Although the group's members were occasionally referred to as Chetniks,[7] The name White Eagles comes from a Nazi-aligned organisation that was formed during World War II and continued a guerrilla war against Tito's government after the war. [citation needed] White Eagle refers to the national symbol of Serbia, the double headed white eagle under a crown.
History
The White Eagles paramilitary group was formed in late 1990 by Dragoslav Bokan and Mirko Jović. The group split into different factions as Bokan and Jović went their separate ways in 1992.[8][9][10] Jović called for "a Christian, Orthodox Serbia with no Muslims and no unbelievers".[11][12]
Šešelj states that the group was started by Jović but they got out of his control.[13] According to Šešelj, the White Eagles and Arkan's Tigers operated with help from the Yugoslav counterintelligence service.[14]
War crimes
Paramilitary units are responsible for some of the most brutal aspects of "ethnic cleansing". Two of the units that have played a major role in the "ethnic cleansing" campaign in BiH, the "Cetniks" associated with Vojislav Šešelj and the "Tigers" associated with Željko Ražnatović (Arkan), have been active in the Republic of Serbia as well. Seselj's followers have reportedly waged "ethnic cleansing" campaigns against ethnic minorities in Serbia's provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo.[15]
— Report of the United Nations Commission on ethnic cleansing in Bosnia and Herzegovina
In December 2010 a group called "White Eagles" (Serbian: Бели Орлови / Beli Orlovi) took responsibility for the killing of Kosovo's Bosniak leader Šefko Salković in the north of Kosovo. The group also took responsibility for obstructions of the election process in northern Kosovska Mitrovica, as well as for attacking KFOR troops.[26][27]
^ abcAllen, Beverly (1996) Rape Warfare: The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, Minnesota, pp. 154-155, ISBN0-8166-2818-1
^Lukic, Rénéo (1996). Europe from the Balkans to the Urals: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. Oxford University Press. p. 190. ISBN978-0-19-829200-5.
^VOA News, Kosovo Holds First Parliamentary Election, 12 December 2010. "A Serb group calling itself White Eagles claimed responsibility for the attack - and also said it carried out the killing of a Bosniak election official last week."