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Dobroslav Paraga

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Preceded by
  
Office established

Succeeded by
  
Anto Dapic

Role
  
Politician

Name
  
Dobroslav Paraga

Preceded by
  
Office established



Born
  
9 December 1960 (age 63) Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia (
1960-12-09
)

Other politicalaffiliations
  
Croatian Party of Rights (1991-1993)

Political party
  
Similar People
  
Ante Paradzik, Anto Dapic, Ante Prkacin, Ruza Tomasic, Ante Pavelic

Dobroslav paraga u hotelu zagreb split 14 05 2015 javna tribina


Dobroslav Paraga (9 December 1960) is a Croatian right-wing politician. He was first president of the Croatian Party of Rights, after party was reestablished in 1991. In 1993 he founded a split party, Croatian Party of Rights 1861 due to disagreement with Anto Đapić.

Contents

Dobroslav Paraga Dobroslav Paraga Veernjihr

Dobroslav paraga witness of time


Background

Dobroslav Paraga SEEbizeu Paraga Tuman je izdao Sloveniju a oni koji

In his early days Paraga advocated the secession of Croatia from Yugoslavia which led to persecution by the Communist authorities. He used that persecution as an argument against Yugoslavia and its low human rights standards. Because of that he became one of the best known dissidents.

When a multi-party system was established in Croatia, Paraga initially joined the Croatian Democratic Union of Franjo Tuđman. However, involvement with the party clearly indicated that there was variation in sentiment among its members. Paraga felt that his CDU did not appear to be the radical party which he had expected, and so the party split. Paraga, and a delegation of CDU dissidents, reformed the Croatian Party of Rights (HSP).

While Tuđman saw the Croatian path of independence through negotiations with Slobodan Milošević, Paraga formed the growing chorus of those who preferred direct and resolute military action against Krajina Serbs and Yugoslav People's Army. Because of that, his party formed its own militia, the Croatian Defence Forces (Croatian: Hrvatske obrambene snage, HOS). Paraga's situation was similar to that of Dragoslav Bokan in Serbia. In an interview in 2000 Paraga stated about the aims of the party that they are “for a Croatia to the Drina, and for a Bosnia and Herzegovina to the Adriatic”. Paraga explained that they think they would be much stronger as a union of two countries.

Paraga's growing popularity, together with his militia, began to look like a serious threat to the Croatian government. Reaction came in the form of arrests, indictments and all kinds of intimidation towards HSP and HOS members, even stretching to deaths of HSP members in mysterious circumstances. This campaign gradually subsided, with HOS units formally joining the Croatian Army and the escalation of war in neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Paraga and the HSP had high hopes of becoming the major political factor before the 1992 presidential and parliamentary elections, but those hopes, despite of the HSP colourful rallies being well-attended, did not materialise. The HSP did enter the Croatian Parliament and Paraga came fourth among presidential candidates, but it was clear that the party was far from its target. Another blow came in the form of high treason charges against Paraga and his associate Anto Đapić, who were stripped of their parliamentary immunity.

Those charges were ultimately dropped, but the most serious blow for Paraga came when Đapić turned against him and took over the leadership of the HSP at the 1993 party convention in Kutina. Paraga accused Đapić of being in cahoots with Tuđman and tried to retrieve party leadership in court.

Modern activity

Following the failure of the effort and second split with fellow party members, Paraga founded a party called Croatian Party of Rights 1861, claiming to be the true descendent of the 19th century party in Austria-Hungary.

References

Dobroslav Paraga Wikipedia


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