Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Independent State of Croatia" in English language version.
[...] hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews, and Roma as well as antifascists systematically murdered by the Croatian fascist Ustasa regime between 1941 and 1945 [...] majority of Jews in the NDH had already been murdered in the concentration camps before the Nazi leadership had embarked on the 'Final Solution'.
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: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)Dr Jozo Tomasevich [...] "Rat i revolucija u Jugoslaviji 1941.-1945." [...] Vladko Maček, prvak HSS-a, koji je u travnju 1941. zastupao većinu Hrvata, nije bio voljan prihvatiti "nezavisnost" koja se tada nudila po cijeni koju je Hitler nametnuo
[I]n the establishment of the foundations of state sovereignty during the course of the Second World War, as expressed in the decision of the Territorial Antifascist Council of the National Liberation of Croatia (1943) in opposition to proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia (1941), and then in the Constitution of the People's Republic of Croatia (1947) and in all subsequent constitutions of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1963–1990), at the historic turning-point characterized by the rejection of the communist system and changes in the international order in Europe, in the first democratic elections (1990), the Croatian nation reaffirmed, by its freely expressed will, its millennial statehood
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)Dr Jozo Tomasevich [...] "Rat i revolucija u Jugoslaviji 1941.-1945." [...] Vladko Maček, prvak HSS-a, koji je u travnju 1941. zastupao većinu Hrvata, nije bio voljan prihvatiti "nezavisnost" koja se tada nudila po cijeni koju je Hitler nametnuo
[I]n the establishment of the foundations of state sovereignty during the course of the Second World War, as expressed in the decision of the Territorial Antifascist Council of the National Liberation of Croatia (1943) in opposition to proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia (1941), and then in the Constitution of the People's Republic of Croatia (1947) and in all subsequent constitutions of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1963–1990), at the historic turning-point characterized by the rejection of the communist system and changes in the international order in Europe, in the first democratic elections (1990), the Croatian nation reaffirmed, by its freely expressed will, its millennial statehood