CHANGE IN THE OFFING: THE SHIFTING POLITICAL SCENE IN CROATIA (ICG Balkans Report N°50) Cover Image

CHANGE IN THE OFFING: THE SHIFTING POLITICAL SCENE IN CROATIA (ICG Balkans Report N°50)
CHANGE IN THE OFFING: THE SHIFTING POLITICAL SCENE IN CROATIA (ICG Balkans Report N°50)

Author(s): Author Not Specified
Subject(s): Civil Society, Governance, Inter-Ethnic Relations
Published by: ICG International Crisis Group
Keywords: Croatian parties;
Summary/Abstract: The Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) has dominated Croatian political life since multi-party elections in April 1990 brought an end to communist rule. The HDZ has been a broad movement rather than a modern political party, representing a wide range of political views and interests, united behind its leader, President Franjo Tudjman, in the aim of achieving Croatian sovereignty and independence. In 1990-91, large areas of the country were taken over by rebellious Croatian Serbs, with support from Belgrade. Thus for most of the period of HDZ rule in Croatia, large chunks of the country remained outside Zagreb's control, and the overriding priority was to restore Croatia's territorial integrity, a goal which was finally achieved in January 1998. Croatia also became enmeshed in the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnia) as, supported by Croatia, the Bosnian Croats fought their erstwhile Bosniac allies in 1993-94. The obsession of Tudjman and the hard-line Herzegovina lobby in the HDZ with the dream of eventually detaching chunks of Bosnian territory and joining them with Croatia has been a persistent cause of international pressure on Croatia, as well as of division within Croatian politics.

  • Page Count: 27
  • Publication Year: 1998
  • Language: English
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