Arkan
Željko "Arkan" Ražnatović | |
---|---|
Ražnatović and his "Tigers" | |
Born |
Brežice, PR Slovenia, FPR Yugoslavia | April 17, 1952
Died |
January 15, 2000 47) Belgrade, Serbia, FR Yugoslavia | (aged
Nationality | Yugoslavia (later FR Yugoslavia) |
Other names | Arkan |
Occupation |
|
Religion | Serbian Orthodox |
Criminal charge | |
Spouse(s) |
Natalija Martinović (1985-1994) Svetlana Veličković (1995-2000) |
Wanted by | Interpol, ICTY |
Željko Ražnatović (Serbian Cyrillic: Жељко Ражнатовић, pronounced [ʐêːʎko raʐnâːtoʋit͡ɕ]; 17 April 1952 – 15 January 2000), better known as Arkan (Аркан), was a Serbian career criminal and commander of a paramilitary force in the Yugoslav Wars, called the Serb Volunteer Guard. He was on Interpol's most wanted list in the 1970s and 1980s for robberies and murders committed in a number of countries across Europe, and was later indicted by the UN for crimes against humanity for his role during the wars. Ražnatović was up until his death the most powerful crime boss in the Balkans. He was assassinated in 2000, before his trial could take place.
Early life
Željko Ražnatović was born in Brežice, a small border town in Slovenian Styria, FPR Yugoslavia. His father, Veljko Ražnatović, served as a decorated officer in the SFR Yugoslav Air Force, earning high rank for his notable World War II involvement on the Partisan side, and was stationed in Slovenian Styria at the time of Željko's birth.
He spent part of his childhood in Zagreb (SR Croatia) and Pančevo (SR Serbia), before his father's job eventually took the family to the Yugoslav capital of Belgrade (SR Serbia), which Ražnatović considered his hometown. His father was born in Cetinje (SR Montenegro), a descendant of the Ražnatović brotherhood, and had taken part in the Yugoslav liberation of Priština in World War II.[1]
Ražnatović grew up in Belgrade[2] with three older sisters in a strict, militaristic household with regular beatings administered by his father. In a 1991 interview he recalled: "He didn't really hit me in a classical sense, he'd basically grab me and slam me against the floor."[3]
In his youth, Ražnatović aspired to become a pilot, as his father had been. Due to the highly demanding and significant positions of his parents, there appeared to be very little time in which a bond was able to be established between parents and children. His parents eventually divorced during his teenage years.[2]
Ražnatović was arrested for the first time in 1966 after snatching women's purses around Tašmajdan,[4] spending a year at a juvenile detention center not far from Belgrade. His father then sent him to the seaside town of Kotor (in Montenegro) to join the Yugoslav Navy, but Ražnatović had other plans, ending up in Paris at the age of 15. In 1969 he was arrested by French police and shipped home, where he was sentenced to three years at the detention center in Valjevo for several burglaries. During this time he organized his own gang in the prison.[2]
In his youth, Ražnatović was a ward of his father's friend,[5] the Slovenian politician and Federal Minister of the Interior, Stane Dolanc.[6] Dolanc was chief of the secret police and a close associate of the Yugoslav president, Tito.
