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Battle of Borovo Selo

The Battle of Borovo Selo of 2 May 1991, known in Croatia as the Borovo Selo massacre (Croatian: Pokolj u Borovom Selu) and in Serbia as the Borovo Selo incident (Serbian: Инцидент у Боровом Селу), was one of the first armed clashes in the conflict which became known as the Croatian War of Independence. The clash was precipitated by months of rising ethnic tensions, violence, and armed combat in Pakrac and at the Plitvice Lakes in March. The immediate cause for the confrontation in the heavily ethnic Serb village of Borovo Selo, just north of Vukovar, was a failed attempt to replace the Yugoslav flag in the village with the flag of Croatia. The unauthorised effort by four Croatian policemen resulted in the capture of two by a Croatian Serb militia in the village. To retrieve the captives, the Croatian authorities deployed additional police, who drove into an ambush. Twelve Croatian policemen and one Serb paramilitary were killed before the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) intervened and put an end to the clashes.

Battle of Borovo Selo
Part of the Croatian War of Independence and the Yugoslav Wars
Date2 May 1991
Location
Result SAO Krajina and White Eagles victory
Belligerents
SAO Krajina  Croatia
Commanders and leaders
Vukašin Šoškoćanin
Vojislav Šešelj
Josip Džaja
Josip Reihl-Kir
Units involved
SAO Krajina militia
Dušan the Mighty paramilitary unit
White Eagles
Croatian Police
Strength
unknown 180 policemen
Casualties and losses
1 killed
4 wounded
12 killed
21 wounded
2 captured

The confrontation resulted in a further deterioration of the overall situation in Croatia, leading Croats and Serbs to accuse each other of overt aggression and of being enemies of their nation. For Croatia, the event was provocative because the bodies of some of the dead Croat policemen killed in the incident were reportedly mutilated. The clash in Borovo Selo eliminated any hopes that the escalating conflict could be defused politically and made the war almost inevitable. The Presidency of Yugoslavia convened several days after the battle and authorised the JNA to deploy to the area to prevent further conflict. Despite this deployment, skirmishes persisted in the region. After the war, a former paramilitary was convicted of war crimes for his role in abusing the two captured policemen, and ultimately sentenced to three years in prison. Four others were indicted, but remain at large outside Croatia.

Background

In 1990, following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the Croatian Democratic Union (Hrvatska demokratska zajednica – HDZ), ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats worsened. The Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) confiscated the weapons of Croatia's Territorial Defence (Teritorijalna obrana – TO) in order to minimise the possibility of violence following the elections.[1] On 17 August, inter-ethnic tensions escalated into an open revolt of the Croatian Serbs,[2] centred on the predominantly Serb-populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin,[3] and parts of Lika, Kordun, Banovina and eastern Croatia.[4]

In July 1990, local Serbs established a Serbian National Council to coordinate opposition to Croatian President Franjo Tuđman's policy of pursuing Croatian independence from Yugoslavia. Milan Babić, a dentist from Knin, was elected president of the council, while Knin's police chief, Milan Martić, established a number of paramilitary militias. The two men eventually became the political and military leaders of the Serb Autonomous Oblast of Krajina (SAO Krajina), a self-declared state incorporating the Serb-inhabited areas of Croatia.[5] In March 1991, SAO Krajina authorities, backed by the government of Serbia, began consolidating control over the Serb-populated areas of Croatia, resulting in a bloodless skirmish in Pakrac and the first fatalities in the Plitvice Lakes incident.[6]

At the beginning of 1991, Croatia had no regular army. In an effort to bolster its defence, it doubled the number of police personnel to about 20,000. The most effective part of the police force was the 3,000-strong special police, which was deployed in twelve military-style battalions. In addition, Croatia had 9,000–10,000 regionally organised reserve police officers organised in 16 battalions and 10 companies, but they lacked weapons.[7]

Prelude

class=notpageimage|
Map of the eastern Slavonia area between Osijek and Vukovar (modern county lines provided for reference)

In 1991, the village of Borovo Selo, situated on the right bank of the Danube opposite Serbia, was a part of the Vukovar municipality. While the city of Vukovar itself had an ethnically mixed population of 47.2 percent Croats and 32.2 percent Serbs, smaller settlements in the area were more homogeneous. Fourteen were predominantly populated by Croats, ten (including Borovo Selo) by Serbs, two by Ruthenians and the remaining two were ethnically mixed.[8]

Amid the worsening ethnic tensions, Borovo Selo was barricaded on 1 April, one day after the Plitvice Lakes clash. Two days later, the JNA garrison in Vukovar increased its combat readiness to the maximum level.[9] In early spring, the Croats and Serbs reached an agreement whereby Croatian police would not enter Borovo Selo without explicit consent from local Serb authorities.[10] A political rally was held in Borovo Selo on 14 April, and by the end of the month the situation had become more volatile. Speakers at the rally—Serbian Radical Party (Srpska radikalna stranka – SRS) leader Vojislav Šešelj, Serbian National Assembly member Milan Paroški and Serbian Minister of Diaspora Stanko Cvijan—promoted the creation of Greater Serbia, a state which would unite all Serbs within a single country. They all repeated their speeches, together with an open call for dissenting Croats to be killed, a week later in Jagodnjak, north of Osijek.[11]

