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  1. In Velenje, Slovenia, a 49-year-old local man beheaded the large bronze Josip Broz Tito statue on Tito Square, loaded the head into the trunk of his Škoda — which was driving around with two different Croatian license plates — and then bragged about it online. Police arrested him soon after and found the bronze head in his car.

    The suspect, Miroslav Pačnik, is now charged with damaging cultural heritage, a crime that can carry up to eight years in prison under Slovenian law, and the Velenje city authorities plan to file a damage claim to cover repair costs. Many people online are pointing out that Slovenian courts often hand down much lighter punishments in practice, so he could end up serving only a few months — if any actual prison time at all — depending on how things play out.

    Meanwhile, welders have already reattached Tito’s head, and the statue is being fully restored.

    After the arrest, Velenje’s mayor, Peter Dermol, condemned the act and described the suspect as “an unbalanced person with an unbalanced background,” which the suspect’s lawyer, Franci Matoz, has called offensive and inappropriate. Matoz is now demanding a formal public apology and has said he will take the mayor to court if the apology is not issued.

    Here’s where it gets political: Pačnik’s lawyer is Franci Matoz, a high-profile attorney who has long represented Janez Janša, the three-time former prime minister of Slovenia and current leader of the opposition, and has been closely involved with Janša’s Slovene Democratic Party (SDS). Because of this, many are speculating that the act and Matoz’s aggressive legal defence may not be just random vandalism, but a carefully planned move being used by SDS to drag debates about WWII, communism, and historical symbols back into the public arena just a few months before Slovenia’s general elections, feeding wider political culture wars.

    The mayor of Velenje, Peter Dermol, has pushed back hard, called the act unacceptable, and refuses to retract his criticism, rejecting calls for any apology to the suspect.

  2. TheGodEmperorOfChaos on

    How do you even decapitate a statue without anyone noticing?

  3. True_Sir_4382 on

    I know almost nothing about Yugoslavia and the country’s it split into but marshal Tito was badass

  4. Brief_Hovercraft_427 on

    They hate Tito because he was right and they can’t stand how badly they fucked up so they blame their own failure on him. Never before and, sadly, probably never again will this part of the world have such a great leader.

  5. Unable-Stay-6478 on

    He should be sent to Goli Otok for committing such sacrilege.

  6. jailbird on

    I grew up in Yugoslavia (or what was left of it), and I’d hate to see a statue of him anywhere.

    [He organized a systematic killing and deportation of around 150.000 Swabians and Hungarians from the Vojvodina region of Yugoslavia after WWII](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danube_Swabians). My great-grandfather was shot in a mass grave because of his nationality, he didn’t participated in the war at all.

    My aunt had to spend years in the political prison of Goli Otok in the 70s because she stood up against Tito’s dictatorship. Tito was jailing any kind of opposition there.

    His massive loans helped the country’s wellbeing for a while, but the centralized power of his regime directly lead to the political chaos after his death, the wars in the region and the bloody falling apart of Yugoslavia.

    People blindly look at him with naive nostalgia because whilst his power they were living above standards of other communist nations – but lets call him what he was: a dictator, not a leader to be proud about.

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