Category
page 1Aftermath of World War II in Yugoslavia
Bleiburg repatriations
crime in Yugoslavia at the end of World War II
Foibe massacres
extrajudicial mass killings of Italian and other local populations in Istria and Dalmatia during and after the Second World War
OZNA
The Department for Protection of the People, commonly known under its Serbo-Croatian acronym as OZNA, was the secret police of Communist Yugoslavia that existed between 1944 and 1946.
Istrian-Dalmatian exodus
post-World War II expulsion and departure of ethnic Italians from the ethnically mixed Yugoslav territories of Istria, Zadar, and Rijeka
Jazovka
Jazovka is a pit in the Žumberak Mountains area of Croatia, known as a site of mass executions and burials associated with Partisan activities during and after World War II. Hundreds of wounded Croatian soldiers from Zagreb hospitals and civilians were dumped in the pit. Some were already dead, but others died of exposure and injuries. Since the site was rediscovered in 1990, when more 800 skeletons were found, an annual pilgrimage has been organized.
Eternal Flame Memorial
Memorial in Sarajevo
Morgan Line
line of demarcation set up after World War II in the Italian region known as "Julian March"
Crusaders
Croatian anti-communist terrorist group
communist purges in Serbia in 1944–1945
War crimes by the Yugoslav Partisan Movement
Bloody Christmas
campaign of executions of Bulgarians in the Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
Foiba of Basovizza

Gračani massacre
Law for the Protection of Macedonian National Honour