Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Zlatko Hasanbegović

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Prime Minister
  
Tihomir Orešković

Prime Minister
  
Tihomir Orešković

Nationality
  
Croatian

Education
  
University of Zagreb

Constituency
  
I electoral district

Preceded by
  
Berislav Šipuš

Spouse
  
Lamija Hasanbegović

Zlatko Hasanbegović What were the Ustasa for Minister Hasanbegovic Balkan Insight

President
  
Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović

President
  
Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović

Parents
  
Ibrahim Hasanbegović, Zumreta Hasanbegović

Political parties
  
Croatian Democratic Union (2015–), Croatian Pure Party of Rights (1996–1997)

Similar
  
Andrej Plenković, Tomislav Karamarko, Tihomir Orešković, Milorad Pupovac, Božo Petrov

Bujica 06 02 2017 dr zlatko hasanbegovi komentirao ostavku hribara i odgovorio nini obuljen


Zlatko Hasanbegović ([zlâtko xǎsanbeɡoʋit͜ɕ]; born 14 June 1973) is a Croatian historian who served as the 10th Minister of Culture in the Cabinet of Tihomir Orešković since 22 January until 19 October 2016.

Contents

Zlatko Hasanbegović Novi ministar kulture kontroverzan je ovjek a ovo je 8 njegovih

Bujica 18 05 2015 dr zlatko hasanbegovi bleiburg 2015


Early life and education

Zlatko Hasanbegović Novi ministar kulture kontroverzan je ovjek a ovo je 8 njegovih

Zlatko Hasanbegović was born on 14 June 1973 in Zagreb to Zumreta Hasanbegović (née Prohić) from Gračanica and Ibrahim Hasanbegović from Bosanska Gradiška. His mother's side of the family moved from Gračanica (modern day Bosnia and Herzegovina) to the Croatian capital of Zagreb in 1941. His maternal grandfather, Sabrija Prohić, was a rich industrialist with properties across the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia. During World War II, the Prohić family helped hide a Jewish girl from Gračanica in their house in Zagreb.

Zlatko Hasanbegović The new Minister of Culture Zlatko Hasanbegovi dissolved the

After the war, they were accused for smuggling foreign currency and arrested by the Communists. Sabrija Prohić tried to escape to Argentina, but was caught and later killed as a "class enemy", while their entire property was confiscated.

Zlatko Hasanbegović httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Hasanbegović finished elementary and high school in Zagreb, after which he enrolled in Zagreb Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences where he graduated in history. He gained his doctorate on the same Faculty in 2009 in the field of history under supervisory of Ivo Goldstein.

Career

Zlatko Hasanbegović Israel39s Wild Beasts And Political Persecution Of Croatia39s

Hasanbegović is working as a research associate at the Ivo Pilar Institute of Social Sciences. He is the editor of Pilar journal, member of executive committee of the Majlis of Zagreb's Muslim community,

Zlatko Hasanbegović hasanbegovi

He is president of the Supervisory Board of the Honorary Bleiburg Platoon, an organisation which is the main organizer of the commemoration for Bleiburg repatriations, and associate of various initiatives for the determination of victims of communist terror. The subject of his interest is the relation of modern Croatian national ideology, in particular the Party of Rights and its present-day offshoots, Islam in Croatia and Islam in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the 19th and 20th centuries. Hasanbegović researched the Muslim component of Croatian bourgeois culture until 1945 and the political and religious-ethnic relations in Bosnia and Herzegovina since the 1878 Austro-Hungarian rule until the communist takeover in the 1940s.

Hasanbegović has published Croatian translations of several essays: Against Democracy and Equality: The European New Right by Tomislav Sunić, The Holocaust Industry by Norman Finkelstein, Intellectual Terrorism by Jure Vujić, Communism and Nazism by Alain de Benoist, and Wahhabism by Hamid Algar.

He entered politics in his youth when he was a member of the Croatian Pure Party of Rights (HČSP). In 2015 he joined the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ). On 8 May 2015 during the „Otvoreno“ show on Croatian Radiotelevision Hasanbegović stated that anti-fascism is not in the foundations of the Croatian Constitution; "Croatian War of Independence is the only war in the 20th century from which Croats came out as true winners and the only basis on which Croatia should be built. Ghosts and goblins of the past will cause a permanent rift and endless debate. Anti-fascism is not the foundation of Croatia, but a platitude that has no basis in the constitutional text, not being mentioned anywhere."

Deputy Parliament Speaker and professor of constitutional law Robert Podolnjak from the governing Bridge of Independent Lists party, among many others, posited that anti-fascism is founded in the Croatian Constitution.

