital on Sunday, denouncing the rise of far-right nationalism and attempts to glorify the country’s WWII pro-Nazi Ustasha regime.

    Similar marches took place in Rijeka, Pula and Zadar.

    mediafaro.org/article/20251130

    #Croatia #Protests #Politics #Farright #Nazis #WW2 #Ustasha #History #Zagreb #Rijeka #Pula #Zadar

  10. #Croatia #fascists #Ustasha #history

    "Croatian ultra-nationalist mega-gig exposes divided society

    A 'neo-fascist Croatian Woodstock' or patriotic, anti-establishment fun?

    Last month's mega-gig by the ultra-nationalist singer Thompson – the stage name of Marko Perkovic – has dramatically exposed the polarised divisions deep within Croatian society.

    It shone a spotlight on wildly differing interpretations of both the country's struggle for independence in the 1990s, and the history of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), a World War Two-era Nazi puppet state.

    Nobody would argue that the concert was anything other than huge. Thompson's management claimed that more than half a million tickets for the show at Zagreb Hippodrome were sold. The actual attendance was considerably lower – but still in the hundreds of thousands.

    That enormous crowd enthusiastically joined in when Thompson launched into his opening number, Čavoglave Battalion. To his cry of 'Za dom' ('for homeland'), the audience roared back 'Spremni!' ('ready!'). MPs from the governing HDZ party were among those chanting along.

    This chant has outraged opposition parties and organisations working for human rights and ethnic and regional reconciliation. They point out that 'Za dom, spremni' originated with the anti-Semitic, Nazi-allied Ustasha organization during World War Two – and that Croatia's Constitutional Court has ruled that the phrase 'is an Ustasha salute of the Independent State of Croatia [which is] not in accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia'."

    bbc.com/news/articles/cz60nyp3

  11. #Croatia #fascists #Ustasha #history

    "Croatian ultra-nationalist mega-gig exposes divided society

    A 'neo-fascist Croatian Woodstock' or patriotic, anti-establishment fun?

    Last month's mega-gig by the ultra-nationalist singer Thompson – the stage name of Marko Perkovic – has dramatically exposed the polarised divisions deep within Croatian society.

    It shone a spotlight on wildly differing interpretations of both the country's struggle for independence in the 1990s, and the history of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), a World War Two-era Nazi puppet state.

    Nobody would argue that the concert was anything other than huge. Thompson's management claimed that more than half a million tickets for the show at Zagreb Hippodrome were sold. The actual attendance was considerably lower – but still in the hundreds of thousands.

    That enormous crowd enthusiastically joined in when Thompson launched into his opening number, Čavoglave Battalion. To his cry of 'Za dom' ('for homeland'), the audience roared back 'Spremni!' ('ready!'). MPs from the governing HDZ party were among those chanting along.

    This chant has outraged opposition parties and organisations working for human rights and ethnic and regional reconciliation. They point out that 'Za dom, spremni' originated with the anti-Semitic, Nazi-allied Ustasha organization during World War Two – and that Croatia's Constitutional Court has ruled that the phrase 'is an Ustasha salute of the Independent State of Croatia [which is] not in accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia'."

    bbc.com/news/articles/cz60nyp3

  12. #Croatia #fascists #Ustasha #history

    "Croatian ultra-nationalist mega-gig exposes divided society

    A 'neo-fascist Croatian Woodstock' or patriotic, anti-establishment fun?

    Last month's mega-gig by the ultra-nationalist singer Thompson – the stage name of Marko Perkovic – has dramatically exposed the polarised divisions deep within Croatian society.

    It shone a spotlight on wildly differing interpretations of both the country's struggle for independence in the 1990s, and the history of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), a World War Two-era Nazi puppet state.

    Nobody would argue that the concert was anything other than huge. Thompson's management claimed that more than half a million tickets for the show at Zagreb Hippodrome were sold. The actual attendance was considerably lower – but still in the hundreds of thousands.