In addition, White Eagles paramilitaries arrived in Borovo Selo in mid-April at the request of local militia commander Vukašin Šoškoćanin. The paramilitaries were either armed directly by Serbia's Ministry of the Interior directly or by a militia linked to the SAO Krajina, with the approval of the Serbian authorities.[12][13] By the end of April 1991, the White Eagles in Borovo Selo were joined by fighters from the Dušan the Mighty paramilitary unit, which was linked to the Serbian National Renewal party.[14]

In mid-April, Armbrust rockets were fired from Croatian positions outside Borovo Selo into the village. According to one version of the event, several rounds were fired at agricultural machinery that served as barricades in the outskirts of Borovo Selo.[15] According to a second version, three rockets were fired at the village with the specific aim of inflaming ethnic tensions.[16] One of the rockets struck a house and another landed in a field without detonating.[17] There were no casualties.[18] Radio-Television Belgrade subsequently broadcast images of the rockets and presented them as evidence of Croatian aggression, further exacerbating inter-ethnic tensions.[17] The rockets were fired by a group of men who were led to the site by Osijek police chief Josip Reihl-Kir, who was later killed by Croatian irregulars.[17] Croatia's Interior Minister Josip Boljkovac later indicated that the group included Deputy Defence Minister Gojko Šušak, Branimir Glavaš and Vice Vukojević.[19] Šušak claimed that he had nothing to do with the incident, but admitted to having been in the area at the time.[13] Nikola Jaman, then a reserve unit commander in the Ministry of the Interior, later stated that he had led the action, and denied that Šušak, Glavaš and Vukojević had been involved. He claimed that the action was planned together with Reihl-Kir.[20]

Timeline

 
Croatian police in Borovo Selo, 2 May 1991.

During the evening of 1 May 1991, four Croatian policemen entered Borovo Selo in an unauthorised attempt to replace a flag of Yugoslavia in the village with a flag of Croatia.[18] The attempt resulted in an armed clash.[16] Two of the policemen were wounded and taken prisoner, and the other two fled after sustaining minor injuries (one a wounded foot and the other a grazing wound to the head).[21] According to Croatia's Ministry of the Interior, the police had been patrolling the Dalj–Borovo Selo road at the time of the incident.[22] Even though the officers were assigned to the Osijek police administration,[23] the Vinkovci police administration—which was assigned authority over the Vukovar municipality—asked the Vukovar police station to contact Šoškoćanin about the incident. Vukovar police contacted him at 4:30 a.m., but Šoškoćanin reportedly said he knew nothing. At 9:00 a.m., Vinkovci police chief Josip Džaja telephoned Šoškoćanin and received the same answer. When Reihl-Kir contacted Šoškoćanin half an hour later, the latter confirmed the incident and said the police had shot at members of the local population, wounding one. Reihl-Kir failed to secure the release of the two captured officers.[22]

Reihl-Kir and Džaja concluded that a party should be sent to Borovo Selo.[22] Šoškoćanin agreed to grant the police safe passage under a white flag.[24] A force of twenty to thirty policemen subsequently entered Borovo Selo.[25] Although they bore a white flag, they were ambushed by paramilitaries and members of a local militia.[24] Around 150 policemen arrived from Osijek and Vinkovci on buses and were deployed as reinforcements.[25] The force dispatched from Vinkovci entered Borovo Selo and was ambushed, while the reinforcements sent from Osijek via Dalj were stopped at a roadblock north of Borovo Selo and failed to enter the village. A firefight ensued and lasted until 2:30 p.m., when seven JNA armoured personnel carriers (APCs) moved into the village from Dalj. Another convoy of APCs deployed by the JNA through Borovo Naselje, just south of Borovo Selo, was stopped by a crowd of Croat women who refused to let them through.[22]

Aftermath

Casualties

Twelve Croatian policemen were killed and 21 injured in the ambush.[6] The two captured policemen were ferried across the Danube and transported to Novi Sad, but were released and returned to Osijek by the evening of 2 May.[26] Vojislav Milić, a paramilitary from Valjevo, was the only fatality among the Serb militia.[27] Four other paramilitaries were wounded.[28] Some of the police killed at Borovo Selo were found to have been mutilated, their ears cut, their eyes gouged out and their throats slit.[24][16] These acts were meant to inflame ethnic hatred.[29]

Escalation to war

 
The municipal building at the center of the May 1991 incident, as seen in April 2021

