
Chronicle
The mass murderer in Dubona and Mali Orašje almost fully admitted his guilt
At the preliminary hearing, Uroš Blažić said "he doesn't know what possessed him to commit such a crime."
At the preliminary hearing, Uroš Blažić said "he doesn't know what possessed him to commit such a crime."
Uncle Uroš Blažić's brother, accused of mass murder in the villages of Malo Orašje and Dubona, was sentenced to a prison sentence of one year and six months for the criminal offense of illegal production, possession, carrying and trafficking of weapons and explosive materials in complicity.
The state left the wounded, survivors and families of those killed in the massacres in Dubona and Mali Orašje in the lurch. The system has failed once again. Help for these people comes from humanitarian actions launched on a private initiative
Jovan Mitrović, in a written statement, stated that one of his brother Petar's wishes was to leave the village of Malo Orašje and go to the Tumane monastery, where he would receive communion.
A couple of parents from Dubona lost both children. They live from agriculture. When they deliver their goods to someone, sometimes they never get paid for it. They simply have no way to pay for their work if someone who owes them is "above the law". That man is in a pre-infarction state and the first thing the doctor advised him was that he should not do physical work. But he tells us: "What am I going to do if I can't work, how can I live, and even when I work, they cheat me." In fact, they all live with a "built-in", learned acceptance that injustice is a part of this life. They say so themselves, they are reconciled with that: "We are used to injustice, that's how life is."
Political propaganda has reached its lowest level since TV Bastille, in hysterical fear of losing ratings