The Yugoslav Clash With The Soviet Oposition In 1970-ties And Kidnapping Of The Vlado Dapcevic Cover Image

Neoibeovci. Obračun sa prosovjetskom opozicijom u SFRJ i kidnapovanje Vlade Dapčevića
The Yugoslav Clash With The Soviet Oposition In 1970-ties And Kidnapping Of The Vlado Dapcevic

Author(s): Srđan Cvetković
Subject(s): History
Published by: Institut za savremenu istoriju, Beograd
Keywords: New Communist Party of Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia; Communism; political repression

Summary/Abstract: This article is detailed analyze of the state clash with pro-Soviet opposition (so called neoibeovci) during the 1970-ties in the Socialist Yugoslavia. All over the country, several illegal groups were discovered and arrested, most of them in Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia. State Security monitored these groups during the late 1960-ties. But after the Soviet aggression on Czechoslovakia, and political turbulence in Croatia in beginning of 1970-ties, their work was carefully monitored. The peak of the arrestment was during the illegal congress of the New Communist Party of Yugoslavia in city of Bar during 1974. Another important event in the history of the pro-Soviet opposition was kidnapping of its two main figures: Vlado Dapevic and Mileta Perovic, performed by the Yugoslav State Security in 1975.

  • Issue Year: 2012
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 147-164
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: Serbian