Lobor concentration camp | |
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Concentration camp | |
Coordinates | 46°7′16″N 16°4′3″E / 46.12111°N 16.06750°E |
Other names | Loborgrad |
Location | Lobor, Zlatar Bistrica, Independent State of Croatia (modern-day Croatia) |
Operated by | Independent State of Croatia |
Original use | The palace of Keglevich family |
Operational | 9 August 1941 - November 1942[1] |
Inmates | Jewish and Serb women and children |
Killed | at least 200 |
The Lobor concentration camp or Loborgrad camp (Croatian: Koncentracijski logor Lobor) was a concentration camp established in Lobor, Independent State of Croatia (modern-day Croatia) in the deserted palace of Keglevich family. It was established on 9 August 1941, mostly for Serb and Jewish children and women. The camp was established and operated by Ustaše, with 16 of its guards being members of the local Volksdeutsche community. Its inmates were subjected to systematic torture, robbery and murder of "undisciplined" individuals. All younger female inmates of the Lobor camp were subjected to rapes. More than 2,000 people were inmates of this camp, at least 200 died in it. All surviving children and women were transported to Auschwitz concentration camp in August 1942 where they all were killed.