Andrija Artuković
Andrija Artuković | |
---|---|
Andrija Artuković (3rd from right) taking the oath during the NDH government inauguration in April 1941. | |
1st Minister of Interior of the Independent State of Croatia | |
In office 16 April 1941 – 10 October 1942 | |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Ante Nikšić |
Minister of Justice of the Independent State of Croatia | |
In office 10 October 1942 – 29 April 1943 | |
3rd Minister of Interior of the Independent State of Croatia | |
In office 29 April 1943 – 1 November 1943 | |
Leader | Ante Pavelić |
Preceded by | Ante Nikšić |
Succeeded by | Mladen Lorković |
State Secretary | |
In office 11 November 1943 – 8 May 1945 | |
Preceded by | Mirko Puk |
Succeeded by | Office abolished |
Personal details | |
Born |
19 November 1899 Klobuk, Austria-Hungary (present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) |
Died |
16 January 1988 88) Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia (present-day Republic of Croatia) | (aged
Political party | Ustaše |
Spouse(s) | Ana Maria Heidler |
Alma mater | University of Zagreb |
Profession | Lawyer |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Andrija Artuković (19 November 1899 – 16 January 1988) was a Croatian lawyer, politician and senior member of the Croatian nationalist and fascist Ustaše organisation, who held the Interior and Justice portfolios in the Government of the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH) during World War II. He signed into law a number of racial laws against Serbs, Jews and Romani people, and was responsible for a string of concentration camps in which tens of thousands of civilians were murdered and mistreated. He escaped to the United States after the war, where he lived until extradited to Yugoslavia in 1986.[1] He was tried and found guilty of a number of mass killings in the NDH, and was sentenced to death, but the sentence was not carried out due to his age and health. He died in custody in 1988.
Early life and career
Andrija Artuković was born on 19 November 1899,[2] in Klobuk, near Ljubuški in Austro-Hungarian-occupied Herzegovina to Marijan and Ruža (née Rašić) Artuković. He was one of 14 siblings raised on a farm.[3] He studied at a Franciscan gymnasium (high school) run by the monastery in nearby Široki Brijeg, and obtained a doctorate in law from the University of Zagreb in 1924. From 1926 he was practising law in Gospić in the Lika region of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[2]
Ustaše activities
Artuković joined the Croatian nationalist and terrorist Ustaše organisation which had been formed in 1929, and in 1932 he was one of the organisers of their small Velebit uprising in Lika,[2] which involved an attack on a Yugoslav gendarmerie station by a group of Ustaše.[4] Artuković fled Yugoslavia before the uprising commenced, escaping via Rijeka to Venice on 31 August. On arrival in Italy, the poglavnik (supreme leader) of the Ustaše, Ante Pavelić, appointed Artuković as an adjutant to Main Ustaša Headquarters and commander of all Ustaše in Italy, and Artuković adopted the pseudonym "Hadžija" (pilgrim).[2] The uprising he helped organise was quickly and brutally suppressed by the Yugoslav authorities, which brought the Ustaše some public attention and prestige.[4]
In Italy, Artuković came into conflict with a group of supporters of fellow Ustaša Mijo Babić (known as "Giovanni"). In late 1933, Artuković left the country. After that he went to Budapest then Vienna where he was arrested and briefly detained in March 1934 before being expelled from Austria. He returned to Budapest, then after meeting Pavelić in Milan in early October, he travelled to London. He was arrested there after the Ustaše assassination of the Yugoslav King Alexander I in Marseilles, France.[2]
After his arrest he was handed over to French authorities, and spent three months in a Paris prison. In January 1935 he was extradited to Yugoslavia, and after 16 months spent in prison in Belgrade, he was acquitted by the Court for the Protection of the State. He was released on 16 April 1936, and briefly returned to Gospić before travelling to Austria in May. He later went to Germany,[5] where he was involved in spreading Ustaše propaganda.[6] In early 1937 he was living in Berlin when he was interrogated by the Gestapo, and under threat of arrest, he fled to France. This was followed by a stint in Budapest after which he returned to Berlin.[5] By the late 1930s, the Ustaše had adopted the fascist principles of their financial backer and protector, Italy.[7]
