May 1, 2015 | 12:04 
Victims remembered 20 years after Croatia's Operation Flash
 Source: B92, Beta, Tanjug  BELGRADE -- Friday marks 20 years since the 
offensive of Croatian forces against Serb areas in western Slavonia, at the 
time a part of the Republic of Serb Krajina (RSK). 
                        During the two-day operation dubbed "Flash", which 
started on May 1, 1995 about five o'clock in the morning with an artillery 
attack on the town of Pakrac, the Croatian army took control of the area.A 
large number of Serb civilians were killed during the operation and about 
30,000 were forced to leave their homes. 

 According to the data of the Croatian Helsinki Committee for Human Rights 
(HHO), presented in July 2003. the offensive resulted in the deaths of 83 Serb 
civilians. Of that number, 30 were killed when refugee convoys came under 
attack, while 53 died in their homes. 

 According to the data of the Documentation and Information Center Veritas from 
April 2003, 283 Serbs were either killed or have been listed as missing since 
May 1, 1995. 

 A day after Croatia launched its offensive against western Slavonia, then 
leader of the RSK Milan Martic ordered the shelling of Zagreb which lasted two 
days. For this, Martic was indicted for war crimes by the Hague Tribunal, found 
guilty, and sentenced to 35 years in prison. 

 The forces of the former RSK fired 23 missiles which resulted in the deaths of 
six people while 176 others were injured. 

 The Hague Tribunal was also preparing a war crimes indictment against then 
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman who died in 1999. 

 In April 2001, Hague investigators question former Croatian Army Chief of 
Staff Peter Stipetic - but he cleared of all suspicion of responsibility for 
the crimes committed during operations Medak Pocket (Medacki Dzep), Flash, and 
Storm. 

 Hague investigators have also interviewed several other Croatian officers, but 
decided not to indict any of them. 

 In July 2005, the Croatian prosecution received a complaint against General 
Mladen Kruljac over the war crimes committed in western Slavonia during 
Operation Flash. That complaint was forwarded to the competent prosecutor's 
office in Slavonski Brod, but he was never indicted. 

 A month later, then Croatian President Stjepan Mesic promoted Kruljak to the 
rank of lieutenant general. 

 In July 2010, 28 bodies were exhumed from the local cemetery in the village of 
Medari near Nova Gradiska in western Slavonia, including those of children. 
These were the victims of Operation Flash buried in a mass grave. In May 2011, 
the remains of 48 more Serbs murdered during the operation were exhumed at the 
local cemetery in the village of Vrboljani, and a year later 28 more in the 
municipality of Novska. 

 According to the Veritas Center data published in November 2011, the remains 
of 14 Serbs were identified in Zagreb, also the victims of the operation 
carried out 20 years ago by the Croatian Army and police. 

 The Commission for Missing Persons of the Serbian Government announced in July 
2014 that 1,035 Serb victims of operations Flash and Storm had been exhumed 
from registered burial sites in Croatia from 2001 until 2013. 

 In May of 2013 the Serbian War Crimes Prosecution announced it was working 
closely with Croatian counterparts to shed light on the murder of 21 Serb 
civilians on May 1, 1995. 

 A memorial service for the victims has been held in Belgrade's Church of St. 
Marko on Friday, organized by an association of the victims' families. 

 President of the Coalition of Refugee Associations and Deputy Chairman of the 
Serbian Parliamentary Committee on Diaspora Miodrag Linta will on Saturday in 
Gradiska attend a ceremony marking 20 years of the killings and persecution of 
Serbs in western Slavonia. 

 After a memorial service, wreaths will be laid at a memorial to the victims, 
while Linta will address those gathered. 

 In memory of the killed Serbs, those gathered will walk to the middle of a 
bridge and cast flowers and wreaths into the Sava River. 

 The ceremonies will be organized by an association of Serbs driven out of 
western Slavonia and the municipality of Gradiska, located on the border with 
Croatia in the Serb Republic, the Serb entity in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

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