The clash led Tuđman's advisers to advocate an immediate declaration of independence from Yugoslavia and retaliation against the JNA, which Croats viewed as being pro-Serb.[6][26] On 3 May, Tuđman opined that Croatia and Serbia were virtually at war, but said he hoped the international community would stop the violence.[6][26] According to the Croatian historian Davor Marijan, Tuđman's decision not to retaliate against the JNA was often interpreted at the time as cowardice bordering treason, leading to public criticism and the resignation of General Martin Špegelj from the post of Defence Minister. Nonetheless, the decision afforded Croatia much-needed time to prepare for war, as Yugoslav Navy Fleet Admiral Branko Mamula later acknowledged.[30] The incident shocked the Croatian public, causing a massive shift in public opinion towards demonisation of Serbs, supported by the Croatian media.[31] Serbs were collectively labelled "Chetniks", "terrorists" and "enemies of Croatia". Similarly, Serbs referred to Croats as "Ustaše" and "enemies of the Serb people". Thus, a political settlement to avoid all-out war became increasingly unlikely.[32] After the clash, war appeared unavoidable.[33]

On 8–9 May, the Presidency of Yugoslavia convened to discuss the events in Borovo Selo and deliberate over a JNA request for military intervention. The presidents of all of Yugoslavia's constituent republics were present at the meeting. The Croatian leadership permitted the JNA to be deployed to areas where inter-ethnic tensions were running high.[34] On 9 May, representatives of the federal and Croatian governments visited Vukovar. Federal representatives visited Borovo Selo, unlike the Croatian government officials who stated they "refused to talk to terrorists".[35] In response to the Borovo Selo clash, the JNA redeployed a part of the 12th Proletarian Mechanised Brigade from Osijek and the 1st Mechanised Battalion of the 453rd Mechanised Brigade based in Sremska Mitrovica to the Vukovar area. At the same time, the 2nd Mechanised Battalion of the 36th Mechanised Brigade was moved from Subotica to Vinkovci.[36] Despite the deployment of the JNA in the area, ethnically motivated skirmishes persisted until the start of the Battle of Vukovar in late August.[6]

Memorial controversy and prosecution

 
The Borovo Selo memorial as it appeared prior to 2012

During the 1996–98 United Nations administration established pursuant to the Erdut Agreement to restore the area to Croatian control, three Croatian non-governmental organisations erected a memorial on public property at the entrance to Borovo Selo, but the site was quickly vandalised. A new monument was erected in the centre of the village in 2002, but this was also vandalised soon after completion. A new plaque bearing the names of the 12 Croatian policemen killed in the incident was added to the monument in 2012,[37] but was also subject to vandalism.[38] Although the vandalism was condemned by local Serb politicians, they complained that the memorial was offensive to the Serb minority and imposed guilt on the entire community because it branded Serb forces at Borovo Selo in 1991 as "Serb terrorists".[39]

In February 2012, an Osijek court convicted Milan Marinković of war crimes and sentenced him to three-and-a-half years in prison for mistreating two captured Croatian police officers.[40] In 2014, Marinković's sentence was reduced to three years on appeal.[41] Four other men were indicted in relation to the officers' mistreatment. Since they live outside Croatia, they are not subject to prosecution by the Croatian judiciary.[40]

