Background
Rašković was born in Knin in 1929.
psychiatrist university professor
Rašković was born in Knin in 1929.
He passed his secondary school exams in Šibenik, and graduated in Zagreb. He then studied electrical engineering and medicine at the University of Zagreb, where he obtained his diploma and a Doctor of Philosophy from the university"s medical school.
During World World War II, after an Ustaše pogrom which resulted in the deaths of his relatives, he was exiled to Kistanje in the Italian-occupied Dalmatia. In the 1960s, he served as director of Šibenik city hospital and later director of the medical center. He was one of the founders of the Medical Research Institute of Neurophysiology in Ljubljana.
He was a university professor in Zagreb and Ljubljana, and a visiting professor at the universities of Pavia, Rome, Houston and London.
This led to direct negotiations between the two about the future of Serb minority in Croatia. During one of those negotiations Rašković remarked that the "Serbs were crazy people".
Tuđman"s chief political advisor Slaven Letica had those words secretly taped and leaked the transcript to Croatian media in a hope to discr Rašković among his people and thus replace him with someone more acceptable to Croatian government. This proved to be disastrous miscalculation - instead of rejecting Rašković, many Croatian Serbs lost any trust in Croatian government and embraced extremism that would ultimately lead to armed conflict.
Later in 1990, Rašković was removed from power by "more radical, hard-line Serb nationalists" who went on to create the Republic of Serbian Krajina.
Rašković retired from politics in 1991, following the Plitvice Lakes incident. Rašković died in Belgrade from a heart attack on 29 July 1992 at the age of 63, and is buried in Belgrade"s Alley of Distinguished Citizens.
In early 1990, Rašković went into politics and founded the Serbian Democratic Party (Study Direct Stream), which took part in first democratic elections. He noticed that there was no equivalent party in Bosnia and Herzegovina and contacted Radovan Karadžić, a colleague, to suggest he establish one.
Rašković was a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, the Academy of Medical Sciences of Croatia, as well as a member of a number of psychiatry associations in the United States, the former Czechoslovakia, and Italy.