January 9, 2021 – The area affected by the devastating earthquake of 29 December 2020 is mostly rural. People there live off the land. They employ others at family farms and as small scale producers. Ordering from a Petrinja OPG or one from the surroundings directly helps families and the economy of the earthquake-affected area, so here's a list detailing them
Alongside the outpourings of sympathy and promise of prayers, since the large earthquakes of December 2020 struck Sisak-Moslavina County, Total Croatia News has been inundated with requests from regular readers and other asking how they can directly and effectively help. TCN has tried to answer all enquiries the best we can and has striven towards directing donors to the best-placed outlets.
Certainly, the rebuild of the communities and economies in places like Petrinja, Glina, Sisak and hundreds of surrounding villages, hamlets and settlements will take months, even years. As TCN discovered after we visited the affected region one day after the earthquake, this area is predominantly rural. People here live off the land, from agricultural endeavours. Small producers and family farms make up much of the economy. In a year where such producers have been hard hit by travel restrictions and other aspects of the pandemic, the livelihoods of many have been shattered by the subsequent earthquake.
In a pro-active, helpful and exhaustive piece of data collection, writer Antonia Dobrota and the team at Croatian-language tourism portal cimerfraj have over recent days come up with an inspired suggestion of how [people can directly help the economies and people of the affected region. They have published a list of as many small producers, family farms and Petrinja OPG producers, plus those in surrounding areas.
By ordering food, produce and goods like pottery from this list, people can spend their money directly within the economies of the affected area – no suspicion, no doubt, no middlemen, no staffing costs deducted. It is an inspired decision to construct (and continually update) such a list. Bravo, Antonia and cimerfraj! Several Croatian-language media outlets have since republished the list. Total Croatia News is pleased to do so in English. We warmly encourage its use, not only now, but in the months that follow.
Being small producers and family farms, most of the producers below are not only vital to others in the local communities (by offering employment opportunities), their goods are almost exclusively organic and produced in a traditional, eco-friendly manner. Any orders should be submitted with the utmost confidence.
(OPG is a designation in Croatia that is given specifically to family farms and small, community producers)
OPG Mladen Tonković
Gornji Vidusevac 2a, Glina
095 8069 822
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: hazelnuts
OPG Predrag Đurđević
Stjepana Radića 168, Petrinja OPG
091 5853 717
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: honey, bee products
OPG Vicencinović Hergouth
Stari put 28, Gornja Gračenica
098 9817 696 This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: liqueurs, fruit brandies
OPG Naglić
Kompator 34, Velika Ludina
091 5437 949
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: organic fruit
OPG Pčelarstvo Crneković
Kornatska 20, Sisak
091 8913 248
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: honey, bee products
OPG Tomislav Marcinek
Mate Vezmara 25, Voloder
098 9043 165
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Products: sheep, chicken and rabbit breeding
Family farm Zeljko Perkovic
Timarci 117, Sunja
091 5887 753
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: sheep
OPG Oljačić
Dragutina Benka 12, Petrinja OPG
098 1861 397
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: seasonal fruits and vegetables
OPG Horžić
Vladimira Nazora 26, Sunja
099 4600 210
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: meat and eggs
OPG Abramović
Franje Zuzeka 17, Glina
098 638 455
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: mulch, honey and beekeeping products
OPG Leci
Tadije Smičiklasa 34, Petrinja OPG
091 1502 732
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: chokeberry / ariona berry and fruit jams, chokeberry / ariona berry juice
OPG Mikliš
Desno Trabarjevo 39, Martinska Ves
098 615 011
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: chickens, ducks, turkeys, chickens, eggs
OPG Ivanković
Martinska Ves 124, Martinska Ves
095 3992 217
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: hazelnut, beans, orange sweet potato
OPG Ćordaš
Donji Klasnic 111, Glina
091 8843 182
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: teas, jams, chokeberry / ariona berry products
OPG Marčinko
Dražena Petrovića 18/2, Petrinja OPG
099 7235 037
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Products: chokeberry / ariona berry, various types of honey and juices, eco buckwheat flour
Family farm Jure Kolarić
Bobovac 321, Sunja
095 8158 505
Mini cheese factory
Products: Mini cheese factory
OPG Džakula
Sjeverovac 23, Sunja
091 2048 169
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: veal, pork, fresh meat and cured meat products
Pottery is a traditional craft in the area of Petrinja © TZ Petrinja
Pottery Matej Stanešić
Ljudevita Gaja 30, Petrinja OPG
044 816 308
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Pottery Val
Slavko Kolar 2, Petrinja OPG
0912340 060
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Cacti Beslic
Zagrebacka 185, Duzica
044 752 273
Products: cacti, succulents, aloe, carnivorous plants
Vrtlarija Gadžić
Stjepana Radića 324, Petrinja OPG
099 4040 992
gardener-gadzic
Products: flower and vegetable seedlings, perennials, roses, ornamental and spice plants
Eko-Pčela & OPG Rožić
Slatina 86, Petrinja OPG
098 1727 187
Products: organic honey, grain, rye, buckwheat, oats, fruit seedlings
Beekeeping Priljeva
Mije Srnaka 40, Petrinja OPG
098 9748 434
honey and beekeeping products
OPG Jela Grubišić
9 Gromova Street, Petrinja OPG
098 9454 211
Products: chickens, eggs
OPG Josipa Gadžić
Franza Wagnera 92, Petrinja OPG
098 9454 211
Products: flower and vegetable seedlings
OPG Polimac
Gornja Mlinoga 44
044 823 117/098 1373 107
Products: lambs and sheep
OPG Bunjan Dalibor
Sisačka 50 a, Petrinja OPG
099 2540 815
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: seasonal fruits and vegetables
OPG Champignon
Đurđica Bočina, Žabno 16, Sisak
099 8196 665
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Products: different types of mushrooms
OPG Trsoglavec Štefica
Sibic
098 286 558
Products: cheese, cream, butter and other dairy products
OPG Radošević Marijana
Stromarova 9, Petrinja OPG
099 2557 140
Products: honey and bee products
OPG Dario Paropatić
091 5723 320
Livestock breeding, buying and selling
OPG Paropatić Dejan
099 6597 155
Buying and selling live cattle
OPG Dvorneković
Milana Makanca 25, Petrinja OPG
091 1814 368
Products: blackberry wine, red currant wine, honey, propolis and fruit liqueurs