Footnotes

References

Books
  • Bjelajac, Mile; Žunec, Ozren (2012). "The War in Croatia, 1991–1995". In Ingrao, Charles; Emmert, Thomas A. (eds.). Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies: A Scholars' Initiative. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. pp. 232–273. ISBN 9781557536174.
  • Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Russian and European Analysis (2002). Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 1990–1995. Washington, D.C.: Central Intelligence Agency. OCLC 50396958.
  • Crnobrnja, Mihailo (1996). The Yugoslav Drama. Montreal, Quebec: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773566156.
  • Čuljak, Tihomir (2003). Rat [War] (in Croatian). Osijek. ISBN 953-98383-2-0.
  • Donia, Robert J.; Van Antwerp Fine, John (1994). Bosnia and Hercegovina: A Tradition Betrayed. London, England: C. Hurst & Co. ISBN 9781850652120.
  • Grandits, Hannes; Leutloff, Carolin (2003). "Discourses, Actors, Violence: The Organisation of War-Escalation in the Krajina Region of Croatia 1990–91". In Koehler, Jan; Zürcher, Christoph (eds.). Potentials of Disorder: Explaining Conflict and Stability in the Caucasus and in the Former Yugoslavia. Manchester, England: Manchester University Press. pp. 23–45. ISBN 9780719062414.
  • Hoare, Marko Attila (2010). "The War of Yugoslav Succession". In Ramet, Sabrina P. (ed.). Central and Southeast European Politics Since 1989. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 111–136. ISBN 9781139487504.
  • Hockenos, Paul (2003). Homeland Calling: Exile Patriotism & the Balkan Wars. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801441585.
  • Marijan, Davor (2004). Bitka za Vukovar [Battle of Vukovar] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Hrvatski institut za povijest. ISBN 9789536324453.
  • Nation, R. Craig (2003). War in the Balkans, 1991–2002. Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Strategic Studies Institute. ISBN 9781584871347.
  • Nazor, Ante (2007). Počeci suvremene hrvatske države: kronologija procesa osamostaljenja Republike Hrvatske: od Memoranduma SANU 1986. do proglašenja neovisnosti 8. listopada 1991 [Beginnings of the Modern Croatian State: A Chronology of the Independence of the Republic of Croatia: from 1986 SANU Memorandum to the Declaration of Independence on 8 October 1991] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Croatian Homeland War Memorial Documentation Centre. ISBN 9789537439019.
  • Pullan, Wendy; Baillie, Britt (2013). Locating Urban Conflicts: Ethnicity, Nationalism and the Everyday. Basingstoke, England: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9781137316882.
  • O'Shea, Brendan (2012). Perception and Reality in the Modern Yugoslav Conflict: Myth, Falsehood and Deceit 1991–1995. London, England: Routledge. ISBN 9780415650243.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P. (2002). Balkan Babel: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia From the Death of Tito to the Fall of Milošević. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 9780813339870.
  • Repe, Božo (2009). "Balkan Wars". In Forsythe, David P. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Human Rights, Volume 1. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 138–147. ISBN 9780195334029.
  • Silber, Laura; Little, Allan (1996). The Death of Yugoslavia. London, England: Penguin Books. ISBN 9781575000053.
  • Štitkovac, Ejub (2000). "Croatia: The First War". In Udovicki, Jasminka; Ridgeway, James (eds.). Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. pp. 154–174. ISBN 9780822325901.
  • Thomas, Robert (1999). Serbia Under Milošević: Politics in the 1990s. London, England: C. Hurst & Co. ISBN 9781850653417.
  • Thompson, Mark (1999). Forging War: The Media in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina. Luton, England: University of Luton Press. ISBN 9781860205521.
Scientific journal articles
  • Marijan, Davor (October 2002). "Bitka za Vukovar 1991" [Battle of Vukovar]. Scrinia Slavonica (in Croatian). Croatian Historical Institute – Department of History of Slavonia, Srijem and Baranja. 2 (1): 367–402. ISSN 1332-4853.
  • Marijan, Davor (May 2012). "The Sarajevo Ceasefire – Realism or strategic error by the Croatian leadership?". Review of Croatian History. Croatian Institute of History. 7 (1): 103–123. ISSN 1845-4380.
  • Sučić, Stjepan (June 2011). "Značaj obrane Vukovara u stvaranju hrvatske države" [Significance of Vukovar Defence in Creation of the Croatian State]. National Security and the Future (in Croatian). St. George Association, Zagreb. 12 (3): 11–69. ISSN 1332-4454.
News reports
  • Butigan, Sanja (2 June 2012). "Na spomenik ubijenim redarstvenicima četiri "S" ispisao mladić (20) iz Borova" [A 20-Year Old Youth from Borovo Writes Four S-es on the Monument to the Killed Constables]. Glas Slavonije (in Croatian). Osijek, Croatia. ISSN 0350-3968. from the original on 3 November 2013.
  • Čizmić, Martina (13 February 2009). [Josip Boljkovac: Croatia Attacked Serbs First]. Nacional (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia. ISSN 1331-8209. Archived from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  • Deželić, Vanja (10 May 2012). "Puhovski: Spomen ploča u Borovu Selu osuđuje srpske teroriste, a ne Srbe kao manjinu" [Puhovski: Borovo Selo Memorial Plaque Condemns Serb Terrorists Rather Than Serbs as a Minority] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Politika Plus. from the original on 3 November 2013.
  • Pavelić, Boris (1 February 2012). "Milan Marinkovic Sentenced for War Crimes in Borovo Selo". Balkan Insight. from the original on 20 April 2013.
  • Prusina, Tomislav (11 February 2009). "Jaman: Boljkovac laže" [Jaman: Boljkovac is lying]. Jutarnji list.
  • Mikola, Danijela (2 May 2014). "Nitko nije kažnjen: U Borovu Selu ubijeno 12 redarstvenika" [No Justice: 12 Police Officers Killed in Borovo Selo]. 24sata.hr.
  • "Roads Sealed as Yugoslav Unrest Mounts". The New York Times. New York City. Reuters. 19 August 1990. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on 21 September 2013.
  • "Tri godine zatvora za mučenje hrvatskih redarstvenika 1991" [Three years in prison for the torture of two Croatian policemen in 1991]. Glas slavonije. 14 May 2014.
Other sources

