Ovčara camp
Ovčara | |
---|---|
concentration camp | |
Coordinates | 45°17′44″N 19°03′33″E / 45.29556°N 19.05917°E |
Location | Grabovo, just outside Vukovar, Croatia |
Operated by | Croatian Serb Territorial Defense, Leva Supoderica and the Yugoslav People's Army |
Operational | October–December 1991 |
Inmates | Croat prisoners of war and civilians, as well as some Serbs, Muslims, and Hungarians |
Number of inmates | 3,000–4,000 |
Killed | 260 dead or missing |
Ovčara was a Serbian transit camp for Croatian prisoners during the Croatian War of Independence, from October to December 1991, and the location of the Ovčara massacre.
Prison camp
[edit]Ovčara is located 5 kilometers southeast of the city of Vukovar. It is a desolate stretch of land where the Vukovar agricultural conglomerate built cattle-raising facilities after World War II. These facilities are storage hangars, which are fenced and can be easily guarded. The hangars are made of brick and have a big sliding front door, which includes a small door.
The Serbian forces turned Ovčara into a prison camp in early October 1991. Aside from the massacre, 3,000 to 4,000 men prisoners were temporarily held in the camp before being transported to the prison in Sremska Mitrovica or to the local army barracks, which was the transit point for the Serbian detention camps of Stajićevo, Begejci and others. Some of the Serb forces were led by Željko Ražnatović — also known as "Arkan" — who directed much of the pillaging and murder that occurred in Vukovar during and after the siege.[1]
At the end of the battle of Vukovar and in the prelude to the Vukovar hospital massacre, numerous men were brought to Ovčara, including wounded patients, hospital staff and some of their family members, former defenders of Vukovar, Croatian political activists, journalists and other civilians.[2][3] One member of the group standing trial in Belgrade for the executions testified that "among the prisoners, there were quite a number of civilians and wounded persons with bandaged wounds and casts", including a pregnant woman.[4] Several witnesses at the trial, former JNA soldiers, also confirmed there were civilians present at Ovčara.
The archive of the city government of Vukovar has some testimonies of Ovčara prisoners. When they came out of the buses, they had to run between two rows of Serbian soldiers and other forces, who beat them with rifle butts, clubs and other blunt weapons.[citation needed] The beatings continued in the hangars; at least two men died from those beatings.[5] Ovčara was closed on December 25, 1991. Its total count was around 200 men killed and 64 missing prisoners.[6]
Massacre
[edit]On November 18, 1991, which was the day when the battle of Vukovar ended, the Serbian forces captured the Vukovar hospital. They gathered the wounded fighters, civilians and hospital staff, put them in buses and transported them to Ovčara. The prisoners were brought together, massacred, executed by firearms, thrown in a trench and covered by earth.
The Ovčara mass grave lies northeast from the facilities, one kilometer from the Ovčara-Grabovo road. It belongs to the category of the mass graves with the remains of prisoners of war and civilians executed in the immediate vicinity or at the very place of the grave.
References
[edit]- ^ Eric Stover and Gilles Peress: The Graves (1998), (Scalo. Zurich), p. 108.
- ^ ICTY Outreach Programme: JUSTICE FOR THE VICTIMS OF "OVČARA"
- ^ New York Times: Serbian Court Finds 14 Guilty in '91 Massacre of Croatians
- ^ "Ovčara case: Trial for the war crimes against the men war prisoners / War Crimes Chamber of the District Court in Belgrade, Serbia (page 5)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-26. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ^ Profile: The 'Vukovar Three'
- ^ "U.N. tribunal to rule in Vukovar massacre case". Reuters. September 25, 2007. Retrieved September 11, 2010.