Whenever Ražnatović was in trouble, Dolanc helped him, allegedly as a reward for his services to the Yugoslav secret state police (UDBA), as seen in the escape from the Lugano prison in 1981. Dolanc is quoted as having said: "One Arkan is worth more than the whole UDBA."[6]
Criminal career
Western Europe
In 1972, aged 20, he migrated to Western Europe.[4] Abroad, he was introduced to and kept contact with many well-known criminals from Yugoslavia such as Ljuba Zemunac, Ranko Rubežić, Đorđe "Giška" Božović, Goran Vuković, et al., all of whom were also occasionally contracted by the Yugoslav secret service, and all of whom were since assassinated or otherwise killed. He took the nickname "Arkan" from one of his forged passports. On 28 December 1973 he was arrested in Belgium following a bank robbery, and was sentenced to ten years in prison.[4]
He managed to escape from the Verviers prison on 4 July 1979.[4] Although Ražnatović was apprehended in the Netherlands on 24 October 1979, the few months he was free were enough for at least two more armed robberies in Sweden and three more in the Netherlands. Serving a seven-year sentence at a prison in Amsterdam, he pulled off another escape on 8 May 1981 after someone slipped him a gun. Wasting no time, more robberies followed, this time in Germany, where after less than a month of freedom he was arrested in Frankfurt on 5 June 1981 following a jewellery store stickup. In the ensuing shootout with police he was lightly wounded, resulting in his placement in the prison hospital ward, where looser security allowed him to escape again only four days later, on 9 June, supposedly by jumping from the window, beating up the first bystander and stealing his clothing before disappearing.[4]
His final European arrest occurred in Basel, Switzerland during a routine traffic check on 15 February 1983. However he managed to escape again within months, this time from Torberg prison on 27 April. It is widely speculated that Ražnatović was closely affiliated with the Yugoslav security service UDBA throughout his criminal career abroad.[4]
He had convictions or warrants in Belgium (bank robberies, prison escape), the Netherlands (armed robberies, prison escape), Sweden (20 burglaries, 7 bank robberies, prison escape, attempted murder[7]), Germany (armed robberies, prison escape), Austria, Switzerland (armed robberies, prison escape), and Italy.
Return to Yugoslavia
Ražnatović returned to Belgrade in May 1983, continuing his criminal career by opening a number of illegal businesses. In November 1983, six months after his return, a bank in Zagreb was robbed with the robbers leaving a rose on the counter — allegedly Ražnatović's signature from his Western European robberies.[4] As a result, two federal policemen, members of the Secretariat of Internal Affairs' (SUP) Tenth department, showed up in civilian clothing looking for Arkan at his mother's apartment on 27 March Street in Belgrade.[4]
Ražnatović was not there, so his mother called him and said that two unknown males waited for him.[4] He showed up with a revolver and proceeded to shoot and wound both policemen – he shot the first one on the spot and the other while trying to flee the scene. Arkan was detained immediately, however, barely 48 hours later he was released. The occurrence made it clear to all observers that he enjoyed protection from the highest places in SFR Yugoslavia as a result of his involvement with the State Security. He spent the mid-1980s running a disco club, "Amadeus", together with Žika Živac and Tapi Malešević. Located in the Tašmajdan neighbourhood, the club was reportedly another perk of their contractual work for the security service.[4]
Furthermore, Arkan could be seen riding around Belgrade in his pink Cadillac and gambling on roulette in casinos all over the country from Belgrade and nearby Pančevo to Sveti Stefan and Portorož.[4] It would be gambling that involved him into a spot of trouble when, following a game of poker in a private apartment at Ive Lole Ribara Street, Bečići, an elevator altercation started with a tenant from the said apartment building. He reportedly broke the man's arm after beating him with a gun. He couldn't avoid being charged this time and the trial saw an interesting exchange between him and the judge – during the pre-session identification Arkan stated he was employed by the Secretariat of Internal Affairs. When this was challenged by the prosecutor, Arkan produced a document about a mortgage loan that he obtained from the Federal State Security for his house at Ljutice Bogdana Street. He ended up receiving a six-month sentence, which he served at Belgrade Central Prison.[4]
Role in the Yugoslav Wars
Early
Only days after the Croatian elections in 1990, Ražnatović, who was the leader of the Delije (football club Red Star Belgrade's Ultras), was present at the away game against Croatian side Dinamo Zagreb at Stadion Maksimir on 13 May 1990, a match that ended in the infamous Dinamo–Red Star riot.[8] Ražnatović and the Delije, consisting of 1,500 people, were involved in a huge fight with the home team's football hooligans.[9]