Coordinates: 45°22′51.60″N 18°57′27.00″E / 45.3810000°N 18.9575000°E / 45.3810000; 18.9575000

battle, borovo, selo, 1991, known, croatia, borovo, selo, massacre, croatian, pokolj, borovom, selu, serbia, borovo, selo, incident, serbian, Инцидент, Боровом, Селу, first, armed, clashes, conflict, which, became, known, croatian, independence, clash, precipi. The Battle of Borovo Selo of 2 May 1991 known in Croatia as the Borovo Selo massacre Croatian Pokolj u Borovom Selu and in Serbia as the Borovo Selo incident Serbian Incident u Borovom Selu was one of the first armed clashes in the conflict which became known as the Croatian War of Independence The clash was precipitated by months of rising ethnic tensions violence and armed combat in Pakrac and at the Plitvice Lakes in March The immediate cause for the confrontation in the heavily ethnic Serb village of Borovo Selo just north of Vukovar was a failed attempt to replace the Yugoslav flag in the village with the flag of Croatia The unauthorised effort by four Croatian policemen resulted in the capture of two by a Croatian Serb militia in the village To retrieve the captives the Croatian authorities deployed additional police who drove into an ambush Twelve Croatian policemen and one Serb paramilitary were killed before the Yugoslav People s Army JNA intervened and put an end to the clashes Battle of Borovo SeloPart of the Croatian War of Independence and the Yugoslav WarsBorovo SeloDate2 May 1991LocationBorovo Selo CroatiaResultSAO Krajina and White Eagles victoryBelligerentsSAO Krajina CroatiaCommanders and leadersVukasin Soskocanin Vojislav SeseljJosip Dzaja Josip Reihl KirUnits involvedSAO Krajina militia Dusan the Mighty paramilitary unit White EaglesCroatian PoliceStrengthunknown180 policemenCasualties and losses1 killed4 wounded12 killed21 wounded2 captured The confrontation resulted in a further deterioration of the overall situation in Croatia leading Croats and Serbs to accuse each other of overt aggression and of being enemies of their nation For Croatia the event was provocative because the bodies of some of the dead Croat policemen killed in the incident were reportedly mutilated The clash in Borovo Selo eliminated any hopes that the escalating conflict could be defused politically and made the war almost inevitable The Presidency of Yugoslavia convened several days after the battle and authorised the JNA to deploy to the area to prevent further conflict Despite this deployment skirmishes persisted in the region After the war a former paramilitary was convicted of war crimes for his role in abusing the two captured policemen and ultimately sentenced to three years in prison Four others were indicted but remain at large outside Croatia Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Timeline 4 Aftermath 4 1 Casualties 4 2 Escalation to war 4 3 Memorial controversy and prosecution 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesBackground EditSee also Log revolution In 1990 following the electoral defeat of the government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia by the Croatian Democratic Union Hrvatska demokratska zajednica HDZ ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats worsened The Yugoslav People s Army Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija JNA confiscated the weapons of Croatia s Territorial Defence Teritorijalna obrana TO in order to minimise the possibility of violence following the elections 1 On 17 August inter ethnic tensions escalated into an open revolt of the Croatian Serbs 2 centred on the predominantly Serb populated areas of the Dalmatian hinterland around Knin 3 and parts of Lika Kordun Banovina and eastern Croatia 4 In July 1990 local Serbs established a Serbian National Council to coordinate opposition to Croatian President Franjo Tuđman s policy of pursuing Croatian independence from Yugoslavia Milan Babic a dentist from Knin was elected president of the council while Knin s police chief Milan Martic established a number of paramilitary militias The two men eventually became the political and military leaders of the Serb Autonomous Oblast of Krajina SAO Krajina a self declared state incorporating the Serb inhabited areas of Croatia 5 In March 1991 SAO Krajina authorities backed by the government of Serbia began consolidating control over the Serb populated areas of Croatia resulting in a bloodless skirmish in Pakrac and the first fatalities in the Plitvice Lakes incident 6 At the beginning of 1991 Croatia had no regular army In an effort to bolster its defence it doubled the number of police personnel to about 20 000 The most effective part of the police force was the 3 000 strong special police which was deployed in twelve military style battalions In addition Croatia had 9 000 10 000 regionally organised reserve police officers organised in 16 battalions and 10 companies but they lacked weapons 7 Prelude Edit Vukovar Borovo Naselje Borovo Selo Dalj Vinkovci Osijekclass notpageimage Map of the eastern Slavonia area between Osijek and Vukovar modern county lines provided for reference In 1991 the village of Borovo Selo situated on the right bank of the Danube opposite Serbia was a part of the Vukovar municipality While the city of Vukovar itself had an ethnically mixed population of 47 2 percent Croats and 32 2 percent Serbs smaller settlements in the area were more homogeneous Fourteen were predominantly populated by Croats ten including Borovo Selo by Serbs