10 results found for: “UDBA”.

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Directorate for State Security (Yugoslavia)

organization of Communist Yugoslavia. It was at all times best known by the acronym UDBA, which is derived from the organization's original name in the Serbo-Croatian...

Last Update: 2025-04-10T14:03:16Z Word Count : 1964

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OZNA

was formed from the military part and the Directorate for State Security (UDBA) from its civilian counterpart. Since the OZNA was left without its third...

Last Update: 2025-04-01T18:31:17Z Word Count : 1527

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Operation Gvardijan

Gvardijan was a covert action of the Yugoslav Directorate for State Security (UDBA) from 1947 and 1948. It prevented an attempt by Ustasha emigrants to carry...

Last Update: 2025-03-11T20:10:32Z Word Count : 1446

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Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

place, along with acts of sabotage. However, the Yugoslav security service (UDBA) led by Aleksandar Ranković, was quick and efficient in cracking down on...

Last Update: 2025-04-06T21:50:36Z Word Count : 29153

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Arkan

to the UDBA, as seen in the escape from the Lugano prison in 1981. Dolanc is quoted as having said: "One Arkan is worth more than the whole UDBA." In 1972...

Last Update: 2025-04-08T13:38:41Z Word Count : 6126

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Bruno Bušić

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He was one of the best-known victims of UDBA (Yugoslav secret police) killings. Bušić was born in the village of Vinjani...

Last Update: 2025-03-11T03:28:00Z Word Count : 588

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Stjepan Đureković

businessman who was assassinated by the Yugoslavian State Security Administration (UDBA) in West Germany in 1983. He was previously the CEO of the state-owned INA...

Last Update: 2024-07-14T02:29:53Z Word Count : 679

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Vinko Sindičić

Vinko Sindičić (born 29 September 1943) is a former UDBA agent. Vinko Sindičić was born in the town of Stara Baška on the island of Krk on the 29th of...

Last Update: 2025-02-07T01:40:36Z Word Count : 448

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Titoism

the LCY's Politburo. The secret police, the State Security Administration (UDBA), while operating with considerably more restraint than its counterparts...

Last Update: 2025-02-15T01:19:15Z Word Count : 6015

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Counterintelligence Service (Yugoslavia)

for Protection of the People (OZNA), with Directorate for State Security (UDBA) forming the second, civilian, component of the new security and intelligence...

Last Update: 2025-02-26T05:36:32Z Word Count : 222

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Main result

Directorate for State Security (Yugoslavia)

The State Security Service, also known by its original name as the Directorate for State Security, was the secret police organization of Communist Yugoslavia. It was at all times best known by the acronym UDBA, which is derived from the organization's original name in the Serbo-Croatian language: "Uprava državne bezbednosti" ("Directorate for State Security"). The acronyms SDB (Serbian) or SDS (Croatian) were used officially after the organization was renamed into "State Security Service". In its latter decades it was composed of eight semi-independent secret police organizations—one for each of the six Yugoslav federal republics and two for the autonomous provinces—coordinated by the central federal headquarters in the capital of Belgrade. Although it operated with more restraint than secret police agencies in the communist states of Eastern Europe, the UDBA was a feared tool of control. It is alleged that the UDBA was responsible for the "eliminations" of thousands of enemies of the state within Yugoslavia and internationally (estimates about 200 assassinations and kidnappings). Eliminations vary from those during World War II of the Ustaše Croat fascist leader Vjekoslav Luburić in Spain, to Croatian emigrant writer Bruno Bušić and Serbian emigrant writer Dragiša Kašiković, although war criminals have to be distinguished from those assassinated only for dissent or political reasons. With the breakup of Yugoslavia, the breakaway republics went on to form their own secret police agencies, while the Serbian State Security Directorate kept its UDBA-like name.


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