
The Croatian Army managed to push the entire Serbian Army as well as around 200.000 civilians [1] to the areas of Bosnia and Hercegovina, and “clean” the area by murdering and forcibly expelling the remaining Serbian population. For those familiar with less politically correct phrases and closer to the region, the Operation Storm is quite famous for its ethnic cleansing techniques. The operation is also known for sending General Ante Gotovina straight to the Croatian star skies and to the top wanted list of the war criminals of the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia.
Personal experience
Without going into the complex details of the international law issues this case implies, I want to focus on my personal experience observing the national celebrations of the mentioned state holiday and throw in a few comments in the light of Croatia’s open path to the EU.
As somebody more or less familiar with the issue of Ante Gotovina, you will not escape the big posters celebrating his importance already on the first walk through the little town. Phrases like “No surrender, no treachery!” or “Ante, our hero!” will stay in sight wherever you go. Besides the omnipresent posters it gets especially interesting for a foreigner around the mentioned holiday. The local and national newspapers were filled with articles justifying the operation and the role of the Croatian Army, and some comments were on the verge of the tasteless and questionable media coverage (I can still clearly remember a profile article of a boy who turned 18 during the operation, and has celebrated his birthday by burning 18 Serb houses and killing 18 Serbs. The local newspaper was portraying him as a war hero in 2006.) The radio plays only Thompson’s songs for days to come. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the name, Thompson is a very popular Croatian singer, labeled by some as the greatest Ustaš poet. Everybody knows the lyrics by heart, and I tell you, some are not easy to digest for someone who does not share the nationalistic energy. Young boys are screaming “I will kill a Serb!” on the streets like it does not matter what they are saying. Everybody’s out, everybody is celebrating. I would not want to be a Serbian caught in the middle of these parties, and honestly, the whole celebration period was a shock to me.
A local friend of mine said that although it was not his war, since he was too young to remember what was actually going on, many of the locals still live with a very clear picture of the war and the aggression that took place. And those pictures are being carried over to the young generations, borne even after the war. I cannot help to think that it will take generations before the hostility towards the Serbian nation will cease, but I guess that is the normal regeneration time after the war - although only with appropriate peace-building measures! I am not sure what those are for Croatia, but I am guessing one of the indirect might be its path towards the EU membership, negotiations of which started not long ago, in October 2005.
EU’s role
However, according to the last Eurobarometer only 34% of Croats think that the membership in the EU is good for their country. The link between their collaboration with the International Criminal Tribunal in Hague and the European Union conditioning seemed to have been established quite quickly and for many Croats the path to the EU might mean giving up the proudness of some of their very recent and hurting war memories. Their understanding of national survival and patriotic pride is already going a different path of what the international community wants them to understand as remedy for war crimes and respect for human rights, the same community who is trying to pay its dues for not delivering when there was time to (that being at the start of the wars in 1990). Yet these are the same reasons why the Croatian authorities themselves have not yet impartially and justifiably addressed the issue of war crimes committed during the 1991-95 period (or are doing that with a very slow pace)! The patriotic and nationalistic movements within are just too strong and every government that would be too keen on doing so, would have consciously risk its fall.
The political elite in Croatia is setting high-flying dates for the entry (2008 as the most quoted date), however, it is very likely that they will not live up to their promises. Croatia is on its “European” path, no doubt about that, but it will be a long and entangled road, I fear. Not so much in the economic and purely political sense, but in changing the political culture of the nation and true democratisation and peace-building of it, which Croatia still needs very much.
The EU should offer its complete support to the processes of full democratisation and recovery, because it can do so, and there should be no hesitation or doubt about that. The EU can and should look less like a patron and more like an older brother.
Read more about it at:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/inde...
http://www.delhrv.ec.europa.eu/en/e...





