Resolution adopted on mass child killings in WWII-era Independent State of Croatia

BELGRADE - In occupied Europe during WWII, only the Ustasha Independent State of Croatia had specialised death camps for Serb, Jewish and Romani children, notes a resolution on Ustasha killings of Serb, Jewish and Romani children in death camps for children in the Independent State of Croatia between 1941 and 1945.

The resolution was adopted after a historic three-day conference titled Jasenovac - The Auschwitz of the Balkans, which included testimonies by former prisoners of death camps for children.

The conference was held in the Serbian parliament building.

The resolution says the participants of the conference - surviving prisoners of death camps for children set up in Jasenovac, Jastrebarsko, Sisak and other locations in the Independent State of Croatia, as well as scientists and members of the international group GH7-Stop Revisionism - noted that, of the...

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