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・ Josip Kregar
・ Josip Križaj
・ Josip Križaj (aviator)
・ Josip Križaj (opera singer)
・ Josip Križan
・ Josip Krznarić
・ Josip Kuže
・ Josip Kvesić
・ Josip Landeka
・ Josip Leko
・ Josip Lipokatič
・ Josip Lisac
・ Josip Lucić
・ Josip Lukačević
・ Josip Magdić
Josip Manolić
・ Josip Marija Carević
・ Josip Marn
・ Josip Marohnić
・ Josip Marošević
・ Josip Metzger
・ Josip Mihalović
・ Josip Mikoczy-Blumenthal
・ Josip Mikulić
・ Josip Milardović
・ Josip Mišić
・ Josip Mišić (footballer, born 1986)
・ Josip Mišić (footballer, born 1994)
・ Josip Mohorović
・ Josip Movčan


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Josip Manolić : ウィキペディア英語版
Josip Manolić

Josip Manolić (; born 22 March 1920) is a Croatian politician who was Prime Minister of the Republic of Croatia from 24 August 1990 to 17 July 1991.
==Background and political career==

Manolić was born in Kalinovac near Đurđevac. In his youth during World War II, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia and the Partisans. After the war, he became a high-ranking official of OZNA, and later UDBA. One of his duties was to supervise all political prisons in Croatia.
After the Croatian Spring, Manolić became a dissident and befriended Franjo Tuđman. He was one of the founders of the Croatian Democratic Union and later emerged as Tuđman's right-hand man.
His status was confirmed on 24 August 1990 when he became prime minister, following the departure of Stjepan Mesić, who had left that post in order to serve as the Croatian representative in the Yugoslav collective Presidency. His cabinet was mostly preoccupied with the process that would ultimately lead to Croatia's declaration of independence on 25 June 1991, as well as the rebellion of ethnic Serbs in Krajina.
When Manolić left the office on 17 July 1991 Croatian forces — police and nascent military — were involved in full-scale war with Krajina rebels, who were backed by the Yugoslav federal army. He took another, even more important post of the head of Constitutional Order Protection Office (''Ured za zaštitu ustavnog poretka''), a body that would coordinate and supervise all Croatian security services. There he built Tuđman's security apparatus, relying mostly on the old cadre from UDBA and other sections of the Communist-era security apparatus. Despite the nature of his work, he remained very much in the public spotlight. In his interviews and statements he gradually gained a reputation of being a moderate. His enormous power, moderate views and Partisan past made him very unpopular among the rank and file of the HDZ party and brought him into conflict with Gojko Šušak, the powerful minister of defence who led a hardline nationalist faction.
In 1993 Manolić was replaced from his post and elected as Speaker of the Chamber of Counties of Croatia (to 1994). Many saw this as his demotion and fall from Tuđman's favor.
One year later Manolić and Mesić tried to organise a mass defection of HDZ members of Sabor and thus deprive Franjo Tuđman of parliamentary majority. They failed and later, together with other HDZ dissidents, created a new party called Croatian Independent Democrats (HND).
Manolic's attempt to take power on national level failed, but his supporters in the Zagreb County Assembly succeeded in replacing HDZ administration. This led Tuđman to introduce new legislation, merging Zagreb County and the City of Zagreb and calling for new elections, which ultimately resulted in the Zagreb Crisis. Those elections coincided with the 1995 parliamentary elections, during which HND fared badly, failing to enter Sabor. This prompted Mesić to join the Croatian People's Party, while Manolić tried to mend ties with his former party, becoming a marginalised political figure in the process.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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