OPG Šipuš
Preloscica 92, Sisak
097 6674 912
Products: dairy products, cheeses of different flavors
OPG Vuletić Željka
Gornja Mlinoga 39, Petrinja OPG
098 1847 750
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: jams, marmalades and juices from pumpkin, chokeberry / ariona berry and other fruits
OPG Priljeva Stojan
Donje Seliste, Glina
044 880 353/099 7403 650
Products: cheese and dairy products
OPG Lovro Lenac
A. Tomulića 10, Hrvatska Kostajnica
099 5127 643
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: pumpkin and chestnut
OPG Tamara Sekereš
Osekovo
091 7914 230
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Production: Beekeeping. 8 different types of honey, honey mixtures, propolis, delivery for Zagreb
OPG Ivica Vancas
Nebojan 134, Petrinja OPG
044 751 034/099 8048 076
Production: cereals (except rice), legumes and rapeseed oil
OPG Finka and Zdravko Oršulić
Matije Antolca 141, Petrinja OPG
095 9033 084/095 5863 284
Products: vegetable and flower seedlings, flowers and herbs
Family farm Snježana Oršulić
135 Gromova Street, Petrinja OPG
095 9074 512
Production: flower and vegetable seedlings
OPG Kata Čiča
Donji Viduševac, Glina
098 9945 323
Products: eco hazelnuts and free-range eggs
Family farm Slavica Jurić
Donja Budicina 22, Petrinja OPG
091 7220 520
Products: free-range eggs
OPG Mladen Bjelac
Ive Maline 84, Petrinja OPG
098 601 191
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: hazelnuts
OPG Stevo Zec
Hrvatska Kostajnica
091 7267 749
Products: honey
OPG Novakovic Milan
Gornji Bjelovac 15, Donji Kukuruzari
044 856 073
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: home-made sausages and bacon, pork fat
OPG Nikola Petković
Kralja Tomislava 73, Glina
091 7691 460
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: blackberry wine, blackberry liqueurs, raspberries, cherries, walnuts, rakija, jams, rural tourism
OPG Petrinjčica Davor Lugomer
Luščani 115
091 4000 407
Borovnice Petrinjčica
Products: blueberry cultivation from 15.6 to 10.8
OPG Križić
Matije Antolca 1, Petrinja OPG
095 3924 280
Products: vegetables and bee products
OPG Marica Rožić
Vratečko 23, Petrinja OPG
091 6141 708
Products: livestock (cows, horses, chickens), milk production
OPG Naglić Kristina
Hrvatskog proljeća 30, Glina
099 2309 051
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: lambs, wine, brandy, liqueurs and Christmas trees
OPG Nikola Navijalić
Kralja Tomislava 1 branch 5, Moscenica
098 9729 671
Products: strawberries, vegetables, honey
OPG Miroslava Jović
Brezovo Polje 38, Glina
099 8299 458
Products: veal
OPG Josip Petrović
Brezovo Polje 95, Glina
099 2153 129
Products: pork, lamb, calves and young goats
OPG Dragan Jović
Brezovo Polje 95, Glina
099 2153 129
Production: calves
OPG Marijan Glušić
Antuna Mihanovića 1a, Petrinja OPG
095 9099 305/091 5251 497
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: apples and apple juice
OPG Josip Starešinović
Strašnik 109, Petrinja OPG
099 8759 237
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: milk, cheeses
OPG Milić Perica
Volinja 3, Dvor
099 5904996 / 098 779 214
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: free-range eggs, beef, composting, potatoes
OPG Vesna Antunović
Don Ante Lizatovica 5, Donji Kukuruzari
098 1902 554
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: honey, bee products
Family farm Vladimir Vujčić
Velika Gradusa 63, Sunja
091 7231 393
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: lambs
Family farm Vesna Pranjic - Marincic Winery
Frankopanska 18, Sisak
(new address: Jazvenik 8e, Sela)
0917315678/0915892346
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: wine, viticulture and winemaking
OPG Anita Zrnić
Bestrma 116, Sunja
098 1829 823
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: lamb, young goats
DVORSKA KOŠARICA – association of OPGs
091 9299 888
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
OPG Zoran Simić
Donji Javoranj 38 Dvor
Products: breeder of indigenous, protected breeds of pigs, sheep, goats and donkeys - live animals, meat and meat products - sausages, lard, čvarci (fried pork rind – pork scratchings), bacon
OPG Milko Nišević Kepčije
Products: smoked and fresh cheeses, organic breeding of calves, heifer cows, sheep and lambs
OPG Angela and Štefan Abramović
Products: pumpkin oil, flour, seeds, goat cheese, yogurt, fresh seasonal fruits and vegetables
OPG Milan Janković
Uncani 75, Dvor
0996585104
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: flaxseed (linseed) oil, pumpkin oil, pumpkin protein, flax seeds
OPG Kokin dom
Petrinja OPG
095 7972 064
Production: chickens
OPG Blaženko Anđić
Tomislava Ivkaneca 8a, Petrinja OPG
Products: honey and bee products, chokeberry / ariona berry products
OPG Jelić Ivka
Gajeva, Petrinja OPG
Available in online shop Zelena Kuca
Products: Collective of small producers of domestic and ecological products from Petrinja and its surroundings
Family farm Dijana Vukovic
Novi Farkasic 48
099 2862 510
Products: pumpkin oil
OPG "Majčina dušica" Nada Tanković
Petrinja OPG
091 7346 973
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: spices, herbs and medicinal herbs, berries (currants, raspberries, blackberries)
OPG Barišić Ivan
Mececani, Donji Kukuruzari
091 6460 664
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: vegetables, fruits, conserved fruits and vegetables, sheep and beekeeping
OPG Mara Dejanović
Deanovići 12, Petrinja OPG
098 9424 409
Products: dairy products, meat products, eggs, onions and other vegetables, lambs, pigs, calves
OPG Josip Jurković
Desni Degoj 20, Glina
098 9830 900
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: eggs, potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions
OPG Mira Cavic
Batinova Kosa 59, Topusko
099 7987 820
Products: free-range eggs, honey, potatoes, onions, lard, cleaned (plucked and butchered) chickens, geese and ducks, lambs
OPG Špiljar Nikola
Novi Farkasic 43, Petrinja OPG
098 9721 470
Products: cow-calf, sheep, pigs and horses
OPG Ivica Klobučar
Jurja Fratrovića 13, Glina
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: sheep breeding and free-range eggs
OPG Borojević
Trgovi, Dvor
091 9158 544
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Products: certified organic production and processing of hazelnuts (shelled hazelnuts, hazelnut oil, hazelnut flour, roasted hazelnuts) and buckwheat
OPG Severin Jurić
Lijevi Odvojak 33 A, Brest Pokupski
099 5053 160 / 098 551 324
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Product: hazelnuts
Cimerfraj add the following notes:
This list includes all small producers and family farms from the earthquake-affected settlements and the surrounding areas. At the time of compiling the list, we do not know whether these manufacturers are harmed or not, nor do we consider this important. We believe that synergy is necessary in order to initiate the balanced development of favorable existential opportunities for life in this area.
