词条 | Croatian Six |
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}}The Croatian Six (consisting of Max Bebic, Vic Brajkovic, Tony Zvirotic, Joe Kokotovic, his brother Ilija Kokotovic and Mile Nekic) were six Croatian-Australian men sentenced to 15 years jail in 1981 for a conspiracy to bomb several targets in Sydney, including a Yugoslavian travel agent, the former Elizabethan Theatre in Newtown and a major water supply line in St Marys in western Sydney.[1] The trial was one of the longest in Australian legal history.[1] The men appealed their convictions and sentences but lost.[1] Media investigations undertaken since the trial by news program by a number of well-known investigative journalists including the ABC's 'Four Corners' program and 'The Sydney Morning Herald', suggested most of the evidence on which the six were charged was fabricated and that the men were set up as part a sting operation by the Yugoslav foreign intelligence service, 'UDBA'. Intelligence sources later indicated that Dr Georgi Trajkovski, the Yugoslav Consul General in Melbourne, was an UDBA operative and a key player in the Croatian Six set up.[2] The case also drew attention from John Schindler, then at the US Naval War College, who claimed that the 'Croatian Six' was 'a "classic" agent provocateur operation run by the intelligence agency of the then communist regime in Belgrade, known as the UDBA, against exile communities that were against the Yugoslavian federation.'[3] He also claimed that former UDBA officials said that the Croatian Six case was "one of their great successes" in completely discrediting the Croatian Australian community. According to Schindler, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation would have (or at least should have) been aware of UDBA's involvement.[3] Ian Cunliffe, formerly a senior lawyer in the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, claimed intelligence material was withheld that would have resulted in not guilty verdicts for the Croatian Six. This material was purposely kept from then Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser and subpoenas by defence lawyers in the trial were not allowed on "national security grounds".[3] In 2012, three of the surviving five men — Max Bebic, Mile Nekic and Vic Brajkovic — represented by human rights lawyer Sebastian De Brennan, applied to the NSW Supreme Court for a judicial review of their convictions.[3] The application was dismissed.[4] References1. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/framed-the-untold-story-about-the-croatian-six-20120210-1smum.html|title=Framed: the untold story about the Croatian Six|first=Hamish|last=McDonald|publisher=Sydney Morning Herald|date=11 February 2012}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Croatian Six}}2. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1107/S00270/who-was-the-croatian-six-mastermind.htm |publisher=SCOOP Independent News |author=Sasha Uzunov| title=Who Was The Croatian Six Mastermind? |date=25 July 2011 |accessdate=11 October 2017 }} 3. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/terror-six-claim-it-was-fix-20120211-1sy8b.html|title=Terror six claim it was fix|first=Hamish|last=McDonald|publisher=Sydney Morning Herald|date=12 February 2012}} 4. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/bid-for-review-of-croatian-six-terrorist-convictions-again-fails-20130210-2e6i0.html|title=Bid for review of Croatian Six terrorist convictions again fails|first=Hamish|last=McDonald|publisher=Sydney Morning Herald|date=11 February 2013}} 2 : Prisoners and detainees of the Commonwealth of Australia|1981 in Australia |
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