Hasanbegović said that his remarks about anti-fascism were related to the Yugoslav totalitarian legacy and Titoism: "All who abuse the notion of anti-fascism, which can be fluid, as is well-known to historians, know that various meanings can be attributed to that notion. Stalin, Tito, Pol Pot and also U.S. General Patton were anti-fascists. Everyone knows that those were different persons. We are not talking about abstract anti-fascism but about the particular Yugoslav Communist totalitarian legacy."

Culture Minister

On 22 January 2016, Hasanbegović was appointed as Minister of Culture by Prime Minister Tihomir Orešković. A part of the cultural workers expressed their dissatisfaction mainly due to his comments about anti-fascism and his lack of experience in management of culture. Civic initiative Platform 112, which brings together 70 NGOs, held a protest in front of the Parliament on the day when the new Government was approved, urging MPs to vote against the Cabinet of Tihomir Orešković because of Hasanbegović. The Croatian Journalists' Association issued a statement in which they strongly opposed the nomination of Hasanbegovic as Minister of Culture.

The Israel-based Simon Wiesenthal Center urged the Croatian government to dismiss Hasanbegović, saying he took a disdainful attitude towards Croatian resistance to fascism during World War Two. The Croatian Helsinki Committee (HHO) and the Initiative EU 1481 of Matica hrvatska dismissed the accusations against Hasanbegović as unfounded. Hasanbegović stated that the protests against him were not supported by any facts but based on a selective use of his different statements.

As one of his first moves as minister, Hasanbegović announced that there is no need for the continuation of government funding of any non-profit media. The International and European Federations of Journalists joined their affiliates in Croatia, the HND and the Trade Union of Croatian Journalists (Sinoh) in condemning this decision, as well as the Hasanbegović's dissolution of the Expert Committee for non-profit media before the end of its mandate.

Under the new budget for 2016, the Croatian government stopped funding certain cultural projects and non-profit media, which Hasanbegović described as "racket money", adding that tax-payers' money will no longer be distributed in a non-transparent way for neither the left-wing nor right-wing media.

In May, he signed a cooperation deal with Hungary's Minister Zoltán Balog. At the 17th electoral convention of the HDZ, Hasanbegović was elected to the HDZ Presidency and received most votes.

After Croatian Parliament supported motion of no confidence against Prime Minister Orešković, his whole Cabinet resigned while the Parliament dismissed itself which led to new election. On 2016 parliamentary election, Hasanbegović was elected to the Parliament as HDZ's candidate. In the aftermath, newly elected president of HDZ Andrej Plenković formed a new government with new culture minister being Nina Obuljen Koržinek and not Hasanbegović for which he expressed his dissatisfaction.

HOP controversy

In 1996, Hasanbegović wrote at least two articles in the magazine "The Independent State of Croatia", named after the fascist Independent State of Croatia (NDH), in which he glorified the Ustaše as heroes and martyrs. The magazine was edited by the far-right Croatian Liberation Movement (HOP) and Hasanbegović was described as a young HOP member in it. Commenting on his texts from 1996 twenty years later, Hasanbegović said that the crimes of the Ustaše were "the biggest moral lapse" of the Croatian people in their history, adding: "Using totally peripheral statements I made as a student more than 20 years ago and taking them out of context is nothing but political manipulation". He also denied that he was ever a member of the Croatian Liberation Movement.

In the early 1990s, Hasanbegović posed for a photo in Split wearing a cap with what is allegedly an Ustaše badge. The photograph's resurfacing in 2016 and its circulation in the Croatian media caused major backlash, despite Hasanbegović denying that he was wearing an Ustaša cap, claiming the photo was taken in 1993 and that it was manipulated. He admitted to be in the photo, but claimed to have merely worn a black cap that was a part of the uniform of Croatian Defence Forces, Croatian Party of Rights' paramilitary (1991-1992). CDF rank and file never wore such caps as part of their uniforms, but some extremist members (such as Split battalion commander, Marko Skejo) did own and sport Ustaša caps.

Publications

  • Muslims in Zagreb, 1878-1945. The Era of the Foundation; Majlis of the Islamic Community Zagreb - Institute of Social Sciences "Ivo Pilar", Zagreb, 2007.
  • Yugoslav Muslim Organisation 1929-1941 (In War and Revolution 1941-1945); Bosniac National Community - Institute of Social Sciences "Ivo Pilar" – Majlis of the Islamic Community Zagreb, Zagreb, 2012.
  • References

    Zlatko Hasanbegović Wikipedia