Zagreb: Puppet-Nazi leader honored in mass

A church service in the Croatian capital on Sunday night commemorated Ustasha criminal Ante Pavelić on the 49th anniversary of his death.

Izvor: Tanjug

Monday, 29.12.2008.

09:48

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A church service in the Croatian capital on Sunday night commemorated Ustasha criminal Ante Pavelic on the 49th anniversary of his death. About a hundred people attended the requiem mass served by Jesuit priest Marijan Steiner, along with Dominican Vjekoslav Lasic, who has served similar church services for Pavelic for years without any consequences. Zagreb: Puppet-Nazi leader honored in mass Lasic is also known for glorifying Croatia's puppet Nazi Second World War entity known as the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), describing it as the basis of the modern Croatian state. The media are quoting one of his previous messages when he said he is "convinced that leader Ante Pavelic is now in heaven along with innocent children, looking at God's face". Pavelic was at the helm of the NDH for four years, as this regime committed war crimes against Serbs, Jews and Romas, but also against Croat anti-fascists, including mass murder in death camps such as Jasenovac. He escaped Zagreb at the end of war and settled in Spain, where he died in a German hospital in Madrid. Since Pavelic was never tried for war crimes in the post-Second World War communist Yugoslavia, his daughters are now seeking a return of the property he seized during that war.

Zagreb: Puppet-Nazi leader honored in mass

Lasić is also known for glorifying Croatia's puppet Nazi Second World War entity known as the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), describing it as the basis of the modern Croatian state.

The media are quoting one of his previous messages when he said he is "convinced that leader Ante Pavelić is now in heaven along with innocent children, looking at God's face".

Pavelić was at the helm of the NDH for four years, as this regime committed war crimes against Serbs, Jews and Romas, but also against Croat anti-fascists, including mass murder in death camps such as Jasenovac.

He escaped Zagreb at the end of war and settled in Spain, where he died in a German hospital in Madrid.

Since Pavelić was never tried for war crimes in the post-Second World War communist Yugoslavia, his daughters are now seeking a return of the property he seized during that war.

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