Independent State of Croatia
In late March 1941, Yugoslavia joined the Axis, but two days later a pro-Allied coup d'état overthrew the government that had signed the treaty. In response, Adolf Hitler decided to invade and dismember Yugoslavia. The German-led Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in early April comprehensively defeated the Yugoslav military, and the country was divided up between the Axis powers. Before the Yugoslav government had capitulated, the Germans engineered the creation of the Independent State of Croatia, and placed Pavelić and the Ustaše in charge.[8]
Slavko Kvaternik, the most senior Ustaše still in Yugoslavia, proclaimed the Independent State of Croatia on 10 April 1941,[9] and Artuković and the other émigré Ustaše returned to Zagreb. On 12 April, Kvaternik formed an interim government,[10] which included Artuković.[5] Pavelić arrived in Zagreb on 15 April,[11] and on the following day, Artuković became the Interior Minister in the first Croatian government. As a member of Pavelić's trusted inner circle, Artuković carried out the orders he was given.[5]
On 17 April, to provide authority for Ustaše policies targeting Serbs, Jews, Roma and anti-Ustaše Croats and Bosniaks within the NDH, Pavelić proclaimed the Law Decree on the Defence of the People and the State. It prohibited any person from acting against the Croatian people and its interests, for which the penalty was death. Such alleged offences were to be dealt with in a summary manner by a panel similar to a court martial.[12] On 22 April, Artuković announced that the NDH government would solve the "Jewish question" in the same way as the German government, and a week later, he issued further racial laws, and advocated a policy of terror.[5] These first and subsequent racial laws were vaguely worded, permitting wide interpretation. The organisation charged with enforcing these laws was the Directorate of Public Order and Security, which was subordinated to Artuković's Interior Ministry. The Directorate was established in May, and was headed by Eugen "Dido" Kvaternik, the son of Slavko Kvaternik.[12]
In the meantime, Artuković participated in the Croatian-Italian border negotiations that took place between Pavelić and the Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano in Italian-annexed Ljubljana on 25 April 1941.[5] The Italians made a claim for the entire eastern shore of the Adriatic, but Pavelić made a counter-offer of that part of Dalmatia that had been offered to Italy in the secret Treaty of London of 1915.[13] The earlier Pavelić-Ciano agreement became the basis for the Treaties of Rome, which ceded these areas to Italy,[14] and Artuković also accompanied Pavelić to the signing of those treaties in mid-May.[5]
On 6 June, Artuković accompanied Pavelić during his visit to Adolf Hitler.[5] On 24 February 1942,[15] at the opening of the Croatian Parliament (Croatian: Sabor), Artuković announced the creation of the Croatian Orthodox Church, which was intended to replace the Serbian Orthodox Church for Serbs living within the NDH.[16] During the same speech, he promised that the NDH would take more radical action against Jews than Nazi Germany, referring to the Jewish people of the NDH as "insatiable and poisonous parasites" who would be destroyed,[15] and stating that Croats had been forced to serve the Jews in pursuit of their "filthy" profits and "materialistic and grasping" ambitions.[17] This speech preceded a systematic campaign against Croatian Jews which included mass deportations to NDH concentration camps and German extermination camps.[18] After the government reshuffle on 10 October 1942, Artuković became Minister of Justice and Religion, then from 29 April 1943 until 1 October 1943 he was again the Minister of Interior. He was Secretary of State from 11 October 1943 until the collapse of the Independent State of Croatia on 8 May 1945.[5]
Emigration, repatriation and trials
With other members of Government, he left Zagreb on 6 May 1945 and went to Austria. He was detained in an Allied camp in Spittal an der Drau. On 18 May 1945, British extradited some Croatian ministers and Prime Minister Nikola Mandić to the Yugoslav authorities. Artuković was not extradited, but he was released soon with remaining ministers. He left the British occupational zone, then went via the American to the French occupational zone, where his family was. With a Swiss passport under the pseudonym of Alois Anich, he traveled to Ireland. In 1948, with his wife and children, he entered the United States on a tourist visa and settled in Seal Beach, California. He worked at a company owned by his brother.[5] As a war criminal, Porajmos perpetrator and Ustaše official, he did not qualify for legal status in the United States and remained in the country after overstaying his visa.[19]
