Several thousand people rallied in Croatia's capital on Sunday in an anti-fascist march protesting against the rise of World War II revisionism and far-right views in the country.
In recent months, Croatia has been seeing right-wing nationalists increasingly trying to impose their agenda, with subsequent incidents targeting the ethnic Serb minority and the use in public of the country's World War II pro-Nazi regime salute.
In early November, masked men disrupted a Serb cultural event in Croatia's second-largest city of Split, replicating the Ustasha salute.
Relations with ethnic Serbs have remained fragile since Croatia's 1990s war with Belgrade-backed rebel Serbs who opposed its independence.
Hundreds of thousands gathered in Zagreb at a July concert of ultra-nationalist singer Marko

Omak Okanogan County Chronicle

Associated Press US and World News Video
Boston Herald
People Human Interest
Daily Voice
WAFB
WRDW-TV News 12
NewsChannel 5 Nashville
AlterNet
NFL Seattle Seahawks
Live 5 News Crime
@MSNBC Video