On 11 October 1990, as the political, ethnic, and religious situation in Yugoslavia became tense (see Log Revolution), Ražnatović created a paramilitary group named the Serb Volunteer Guard. Ražnatović was the supreme commander of the unit, which was primarily made up of members of the Delije and his friends.[10]
In late October 1990, Ražnatović traveled to Knin to meet representatives of the Republic of Serbian Krajina, a break-away region with a significant number of ethnic Serbs, wanting to become a part of Serbia and remain in FR Yugoslavia, as opposed to the Croatian government that seceded. On 29 November 1990, Croatian police arrested him at the Croatian-Bosnian border crossing Dvor na Uni, along with local Dušan Carić, and Belgraders Dušan Bandić and Zoran Stevanović. His entourage was sent to Sisak, and was charged with conspiracy to overthrow the newly formed Croatian state. Ražnatović was sentenced to 20 months in jail. He was released from Zagreb's Remetinec prison on 14 June 1991. It has been claimed that the Croatian and Serbian governments agreed on a 1,000,000 Deutsche Mark settlement for his release.[11]
In July 1991, Ražnatović was for some time at the Cetinje monastery, with Metropolitan Amfilohije Radović. His group of men, fully armed, were allowed to enter the monastery, where they served as security.[12][13] His group traveled from Cetinje to the Siege of Dubrovnik. On his return from Dubrovnik, he was again a guest at Cetinje.[12]
War
Ražnatović established the Serb Volunteer Guard, commonly known as "Arkan's Tigers", a paramilitary force set up in a former military facility in Erdut. His unit saw action from mid-1991 to late 1995, initially in the Vukovar region of Croatia. Ražnatović's much feared irregular military forces consisted of a core of 200 men and perhaps totaled no more than 500 to 1,000.[14] His units were subsequently supplied and equipped by the reserves of the Serbian police force during the wars in Croatia and Bosnia. The unit included many volunteers from countries like Germany, Russia, Greece and Belgium, many of which were linked with criminal activities in Europe.
After war broke out in the former Yugoslav republic of Croatia in the fall of 1991 and in the republic of Bosnia and Hercegovina in April 1992, Ražnatović and his units moved to different territories in these countries. In Croatia, the Tigers fought in various areas in SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia. In Bosnia, his unit fought in battles in and around Zvornik, Bijeljina and Brčko, mostly against Croat and Bosniak paramilitary groups.
In autumn 1995 his troops fought in the area of Banja Luka, Sanski Most and Prijedor. In October 1995 he left Sanski Most, as the Bosnian Army reclaimed the city.[15] Ražnatović personally led most of the operations, and rewarded his most efficient officers and soldiers with ranks, medals and eventually products of lootings. Several younger soldiers were rewarded for their actions in and around Kopački Rit and Bijelo Brdo.
Ražnatović came to serve as a popular icon for both Serbs and their enemies. For some Serbs he was a patriot and folk hero, while serving as a target of hatred and fear to their enemies. His troops were also stationed in the Republic of Serbian Krajina to fight against Croatian paramilitary forces, and he had a dispute over military operations with the Serbian regional leader Milan Martić.[16] Ražnatović also had friendly relations with Russian ultra-nationalist politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky.
Arkan became an untouchable criminal figure in Belgrade and all of the former Yugoslavia. He was really so powerful, so strong financially that no one could do anything about him.... In 1993, I learned that Željko Ražnatović, Arkan, had in Belgrade kidnapped and taken to Erdut and there killed Isa Lero... also a man from the criminal underground who had come into conflict with Arkan. I even found a witness to the murder. I publicly accused Arkan. I submitted a report to the police. The police inspectors came to see me. We talked about it. I gave them all the information I had, but then the police inspector told me that they were aware of it but that they were unable to prove it because of the fear among the potential witnesses. So the police were quite well-informed about his criminal activities, but it was very hard to prove anything or to bring charges because his support network was so widespread, and this can be shown through various newspaper articles and so on. In one television statement, I told him when we were debating on TV, that he had pulled a sock over his head more often than I had pulled one on my feet.
In the postwar period after the Dayton agreement was signed, Ražnatović returned to his interests in sport and private business. The Serb Volunteer Guard was officially disbanded in April 1996 with the threat to be reactivated in case of war emergency. In June of that year he took over a second division soccer team FK Obilić which he soon turned into a top caliber club, even winning the 1997/98 Yugoslav league championship. According to a book by Franklin Foer, How Football Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization, Ražnatović threatened players on opposing teams if they scored against Obilić.
