petak, 6. kolovoza 2010.

Isprika žrtvama Oluje

Slika (Foto: YIHR) ploče isprike građana RH žrtvama Oluje

koja je uklonjena odmah slijedeći dan nakon postavljanja, a i glupa vlada se odmah pobunila jer im smeta što piše da je postavljena uz financijsku pomoć vlade RH. Baš sam se ugodno iznenadila skoro povjerovavši da bi oni mogli biti na toj razini svijesti da podrže ovakav čin, a oni požurili da pokažu kako ne bi i da su zapravo još pokvareniji i zatucaniji time što se sad još bune što ih je netko greškom prikazao u ljepšem svjetlu nego kakvi jesu.



Postavili spomen ploču izbjeglicama iz Knina

Povodom petnaeste godišnjice vojno-redarstvene operacije Hrvatske vojske i snaga MUP-a Oluja, Inicijativa mladih za ljudska prava u Hrvatskoj (YIHR/Inicijativa) je obilježila stradanje civila u ovoj operaciji, uz financijsku potporu Vlade Republike Hrvatske. ... Na spomen ploči stoji sljedeći tekst: "5.8.1995. - 5.8.2010. / O 15. obljetnici akcije HV-a 'Oluja', uz ovu cestu kojom su prošle tisuće izbjeglica, ploču postavljaju građani RH koji nude žrtvama svoju ispriku u nedostatku isprike odgovornih. / Ploča je postavljena uz financijsku potporu Vlade RH."

[...]

[...] postavljanje ove spomen ploče ne znači etiketiranje cijele akcije i njezine namjere zločinom. Inicijativa prepoznaje napore građana RH uložene u oslobađanju teritorija RH od okupacije, ali smatramo kako je nužno u procesu demokratizacije suočiti se sa zločinima koji su počinjeni, njih priznati i za njih se ispričati. Nadalje, nužno je da institucije ulože dodatne napore u omogućavanju povratka svih izbjeglica na cijelom teritoriju RH. Izražavamo nadu da ćemo ove godine od predstavnika vlasti u RH čuti iskrene isprike žrtvama. (cijeli članak pročitajte na linku)



Pridružujem se ovoj isprici i dijelim mišljenje da je nakon 15 i više godina stvarno krajnje vrijeme da se ubrza i dovrši povratak svih izbjeglica iz Hrvatske.



DODATNI LINKOVI:

1 link o Palestini/Izraelu:

Ann Wright: Secretary of State Clinton: Now That the Wedding Is Over, Could You Respond to Requests From American Citizens on the Gaza Flotilla?

Despite numerous inquiries to the State Department about the status of the response to my letter, after seven weeks I have not received a response to the letter nor to the 80 questions that I requested that the United States government pose to the Israeli government concerning their attack on the Gaza flotilla. As an American citizen, I am distressed that no one in the State Department government will not respond to this request for assistance. As a former US diplomat who worked for 16 years in the State Department and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan (I helped reopen the US Embassy in December, 2001) and Mongolia, and who received an award for heroism from the State Department for actions during the evacuation of the US Embassy and the international community during the Sierra Leone civil war, I am deeply saddened by the lack of professionalism in my former organization in responding to such a request. ... Could you also determine if the State Department has made a demarche to the Israeli government concerning the circumstances surrounding the commandos deadly shooting of unarmed 19 year old American citizen Furkan Dogan, who was shot 5 times, several times to the head? Of much less importance, but still of concern because of evidence contained, I want to know if a demarch was made for the return of our personal possession including cameras, cellphones and computers taken when the Israeli commandos forcefully boarded all six of the ships in the flotilla. We returned to the United States with the clothes on our backs and our passports. Despite lists of our possessions being given to US consular officers during a June 2 visit to us while we were in prison in Israel, and to US consular officers in Istanbul, Turkey during our brief stay after being deported from Israel and to American Citizen Services officials at the State Department in Washington, DC, virtually nothing has been returned to us (I did receive a diary sent from the US Consulate in Istanbul, but nothing else -- no computer, camera, cellphone, clothing, handbag, address book, $800 in cash, backpack, suitcase, etc.). Phone calls in Israel have been made on cellphones in the possession of the Israeli government.