SHOCK DISCOVERY IN SLOVENIA: NEW GIANT FOIBA FOUND WITH HUNDREDS OF CORPSES
News & history
By Michael Carbone
In total silence from the leftist globalist European media - and despite the continued denialism of the left, especially in Italy - a few days ago a new foiba was discovered in southern Slovenia. It is one of the most gruesome: inside it 3,200 corpses of people killed by the repression of Tito's communist regime were discovered. The discovery was made possible by a massive excavation campaign commissioned between June and October by the government in this particular area, Kocevskij Rog, a karst plateau near the town of Kocevje. This area is already well known for its grim reputation of housing other foibe that tell the story of Tito's Yugoslav regime.
There are multiple details that have aroused horror at this foiba, which may be the largest mass grave discovered to date. The corpses would show signs of gunfire, so it could be a mass shooting. According to early details, skeletons would be found along the walls of the foiba, perhaps an extreme attempt to escape. Speleologists then found crutches, a possible indication that war invalids were also thrown into the foiba. After so long and because of such prolonged exposure to the elements, to date it is no longer possible to proceed to identify the more than three thousand bodies.
According to the researchers, the sources suggest that the massacre that occurred in Kocevsky Rog can be placed in the month of June 1945. The newly discovered foiba thus bears witness to the repression and ethnic cleansing carried out by Tito and his partisans not only toward Italian citizens. The Kocevskij Rog foiba is presumed to contain 3,200 bodies mostly of Slavic origin.
At the end of World War II, when Tito's communist regime triumphed in the former Yugoslavia, opponents to the regime of Slavic and Croatian origin attempted an exodus in the direction of Austria, but were gathered in a camp in the Klagenfurt area. It was the British troops settled in the country that arranged for their return home, following the defeat of the Third Reich. Upon their return to Yugoslavia, however, the opponents were singled out as alleged Nazi collaborators and consequently sentenced to death. Historians estimate that between 30,000 and 55,000 people found death between the spring and fall of 1945 alone.
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