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The Daksa Massacre〔(Pleasance, Chris. 2013. Would You Pay £1.7m for the Island of Death? ''Mail Online'' (October 21) )〕〔(''The Daily Star''. 2015. 6 Uninhabited and Mysterious Islands with Bizarre Pasts. (October 28). )〕 was a massacre committed by Yugoslav Partisans on 24 and 25 October 1944 during World War II on the small island of Daksa near Dubrovnik. After partisans entered Dubrovnik on 18 October 1944, they arrested more than 300 citizens of Dubrovnik. Partisans executed 53 Croatian civilians without trial. Exhumation and DNA analysis have confirmed the identity of 18 persons, while 35 remained unknown, and the true number of victims was also determined because before the exhumation, the number of 35 victims was already known for certain. After the crime, Partisans published and distributed flyers through Dubrovnik with sign: "In the name of peoples of Yugoslavia" in form of the sentence of the "Judicial Council of the Court Martial of the Command of South Dalmatian region". The flyers contained the names of 35 people that were killed that day. On 19 June 2010, victims of the massacre were decently buried. Notable victims of the massacre were priest Petar Perica, composer of famous Croatian song ''Djevo Kraljice Hrvata'' and Niko Koprivica, mayor of Dubrovnik. This atrocity was never investigated and nobody has been tried for this crime to this day. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Daksa massacre」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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