Editing Vjekoslav Luburić
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Luburić was born in Humac, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in 1914. His father was shot by a Serbian police officer in 1918 after being caught smuggling, causing Luburić to develop a deep hatred for Serbs and the Serbian monarchy. He began to associate with Croatian nationalists while in secondary school and joined the Ustaše movement in 1931. That same year he was convicted of embezzling from the Croatian stock exchange and sentenced to five months in prison. After his release he relocated to an Ustaše training camp in Hungary and swore loyalty to Ustaše leader [[Ante Pavelić]]. He and most other Ustaše residing in Hungary were expelled from the country after [[Alexander I of Yugoslavia]] was assassinated by the Ustaše. | Luburić was born in Humac, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in 1914. His father was shot by a Serbian police officer in 1918 after being caught smuggling, causing Luburić to develop a deep hatred for Serbs and the Serbian monarchy. He began to associate with Croatian nationalists while in secondary school and joined the Ustaše movement in 1931. That same year he was convicted of embezzling from the Croatian stock exchange and sentenced to five months in prison. After his release he relocated to an Ustaše training camp in Hungary and swore loyalty to Ustaše leader [[Ante Pavelić]]. He and most other Ustaše residing in Hungary were expelled from the country after [[Alexander I of Yugoslavia]] was assassinated by the Ustaše. | ||
Following the outbreak of [[World War II]], the [[Axis Powers]] invaded Yugoslavia in 1941 and allowed the Ustaše to establish the Independent State of Croatia. The Ustaše almost immediately passed laws allowing the establishment of concentration camps and the massacre of prisoners; while these did target Jews and Roma, they were mostly aimed at eradicating the Serb population of Croatia, with the Ustaše openly declaring their intent to exterminate one-third of Serbs, expel one-third and force one-third to assimilate into Catholicism. Luburić entered Croatia soon after and was appointed as adjutant to [[Vjekoslav Servatzy]]. His first | Following the outbreak of [[World War II]], the [[Axis Powers]] invaded Yugoslavia in 1941 and allowed the Ustaše to establish the Independent State of Croatia. The Ustaše almost immediately passed laws allowing the establishment of concentration camps and the massacre of prisoners; while these did target Jews and Roma, they were mostly aimed at eradicating the Serb population of Croatia, with the Ustaše openly declaring their intent to exterminate one-third of Serbs, expel one-third and force one-third to assimilate into Catholicism. Luburić entered Croatia soon after and was appointed as adjutant to [[Vjekoslav Servatzy]]. His first ask was to conduct reprisals for the murder of a Croat family in the village of Blagaj. Luburić ordered the round-up of 400 Serbs in the neighbouring village of Veljun on the evening of 9 May and had them brought to Blagaj, where they were taken behind the schoolhouse and killed with knives and blunt objects, a massacre in which Luburić personally participated. | ||
In June Luburić was ordered to carry out cleansing actions in the Lika region after Ustashas in the villages of Gornja Suvaja and Donja Suvaja reported being shot at. On 1 July Luburić lead a group of 300 into the villages but found that the male population had fled into the wilderness, leaving behind the women, children and elderly. In a massacre lasting two hours, Luburić and his men shot 173 civilians and subjected the women to rape and sexual mutilation. On 2 July the Ustaše attacked the nearby village of Osredci, but found that only the elderly and infirm remained, as the rest of the villages had heard they were coming and fled. 30 of the remaining inhabitants were killed before Luburić and his men went on to attack nearby Bubanj, where 152 - 270 villagers were killed and twenty homes were burned down. On 3 July Luburić's unit detained 53 inhabitants of the village of Nebljusi, including ten children, and pushed them to their deaths in a sinkhole; two survived. By the end of the month Luburić's reprisals had killed approximately 1800 people. The atrocities in Lika led to an increased membership of the Croatian partisans and [[Chetniks]] and provoked the Srb uprising against the Ustaše. | In June Luburić was ordered to carry out cleansing actions in the Lika region after Ustashas in the villages of Gornja Suvaja and Donja Suvaja reported being shot at. On 1 July Luburić lead a group of 300 into the villages but found that the male population had fled into the wilderness, leaving behind the women, children and elderly. In a massacre lasting two hours, Luburić and his men shot 173 civilians and subjected the women to rape and sexual mutilation. On 2 July the Ustaše attacked the nearby village of Osredci, but found that only the elderly and infirm remained, as the rest of the villages had heard they were coming and fled. 30 of the remaining inhabitants were killed before Luburić and his men went on to attack nearby Bubanj, where 152 - 270 villagers were killed and twenty homes were burned down. On 3 July Luburić's unit detained 53 inhabitants of the village of Nebljusi, including ten children, and pushed them to their deaths in a sinkhole; two survived. By the end of the month Luburić's reprisals had killed approximately 1800 people. The atrocities in Lika led to an increased membership of the Croatian partisans and [[Chetniks]] and provoked the Srb uprising against the Ustaše. |