Due to some parts of the area currently being poorly covered by phone and internet signal, some of the manufacturers are easier to contact by text message, SMS or WhatsApp.
The list is still being updated. If you know of a domestic manufacturer from the affected area who is not currently included, please send all relevant details to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
ZAGREB, 4 January, 2021 - A tremor measuring 3.3 on the Richter scale shook the town of Glina on Monday evening.
The tremor, registered at 1929 hours Monday with the epicentre 11 kilometres east of Glina, had the IV intensity on the EMS scale, Croatia's Seismological Survey stated.
This is one in a series of aftershocks that have been felt in Sisak-Moslavina County since the 29 December devastating 6.2-magnutude quake. On 28 December, the area was hit by a quake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale.
ZAGREB, 3 January, 2021 - Of the 19 cities and municipalities in Sisak-Moslavina County, Petrinja, Glina, Sisak and Lekenik suffered the biggest damage, and Donji Kukuzari, Sunja, Hrvatska Kostajnica, Majur, Dvor, Topusko, Gvozd and Marinska Ves sustained extensive damage in the 29 December quake.
The county prefect Ivo Zinic explained on Sunday that so far, the damage was reported on 8,928 buildings and structures.
Of them, 20% are buildings completely destroyed or out of use anymore. Also, a quarter of the inspected buildings will need additional checks, and 54% of buildings checked by experts received a green label, which means that they can be used.
Reports on damaged buildings are still being received and the number of destroyed and damaged buildings will definitely rise, the prefect said at a news conference.
We have set up five mobile teams that are visiting settlements and villages to establish a state of affairs and see what the population needs, he added.
"A difficult situation is ahead of us, people are depressed, we will also organise psychological assistance," Zinic said.
825 small businesses, a third of family-run farms suffer damage by quake
Of 2,000 small businesses in the county, 825 have reported extensive damage, he said.
Furthermore, 700 companies and 3,000 out of 9,000 family-run farms have also sustained damage, he said.
When it comes to educational institutions, out of the 13 secondary schools in the county, six are unusable, and a preschool institution in Petrinja was destroyed.
Retirement homes in the area were also evacuated.
All healthcare institutions are providing services, although some of them are now placed in containers.
On 29 December, the earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale, that hit the area of Petrinja, some 50 kilometres south of Zagreb, killed seven people in the county, and a number of people were injured.
"The intensity of this destructive earthquake has been estimated at VII-IX degrees on the EMS scale. The quake was felt across the country. Large-scale damage is expected," the Croatian Seismology Service said on its Twitter profile immediately after the quake.
January 2, 2021 – Shortly after the terrible earthquake that hit the area of Sisak-Moslavina County, the sky above Sisak sent a symbolic message – a beautiful cloud that looks like Croatia on the map appeared above the city!
In the moments of the terrible earthquake that hit Sisak, Petrinja, and surrounding places on Tuesday, which damaged over 2000 houses, an unusual cloud appeared in the sky above Sisak. Few people managed even to notice it, but one child realized – the cloud is in the shape of Croatia on the map. His sister hurriedly captured the moment – she took a photo of the symbolic cloud, which was later shared across social media.
Their mother, Antonija Kmetović, first posted the photo on her Facebook profile. She explained to Jutarnji list how they survived the earthquake and how the significant photo was created.
"We were in the apartment during the earthquake. Everything was breaking, moving, shaking, thundering. The four of us were falling over. We clung to the door frame and begged it to stop. It seemed like an eternity. When it stopped, collapsed closets clogged our hallway. We barely got out, barefoot, hugging, and crying. I left my mobile phone to my children and ran to the apartment to get jackets and shoes. They were standing in front of the building with their neighbors while my husband was removing the closets so that we could walk through the buried hallway," Antonija describes the horror moments they survived in the quake.
"My son saw strange clouds. He is studying geography, so he is interested in maps and longitudes and latitudes. So my daughter immediately photographed the sky. There is no filter or editing. Pure gratitude that we are alive and that we managed to escape outside, that it stopped shaking," says Antonija.
Shortly after the earthquake, she posted a beautiful photo of a cloud in the shape of Croatia on her Facebook profile with the description "God, save Croatia." Their apartment cracked after the devastating earthquake, but she and her family are okay. They are happy that nothing happened to them.
"The apartment cracked, but I think we were fortunate that the building was well built, even though it is over 60 years old. When I see what happened to others, this is happiness to heaven," concludes Antonija.
For more on the Petrinja earthquake, follow our dedicated section.
30. prosinac 2020. – Dan nakon razornog potresa u Petrinji, TCN je posjetio Majske Poljane, Glinu i Petrinju, te tamo pronašao tragediju, humanost i Hrvate koji daju sve od sebe.
Moj prvi i jedini posjet Petrinji bio je u zimi 2003. godine. Iz nekog sam razloga, kojeg se sada ne mogu sjetiti, morao ići pokupiti Ukrajinca zaposlenog u OSCE-u i njegovog sina. Sin mu je slomio nogu i moj je zadatak bio odvesti ga do bolnice u Zagrebu. Malo se toga sjećam iz Petrinje osim snijega i mnogih srušenih zgrada koje su ostale nakon godina rata i neprijateljske okupacije desetak godina ranije.
