Croats, Serbs still nurture antagonisms 

By SNJEZANA VUKIC, Associated Press Writer

Mon Aug 7, 4:56 AM ET
 


Two years ago, Croatia's prime minister dropped in on Sofia Skoric's home and 
munched on bread she had baked for him. It was a gesture intended to show that 
the hard feelings many harbored toward minority Serbs after the country's 
bloody 1991 war were gone.

But late last month, Skoric and her husband, Svetozar, woke up in horror in the 
middle of the night. Stones were shattering the windows of the elderly Serb 
couple's home in the southern Croatia village of Biljani Donji, and a menacing 
fire was blazing in the garden.

"Why are they doing it to us?" said Svetozar Skoric, whose house was also 
attacked on four previous occasions. "We just want to live here in peace. We 
never harmed anyone."

Four of the alleged attackers — all from the nearby village of Skabrnja — were 
arrested and charged with committing a crime of racial or other discrimination 
and intimidating Serbs with the aim of forcing them to move out. All four 
pleaded not .

The incident, one of the most violent in the last 15 years, quickly raised 
tensions in southern Croatia, scene of some of the worst wartime killings. It 
also showed that while politicians often speak of reconciliation, anti-Serb 
sentiment still runs high in small communities.

The attack occurred after someone drew butterflies over graffiti that had been 
scribbled on a store in Biljani Donji that said "Don't forget Skabrnja," 
enraging Croats in the village. Some even swore they recognized a Serb emblem — 
infamous since the war — in the butterflies' wings.

At least 34 people were slain in Skabrnja by rebel Serbs in the early days of 
the conflict, which was triggered by a Serb rebellion against Croatia's 
independence from ex-Yugoslavia.

After the butterflies appeared, the four suspects allegedly drove to Biljani 
Donji — just a mile away — to throw stones at Serb houses and shout anti-Serb 
offenses. Some abandoned barns were set on fire, and new graffiti appeared that 
warned: "God forgives, but Skabrnja does not."

Prime Minister Ivo Sanader's government swiftly condemned the attack, and 
President Stipe Mesic traveled to Biljani Donji, insisting that Croatia's Serbs 
"have a right to live in peace." Police have since been patrolling the village 
to thwart any other possible attacks.

The community's residents — supported by the local priest and their mayor — say 
part of the reason tensions remain is that no Serbs were ever held responsible 
for the Skabrnja massacre. While Croatian courts have tried at least 600 Serbs 
for war crimes committed in 1991, many Croats believe scores of others escaped 
justice.

Serbs claim they are being persecuted for crimes committed by others. They 
insist they are still discriminated against and that the attacks on them often 
go unpunished.

"This was a hate crime," said Milorad Pupovac, the Croatian Serbs' leader, who 
visited Biljani Donji in the wake of the attack on the Skorics' home. "One 
can't get justice for the tragedy in Skabrnja by carrying out a shameful 
revenge on innocent people. Crimes like this should be prevented and punished."

The Croatia office of the European Union, which Croatia is trying to join, 
urged the government to take measures to prevent similar attacks. It said it 
would "closely monitor" Croatia's actions — driving home the point that the 
country's treatment of its Serb minority is a key condition for EU membership.

Some believe the incident was orchestrated by nationalists who want to ruin 
Sanader's pro-EU policies and, ultimately, oust him from power. Sanader's 
pro-Western government began reaching out to Serbs a few years ago, including 
them in parliament and local governments and approving grants for their 
education, housing and social welfare.

Yet the government is reluctant to alienate its rightist supporters by 
appearing to give the Serbs too much support.

After the attack, Sanader's deputy, Jadranka Kosor, went to Skabrnja to soothe 
passions and promise that the perpetrators of the massacre will be found and 
punished.

Sanja Modric, a political analyst, believes the government should do more.

"The government does condemn the violence and it frequently meets officials 
from Serbia, but it's just for show and it's not enough," Modric wrote in the 
Jutarnji List daily.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060807/ap_on_re_eu/croatia_targeting_serbs&printer=1;_ylt=AjDWC.3iSxDiMvDMA6odkLhbbBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-



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