two by Ruthenians and the remaining two were ethnically mixed 8 Amid the worsening ethnic tensions Borovo Selo was barricaded on 1 April one day after the Plitvice Lakes clash Two days later the JNA garrison in Vukovar increased its combat readiness to the maximum level 9 In early spring the Croats and Serbs reached an agreement whereby Croatian police would not enter Borovo Selo without explicit consent from local Serb authorities 10 A political rally was held in Borovo Selo on 14 April and by the end of the month the situation had become more volatile Speakers at the rally Serbian Radical Party Srpska radikalna stranka SRS leader Vojislav Seselj Serbian National Assembly member Milan Paroski and Serbian Minister of Diaspora Stanko Cvijan promoted the creation of Greater Serbia a state which would unite all Serbs within a single country They all repeated their speeches together with an open call for dissenting Croats to be killed a week later in Jagodnjak north of Osijek 11 In addition White Eagles paramilitaries arrived in Borovo Selo in mid April at the request of local militia commander Vukasin Soskocanin The paramilitaries were either armed directly by Serbia s Ministry of the Interior directly or by a militia linked to the SAO Krajina with the approval of the Serbian authorities 12 13 By the end of April 1991 the White Eagles in Borovo Selo were joined by fighters from the Dusan the Mighty paramilitary unit which was linked to the Serbian National Renewal party 14 In mid April Armbrust rockets were fired from Croatian positions outside Borovo Selo into the village According to one version of the event several rounds were fired at agricultural machinery that served as barricades in the outskirts of Borovo Selo 15 According to a second version three rockets were fired at the village with the specific aim of inflaming ethnic tensions 16 One of the rockets struck a house and another landed in a field without detonating 17 There were no casualties 18 Radio Television Belgrade subsequently broadcast images of the rockets and presented them as evidence of Croatian aggression further exacerbating inter ethnic tensions 17 The rockets were fired by a group of men who were led to the site by Osijek police chief Josip Reihl Kir who was later killed by Croatian irregulars 17 Croatia s Interior Minister Josip Boljkovac later indicated that the group included Deputy Defence Minister Gojko Susak Branimir Glavas and Vice Vukojevic 19 Susak claimed that he had nothing to do with the incident but admitted to having been in the area at the time 13 Nikola Jaman then a reserve unit commander in the Ministry of the Interior later stated that he had led the action and denied that Susak Glavas and Vukojevic had been involved He claimed that the action was planned together with Reihl Kir 20 Timeline Edit Croatian police in Borovo Selo 2 May 1991 During the evening of 1 May 1991 four Croatian policemen entered Borovo Selo in an unauthorised attempt to replace a flag of Yugoslavia in the village with a flag of Croatia 18 The attempt resulted in an armed clash 16 Two of the policemen were wounded and taken prisoner and the other two fled after sustaining minor injuries one a wounded foot and the other a grazing wound to the head 21 According to Croatia s Ministry of the Interior the police had been patrolling the Dalj Borovo Selo road at the time of the incident 22 Even though the officers were assigned to the Osijek police administration 23 the Vinkovci police administration which was assigned authority over the Vukovar municipality asked the Vukovar police station to contact Soskocanin about the incident Vukovar police contacted him at 4 30 a m but Soskocanin reportedly said he knew nothing At 9 00 a m Vinkovci police chief Josip Dzaja telephoned Soskocanin and received the same answer When Reihl Kir contacted Soskocanin half an hour later the latter confirmed the incident and said the police had shot at members of the local population wounding one Reihl Kir failed to secure the release of the two captured officers 22 Reihl Kir and Dzaja concluded that a party should be sent to Borovo Selo 22 Soskocanin agreed to grant the police safe passage under a white flag 24 A force of twenty to thirty policemen subsequently entered Borovo Selo 25 Although they bore a white flag they were ambushed by paramilitaries and members of a local militia 24 Around 150 policemen arrived from Osijek and Vinkovci on buses and were deployed as reinforcements 25 The force dispatched from Vinkovci entered Borovo Selo and was ambushed while the reinforcements sent from Osijek via Dalj were stopped at a roadblock north of Borovo Selo and failed to enter the village A firefight ensued and lasted until 2 30 p m when seven JNA armoured personnel carriers APCs moved into the village from Dalj Another convoy of APCs deployed by the JNA through Borovo Naselje just south of Borovo Selo was stopped by a crowd of Croat women who refused to let them through 22 Aftermath EditCasualties Edit Twelve Croatian policemen were killed and 21 injured in the ambush 6 The two captured policemen were ferried across the Danube and transported to Novi Sad but were released and returned to Osijek by the evening of 2 May 26 Vojislav Milic a paramilitary from Valjevo was the only fatality among the Serb militia 27 Four other paramilitaries were wounded 28 Some of the police killed at Borovo Selo were found to have been mutilated their ears cut their eyes gouged