Nije se mnogo toga promijenilo za ljude Petrinje i okolice u 25 godina otkako je rat završio. Nezaposlenost, emigracija – nažalost, česta priča u kontinentalnoj Hrvatskoj, osim u glavnom gradu Zagrebu. Potres jačine 6.2 osjetio se u deset drugih zemalja i u svim dijelovima Hrvatske – bio je to moj prvi potres u životu, za vrijeme ručka u Varaždinu, udaljenom 140 kilometara, dovoljno jak da odmah napustimo kuću.
Kako smo pratili posljedice na TCN-u, bilo je jasno da se radi o ogromnoj tragediji, dok je unutar nekoliko sati objavljeno da ima barem sedam žrtava. Međunarodne poruke i obećanja za pomoć počeli su dolaziti, a zanimanje za naše vijesti uživo iz inozemstva bilo je ogromno. Odlučio sam sljedeći dan posjetiti tu regiju, u nadi da će detaljan izvještaj o situaciji na terenu pomoći ljudima da shvate opseg tragedije, kao i realno prikazati sliku o tome što se događa na terenu.
Kako nisam bio siguran kakvo će biti stanje na cestama, od kuće u Varaždinu sam krenuo u 5 ujutro, a u Zagrebu usput pokupio kolegu s TCN-a Marca Rowlandsa. Kako nikad prije nismo radili ništa slično, odlučili smo da ćemo zastati u Majskim Poljanama, selu u kojem je stradalo četiri od sedam žrtava, a u kojem načelnik tvrdi da je samo 10 % zgrada neoštećeno.
Načelnik nije pretjerivao.
Magla je na trenutke bila gusta, a mi smo postajali sve očajniji dok smo vozili po uskoj glavnoj cesti. Kako se zajednica može oporaviti od nečeg ovakvog? Ponovo izgraditi?
Šokiran čovjek sjedi uz cestu. Kuća mu je uglavnom u dobrom stanju, ali on je sam i nema struje. Susjedi mu nisu tako dobro prošli. Kad je čuo da sam Englez, rekao mi je da je ratni veteran i da se borio uz jednog Engleza u Vinkovcima 1992. u 109. brigadi.
„Jel se on možda zvao Steve?“, upitao sam ga, jer se radi o jedinom Englezu kojeg sam znao u Vinkovcima a koji je ratovao u Hrvatskoj (i SVAKAKO jedinom Englezu koji je otvorio pub u polju usred ničega u istočnoj Hrvatskoj).
„Da, Steve. Vjerojatno me se ne bi sjetio niti prepoznao nakon svih ovih godina.“ Predložio sam da probamo, pa smo Steveu poslali poruku s gornjom fotografijom, na što je on odgovorio da mu je to lice poznato. Svijet je u Hrvatskoj doista malen.
I dok je Vladimirova kuća bila u pristojnom stanju, to se ne bi moglo reći za kuću susjeda prekoputa. Jučer se radilo o kući u kojoj su živjeli ljudi. Danas, u njoj sam izbrojao desetak konja, od kojih je jedan bio vezan za traktor. Svi su bili u šoku.
Mnogim sam kolegama iz medija koje sam danas sreo ispričao o konjima i pojavili su se na nacionalnoj televiziji u vijestima, pa sam čuo da je u tu kuću stigao kontejner pomoći, uključujući i hranu za konje.
Naš auto nije bio jedini s varaždinskim tablicama u Majskim Poljanama. Bilo nas je iz Varaždina, Čakovca, Zagreba, Vukovara, Bosne. Volonteri, Hrvati i stranci s punim automobilima hrane, deka, vode, odjeće, tražili su domaće stanovništvo da bi im pomogli da prebrode ovaj težak period.
Vladimiru je dan ranije već došla pomoć od Crvenog Križa, donijeli su mu hranu, odjeću i pokrivače. Uzeo je samo malo hrane, jer bi drugima moglo više trebati.
To je bila slika dana – automobili iz cijele Hrvatske (ovdje prikazan iz Našica) napunjeni namirnicama da bi pomogli ljudima Majskih Poljana, Gline, Petrinje i Siska.
Od svih zemalja u kojima sam živio ili kroz njih putovao, nikad nisam vidio naciju koja se tako ujedini u vremenima krize ovako kako se Hrvatska ujedini. Dok mi se srce slamalo od scena užasa na sve strane, jednako je tako bilo puno ponosa na sve što čine ljudi u mojoj odabranoj domovini.
Ljudi Majskih Poljana vjerojatno su bili zbunjeni svime što se dogodilo, a jednako su tako zbunjene bile i životinje. Od onih konja do ovaca i mnogih pasa koji su ili lutali okolo ili čuvali kuće koje više ne postoje, usamljenost i izgubljenost kod omiljenih ljubimaca na mene je ostavila najjači trag danas.
Prošli smo kroz maglu na drugu stranu Majskih Poljana, gdje nas je dočekala Hrvatska vojska, koja je među prvima došla odgovoriti na izvanrednu situaciju.
Uskoro su bili vrijedni postavljajući privremena skloništa za stanovnike.
Sjajan timski rad, očito dobro uvježban.
I za 15 minuta, zadatak izvršen, prvi šator postavljen.
Uputili smo se prema najbližem gradu, Glini, koja je također teško oštećena. Putem, uz rub ceste vidjeli smo hrpe smeća od oštećenih kuća. Uredno složene, čekaju da ih netko dođe pokupiti.
Ovu mi je fotografiju Petrinje prijatelj poslao jučer. Čišćenje ovoga će trajati zauvijek, čini se.
Nismo mogli vjerovati koliko su ulice Gline čiste, dok nismo vidjeli ekipe domaćih ljudi u akciji.
Jedan dio očišćen, idemo dalje.
Neke stvari neće biti moguće popraviti.
Vatrogasci su davali sve od sebe, uklanjali otpad i nastojali zgrade učiniti što sigurnijima. Mnogi su oštećeni dimnjaci uklonjeni u regiji tijekom dana.
Iz Gline smo krenuli prema Petrinji, ali putem je bilo svašta vrijedno pažnje. Prekrasna kamena crkva u Gori, žrtva potresa, s ogromnim komadima kamena koji leže u vrtu. Jedan stanovnik rekao mi je da je crkva stara tek nekoliko godina, jer je bila obnovljena nakon Domovinskog rata.
