Friday, April 22, 2011

Serbia remembers victims of WW2 Croatia genocide

Source: B92, Tanjug

BELGRADE -- Serbia today marks NDH Genocide Remembrance Day, to commemorate mass killings of Serbs, Jews and Roma in the entity's death camps.

The pro-Nazi Independent State of Croatia (NDH) existed during the Second World War.


The remembrance day was chosen to commemorate the breakthrough of prisoners from the Jasenovac death camp in April 1945.

President Boris Tadić said that Serbia is a democratic country built on anti-fascist traditions, and that it finds any ethnic or religious intolerance to be unacceptable.

Memories of anti-fascist struggle and sacrifices are still strong in Serbia, said Tadić, "and it is this memory that gives rise to hope death camps will never happen again," said his press service.

"We will always remember the tragic suffering of Serbs, Jews and Roma in Jasenovac and Donja Gradina," Tadić said of camps in Croatia, and also mentioned the victims -Serbia's Jews - of the Old Fairground camp set up in Belgrade by the occupying Nazi German forces.

The Serbian president urged that remembering of the victims of the Holocaust and their suffering should provide guarantee that there would be "no revisionism of history".

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