out and their throats slit 24 16 These acts were meant to inflame ethnic hatred 29 Escalation to war Edit The municipal building at the center of the May 1991 incident as seen in April 2021 The clash led Tuđman s advisers to advocate an immediate declaration of independence from Yugoslavia and retaliation against the JNA which Croats viewed as being pro Serb 6 26 On 3 May Tuđman opined that Croatia and Serbia were virtually at war but said he hoped the international community would stop the violence 6 26 According to the Croatian historian Davor Marijan Tuđman s decision not to retaliate against the JNA was often interpreted at the time as cowardice bordering treason leading to public criticism and the resignation of General Martin Spegelj from the post of Defence Minister Nonetheless the decision afforded Croatia much needed time to prepare for war as Yugoslav Navy Fleet Admiral Branko Mamula later acknowledged 30 The incident shocked the Croatian public causing a massive shift in public opinion towards demonisation of Serbs supported by the Croatian media 31 Serbs were collectively labelled Chetniks terrorists and enemies of Croatia Similarly Serbs referred to Croats as Ustase and enemies of the Serb people Thus a political settlement to avoid all out war became increasingly unlikely 32 After the clash war appeared unavoidable 33 On 8 9 May the Presidency of Yugoslavia convened to discuss the events in Borovo Selo and deliberate over a JNA request for military intervention The presidents of all of Yugoslavia s constituent republics were present at the meeting The Croatian leadership permitted the JNA to be deployed to areas where inter ethnic tensions were running high 34 On 9 May representatives of the federal and Croatian governments visited Vukovar Federal representatives visited Borovo Selo unlike the Croatian government officials who stated they refused to talk to terrorists 35 In response to the Borovo Selo clash the JNA redeployed a part of the 12th Proletarian Mechanised Brigade from Osijek and the 1st Mechanised Battalion of the 453rd Mechanised Brigade based in Sremska Mitrovica to the Vukovar area At the same time the 2nd Mechanised Battalion of the 36th Mechanised Brigade was moved from Subotica to Vinkovci 36 Despite the deployment of the JNA in the area ethnically motivated skirmishes persisted until the start of the Battle of Vukovar in late August 6 Memorial controversy and prosecution Edit The Borovo Selo memorial as it appeared prior to 2012 During the 1996 98 United Nations administration established pursuant to the Erdut Agreement to restore the area to Croatian control three Croatian non governmental organisations erected a memorial on public property at the entrance to Borovo Selo but the site was quickly vandalised A new monument was erected in the centre of the village in 2002 but this was also vandalised soon after completion A new plaque bearing the names of the 12 Croatian policemen killed in the incident was added to the monument in 2012 37 but was also subject to vandalism 38 Although the vandalism was condemned by local Serb politicians they complained that the memorial was offensive to the Serb minority and imposed guilt on the entire community because it branded Serb forces at Borovo Selo in 1991 as Serb terrorists 39 In February 2012 an Osijek court convicted Milan Marinkovic of war crimes and sentenced him to three and a half years in prison for mistreating two captured Croatian police officers 40 In 2014 Marinkovic s sentence was reduced to three years on appeal 41 Four other men were indicted in relation to the officers mistreatment Since they live outside Croatia they are not subject to prosecution by the Croatian judiciary 40 Footnotes Edit Hoare 2010 p 117 Hoare 2010 p 118 The New York Times 19 August 1990 ICTY 12 June 2007 Repe 2009 pp 141 142 a b c d e Central Intelligence Agency 2002 p 90 Central Intelligence Agency 2002 p 86 Sucic 2011 p 19 Sucic 2011 p 32 Stitkovac 2000 p 157 Nazor 2007 p 64 Thomas 1999 p 97 a b O Shea 2012 p 10 Thomas 1999 p 96 Culjak 2003 p 52 a b c Nation 2003 p 105 a b c Hockenos 2003 p 58 a b Silber amp Little 1996 p 141 Nacional 13 February 2009 Jutarnji list 11 February 2009 Hockenos 2003 pp 58 59 a b c d Ministry of the Interior 2008 Bjelajac amp Zunec 2012 p 249 a b c Ramet 2002 p 64 a b Stitkovac 2000 p 158 a b c Hockenos 2003 p 59 Thompson 1999 p 30 Marijan 2004 p 51 Donia amp Van Antwerp Fine 1994 p 225 Marijan 2012 p 118 Silber amp Little 1996 p 142 Grandits amp Leutloff 2003 p 37 Stitkovac 2000 p 159 Nazor 2007 p 67 Sucic 2011 p 33 Marijan 2002 p 368 Pullan amp Baillie 2013 p 122 Glas Slavonije 2 June 2012 Politika Plus 10 May 2012 a b Pavelic 1 February 2012 Glas slavonije 14 May 2014 References EditBooksBjelajac Mile Zunec Ozren 2012 The War in Croatia 1991 1995 In Ingrao Charles Emmert Thomas A eds Confronting the Yugoslav Controversies A Scholars Initiative West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 232 273 ISBN 9781557536174 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Russian and European Analysis 2002 Balkan Battlegrounds A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990 1995 Washington D C Central Intelligence Agency OCLC 50396958 Crnobrnja Mihailo 1996 The Yugoslav Drama Montreal Quebec McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 9780773566156 Culjak Tihomir 2003 Rat War in Croatian Osijek ISBN 953 98383 2 0 Donia Robert J Van Antwerp Fine John 1994 Bosnia and