The leader of the Chetnik movement, the combat general Dragoljub “Draža” Mihailović, was shot near the beach of Ada Ciganlija outside an old prison in Belgrade, by order of the court.
The trial of Mihailović and his associates - later described by historians as a “tragicomedy” - took place in Belgrade - then the capital of Yugoslavia - between 10 June and 15 July 1946. The task was plain - to get rid of anyone who could challenge Josip Broz Tito’s power.
The court refused to accept the testimony of witnesses and evidence that could be favourable to Mihailović. Besides him, another 23 found themselves under investigation including the leader of the Socialist Party of Yugoslavia, Živko Topalović, the Prime Ministers Slobodan Jovanović and Božidar Purić, Foreign Minister Momčilo Ninčić, former Yugoslav ambassador to the USSR, Milan Gavrilović, and former Yugoslav ambassador to the US, Konstantin Fotić, many of whom were tried in absentia.
On 15 July, Mihailović and 10 other defendants were sentenced to death. They were shot in the early morning of 17 July. Mihailović’s defence counsel, Dragan Joksimović, was himself arrested soon after the trial and died in prison.
The general’s burial place remained unknown until June 2011 when the Secretary of the State Commission for the secret graves of those killed after 1944, Srdjan Cvetković, reported that the remains of those who had been executed had been discovered.
On 14 May 2015, General Mihailović was rehabilitated by the Supreme Court in Belgrade, but many of Tito’s followers still consider him an enemy - even after all these years.
Source: Alexey Timofeyev. The Chetnik movement. The Royal Army. - M.: Veche, 2012.