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Contents

   



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1 Background  





2 Operation  





3 Aftermath  





4 Notes  





5 References  














Bučje camp






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Coordinates: 45°2744N 17°2409E / 45.46222°N 17.40250°E / 45.46222; 17.40250
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Bučje camp
Concentration camp
Bučje camp is located in Croatia
Bučje camp

Location of Bučje camp within Croatia

Coordinates45°27′44N 17°24′09E / 45.46222°N 17.40250°E / 45.46222; 17.40250
LocationBučje, Pakrac, Croatia
Operated byCroatian Serb rebels
OperationalAugust–December 1991
InmatesCroatian civilians, prisoners of war, pro-government Serbs
Number of inmates200–300
Killed10
Notable inmatesIvan Šreter

The Bučje camp (Croatian: Logor Bučje) was a concentration camp[1][2][3] ran by rebel Croatian Serb forces during the early stages of the Croatian War of Independence. Located in the village of Bučje near Pakrac, the camp was used for the imprisonment of 200–300 Croatian civilians, prisoners of war, other non-Serbs, as well as Serbs that sided with the Croatian government or refused to join Serbian paramilitary groups. The camp was the site of numerous war crimes including murder, rape, and torture. Twenty-two detainees are still listed as missing as of December 2013.

On two separate occasions, in August and again in October 1991, some inmates were released as part of an organized prisoner exchange with Croatian forces. The remaining 70 prisoners were taken to the Stara Gradiška camp while Bučje itself was closed on 13 December 1991.[4] A few days later, on 26 December, the empty camp and the surrounding area were captured by Croatian forces.

Background

[edit]

In 1990, following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the pro-independence Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), relations between ethnic Croats and ethnic Serbs deteriorated. In 1991, the municipality of Pakrac, in which the village of Bučje was located, was the only municipality in the central part of the Western Slavonia area with a Serbian majority, with Serbs representing 46.4% of its population, followed by Croats with 35.8%.[5] In early 1991, the Pakrac local assembly voted on joining SAO Krajina although the Constitutional Court of Croatia declared the decision invalid.[6] Ethnic tensions in the region culminated on 1 March 1991 with the Pakrac clash, one of the first serious outbreaks of violence in the Croatian War of Independence.[7][8]

Operation

[edit]

The first prisoners were taken to villages Grđevica and Branešci. Soon afterward, they were transferred to Bučje where local Serb paramilitary groups with the help of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA)[9] established a prison camp in the buildings of the nearby veterinary station, school, forest service, and the old municipality seat on 16 August 1991.[4][10] Prisoners, numbering 200[10] to 300[11] during the time the camp was active, consisted of Croatian civilians, some of whom were taken from their workplaces and vineyards, captured members of the Ministry of the Interior and the Croatian National Guard (ZNG), other non-Serb minorities as well as Serbs that were loyal to the Croatian government or refused to join the paramilitary groups.[10][12][4]

Women and children were among those detained in the camp, the youngest inmate being four years old. Prisoners were subjected to physical and psychological abuse.[10] They were beaten while handcuffed and blindfolded and forced to do hard physical labor that resulted in a number of deaths.[12][13] Eyewitness accounts also confirmed that 10 prisoners were murdered.[13] However, as of 2013, only one body has been recovered. The fate and location of the remains of 22 others is still unknown.[13] Two women were raped while being videotaped.[14] Among the prisoners whose remains have yet to be found was Dr. Ivan Šreter, director of the Pakrac hospital and the president of the local HDZ.[15]

The camp was closed on 13 December after prisoner exchanges in August and October 1991. The remaining 70 prisoners were taken to a camp in Stara Gradiška, where they were exchanged in January 1992.[4] By that time, the Croatian Army (HV) captured the empty camp in Bučje as a part of its Operation Papuk-91 in late 1991.[4]

Aftermath

[edit]