In July 1945, the Yugoslav State Commission for Investigation of Crimes of Occupiers and Their Allies declared Artuković a war criminal. The Government of the FPR Yugoslavia made a request for his extradition on 29 August 1951. Their request met with a seven years long bureaucratic delay in Los Angeles, California due to the influence of the Croatian émigré community and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, to whom Artuković and his family had appealed. On 15 January 1959, U.S. Commissioner Theodore Hocke rejected Yugoslavia's extradition request;[20] the INS's grounds for refusing extradition was "...since the crimes for which extradition was requested were deemed 'political' by the court, if Artukovic were deported to Yugoslavia, he would be "subject to physical persecution".[21] When the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) raised the question of the legal basis of the stay in the US of a large number of associates of and/or collaborationists with Nazi Germany, the Yugoslav authorities, under the initiative of the Special Investigation Court of the U.S. Department of Justice, renewed their request for Artuković's extradition. He was arrested on 14 November 1984, and a court process began in New York.[5]
During the trial, the United States Justice Department (USDOJ) attorneys referred to Artuković as the "Butcher of the Balkans".[22] He was ordered extradited to Yugoslavia on 11 November 1986,[5] where he was tried in the Zagreb District Court.[23] He was found guilty of:[3]
- ordering the deaths of a lawyer and former member of the Yugoslav National Assembly, Dr. Ješa Vidić, in early 1941;
- ordering the deaths by machine gun fire of 450 men, women and children in late 1941 because there was no room for them in a concentration camp;
- ordering the killing of the entire population of the town of Vrginmost and its surrounding villages in 1942; and
- ordering the execution of "several hundred" prisoners at Samobor Castle near Zagreb in 1943 by having them driven into an open field, where they were machine-gunned and then crushed by tanks.
The court held that Artuković's intent had originated with "his Ustaša orientation, by which persecutions, concentration camps and mass killings of Serbs, Jews, Gypsies, as well as Croats who did not accept the ideology, were part of the implementation of a program of creating a 'pure' Croatia." In sentencing him to death, the court described him as one of the "ruthless murderers, who under the cover of 'protecting purity of race and faith' and with the aim of realising their Nazi-Fascist ideology, [... ] killed, slaughtered, tortured, crippled, exposed to great suffering, and persecuted thousands and thousands of people, among whom were women and children."[23] He was sentenced to death,[19] but the sentence was not carried out due to his age and poor health.[5]
Death
Artuković died of natural causes in prison hospital in Zagreb on 16 January 1988.[5] His son, Radoslav, requested information about his father's burial from the Yugoslav authorities. A special law was passed in Yugoslavia that the remains of those convicted and sentenced to death but who escaped execution, were to be disposed of as those of executed persons. It is unclear what happened to his remains.[24] In 2010—at the request of one of Artuković's sons, Radoslav, a California native—the president of the Croatian Helsinki Committee, Ivan Zvonimir Čičak, called for authorities to investigate what happened to the remains.[19]
Footnotes
- ↑ 1986 extradition ruling, justia.com; accessed 10 February 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Ravlić 1997, p. 11.
- 1 2 Rohrlich 19 January 1988.
- 1 2 Tomasevich 2001, p. 33.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Ravlić 1997, p. 12.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 35-36.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, p. 32.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 47–52.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 52–53.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, p. 55.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, p. 60.
- 1 2 Tomasevich 2001, pp. 383–384.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, p. 235.
- ↑ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 235–237.
- 1 2 Yeomans 2013, p. 25.
- ↑ Yeomans 2013, p. 22.
