MYTH: "SERBS HAVE NO RlGHTS lN CROATIA"
Myth: The government of the Republic of Croatia denied basic civil, cultural and
linguistic rights to the Serbian minority in Croatia.
Reality: On the very day it declared independence Croatia granted extraordinary rights
and privileges to Serbs and other minorities in Croatia.
It became apparent throughout the world that Serbia was the aggressor in Slovenia,
Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina during the break-up of Yugoslavia. Its clear aim was the
preservation of a Greater Serbian state while retaining the name Yugoslavia against the
expressed will of the majority of the people. However, Serbia's aims were not so clear to
many in the West during the terrible days of aggression in the Fall of 1991 and Spring of
1992.
A full-scale Serbian propaganda campaign repeated time and time again that the War was
to "protect the Serbian minority in Croatia" despite the fact that the Serbs had
lived peacefully with the Croatians for nearly a half-century. To reinforce their case,
Serbia let it be known to the world that the new Croatian government had made no provision
for the rights of Serbs in Croatia. The Western media, unable or unwilling to read the
documents provided to them by the Croatian government in English, accepted mythology as
fact and in many cases continued to repeat it well into 1992. "The Croatians wrote a
new constitution, giving no special rights to Croatia's Serbs..." wrote the Christian
Science Monitor on September 19, 1991.
Croatian Declaration of Independence, June 25, 1991
In reality, with the very first document to emerge from the new Croatian Republic, its
Declaration of Independence on June 25, 1991, the Croatian government guaranteed not only
civil rights, but unique rights to the Serbian minority. The first two articles of the
Declaration established the rights of Croatia to declare independence and to defend its
territorial integrity. Article III of the Declaration stated:
The Republic of Croatia is a democratic, legal and social state in which prevails
the supreme values of constitutional order: freedom, equality, ethnic equality, peace,
social justice, respect for human rights, pluralism and the inviolability of personal
property, environmental protection, the rule of law, and a multi-party system.
The Republic of Croatia guarantees Serbs in Croatia and all national minorities who
live in this territory the respect of all human and civil rights, especially the freedom
to nurture their national language and culture as well as political organizations.
The Republic of Croatia protects the rights and interests of its citizens without
regard to their religious, ethnic or racial belonging. In accordance with customary and
positive international law, the Republic of Croatia guarantees other states and
international bodies that it will completely and consciously uphold all its rights and
duties as a legal successor to the previous Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to
the extent that they relate to the Republic of Croatia.
In order to avoid bloodshed and insure a peaceful transition, the Croatian Declaration
concluded:
The Republic of Croatia calls upon the other republics of the former SFRY to create
an alliance of sovereign states on the presumptions of mutual recognition of state
sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual respect, recognition of political pluralism
and democracy, pluralism of ownership and market economy, and the actual respect of human
rights, rights for ethnic minorities and other civilized values of the free world.
Serbia met this call for peaceful dialogue with the bloodiest warfare Europe had seen
since World War II, slaughtering over ten thousand people, exiling hundreds of thousands
and crushing the human rights of non-Serbs in every corner of former Yugoslavia.
Charter Relating to the Rights of Serbs and Others
In order to dispel any doubts about the Croatian government's commitment to human
rights and exceptional rights for the Serbian minority, the Croatian Parliament in its
first session as an independent state, adopted The Charter Relating to the Rights of
Serbs and Other Nationalities in the Republic of Croatia on June 25, 1991:
I. A just solution relating to the issue of Serbs and other nationalities in the
Republic of Croatia is one of the important factors to democracy, stability, peace and
economic advancement, and to cooperation with other countries.
II. The protection and full realization of rights for all nationalities in the Republic
of Croatia, as well as the protection of individual rights is a composite part of
international protection of human and civil rights and the protection of nationalities and
as such they belong to the area of international cooperation.
III. The rights of nationalities and international cooperation will not allow any
activity which is opposed to the regulations of international law, especially sovereignty,
territorial integrity and the political independence of the Republic of Croatia as a
united and indivisible democratic and social state.
IV. All nationalities in Croatia are legally protected from such activities that would
threaten their existence. They have the right to respect and to self preservation of their
cultural autonomy.
V. Serbs in Croatia and all nationalities have the right to proportionally engage in
bodies of local self-government and appropriate government bodies, as well as security for
economic and social development for the purpose of preserving their identity and for the
protection of any attempts of assimilation, which will be regulated by law, territorial
organization, local self-government as well as institutionalizing parliamentary bodies
which will be responsible for relations between nationalities.
VI. Organizations which will adhere to the aims of its constitution and which are
involved in protecting and developing individual nationalities, and as such are
representative of the said nationality, have the right to represent the nationality as a
whole and each individual belonging to that nationality, within the Republic as well as on
an international level. Individual nationalities and members have the right, in order to
protect their rights, to turn to international institutions which are involved in the
protection of human and national rights.
The commitments of the Croatian government to human rights surpassed those of the
United States Declaration of Independence which referred to native Americans as
"merciless Indian savages," or the U.S. Constitution which specifically defined
an African-American as three-fifths of a person.
The Croatian Parliament further strengthened the law on December 4, 1991 by
specifically granting local police, courts and governments to Serbs in those areas in
which they were a majority. These documents grant Serbs and other national minorities full
protection of human rights, guaranteed proportional representation in government, the
right to self-government, and protection from any attempts of forced assimilation. It
further encouraged individuals and organizations to appeal to international bodies to
secure these protections.
Ironically, Serbs in Croatia have never needed these provisions. It was the Croatians,
Bosnians and Kosovo's Albanian majority who would appeal to the European Community, the
United Nations, the International League for Human Rights, Helsinki Watch, Amnesty
International and other international bodies for protection from the Serbian minority and
the Serbian controlled Army.