This threat was underlined by the thousands of veterans from his army that filled their home field, chanting threats, and on occasion pointing pistols at opposition players during matches. One player told the British football magazine FourFourTwo that he was locked in a garage when his team played Obilić. Europe's football governing body, UEFA, considered prohibiting Obilić from participation in continental competitions because of its connections to Ražnatović. In response to this, Ražnatović stepped away from the position of president and gave his seat to his wife Ceca. In a 2006 interview, Dragoslav Šekularac (who was coach of Obilić while Arkan was with the club) said claims that Arkan verbally and physically assaulted Obilić players were false.[17] Ražnatović was also a chairman of the Yugoslav Kickboxing Association.
During this time Arkan was sponsored by a British oil baron Ian Taylor.[18]
In August 1998, when tensions over Kosovo had already begun, Ražnatović tried to get close to the West, writing a letter of support to U.S. president Bill Clinton over the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. In the letter he expressed condolences for the victims that died in the attack, and warned Clinton of the dangers of Islamic fundamentalism. An excerpt from his letter reads: "Mr President... do not allow that terrorism continues in this part of Balkan in the Serbian state, which is forever a friend of your state." Clinton never responded to the letter.
Kosovo War and NATO bombing
According to chief judge Richard May from the United Kingdom, the ICTY issued an indictment against Ražnatović on 30 September 1997 for war crimes of genocide against the Muslim population, crimes against humanity and grave breaches of the Geneva convention of 1949 for customs and traditions of war.[19] The warrant was kept sealed and was not made public until 31 March 1999, a week after NATO bombing in Yugoslavia had begun. Ražnatović's indictment was made public by Louise Arbour, then UN court's chief prosecutor.
In the week before the start of NATO bombing – as the Rambouillet talks collapsed – Ražnatović appeared at the Hyatt hotel in Belgrade, where most Western journalists were staying, and ordered all of them to leave Serbia.[20]
During the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Ražnatović denied the war crime charges against him in interviews he gave to foreign reporters during the Kosovo War. Ražnatović accused NATO of bombing civilians and creating refugees of all ethnicities, and stated that he would deploy his troops only in the case of a direct NATO ground invasion. After the U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, which killed three journalists and led to a diplomatic row between the United States and the People’s Republic of China, the British Observer and Danish Politiken newspapers claimed the building might have been targeted because the office of the Chinese military attaché was being used by Ražnatović to communicate and transmit messages to his paramilitary group, the Tigers, in Kosovo. As neither paper offered any proof for this claim it was largely ignored by the media.[21]
Arkan showed a small rubber part of the downed F-117A, which he had as "a souvenir", to Western journalists during the NATO bombing.[22]
ICTY indictment
In March 1999, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) announced that Ražnatović had been indicted by the Tribunal, although the indictment was only made public after his assassination. According to the indictment Ražnatović was to have been prosecuted on 24 charges of crimes against humanity (Art. 5 ICTY Statute), grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions (Art. 2 ICTY Statute) and violations of the laws of war (Art. 3 ICTY Statute), for the following acts:[23]
- Forcibly detaining approximately thirty Muslim Bosniak men, in an inadequately ventilated room of approximately five square metres in size.
- Transporting twelve non-Serb men from Sanski Most to an isolated location in the village of Trnova and shooting them, killing eleven of the men and critically wounding the twelfth.
- Transporting approximately sixty-seven Bosniak Muslim men from Sanski Most, Sehovci, and Pobrijeze to an isolated location in the village of Sasina, and shooting them, killing sixty-five of the captives and wounding two survivors.
- Forcibly detaining approximately thirty-five Muslim Bosnian men in an inadequately ventilated room of about five square metres in size, withholding from them food and water, resulting in the deaths of two men.
Assassination
Ražnatović was assassinated, on Saturday, 15 January 2000, 17:05 GMT, in the lobby of Belgrade's elite InterContinental Hotel, a location where he was surrounded by other hotel guests. The killer, Dobrosav Gavrić, was a 23-year-old police mobile brigade's junior member. Gavrić had ties to the underworld and was on sick leave at the time. He walked up alone towards his target from behind. Ražnatović was sitting and chatting with two friends and, according to BBC Radio, was filling out a betting slip. Gavrić waited for a few minutes, calmly walked up behind the party, and rapidly fired a succession of bullets from his CZ-99 pistol. Ražnatović was shot in his left eye and lapsed into a coma on the spot.[24][25] His bodyguard Zvonko Mateović put him into a car, and rushed him to a hospital, but he died on the way.[26]
According to his widow, Svetlana, Ražnatović died in her arms as they were driving to the hospital. His companions Milenko Mandić, a business manager, and Dragan Garić, a police inspector, were also shot to death by Gavrić. Gavrić was shot and wounded immediately after by Mateović and fell unconscious. A female bystander was seriously wounded in the shootout as well. After complicated surgery, Gavrić survived, but remained disabled and confined to a wheelchair as the result of a spinal wound.
