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{{WikiProject banner shell|class=Start|1=
{{FAOL|Serbo-Croatian|sh:Goli otok}}
{{WikiProject Croatia|importance=Mid}}
{{WikiProject Correction and Detention Facilities|importance=low}}
{{WikiProject Yugoslavia}}
{{WikiProject Human rights}}
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{{Expand Serbo-Croatian|Goli otok|fa=yes}}
Is this true:
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"allegations of listening to Radio Moscow or reading Russian literature were considered sufficient grounds for imprisonment." - and, if it is, could we have a citation please. I really don't know either way, but this seems rather extreme for Tito. [[User:Crocodilicus|Crocodilicus]] 02:14, 2 March 2006 (UTC)


== in 'Literature' paragraph ==
Mila Jovovic grand father was imprisond by Tito on Goli otok, so he had to go to Soviet Union. Otherwise she wont be born?


several women are mentioned as having been (held) there - which surprises me, as the text said, the women camp was on a different(ly named) island. was/ is the name of the men's jail/ camp used for both, or was the prison, maybe in the later period, used for all genders?
: Actually it's true. My Grandfather went there for publishing a poem against Tito. 50 years later it was found that there was no proof at all that he wrote the poem itself... [[User:Veni Markovski|Veni]] 02:51, 26 December 2006 (UTC)

and: in the short description for the novel "Tito's" Hawaii" a woman is said to have been/ be 'interred' there, and I was/ am wondering if that (second "r" in the word) might be a typo - my mother tongue isn't English, but I believe 'interred' would mean buried, in a grave - which of course may be possible, but maybe it was meant to say "interned", to mean: imprisoned?
== People killed ==

There is no information how many people died or were killed on Goli otok under Tito's regime.

How many were killed is irrelevant, the only thing we know is that he didn't kill enough!


We do not know that unfortunately. --[[User:Pokrajac|Pockey]] 17:20, 27 March 2007 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 08:21, 17 May 2024


in 'Literature' paragraph

[edit]

several women are mentioned as having been (held) there - which surprises me, as the text said, the women camp was on a different(ly named) island. was/ is the name of the men's jail/ camp used for both, or was the prison, maybe in the later period, used for all genders?

and: in the short description for the novel "Tito's" Hawaii" a woman is said to have been/ be 'interred' there, and I was/ am wondering if that (second "r" in the word) might be a typo - my mother tongue isn't English, but I believe 'interred' would mean buried, in a grave - which of course may be possible, but maybe it was meant to say "interned", to mean: imprisoned?