On 17 September 1993, the leaders of the three rights parties held a meeting in Kutina and began preparations for a new union on a broad common rights program.
•
The ruling HDZ cooperated with the HSP until the fall of Vukovar, after which the leaders of the HSP and HOS were imprisoned for "terrorist activities" and "obstruction of democratically elected government".
Republican Party (United States) | Democratic Party (United States) | Australian Labor Party | Democratic Party | Liberal Party of Canada | Liberal Party of Australia | Republican Party | Liberal Party (UK) | Social Democratic Party of Germany | Liberal Party | Nazi Party | New Democratic Party | Progressive Conservative Party of Canada | Democratic-Republican Party | Green Party | Democratic-Republican Party (United States) | Social Democratic Party | Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario | Conservative Party of Canada | Croatian | Ontario Liberal Party | Communist Party | Communist Party of China | political party | Socialist Party | Republican Party (U.S.) | Labor Party | European Court of Human Rights | Federalist Party | Federalist Party (United States) |
During his return to Yugoslavia in January 1992 he was appointed by Dobroslav Paraga, leader of the Croatian Party of Rights (HSP), as leader of the HOS in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The committee was formed in May 1919 in Graz by a group of exiled Croats, most of whom were former members of the Austro-Hungarian Army and members of the Croatian Party of Rights.
Rakovica achieved some prominence in Croatian history in October 1871, when several members of the Croatian Party of Rights led by Eugen Kvaternik disavowed the official party position advocating a political solution to the issue of Croatia within the Habsburg Monarchy and instead launched a revolt in the village.