Commemoration ceremony in Ražnatović's honour was held at Dom sindikata on 19 January 2000 with writer Brana Crnčević, Yugoslav Left (JUL) official Aleksandar Vulin, singers Oliver Mandić, Toni Montano and Zoran Kalezić, along with the entire first team of FK Obilić with club director Dragoslav Šekularac in attendance.[27]
Željko Ražnatović was buried at the Novo groblje (New Cemetery) in Belgrade with military honours by his volunteers and with funeral rites on 20 January 2000. Around 10,000 people attended the funeral.
Trials
Gavrić pleaded innocent but was convicted and sentenced to 19 years in prison. His accomplices received from 3 to 15 years each, after a year-long trial in 2002. However the district court verdict was overturned by the Supreme Court because of "lack of evidence and vagueness of the first trial process". A new trial was conducted in 2006, ending on 9 October 2006 with guilty verdicts upheld for Gavrić as well as his accomplices Milan Đuričić and Dragan Nikolić. Each man was sentenced to 30 years in prison.[28]
Theories
NPR reported that Arkan simply knew too much when war crimes trials were becoming a reality for the Milošević regime.[26] Another rumour claims that Borislav Pelević, Ražnatović's close associate and his successor as president of Party of Serbian Unity, served as the "inside man" for the plot against Ražnatović. Security services also wiretapped Ražnatović shortly before his murder; for four months the group allegedly followed Ražnatović's movements and whereabouts, learning his habits.
On 15 January 2008, the eighth anniversary of Ražnatović's death, his sister, Jasna Diklić, accused Andrija Drašković, a controversial businessman with alleged ties to the Mafia, of being behind her brother's murder.
According to 1994 relation of SISMI, Ražnatović sent one of his most trusted men, Radovan Stanišić to Italy to start a relationship with Camorra boss Francesco Schiavone. Ražnatović asked Schiavone for arms for his guerrillas and the participation of Schiavone in quieting Albanian mobsters who were blocking his weapons route, and making money arrive in Serbia in the form of humanitarian aid. In exchange the near entrepreneurs clans acquired at optimal prices companies, enterprises, stores, masserie, breedings in half Serbia.[29]
Former French Intelligence Officer Pierre-Henri Bunel suggested that "the executors of the political dirty work for the White House", who may have used Ražnatović as a puppet, were fearful of the disclosure of revelations.[30] Bunel corroborates his claim by indicating that "... c'est justement parce qu'on ne le cherche pas où il faudrait qu'on ne trouve pas l'ennemi public numéro 1 du moment". Ražnatović was, as stated above, on Interpol's Most Wanted list for nearly two decades.
Personal
Željko Ražnatović fathered nine children by five different women.[31] His eldest son Mihajlo was born in Gothenburg, in 1975, from a relationship with a Swedish woman. In 1992, 17-year-old Mihajlo decided to move to Serbia to live with his father. During this time the teenager was photographed wearing the uniform of his father's paramilitary unit during the Yugoslav Wars and according to a Swedish tabloid report the youngster participated in combat operations in Knin and Srebrenica.[32] Mihajlo has since lived in Belgrade where he played for the Red Star Belgrade ice-hockey club off and on between 2000 and 2009, also representing Serbia-Montenegro on the national team level between 2002 and 2004.[33] During this time he also ran a sushi restaurant in Belgrade called Iki Bar and dated Macedonian pop singer Karolina Gočeva.[34] He left Serbia after that.
In 2013 he was in the news in Serbia again following the conclusion of a court case that dragged since 2005 over Ražnatović's failure to meet the repayment terms on a RSD1.1 million car loan he took out in 2002 from Komercijalna banka. After continually failing to meet his monthly payments, the bank wanted the loan paid off in full in August 2005, and two years later took him to court. In June 2010 he was ordered to pay RSD3.3 million based upon the interest on the original loan.[35] In the end, the verdict stated he owed the bank RSD2.9 million.[36] Željko Ražnatović fathered two other children out of wedlock as well.
