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Nedić's Serbia (Nedićeva Srbija) is the popular name for the Serbian ] ] that existed between 1941 and 1944, on the teritory of parts of today's ]. The official name of the goverment was Vlada nacionalnog spasa (eng. Government of National Salvation) which was proclaimed by general ] on 1st of September 1941. The internal affairs of the Serbian puppet state was modelled according to Nazi state models: racial laws were introduced with immediate effects on ], Roma people, as well as imprisonment of all progressive and left oriented persons. |
Nedić's Serbia (Nedićeva Srbija) is the popular name for the Serbian ] ] that existed between 1941 and 1944, on the teritory of parts of today's ]. The official name of the goverment was Vlada nacionalnog spasa (eng. Government of National Salvation) which was proclaimed by general ] on 1st of September 1941. The internal affairs of the Serbian puppet state was modelled according to Nazi state models: racial laws were introduced with immediate effects on ], Roma people, as well as imprisonment of all progressive and left oriented persons. The start of the massive prosecution was marked with the ], an ] exhibition which blamed all the ills of the nation on Jews and the imperialists. The two major concentration camps in Serbia were: ] and ]. The government of Milan Nedić were supported by the ] of ], and the aim was to neutralise all resistance against the German occupation forces, after the massacre in ] by ] forces in a retribution killing of civilians (100 for each dead German soldier, and 50 for each wounded one). Nedić's forces managed to rid Serbia of partisans in 1941, as well as other chetniks forces which were not willing to sign an agreement of cooperation. Under Nedić, Belgrade was declared the first large city in Europe to be ] in 1942. | ||
==Police and Military forces== | ==Police and Military forces== |
Revision as of 12:39, 2 May 2006
Nedić's Serbia (Nedićeva Srbija) is the popular name for the Serbian nazi puppet state that existed between 1941 and 1944, on the teritory of parts of today's Serbia. The official name of the goverment was Vlada nacionalnog spasa (eng. Government of National Salvation) which was proclaimed by general Milan Nedić on 1st of September 1941. The internal affairs of the Serbian puppet state was modelled according to Nazi state models: racial laws were introduced with immediate effects on Jews, Roma people, as well as imprisonment of all progressive and left oriented persons. The start of the massive prosecution was marked with the Anti-Freemason Exhibition, an Anti-Semitic exhibition which blamed all the ills of the nation on Jews and the imperialists. The two major concentration camps in Serbia were: Sajmište and Banjica. The government of Milan Nedić were supported by the chetniks of Dimitrije Ljotić, and the aim was to neutralise all resistance against the German occupation forces, after the massacre in Kragujevac by Wehrmacht forces in a retribution killing of civilians (100 for each dead German soldier, and 50 for each wounded one). Nedić's forces managed to rid Serbia of partisans in 1941, as well as other chetniks forces which were not willing to sign an agreement of cooperation. Under Nedić, Belgrade was declared the first large city in Europe to be Judenfrei in 1942.
Police and Military forces
The police and military forces in Nedić's Serbia were organised in the following manner:
- Military
Concentration camps
- Banjica concentration camp (near Belgrade)
- Sajmište concentration camp (near Belgrade)
- Crveni krst (Niš)
- Dulag 183 (Šabac)
- Svilara (Pančevo)
- Paračin
Politicians
- Velibor Jonić
- Dimitrije Ljotić
- dr. Milorad Nedeljković
- Dragomir-Dragi Jovanović
- Milan Ačimović
- Tanasije-Tasa Dinić
- Čedomir Marjanović
- Bogoljub Kujundžić
- Đura Dokić
- Ljubiša Mikić
- Dušan Letica
- Dušan Djordjević
- Boško Pavlović
References
- Serbian potrayal of Serbia's "Holocaust decency" is historical revisionism
- War in the Balkans - 5
- Commentary on a book about the manipulation of the number of victims in WWII by Yugoslavia
- The New Serbian Rights and Anti-Semitism
- Servians Hide Their Nazi Past
- Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia - report on anti-semitism