Ulaz u Petrinju.
Kako nismo imali neki jasan plan, odlučili smo slijediti stvari koje su nas zainteresirale. Kao što je, naprimjer, bio Crveni Križ koji je na quadovima dostavljao vodu.
Nije ih bilo lako pratiti dok su išli od kuće do kuće. Stanovnici su izlazili da bi preuzeli ono što im pripada. Brzo, inovativno i vrlo učinkovito.
Među najtužnijim prizorima svakako su bile brojne obitelji koje su sjedile u dvorištima, na otvorenom, s osnovnim namirnicama i vodom. Neki su samo stajali i izgledali izgubljeno. Uz prijetnju od novih podrhtavanja, bez struje i bez mjesta gdje su mogli otići, mnogi su samo sjedili vani na hladnom i čekali. Mogli smo tada snimiti fantastične fotografije, ali nismo htjeli biti toliko nametljivi.
Ali, jedan od mojih kontaka s LinkedIna postavio je ovaj kolaž koji vam to može približiti.
Stigli smo i do centra Petrinje, čije su srušene zgrade postale prepoznatljivo povezane s ovom posljednjom katastrofom.
Zastrašujuće.
Ali onda, čudo… Pogledaš na drugu stranu, prema sredini trga i ugledaš Advent u Petrinji, koji izgleda kao da razumije ništa od onoga što se oko njega događa.
Video obilazak dvije Petrinje na jednom trgu.
I ponovo sam se sjetio fotografije mog prijatelja od prethodnog dana – ulice Petrinje bile su nevjerojatno čiste, tako brzo nakon katastrofe.
Drugi razlog zašto su ljudi možda sjedili u svojim dvorištima je to što ništa nije bilo otvoreno. Restorani i kafići zatvoreni su već tjednima zbog korone, ali ovdje su bili zatvoreni i dućani i supermarketi. Ali nije bilo baš šanse da ljudi u Petrinji ogladne, jer je stigla pomoć iz cijele Hrvatske. Zaustavio sam se da bih poslikao kako „Sinj voli Petrinju“. Čovjek me sa snažnim sinjskim naglaskom pitao što trebam. Odgovorio sam da bih rado jedno hladno pivo. Kaže on meni: „Nemamo pivo, ali imamo mnogo drugih stvari, uzmi što trebaš!“ Objasnio sam mu da se šalim, da sam novinar i da mi ne treba ništa ali da mu zahvaljujem na ponudi.
Prišla mu je žena pitati ga ima li što kruha i uzela je što je trebalo njoj i njenoj obitelji. Takve su se stvari događale po cijelom području, pokloni ljudi iz cijele zemlje danas – to je zaista bilo dirljivo.
I svugdje je bilo još volontera koji su čekali da dobiju sljedeći zadatak. Sve je bilo dobro koordinirano zahvaljujući lokalnom stožeru civilne zaštite.
Marc je htio slikati nešto uz cestu, a ja sam se našao kako gledam kuću ovog para koja je bila oštećena, uz prioritet da se popravi krov.
Za par minuta odnekud se pojavila grupica volontera s ljestvama i prionuli su poslu. Takve su se stvari događale po cijelom području, volonteri iz cijele zemlje – to je zaista bilo dirljivo.
Morao sam stići na vrijeme na jedan sastanak – konačno upoznati Josipa Granića i fantastičnu ekipu iz Hrvatske Gorske Službe Spašavanja, čije je sjedište bilo na parkiralištu Lidla.
Nas dvojicu povezuje to što smo podjednako neočekivano postali muški modeli (dobro, za njega je to bilo očekivanije nego za mene) u Varteksovoj kampanji „Nesavršen muškarac u savršenom odijelu“. Josip je fan TCN-a i mnogo je pomogao kad smo radili sjajan članak o fantastičnoj ekipi HGSS-ovaca ranije tijekom ove godine - Meet HGSS The Croatian Mountain Rescue Service.
Iako je radio cijelu noć i nije ništa spavao, Josip je pronašao vremena za intervju koji je dao Marcu, a koji možete pročitati ovdje.
Policijske patrole u pogođenom području. Očekivao sam više zagušenja prometa, ali policija je uspijevala postići da promet teče.
Ono što policija nije mogla kontrolirati je bilo još potresa. Sjedio sam sam u autu dok je Marc fotografirao, prvo se auto počeo ljuljati s jedne na drugu stranu, a onda sam shvatio da se tlo definitivno pomiče – kasnije sam saznao da se radilo o još jednom potresu, ovaj put 4.1. Posve uobičajeno u Hrvatskoj 2020. godine.
Promet je i dalje tekao, donoseći ključne stvari u ona mjesta koja su ih najviše trebala.
Štete je bilo svugdje i svi su je mogli vidjeti.
Uz neka podsjećanja na sretna vremena blagdana, prije nekoliko dana, kada je život bio potpuno drukčiji.
Planirali smo zastati na još jednom mjestu prije povratka u Zagreb – kod crkve u selu Žažini. Njena prednja strana i zvonik više ne postoje.
Otrgnuti od ostatka zgrade.
Ta je crkva ovako izgledala samo 24 sata ranije. Kasnije sam saznao da je orguljaš čistio orgulje u crkvi kada je krenuo najjači potres, te je tragično izgubio život u crkvi.
Freske na zidovima u unutrašnjosti mogle su se i dalje vidjeti.
Novije protiv staroga, jer je susjedna kuća prošla bez oštećenja. Ali kao što smo vidjeli u Gori, to što je zgrada novija ne znači nužno da je sigurna od potresa.
Vraćali smo se u Zagreb u relativnoj tišini, svaki izgubljen u svojim mislima, trpeći posljedice ranog ustajanja i trauma koje smo vidjeli taj dan.
Težak je to bio dan, sasvim sigurno, ali i ugrijao nam je srca. Hrvati su najotporniji ljudi koje znam, a teškoće u njima bude najbolje. Postoje tisuće herojskih primjera svaki dan u ovom trenutku i plješćem svakome od njih koji je preuzeo na sebe dio odgovornosti.
