Far-right politics in Croatia
Neonazism in Croatia is not prohibited, and Croatia allows people to use symbols of NDH and Ustashe freely. Croatia is accused of harbouring its dark past, and moves such as changing the name of main square in Zagreb from the Square of Victims of Fascism to the Sqare of Mile Budak have been criticised by some people in Croatia.
Croatia has no laws which would protect against historical revisonism, nor is denazification considered an issue. Unlike in Germany, Austria, Hungary and most other Europian states where holocaust has happened in WWII, in Croatia the exibition of Nazi and Ustasha symbols, prohibited until 1990 and during Communist times, is not oly alowed, but relatively common. Ustashas are considered victims of Bleiburg massacre and there were even proposals to rebury them together with victims of Jasenovac as a sign of national reconcilation, as if only Croat partisans were victims in Jasenovac. The rise in popularity of Ustasha movement in present day Croatia is partly due to the financial support of Ustasha emigration to HDZ during the 90s.
In today Croatia, people who protest handover of Gotovina and other people wanted for war crimes by the ICTY often carry pictures of Ante Pavelic as well, and children wear black uniforms nowadays much more commonly than the uniforms of comunist pioneers.