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La Jugoslavia sotto il terrore comunista, edizioni di cultura sociale, 1949 copyright expired
This book is an important historical document because it documents titoist Yugoslavia's state terrorist, which was denounced by the Italian stalinist communists, who were slaves of the Soviet Union. It is evident that communists were massacred in Yugoslavia in worse cases than in the USSR and the denunciation was made by Italian stalinists to which Giorgio Napolitano belonged, who was re-elected president of the Italian Republic with the votes of Silvio Berlusconi's political party, which is anti-communist but dubiously famous.
Jasper Ridley Tito-genio e fallimento di un dittatore, Artnoldo Mondadori editore, 1996
capitolo Vittoria e vendetta pagine 236, 237
Gli elettori votarono infilando un gettone metallico nell'urna dei candidati del governo o in quella dell'opposizione. In seguito circolarono voci secondo le quali le elezioni non erano state effettivamente libere e la gente che aveva votato contro Tito sarebbe stata perseguitata.
Subasic diede le dimissioni per ritirarsi a vita privata. Nell'estate del 1946 la Iugoslavia era ormai uno stato comunista a tutti gli effetti, una dittatura a partito unico con Tito come dittatore. La Iugoslavia adottò una costituzione che era quasi la copia esatta della 'costituzione di Stalin' del 1937.
pagina 231
problema di sorvegliare e nutrire 200.000 iugoslavi anticomunisti in Austria
capitolo La repressione dei croati pagina 362
Nel febbraio 1971, l'economista croato Sime Djodan dichiarò che sotto l'impero austroungarico il denaro dei croati speso al di fuori della Croazia ammontava al 55 per cento del loro gettito fiscale totale, sotto re Alessandro e principe Paolo al 46 per cento e che allora sotto Tito era arrivato al 63 per cento. Per i Croati dunque la Repubblica federale socialista di Iugoslavia è una grande sfruttatrice e quindi meno accettabile dell'impero austroungarico o della vecchia Iugoslavia monarchica.
https://www.infoplease.com/encyclopedia/history/bios/yugoslavia/tito-josip-broz/titos-dictatorship
Others maintained that he was by far the worst mass-murderer in post-World War II Europe. Without trial some 150,000 mosty Croatian soldiers were murdered immediately after the war.[1]
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Joze Pirjevec, Italian edition 2015 "Tito e i suoi compagni", Einaudi editore, Torino; chapter "La vittoria", section "Anno 1945: il massacro" page 204 The merciless showdown against the "counter-revolutionaries" which cost the lives of an unknown number of people, between seventy and one hundred thousand, was long a taboo in Yugoslavia and found no echo in the West. Instead, merciless showdown was praised by Stalin, an event that made Josip Broz's collaborators proud. During a meeting with a Polish delegation, the "owner" of the Kremlin criticized the Warsaw authorities for their laxity versus the opposition forces, citing Tito as an example: he is a smart boy because he has eliminated all his opponents.
Enciclopedia britannica, section:"The conflict with Stalin "Tito consolidated his power in the summer and fall of 1945 by purging his government of noncommunists and by holding fraudulent elections that legitimated the jettisoning of the monarchy."
chapter POLITICS IN THE 1970s: Despite certain features, the Yugoslav system was still totalitarian. Some authors describe it as 'soft totalitarianism'. The second Yugoslavia was characterized by its authoritarian leader, Josip Broz Tito, until his death in 1980.
Roman Leljak, Đurmanec 1964, is a Croatian historian.
- ^ Benigar, Aleksa (1993). Alojzije Stepinac, hrvatski kardinal. Zagreb: Glas Koncila. p. 457.
- ^ Café Europa: Life After Communism, Slavenka Drakulic. Hachette.
"He was responsible for the massacre of war prisoners at Bleiburg and forced labour camps such as Goli Otok, for political prisoners and the violation of human rights" - ^ Bern, Gregory (1947). Behind the Red mask. Bern Publications. ISBN 1135742901.
- ^ Pintar, John (1954). Four years in Tito's hell. H.P.K.
- ^ Sebestyen, Victor (2014). 1946: The Making of the Modern World. Macmillan. ISBN 0230758002.