Nemojmo zaboraviti ni velikodušnost dijaspore i međunarodne zajednice. Odgovor na ovu katastrofu zaista je impresivan, kao što je bila i hitna reakcija. Oni koji trebaju pomoć zaista je i dobivaju, a donacije svakako pritom pomažu.
Za više podataka o potresu u Petrinji pratite današnji članak s najnovijim vijestima. Da biste saznali kako možete donirati novac, hranu, građevinski materijal i humanitarnu pomoć, kliknite ovdje i ovdje.
December 31, 2020 – Croatian firemen, army, police and medical workers worked through after the earthquake in Sisak Moslavina County on 29 December 2020. We wanted to get a sense of the demand on and the experiences of emergency services, so we spoke with Josip Granić. Head Of Service for HGSS, who was coordinating the efforts of the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja
This interview took place in Petrinja, just before 12.30pm on Wednesday 30 December 2020
Right now we have around 120 people here. Last night we sent some home. During the height of the operation, we had 192 members of the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja and the surrounding towns and villages. Firefighters and police from all over Croatia came. There are more than 200 army personnel here too.
Because we are part of the operational team of the National Civil Protection, we were already here and involved in the response to the first earthquake. After yesterday's earthquake, I called each HGSS station across Croatia and asked them to prepare at least one vehicle and one team to come and join the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja. The first extra teams to arrive were from this county - Sisak and Novska. They got here around 2pm. Teams from Orebic, Peljesac and Split arrived maybe last, because of the large distance they had to travel. One team came by car, another came by helicopter.
What was the situation like for Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja when the wider team first started to arrive after the second day's larger earthquake?
If I said it was chaos, that wouldn't be strong enough a word. The centre of the town was chaos. Everyone was busying themselves with responding – people were moving debris, firefighters were making their way through, ambulances and police moving through, people of the city in the streets helping out. The streets were filled with dust and smoke. You could hear the sounds of floors and roofs and buildings collapsing all around you.
What were the first undertakings for the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja?
Well, our first response was not only in Petrinja – we were immediately in some of the surrounding villages too. The very first thing we did was send in our search teams and the specially trained dogs we work with. We were instructed by locals. They told us which of the collapsed buildings were likely to have people trapped beneath them. We immediately found one person. It was in the town hall. One lady. The entire ceiling had fallen on top of her. Our colleague from Ogulin found her with his dog. The firefighters worked so fast, so hard to dig her out. They were excellent. It took four and a half hours to get her out. She was lucky. Unfortunately, we also found four more people who were already dead.
We saw quite a lot of volunteers. Who is organising them?
There are many different groups. Many local people were the first ones out on the streets, volunteering. Then, those from the immediate area came - four friends in a car, that kind of thing. |NGOs arrived next – veterans, charities and so on. Then, football fans from all over Croatia arrived. Supporters groups had organised coaches to bring themselves here. At first, nobody was organising them and it was a bit of a problem. They organised themselves. But, it was such chaos that some emergency vehicles, including search and rescue teams of Croatian Mountain Rescue Service in Petrinja, could not pass through the town. This is dangerous because, in search and rescue, your ability to respond quickly is vitally important. After dark, things began to run more smoothly. Many worked until 3am or 4am, then they were sent home. The ones who didn't arrive until much later in the night were incorporated into Civil Protection and assigned to work the next day in villages and towns outside Petrinja, where help was needed.
How has the demand on what you do changed since yesterday?
It hasn't changed that much. We have been visiting villages throughout the county as quickly as we can, searching for people who may be trapped. Some of these places have not yet been reached by the other emergency services, but they will get to them. We found another alive person who was trapped today. Since early in the morning we have searched 84 villages.
What advice would you give someone who wants to come here to volunteer?
Organise it first with Civil protection. If it is organised with them, then you know you won't be in the way and you will be going to where help is needed. If it's organised with them first, then come. There's a job for everyone who wants it here.
How different is the demand on emergency services in this earthquake compared to the earthquake in Zagreb in March 2020?
Well, our services were not requested during the Zagreb earthquake and a lot of that is because of the structural integrity of the buildings in Zagreb. Most were strong enough to survive that big earthquake. The ones which were damaged were only partially damaged. Many buildings in Zagreb were hardly damaged at all and so many people in Zagreb were relatively unaffected by that earthquake. Here, everyone is affected.
All images © HGSS
December 31, 2020 – Total Croatia News visited Majske Poljane, Glina and Petrinja one day after the earthquake. It is difficult to find words to describe the devastation we saw. Perhaps pictures tell the story better
Majske Poljane is a rural community. Such was the devastation here, it was difficult to tell which of the destroyed buildings had yesterday been used for agriculture or if they'd been homes
TCN's Paul Bradbury talks to Majske Poljane resident Vladimir who confirmed that, yes, the building across the lane had been a home, his neighbours had lived there just 24 hours earlier
Doors of houses left ajar, windows collapsed, smashed and broken. Inside, you can see everyday lives, stopped suddenly, frozen in time
Croatian soldiers quickly constructing emergency shelters in the freezing fog of early morning. They came from all over Croatia. Unsure if their damaged houses were structurally safe, parents and children of Glina, surrounding villages and Petrinja stood in gardens and fields, keeping warm around fires. With no electricity, they cooked on barbecues.
Majske Poljane seemed like the most silent place on earth. No single sound, not even bird song.
Even the three village dogs left behind padded around the wet road in silence
Croatian firefighters walk heavily through the mist-filled streets of Glina
The entire upper floor of this house had collapsed, crushing completely the floor underneath
Volunteers at work on the roofs of two neighbouring houses, between Glina and Petrinja one day after the earthquake. The volunteers had come from all over Croatia
Even in the miserably wet winter weather, the greeting sign to Petrinja one day after the earthquake might still have looked cheery, if you couldn't see all the emergency vehicles in the background.
If you didn't know any better, these might look like damaged derelict buildings. But, 24 hours earlier, these had been a row of thriving storefronts, right in the centre of Petrinja one day after the earthquake
Damage to the train station in Sisak. A considerably larger city than Petrinja one day after the earthquake, not one business we passed was working - no supermarkets, no fast-food restaurants. Nothing. Groups of teenagers roamed the streets with nothing to do and nowhere to go
The Parish church of St. Nikola and Vida, Žažina near Petrinja one day after the earthquake
This is how the church had looked just one day earlier. A couple of metres from the church, remnants of the fire that parishioners had gathered around on Badnjak (Christmas Eve). We later learned that the church organist had been cleaning the organ when the earthquake struck, and tragically he was killed.
