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The Saborsko massacre was a war crime [1] committed by Serb-led JNA and rebel Croatian Serbs' militia "Militia of Republic of Serb Krajina" (from neighbouring Plaški [2]) on October 12, 1991 in which they killed local Croats. [3] The Saborsko massacre has been one of many massacres committed by Serb-led JNA and rebel Croatian Serbs' militia "Militia of Republic of Serb Krajina" during the Croatian War of Independence.
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An important fact about the JNA was about its leadership, as well as its ethnical structure of troops (army obligants, reserves, officers). Although JNA (Yugoslav National Army) wore the name of Yugoslavia, the ethnical structure of JNA' soldiers engaged was not representing the ethnical structure of Yugoslavia; it had no army obligants from Croatia and Slovenia, nor Croats from Bosnia and Herzegovina, so the share of Serbs became extremely higher. That was because of ending of regular one-year military service - one of "big" classes ended its service at the end of August and the beginning of September, and after the December of 1991, the recruitmenet percentage from those republics sharply dropped. The class of June had no recruits from Croatian and Slovenia at all. The other important factors, that influenced changed army's ethnical structure was the deserting of army during the service (mostly non-Serb soldiers from Croatia and Croats from Bosnia-Herzegovina), higher percentage of relieving from army obligation (medical and other reasons) during the service (much higher than usual) and various evading steps undertaken before the start of military service. Additionally, reserve forces were recruited from Serbia and Montenegro (the latter were, however, engaged on southern Croatian battlefield). Similar was with army's professional personnel (officers, experts, tehnicians).
According to the census of 1991, Saborsko had 1,701 inhabitant in 460 households. The majority were the autochthonous Croats. Local Serb paramilitaries had started with attacks on Croat villages on October 1, 1991, with military support of JNA forces from Knin. Among other attacks, these forces had attacked Saborsko, a small village located some 10 kilometers northwest from Plitvička Jezera.
The assault, ICTY sources confirm, was a part of the ethnic cleansing plan. According to that plan, "all Croats and other non-Serbs were to be displaced from there, in order to get ethnically clean Republic of Serbian Krajina". Ethnically cleansed areas were used as jumpboards for the further assaults on other areas of Croatia.
On October 12, the attackers breached the defense lines of the village of Saborsko. After that, they went from house to house and killed peasants (in total 29 of them) that had been unable or unwilling to abandon the village. After that, all houses were plundered.
A Catholic church was blown up and the local graveyard was devastated by the attackers, presumably to remove all traces of previous Croat inhabitants.
Several of the villagers survived by sneaking three days through the forests into Bihać in neighboring Bosnia and Herzegovina, where they were accepted and then transferred to Croatia by buses, where they were given shelter with other refugees in hotels.
Altogether, in Saborsko, 29 people were killed in this event.
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