    That enormous crowd enthusiastically joined in when Thompson launched into his opening number, Čavoglave Battalion. To his cry of 'Za dom' ('for homeland'), the audience roared back 'Spremni!' ('ready!'). MPs from the governing HDZ party were among those chanting along.

    This chant has outraged opposition parties and organisations working for human rights and ethnic and regional reconciliation. They point out that 'Za dom, spremni' originated with the anti-Semitic, Nazi-allied Ustasha organization during World War Two – and that Croatia's Constitutional Court has ruled that the phrase 'is an Ustasha salute of the Independent State of Croatia [which is] not in accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia'."

    bbc.com/news/articles/cz60nyp3

  13. #Croatia #fascists #Ustasha #history

    "Croatian ultra-nationalist mega-gig exposes divided society

    A 'neo-fascist Croatian Woodstock' or patriotic, anti-establishment fun?

    Last month's mega-gig by the ultra-nationalist singer Thompson – the stage name of Marko Perkovic – has dramatically exposed the polarised divisions deep within Croatian society.

    It shone a spotlight on wildly differing interpretations of both the country's struggle for independence in the 1990s, and the history of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), a World War Two-era Nazi puppet state.

    Nobody would argue that the concert was anything other than huge. Thompson's management claimed that more than half a million tickets for the show at Zagreb Hippodrome were sold. The actual attendance was considerably lower – but still in the hundreds of thousands.

    That enormous crowd enthusiastically joined in when Thompson launched into his opening number, Čavoglave Battalion. To his cry of 'Za dom' ('for homeland'), the audience roared back 'Spremni!' ('ready!'). MPs from the governing HDZ party were among those chanting along.

    This chant has outraged opposition parties and organisations working for human rights and ethnic and regional reconciliation. They point out that 'Za dom, spremni' originated with the anti-Semitic, Nazi-allied Ustasha organization during World War Two – and that Croatia's Constitutional Court has ruled that the phrase 'is an Ustasha salute of the Independent State of Croatia [which is] not in accordance with the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia'."

    bbc.com/news/articles/cz60nyp3

  14. Next to #Zagreb‘s 🇭🇷 main train station: the memorial for the victims of the #Shoah and the #Ustasha regime.
    About 800 Jews from Zagreb were deported from here to #Auschwitz, in August 1942.
    Many more, including Serbs, Roma and others, were murdered by the Ustasha in #Jasenovac concentration camp, about an hour away.

  15. Next to #Zagreb‘s 🇭🇷 main train station: the memorial for the victims of the #Shoah and the #Ustasha regime.
    About 800 Jews from Zagreb were deported from here to #Auschwitz, in August 1942.
    Many more, including Serbs, Roma and others, were murdered by the Ustasha in #Jasenovac concentration camp, about an hour away.

  16. Next to #Zagreb‘s 🇭🇷 main train station: the memorial for the victims of the #Shoah and the #Ustasha regime.
    About 800 Jews from Zagreb were deported from here to #Auschwitz, in August 1942.
    Many more, including Serbs, Roma and others, were murdered by the Ustasha in #Jasenovac concentration camp, about an hour away.

  17. Next to #Zagreb‘s 🇭🇷 main train station: the memorial for the victims of the #Shoah and the #Ustasha regime.
    About 800 Jews from Zagreb were deported from here to #Auschwitz, in August 1942.
    Many more, including Serbs, Roma and others, were murdered by the Ustasha in #Jasenovac concentration camp, about an hour away.

  18. Next to #Zagreb‘s 🇭🇷 main train station: the memorial for the victims of the #Shoah and the #Ustasha regime.
    About 800 Jews from Zagreb were deported from here to #Auschwitz, in August 1942.
    Many more, including Serbs, Roma and others, were murdered by the Ustasha in #Jasenovac concentration camp, about an hour away.

  19. #FascistCrimes — 29 people were massacred by the Ustaše #Otd in 1944 in Croatia.

    Most of the victims were burned alive.

    Over 160 people were arrested & deported by the #Ustashas (who had the support of the Nazis & the Italian #Fascists) from Joakovlje (Hrvatsko Zagorje), near Zagreb.

    #30dicembre #Ustasha