Photo of the Parish church of St. Nikola and Vida, Žažina courtesy of the church, all other photos © Marc Rowlands
December the 31st, 2020 - If you want to help the Petrinja earthquake victims in Petrinja, Glina, Sisak or any of the other surrounding areas which have been affected, Glovo will deliver your package free of charge.
As Poslovni Dnevnik writes, Glovo, a delivery service which has been present and very popular in Croatia for some time now, has joined the action of collecting donations for the earthquake-affected areas and enabled everyone who wants to help Petrinja earthquake victims to do so more easily by picking up donations for free and delivering them to the desired addresses in the affected areas.
If you want to help, all you need to do is prepare the supplies you want to donate, open the Glovo application, select the Express Delivery category and enter the address where the donation should be collected, as well as the address to which you want to send the donation. Donations are then delivered free of charge to the address you entered - whether it is the address of the Red Cross/Crveni kriz collection point or other organisations that organised the fundraiser.
''Sisak, Petrinja, Glina and the surrounding areas affected by the Petrinja earthquake need our help and we believe that we can help if we all join forces. We'd like to invite everyone who is able to do so to donate and help as much as they can, and we will take care of all of the logistics and donations to reach those in need,'' said Teo Sirola, the director of Glovo for Croatia, adding that the goal of this action is to facilitate the donation process and hopefully increase the overall number of donations to the victims of the recent devastating Petrinja earthquake, which sadly took multiple lives.
Donations made via Glovo can be completed in a mere few clicks and are easy and totally free. It is possible to donate groceries, clothes, hygiene and other necessities through the aforementioned app. Activation is available in all eleven Croatian cities where Glovo operates - Zagreb, Split, Rijeka, Osijek, Zadar, Sisak, Pula, Karlovac, Velika Gorica, Varazdin and Slavonski Brod and the action will last for as long as necessary.
If you want to donate funds or food, material, sanitary, humanitarian or anti-epidemic items, you can find out how here, with lists of what is most needed provided. If you want to donate via a special donations account set up for Petrinja by HPB, click here. Donations made into the special HPB account are free of any additional charges, even if you don't live in Croatia and are paying from a foreign bank account.
December 30, 2020 - A day after the devastating Petrinja earthquake, TCN visits Majske Poljane, Glina and Petrinja, finding tragedy, humanity, and Croatians pulling together with huge hearts.
My first and only previous visit to Petrinja was in the winter of 2003. For reasons which now escape me, I went to pick up a Ukrainian employee of OSCE and his son. The son had a broken leg and my task was to transport him to hospital in Zagreb. Of Petrinja, I remember very little apart from the snow, the cold, and the many destroyed buildings after years of war and enemy occupation less than a decade previously.
Not much good has happened to the people of Petrinja and surrounding areas in the 25 years since the war finished. Unemployment, emigration - a sadly common story in continental Croatia outside the capital Zagreb. An earthquake measuring 6.2 was felt in ten other countries and every part of Croatia yesterday - it was my first earthquake experience, over lunch in Varazdin, 140 km away - powerful enough to have us leave the house immediately.
As TCN covered the aftermath, it was clear that a major tragedy was unfolding, with 7 deaths reported within hours. International messages and pledges came pouring in, and international interest in the live updates was huge. I decided to go and visit the next day, so that perhaps an in-depth account of the situation on the ground might help people understand the scale of the tragedy, as well as painting a realistic picture of what was happening on the ground.
Unsure of how busy the roads would be, I left home in Varazdin at 5 am, picking up TCN colleague Marc Rowlands from Zagreb on the way. Never having done anything like this before, we decided to start in the small village of Majske Poljane, where four of the seven deaths had occurred, and where the mayor had claimed that only 10% of buildings were not damaged.
The mayor was not exaggerating.
The fog was thick at times, and our hearts sank the more we drove along the narrow main road. How does a community recover from something like this? Rebuild?
A shell-shocked man was standing by the side of the road. His house was more or less intact, but he was alone and without power. His neighbours had not fared as well. On hearing I was English, he told me that he was a war veteran and had fought side by side with an Englishman in Vinkovci in 1992 in the 109th Brigade.
"Was his name Steve?" I asked, the only Englishman I knew in Vinkovci who fought for Croatia (and DEFINITELY the only Englishman to open a pub in a field in the middle of nowhere in eastern Croatia).
" Yes, Steve. He probably will not remember me, or recognise me after all these years." I suggested we try and sent Steve the photo above to find out - the reply came back that the face was familiar. Such is the smallness of the village that is Croatia.
While Vladimir's house was in reasonable condition, the same could not be said of the neighbours' house across the road. Yesterday, this had been an inhabited home. Today, inhabited only by at least 10 horses that I counted, one of which was tied to a tractor. All were shellshocked.
I told various media colleagues I came across today about the horses, and they featured on the national news this evening, and I recently heard that a container of help has arrived at the house, including help for the horses.
Ours was not the only car with Varazdin plates in Majske Poljane. They came from Varazdin, Cakovec, Zagreb, Vukovar and Bosnia. Volunteers, Croatians and foreigners with their cars filled with food, blankets, water, clothes, looking for locals to donate to, to help them through this difficult period.
Vladimir had already received a visit from the Red Cross yesterday, and they brought food, blankets and clothes. He took only a little food, as the need for the rest was perhaps greater with others.
It was a theme of the day - cars from all over Croatia (here, Nasice) filled with supplies to help the people of Majske Poljane, Glina, Petrinja and Sisak.
Of all the countries I have lived and travelled in, never have I seend a nation come together in time of crisis in the way Croatia does. As my heart was breaking with the horror scenes all around, it was also beaming with pride at the efforts of my adopted homeland.
The humans of Majske Poljane may have been confused by what had happened, and so too were the animals. From those horses to the bleating sheep and many dogs either wandering around confused or guarding houses which no longer existed, the loneliness and loss of direction of beloved pets was as poignant as anything I saw today.
We made our way back through the mist to the other side of Majske Poljane, to be greeted by the Croatian army, just part of the emergency response.