Ražnatović's first wife was Natalija Martinović, a Spanish language professor, with whom he had four children. Their divorce became official in December 1994. All four children decided to carry their mother's last name (Martinović) rather than their father's surname of Ražnatović.
Since 1993, Ražnatović had been involved with folk singer Ceca Veličković, 21 years his junior. Their lavish wedding ceremony on 19 February 1995 occurred as a day-long media production carried live on TV Pink with different locations and changes of clothing (at different points of the ceremony Ražnatović alternated between World War I Serb military uniform and traditional Montenegrin attire). Ceca bore him two more children.
In June 1994, sometime after her separation from Ražnatović, Natalija Martinović and their four children left Yugoslavia and moved to Athens, Greece where Ražnatović bought them an apartment in the suburb of Glyfada. After Ražnatović's death Martinović disputed his will,[37][38] claiming that Ceca, his second wife, doctored it. In May 2000, she sued Ceca over Ražnatović's assets, including the villa at Ljutice Bogdana Street in which he and Ceca lived (and where Ceca continues to reside), claiming it was built with funds from a bank loan Martinović and Ražnatović took out in 1985.[39] The court eventually ruled against Martinović.[40] The court agreed with her assertions that the villa was built with money from a 1985 bank loan taken out by her and Ražnatović, but also found that she forfeited any rights in future division of that asset when she signed the property over to Ražnatović in 1994 before moving to Greece.
In 2012, Ražnatović's son by his first wife, Vojin Martinović, again accused Ceca of falsifying Ražnatović's will.[41] In response, Ražnatović's former associate Borislav Pelević said that the villa at Ljutice Bogdana Street was not mentioned in Ražnatović's will as he had already signed it over to his second wife.[42]
In popular culture
- History Channel's 2003 documentary Targeted includes a part on Arkan, Baby Face Psycho.[43] Baby Face Psycho on YouTube
- In the 2008 Serbian film The Tour, a group of Serbian actors go on a tour in war-torn Bosnia. Among other factions, they meet an unnamed paramilitary unit wearing insignia similar to those of the Serb Volunteer Guard. Unit's commander (played by Sergej Trifunović) is obviously based on Ražnatović.
- In the 2012 Japanese anime Jormungand, one of the antagonists is Dragan Nikolaevich, commander of the Balkan Dragons. His looks and even his biography bear resounding resemblance to those of Ražnatović.
- In the 2014 Serbian docu-drama series Dosije: Beogradski klanovi, one of the episodes tells the story of Ražnatović.
References
- ↑ "Željko Ražnatović Arkan - život u trileru (16) Crna Gora moja otadžbina". 31 January 2000. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
- 1 2 3 "Internet Svedok - 916". Svedok.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Dada Vujasinovic (8 April 1994). "Ratnik ogrezao u svetosavlju". duga. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Filip Svarm (14 January 2010). "Arkanova ostavština". Vreme.com.
- ↑ Danas - Google Boeken. Books.google.com. 18 December 2009. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- 1 2 Partners in Crime: The Risks of Symbiosis Between the Security Sector and Organized Crime in Southeast Europe. CSD. 2004. pp. 42–. ISBN 978-954-477-115-7.
- ↑ "Aftonbladet nyheter: Kriget om Kosovo". aftonbladet.se. 31 March 1999. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "VIDEO: Day When Maksimir Stadium Went up in Flames". Dalje.com. 13 May 2009. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Football is War". Tol.org. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Ivan Čolović (2000). Football Hooligans, and War. Central European University Press.
