Velebit uprising

The Velebit uprising or Lika uprising (Croatian: Velebitski ustanak; Lički ustanak) was a small-scale sabotage action made by the Ustaše on the 6th and 7 September 1932.

Velebit uprising
Part of Interwar period
TypeSabotage
Location
Planned28 August 1932
Planned byAnte Pavelić
Gustav Perčec
Vjekoslav Servatzy
TargetYugoslav police station
Date6–7 September 1932
Executed byUstaše
Casualties1 dead Ustaše

Preparation

In the area near Gospić, the Ustaše had a strong organization led by lawyer Andrija Artuković. Some other notable members of Gospić's Ustaše branch were landowner Marko Došen, former Austrian-Hungarian officer Juraj Juco Rukavina, traders Josip Tomljenović and Nikola Orešković, and tax clerk Josip Japunčić.[1]

Rukavina had one of the more important roles in the uprising. He visited a number of villages to gain support from local inhabitants for the uprising. The Ustaše spread propaganda stating that Italians supported Croatian independence, and that the Ustaše would help them to gain the area near the Triglav and Ljubljana mountains, while the Italians would give Rijeka and Trieste to Croatia.

Since the main goal was sabotage of the military depot and garrison in Gospić, the Ustaše tried to establish contact with some military personnel, but without major success. The Ustaše from Gospić were in contact with the Ustaše in emigration, constantly exchanging information and advice. Before the beginning of the action, Italian authorities gave permission to the Ustaše to start the action. Ustaše leader Ante Brkan was responsible for transferring arms from Italy through Zadar,[2] which was then part of the Italian state. In early 1932 the first arms were transferred, with a major shipment of arms arriving in August.

At the same time the Ustaše prepared by enlisting men for the action. Two sergeants, Josip Čačić and Ante Malbaša agreed to participate. Five armed and uniformed Ustaše arrived from Italy, among whom was Rafael Boban.[1] They hid in a house of some peasants in Lukovo Šugarje village, and were later followed by another five Ustaše.[2]

At a meeting held in Spittal in Austria held on 28 August 1932,[1] Ante Pavelić, Gustav Perčec, and Vjekoslav Servatzy decided to start a small uprising. Servatzy was chosen to organize the action. Before the action started, Artuković and Došen went to Zadar to avoid arrest by the Yugoslav police.

Attack on a police station in Brušane

During the night between the 6th and 7 September, the Ustaše launched an attack on a police station in Brušane village near Gospić. Besides the ten Ustaše that arrived, some Ustaše from Gospić also participated in the attack. Before the attack, the Ustaše cut the phone lines to the police station in Gospić, then opened fire on the police station in Brušane. The attack lasted for half an hour, after which the Ustaše who lived in Croatia returned to their homes, while those who came from Italy went to Zadar across the Velebit. Though the leader of the action, Artuković, escaped, he was arrested and put on trial in 1936 in Belgrade. He was accused, among other Ustaše, of destruction of the police station on the night of the action.[2]

Aftermath

After the attack the Ustaše pulled back to Velebit with no casualties. Despite the small scale of the uprising, the Yugoslav authorities were unnerved because the power of the Ustaše was unknown. As a result, major security measures were introduced. This action had an impact in the foreign media, especially among the Italian and Hungarian press.[2] In November 1932 in the text published in the official gazette of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, party leader Milan Gorkić criticised leaders of communists from Dalmatia because they did not join Ustaše during the Velebit uprising.[3]

gollark: <@!356107472269869058> Several months on and off, and what do you mean "how the hell does the server still go along with mods"?
gollark: At the Consortium reactors are actually designed by magic optimization algorithms instead of foolish humans.
gollark: The reactors are designed with negative heat on the fuel they run on, so they don't need to be actively controlled to avoid meltdown.
gollark: There's a Potatonetwork™ controller on the main energy buffer thing, and it broadcasts status to the reactors' individual nodes.
gollark: Although we mostly use fusion.

References

Notes

  1. Marković 2003, p. 18.
  2. Matković 2002, p. 14.
  3. (Bulajić 1988, p. 165)

Bibliography

  • Marković, Marko (2003). Povijest Crne legije: Jure i Boban (in Croatian).
  • Matković, Hrvoje (2002). Povijest Nezavisne Države Hrvatske (in Croatian). Naklada Pavičić. ISBN 953-6308-39-8.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Bulajić, Milan (1988). Ustaški zločini genocida i suđenje Andriji Artukoviću 1986. godine. Izdavačka radna organizacija "Rad".CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.