A. Sajti Enikő – Juhász József – Molnár Tibor: A titói rendszer megszilárdulása a Tisza mentén 1945–1955 - A Titói Jugoszlávia levéltári forrásai 4. (Zenta - Szeged, 2013)

Mellékletek

THE CONSOLIDATION OF TITO’S YUGOSLAVIA (1945-1955) I. The Soviet Red Army and the Yugoslav partizán units captured the entire territory of Vojvodina by October 1944. Between October 20th 1944 and February 15th 1945 the Yugoslav authorities introduced military administration. Following this, public administration took over, as outlined in the decree on the temporary organization of people’s liberation committees and its jurisdiction on the territory of Vojvodina. In accordance with the 1946 general federal laws, these committees were declared to be public bodies/state bodies. The People’s Liberation Committee of the Senta District held its constituting meeting February 9th 1945. On the first regular meeting, February 20th 1945, depart­ments functioning within the People’s Liberation Committee of the Senta District were formed. The People’s Liberation Committee of the city of Senta was formed February 14th 1945. The organization of these committees had changed on several occasions between 1946 and 1955 in view of the gradual development of the Yugoslav administration. II. Following the Second World War - according to the Tito-Subasic agreement signed during the war on the island of Vis - the question of Yugoslavia’s form of govern­ment had to be settled. As part of the agreement, the mixed structured, temporary government of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia was formed. Following the war, at the third assembly of the Yugoslav Antifascist Council of People’s Liberation - held between August 7th and 10th 1945 - the board declared itself to be the state’s temporary national assembly. August 10th 1945, this temporary national assembly voted for the law on the electoral register. Legally, every man and woman, who had turned 18, had the right to vote. The law also defined who were deprived of these rights. The following were included into this group: members of the occupying forces and traitors of the home­land, people who were engaged in fights against the People's Liberation Army and its allies; politicians, soldiers, policemen who served the occupying forces, and people who lost their citizenship by court decision. August 23rd 1945, according to paragraph four of the electoral register the Serbian People’s Government brought a declaration that listed the organizations which were considered to be hostile and whose members were also deprived of voting rights. The decree also named the organizations that were taken into account as hostile Hun­garian establishments, which were the Arrow Cross Party, the Imrédy’s Hungarian Rebirth Party, the Turan Hunters, The Southern Hungarian Cultural Association, and the Hungarian Cultural Association of Banat. The authorities also did everything to deprive those people of their voting rights that could have voted against the People’s Front and in favor of the civil opposition. 375

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