On 27 January 1993, the county court in Požega filed an indictment against four Serbian paramilitaries, accusing them of taking a civilian to Bučje and torturing him, along with others in the camp. In April, the four were convicted in absentia. All were sentenced to 8 years imprisonment. In 2009 the county state attorney officially requested that the men be re-tried. In the changed indictment, new evidence suggested that the four did indeed take an individual to Bučje, but they did not participate in the torture of prisoners and had no influence on how long they would be imprisoned. Also, the person they forced to Bučje was captured in his workplace but was a member of the Ministry of the Interior reserve force. They were subsequently charged with armed mutiny against Croatia and were acquitted as part of a general amnesty.[16]

In July 1999, the state attorney filed an indictment against R. A. for physically and psychologically abusing prisoners while serving as a guard in the camp. He was sentenced to six years imprisonment later that year.[17] On 27 January 2007 the county court in Požega sentenced V. K., a guard in the camp, to 20 years in prison for abusing inmates at Bučje.[18] On 2008 members of the veterans associations from Pakrac and Lipik collected information about the case and filed a report to the state attorney, naming 11 individuals whom they believed to be responsible for the opening of the camp.[19]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "The Bučje Camp". Compas - Lira agency, Lipik. Retrieved 2022-09-15.
  • ^ "The Liberation of Bučje". Domovinski rat, Zagreb. Retrieved 2022-09-15.
  • ^ "Bučje". Sandra Vitaljic, Stockholm. Retrieved 2022-09-15.
  • ^ a b c d e Index & 18 September 2004.
  • ^ Miškulin 2011, pp. 356–357.
  • ^ Miškulin 2011, pp. 377–378.
  • ^ Engelberg & 3 March 1991.
  • ^ Engelberg & 4 March 1991.
  • ^ Grozdanić & 22 July 2010.
  • ^ a b c d Teršelič & 15 January 2012.
  • ^ Pakrac 2011.
  • ^ a b Amnesty International 1992.
  • ^ a b c Milković & 16 January 2013.
  • ^ Žarkov 2007, p. 150.
  • ^ Večernji list & 17 January 2011.
  • ^ Centar za mir 2013.
  • ^ Centar za mir & 28 November 2013.
  • ^ Državno odvjetništvo Republike Hrvatske 2013.
  • ^ Index & 19 May 2008.
  • References

    [edit]
    News reports
  • Engelberg, Stephen (4 March 1991). "Serb-Croat Showdown in One Village Square". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 14 June 2013.
  • "HKDU traži odgovornost za zločine u logoru Bučju" [HKDU seeks responsibility for crimes in the Bučje camp]. Index.hr. 18 September 2004.
  • Grozdanić, Dragan (22 July 2010). "Za jedne izdajnik, za druge četnik" [Traitor for some, Chetnik for others]. Novosti.
  • Teršelič, Vesna (15 January 2012). "Logor Bučje: 20. obljetnica oslobođenja zatočenika" [Bučje camp: 20th anniversary of freeing of the detainees] (PDF). Documenta. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-28.
  • "Kapelica kao spomenik i poruka ljubavi i mira" [Chapel as a monument and message of love and peace]. pakrac.hr. 2011.
  • Milković, Vesna (16 January 2013). "Još uvijek se ništa ne zna o sudbini 32 osobe" [Faith of 32 people still unknown]. pozeska-kronika.hr.
  • "Kazneno prijavljeni osnivači logora Bučje" [Bučje camp founders charged]. Index.hr. 19 May 2008.
  • "Institucije nisu učinile dovoljno da se krivci za Bučje procesuiraju" [The institutions have not done enough to prosecute those who are responsible for Bučje]. Večernji list. 17 January 2011.
  • Scientific articles
    Books
    Other sources
  • "Zločin u Bučju" [Crime in Bučje]. Centar za mir. 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-12-27.
  • "Zločin u Bučju (opt. Radovan Arsenić)" [Crime in Bučje (ac. Radovan Arsenić)]. Centar za mir. 28 November 2013.
  • "Logor Bučje" [Bučje camp]. Državno odvjetništvo Republike Hrvatske. 2013.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bučje_camp&oldid=1195108351"

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