Hercegovina A Tradition Betrayed London England C Hurst amp Co ISBN 9781850652120 Grandits Hannes Leutloff Carolin 2003 Discourses Actors Violence The Organisation of War Escalation in the Krajina Region of Croatia 1990 91 In Koehler Jan Zurcher Christoph eds Potentials of Disorder Explaining Conflict and Stability in the Caucasus and in the Former Yugoslavia Manchester England Manchester University Press pp 23 45 ISBN 9780719062414 Hoare Marko Attila 2010 The War of Yugoslav Succession In Ramet Sabrina P ed Central and Southeast European Politics Since 1989 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 111 136 ISBN 9781139487504 Hockenos Paul 2003 Homeland Calling Exile Patriotism amp the Balkan Wars Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801441585 Marijan Davor 2004 Bitka za Vukovar Battle of Vukovar in Croatian Zagreb Hrvatski institut za povijest ISBN 9789536324453 Nation R Craig 2003 War in the Balkans 1991 2002 Carlisle Pennsylvania Strategic Studies Institute ISBN 9781584871347 Nazor Ante 2007 Poceci suvremene hrvatske drzave kronologija procesa osamostaljenja Republike Hrvatske od Memoranduma SANU 1986 do proglasenja neovisnosti 8 listopada 1991 Beginnings of the Modern Croatian State A Chronology of the Independence of the Republic of Croatia from 1986 SANU Memorandum to the Declaration of Independence on 8 October 1991 in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Croatian Homeland War Memorial Documentation Centre ISBN 9789537439019 Pullan Wendy Baillie Britt 2013 Locating Urban Conflicts Ethnicity Nationalism and the Everyday Basingstoke England Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781137316882 O Shea Brendan 2012 Perception and Reality in the Modern Yugoslav Conflict Myth Falsehood and Deceit 1991 1995 London England Routledge ISBN 9780415650243 Ramet Sabrina P 2002 Balkan Babel The Disintegration of Yugoslavia From the Death of Tito to the Fall of Milosevic Boulder Colorado Westview Press ISBN 9780813339870 Repe Bozo 2009 Balkan Wars In Forsythe David P ed Encyclopedia of Human Rights Volume 1 Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 138 147 ISBN 9780195334029 Silber Laura Little Allan 1996 The Death of Yugoslavia London England Penguin Books ISBN 9781575000053 Stitkovac Ejub 2000 Croatia The First War In Udovicki Jasminka Ridgeway James eds Burn This House The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 154 174 ISBN 9780822325901 Thomas Robert 1999 Serbia Under Milosevic Politics in the 1990s London England C Hurst amp Co ISBN 9781850653417 Thompson Mark 1999 Forging War The Media in Serbia Croatia Bosnia and Hercegovina Luton England University of Luton Press ISBN 9781860205521 Scientific journal articlesMarijan Davor October 2002 Bitka za Vukovar 1991 Battle of Vukovar Scrinia Slavonica in Croatian Croatian Historical Institute Department of History of Slavonia Srijem and Baranja 2 1 367 402 ISSN 1332 4853 Marijan Davor May 2012 The Sarajevo Ceasefire Realism or strategic error by the Croatian leadership Review of Croatian History Croatian Institute of History 7 1 103 123 ISSN 1845 4380 Sucic Stjepan June 2011 Znacaj obrane Vukovara u stvaranju hrvatske drzave Significance of Vukovar Defence in Creation of the Croatian State National Security and the Future in Croatian St George Association Zagreb 12 3 11 69 ISSN 1332 4454 News reportsButigan Sanja 2 June 2012 Na spomenik ubijenim redarstvenicima cetiri S ispisao mladic 20 iz Borova A 20 Year Old Youth from Borovo Writes Four S es on the Monument to the Killed Constables Glas Slavonije in Croatian Osijek Croatia ISSN 0350 3968 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Cizmic Martina 13 February 2009 Josip Boljkovac Hrvatska je prva napala Srbe Josip Boljkovac Croatia Attacked Serbs First Nacional in Croatian Zagreb Croatia ISSN 1331 8209 Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Dezelic Vanja 10 May 2012 Puhovski Spomen ploca u Borovu Selu osuđuje srpske teroriste a ne Srbe kao manjinu Puhovski Borovo Selo Memorial Plaque Condemns Serb Terrorists Rather Than Serbs as a Minority in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Politika Plus Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Pavelic Boris 1 February 2012 Milan Marinkovic Sentenced for War Crimes in Borovo Selo Balkan Insight Archived from the original on 20 April 2013 Prusina Tomislav 11 February 2009 Jaman Boljkovac laze Jaman Boljkovac is lying Jutarnji list Mikola Danijela 2 May 2014 Nitko nije kaznjen U Borovu Selu ubijeno 12 redarstvenika No Justice 12 Police Officers Killed in Borovo Selo 24sata hr Roads Sealed as Yugoslav Unrest Mounts The New York Times New York City Reuters 19 August 1990 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Tri godine zatvora za mucenje hrvatskih redarstvenika 1991 Three years in prison for the torture of two Croatian policemen in 1991 Glas slavonije 14 May 2014 Other sources Memorijal 12 redarstvenika 2008 12 Constables Memorial 2008 in Croatian Ministry of the Interior Croatia 2008 Archived from the original on 25 September 2013 The Prosecutor vs Milan Martic Judgement PDF International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 12 June 2007 Coordinates 45 22 51 60 N 18 57 27 00 E 45 3810000 N 18 9575000 E 45 3810000 18 9575000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Borovo Selo amp oldid 1126104294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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