Knin camp was a detention camp run by the Serbian Army of Krajina in Knin, the capital of the Serb-held part of Croatia known as Republic of Serbian Krajina, that held Croatian detainees, soldiers and civilians, from 1991 until 1992, during the Croatian War of Independence.
[3] Some were threatened to read a written testimony in front of TV cameras from Belgrade and confess crimes against Serbs which they did not commit.
[3] Two Catholic priests, Mirko Barbarić and Franjo Halužan, were arrested in Benkovac and then brought to the Knin prison.
[3] Some were tortured with electro shocks, had to eat cigarette ash, wash the toilette floors with their tongues and perform oral sex under threat of murder.
[4] In July 1991, Ivica Knez succumbed to heavy beatings and became the first Croatian casualty in a Krajina camp.