Kulen Vakuf massacre | |
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Location | Kulen Vakuf in Bosnia and Herzegovina (contemporary Independent State of Croatia) |
Coordinates | 44°34′N 16°05′E / 44.567°N 16.083°E |
Date | 6-8 September 1941 |
Target | Muslim and Croat civilians and Ustaše POWs |
Deaths | between 1,000 and 3,000 Muslim civilians and soldiers, including 100 Croats |
Victims | Muslim and Croat civilians and captured soldiers from the Ustaše or Home Guard units |
Perpetrators | Communist-led partisan forces and non-communist Serb Chetnik rebels |
Motive | Retaliation |
Accused | Gojko Polovina |
The Kulen Vakuf massacre was committed during World War II by Communist-led Yugoslav Partisans and groups of non-communist Serb rebels (including Chetniks), killing 1,000 to 3,000 Ustaše prisoners as well as Muslim, and a smaller number of Croat (around 100 killed), civilians in early September 1941 in Kulen Vakuf, part of the Independent State of Croatia (present-day Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina). The local Ustaše had previously massacred Serbs in Kulen Vakuf and surrounding villages.