- ↑ "Hrvatska za Arkana dobila milion maraka". Glas-javnosti. Arhiva.glas-javnosti.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014. (in Serbian)
- 1 2 "Zvijer iz bezdana". e-novine.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Kozaci ne obezbeđuju manastir". Blic.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Vasic, "Yugoslav Army" p. 134; UN experts Final Report par. 92, 139
- ↑ "U spomen na ubijene Sanjane". Angelfire.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Vreme News Digest Agency No 108". Scc.rutgers.edu. 18 October 1993. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Prvoslav Vujčić, Urban Book Circle (1 May 2006). "Get out of here, I am Šekularac". Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ↑ Barnett, Antony; Bright, Martin (2001-06-30). "Oil chief paid $1m to warlord". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
- ↑ "Tpiy". Un.org. 5 March 2007. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Karon, Tony (25 March 1999). "Serbs Unplug CNN". TIME. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Morning Briefing". NATO Press Office. 8 May 1999. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ↑ "MOGU DA POLOMIM F-117A: Evo kako je ARKAN uništio ponos Amerike i "nevidljivi" bombarder! (VIDEO)". Telegraf. 27 March 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
- ↑ "Ražnatović: Initial Indictment" (PDF). Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Breaking, World, Business, Sports, Entertainment and Video News". Archives.cnn.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Serbian warlord shot dead". BBC News. 15 January 2000. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- 1 2 "Arkan Dead". NPR. 15 January 2000. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Šta je ostalo od Arkanove garde; Vreme.com, 10 April 2014.
- ↑ Sedam godina od ubistva Arkana; mondo.rs, 15 January 2007.
- ↑ Giuseppe Genna. "Roberto Saviano. "Scampia-Erzegovina"". Giugenna.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "La naissance d'Al Quaïda - Pierre-Henri Bunel". Politiquedevie.net. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ Tomislav Nikolić. "Ameri - Kurir". Kurir-info.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "De skulle avrätta Srebrenica-fångar". Expressen.se. 11 July 2005. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Mihajlo Raznatovic". Eliteprospects.com. 10 March 1975. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Blic Online | Stara arhiva". Blic.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Stari ALO! - Sud jurio Arkanovog sina u Cecinoj vili!". Alo.rs. 24 July 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Arkanov sin mora da vrati tri miliona dinara!". Alo.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Glas-javnosti". Arhiva.glas-javnosti.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Glas-javnosti". Arhiva.glas-javnosti.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Glas-javnosti". Arhiva.glas-javnosti.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Portret savremenika - Svetlana Ceca Raznatovic: Zitije sa pevanjem i pucanjem". Vreme.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Stari ALO! - Ceca je lažirala Arkanov testament!". Alo.rs. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Cecine vile nema u Arkanovom testamentu!". Vesti-online.com. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
- ↑ "Targeted". WorldCat. 2003.
Biographies
- Stewart, Christopher S. (8 January 2008). Hunting the Tiger: The Fast Life and Violent Death of the Balkans' Most Dangerous Man. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 978-0-312-35606-4.
- Vojin Ražnatović (4 July 2014). Stories About My Father: An Intimate Portrayal Of Europe's Most Controversial Paramilitary Commander. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1494311209.
- Marko Lopušina (2001). Komandant Arkan. Čačak: Legenda. OCLC 48273593. (Serbian)
- Zivorad Lazić. Arkane, Srbine!. Belgrade: Grafiprof. (Serbian)
- Vladan Dinić. Arkan, ni živ ni mrtav. Belgrade. (Serbian)
Interviews
- Interview with Jim Laurie, 23 December 1991. Video on YouTube
- Interview with local Bosnian Serb TV after takeover of Bijeljina, 1992. Video on YouTube (Serbian)
- Interview with RTV BK, 20 July 1997. Video on YouTube (Serbian)
- Interview with BBC, 1999. Video on YouTube (German) (Serbian)
- Interview with ABC, 6 April 1999. (English)
- Interview with British reporter John Simpson, March 1999. Video on YouTube (English)
- Interview during NATO bombings, 1999. FP7EGGVX2aM on YouTube (Serbian)
- Interview with B92, April 1999. Video on YouTube (Serbian)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Željko Ražnatović. |
- "Arkan's Paramilitaries: Tigers Who Escaped Justice". Investigation. Balkan Insight. 8 December 2014.
- "Gangster's life of Serb warlord". BBC News. 15 January 2000.
- "Arkan: Underworld boss of Milošević's murder squad". The Guardian. 19 January 2000.
- "'Blood and Honey – A Balkan War Journal'". NPR. February 2001.
- "Dosije Arkan". Vreme. November 2008.