- ↑ Yeomans 2013, p. 194.
- ↑ Yeomans 2013, pp. 25–26.
- 1 2 3 Jureško-Kero 28 June 2010.
- ↑ Pyle 2001, p. 137.
- ↑ Depoartment of US State document A-124 artukovic case May 24, 1961, foia.cia.gov; accessed 10 February 2016.
- ↑ Pyle 2001, p. 133.
- 1 2 Abtahi & Boas 2005, p. 267.
- ↑ Genc, Mladen (30 July 2010). "Andrija Artuković potajno pokopan u Lepoglavi?!" (in Croatian). Lepoglava.net. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andrija Artuković. |
Books
- Abtahi, Hirad; Boas, Gideon (2005). The Dynamics of International Criminal Justice: Essays in Honour of Sir Richard May. Leiden, The Netherlands: BRILL. ISBN 978-90-474-1780-4.
- Bartulin, Nevenko (2013a). The Racial Idea in the Independent State of Croatia: Origins and Theory. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-26282-9.
- Bartulin, Nevenko (2013b). Honorary Aryans: National-Racial Identity and Protected Jews in the Independent State of Croatia. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1-137-33913-6.
- Breitman, Richard (2005). U.S. Intelligence and the Nazis. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-61794-9.
- Carmichael, Cathie (2003). Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans: Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-47953-5.
- Carmichael, Cathie; Maguire, Richard C., eds. (2015). The Routledge History of Genocide. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-51483-1.
- Crowe, David M. (2013). Crimes of State Past and Present: Government-Sponsored Atrocities and International Legal Responses. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-98681-2.
- Kornberg, Jacques (2015). The Pope's Dilemma: Pius XII Faces Atrocities and Genocide in the Second World War. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-2828-1.
- Lemkin, Raphael (2008). Axis Rule in Occupied Europe. Clark, New Jersey: The Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 978-1-58477-901-8.
- Levene, Mark (2013). Annihilation: Volume II: The European Rimlands 1939-1953. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-968304-8.
- Macdonald, David Bruce (2002). Balkan Holocausts?: Serbian and Croatian Victim Centered Propaganda and the War in Yugoslavia. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-6467-8.
- Mojzes, Paul (2011). Balkan Genocides: Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the Twentieth Century. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-0663-2.
- Popović, Jovo (1986). Suđenje Andriji Artukoviću i što nije rečeno [The Trial of Andrija Artuković: The Untold Story] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Yugoslavia: Stvarnost. ISBN 86-7075-066-X.
- Pyle, Christopher (2001). Extradition, Politics, and Human Rights. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-56639-823-7.
- Ramet, Sabrina P.; Jareb, Mario; Sadkovich, James J. (2007), "Personalities in the History of the NDH", in Ramet, Sabrina P., The Independent State of Croatia 1941–45, New York, New York: Routledge, pp. 95–100, ISBN 0-415-44055-6
- Ravlić, Slaven (1997). "Andrija Artuković". In Dizdar, Zdenko; Grčić, Marko; Ravlić, Slaven; Stuparić, Darko. Tko je tko u NDH [Who was Who in the NDH] (in Croatian). Zabreg, Croatia: Minerva. pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-953-6377-03-9.
- Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. 2. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2.
- Yeomans, Rory (2013). Visions of Annihilation: The Ustasha Regime and the Cultural Politics of Fascism, 1941–1945. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-7793-3.
Websites
- "Andrija Artukovic, "Butcher of Balkans", Dies in Jail". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York: Advance Publications. 19 January 1988. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
- Jureško-Kero, Jadranka (28 June 2010). "Radoslav Artuković, sin ministra u NDH: Želim pokopati oca!" [Radoslav Artuković, the son of the Minister of the NDH: I want to bury my father!]. Večernji list (in Croatian). Retrieved 4 March 2012.
- Rohrlich, Ted (19 January 1988). "Artukovic, Extradited as Nazi War Criminal, Dies January 19, 1988". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California: latimes.com. Retrieved 5 January 2015.