Bijeljina and Modran shootings

The Bijeljina and Modran shootings was a mass shooting event that occurred on February 2, 1992, at Bijeljina and Modran, in thenYugoslavia. Drago Miličić shot and killed six people.[1][2]

Bijeljina and Modran shootings
LocationBijeljina and Modran, Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
DateFebruary 2, 1992
Attack type
Mass shooting
WeaponsAssault rifle, grenades
Deaths6
PerpetratorDrago Miličić

Shooting

On the night of February 2 1992, Yugoslav People's Army conscript Drago Miličić got drunk in a cafe in Modran, where he smashed several ashtrays with a knife before returning to his barracks. There he found a rifle and shot his commander and two privates as they slept. He then threw grenades at security posts, stole a car, and returned to Modran, where he shot his girlfriend's mother, father and brother. He barricaded himself in their house before surrendering to police a few hours later.[1][2][3][4]

Perpetrator

At age 20, Miličić had been drafted into the army four and a half months before the shooting. During a medical examination before conscription, the psychiatrist noted that he was emotionally immature and that he had an anxiety-depression disorder, but that this was not a sufficient reason to prevent his enrollment in the army. Lieutenant Dragoslav Radovanovic, Miličić's superior and subsequent victim, had tried in early October of 1991 to inform his superiors that Miličić should be released due to mental issues. His claims were ignored at the time, and Miličić remained in the army.[1][2]

gollark: I just think it is *not good* if it's working for someone else, generally seems actively hostile for user control, and also seems to slowly be trying to move to a subscription model.
gollark: Arch is somewhat annoying to set up, but it's probably paid back the time investment by teaching me Linux skills and not arbitrarily wasting my time for Microsoft.
gollark: You shouldn't have to work around it. OSes should let you actually use them and work for you, not for some company.
gollark: Well, it does. Because you have to put effort into that nonsense in the first place and it may break later.
gollark: Yes. You can in theory work around the nonsense it does, but all you can do is work around it.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.