They were soon at work, setting up temporary shelters.
Great teamwork, obviously well-practised.
And within 15 minutes, mission complete for the first tent.
We headed on to the nearest town, Glina, which was also badly affected. On the way, by the side of the road, piles of rubble from the damaged houses. Neatly arranged, waiting for the authorities to collect them.
This is the photo a friend from Petrinja sent me yesterday. Cleaning this up was going to take forever, surely?
We couldn't believe how clean the streets of Glina were, until we saw the local teams in action.
One section complete, on to the next.
Some things will be impossible to fix.
The fire brigade was out in force, removing loose debris and making buildings as safe as possible. Lots of loose chimneys were removed in the region today.
From Glina to Petrinja, but there was plenty to observe on the way. A beautiful stone church in Gora, victim of the quake, huge chunks of stone lying in its gardens. A local told me that the church is only a few years old, having being rebuilt after the Homeland War.
The entrance to Petrinja.
With no fixed agenda, we decided to follow things that interested us. Such as the Red Cross on quad bikes delivering emergency water.
It was hard to keep up as they went house to house, with local residents coming out to collect their allocation. Efficient, innovative, and very effective.
One of the most heartwrenching sites of the day were the numerous families sitting in their gardens and yards outside, with basic supplies of food and water. Others were just standing there, looking lost. With the threat of more tremors, no electricity, and nowhere to go, many just sat outside in the cold and waited. There were so many incredible photos to be taken, but neither of us wanted to be that intrusive.
But perhaps a flavour in this collage from a LinkedIn contact.
And so to the centre of Petrinja, whose collapsed buildings have become the most iconic of this latest disaster.
Horrifying.
But then, the strangest thing... Look the other way into the centre of the square to find a beautiful Advent in Petrinja park, seemingly oblivious to the chaos all around.
A video tour of a tale of two Petrinjas in one square.
And I thought back to my friend's photo the previous day - the streets of Petrinja were incredibly clean so soon after such a catastrophe.
Another reason, perhaps, why people were just sitting around in their front gardens was that there was nothing open. Cafes and restaurants have been closed for weeks due to corona, but the shops and supermarkets were also shut. But there was little chance of the people of Petrinja going hungry, as there was help from every corner of Croatia. I stopped to take a photo of 'Sinj Loves Petrinja.'
"What would you like?" asked the man in a strong Sinj accent.
"I would love a cold beer," I replied.
"Sorry, no beer but we have lots of other things. Take what you need."
"Haha, I was joking. I am a journalist, I don't need anything but thank you."
A woman approached asking if they had any bread, and she took what she needed for her family. Such things happened all over the region, gifted by people from all over the country, today - it was heartwarming to see.
And everywhere, the volunteers, waiting to be allocated their tasks. Everything is being very well-coordinated by the local civil protection units.
Marc wanted to take some photos of something along the road, and I found myself watching this old couple whose house had been damaged, urgent repairs to the roof a priority.
Within minutes, a team of volunteers appeared with a ladder and set to work. Such things happened all over the region, volunteers from all over the country, today - it was heartwarming to see.
There was one appointment I had that I was keen to keep - finally meeting Josip Granic and the amazing team from the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service, whose headquarters were in the Lidl car park.
We are curiously bonded by both being unlikely male models (ok, he far more likely than me) in the Varteks 'Imperfect Guy in a Perfect Suit' campaign. Josip is a big TCN fan and was very helpful in a great feature on the amazing team at the Croatian Mountain Rescue Service by TCN earlier this year - Meet HGSS The Croatian Mountain Rescue Service.
Despite working through the night without any sleep, Josip found time for an interview with Marc, which we will publish tomorrow.
Police road checks in the earthquake era. I was expecting much more traffic congestion, but the police kept things moving.
What the police could not control were more tremors. Alone in the car again as Marc took more photos, the car started to move side to side, and the earth was definitely moving underneath me - a 4.1 earthquake I was to discover later. Par for the course in Croatia in 2020 and nothing to write home about.
And the traffic kept flowing, bringing the essential items to the locations which needed them most.
The damage was everywhere, and for all to see.
Some with memories of the celebrations of a happier festive season, just a few days ago, when life was very different.
There was time for one more stop before returning to Zagreb - the church in the village of Zazina. Its front and spire no longer there.
Ripped from the rest of the building.
This is how the church had looked just 24 hours earlier. I learned later that the church organist had been cleaning the organ when the earthquake struck, and he was tragically killed.
The frescoed walls inside still there to see.
Young versus old, as the neighbour emerged without a scratch. But as we saw with the church in Gora, young does not necessarily guarantee safety from earthquakes.
We drove back to Zagreb in relative silence, each lost in their own thoughts and suffering from the early start and the trauma of the day.
A harrowing day for sure, but also a heartwarming one. Croatians are the most resilient people I know, at their finest in adversity. There are thousands of heroic examples of this being performed on a daily basis at the moment, and I applaud each and every one of them who has risen to the task.
And let's not forget the generosity of the diaspora and international community as well. The response to this disaster has been magnificent, as has been the emergency response. Help IS getting to those who need it most on the ground, and the donations ARE making a difference.
For more on the Petrinja earthquake, follow today's live updates. For more on how you can help and donate funds, food, material and humanitarian aid, click here and here for the details of a special (free of additional charges) HPB donation account for Grad Petrinja.
ZAGREB, Dec 30, 2020 - The prison buildings in Sisak and Glina sustained some damage in Tuesday's earthquake and prisoners are being transferred to other penitentiaries across Croatia, Justice and Public Administration Minister Ivan Malenica said on Wednesday after he visited Sisak.
During his visit to quake-hit areas, Malenica expressed condolences to the family of a prison guard killed in the earthquake as well as to another prison guard whose family member died in the deadly quake that claimed seven lives.
Malenica said that the authorities had promptly responded on Tuesday when the earthquake struck the area and the Sisak prison was immediately evacuated. At the moment of the disaster, there were 60 inmates. They were first evacuated to the yard of the building and later were transported to some other prisons in Zagreb, Bjelovar and Gospic.
There are about 80 inmates in the Glina prison and they are also likely to be transferred to other penitentiary facilities in the course of the day.
Structural engineers who checked the Sisak prison building registered some damage and Minister Malenica said that he could not say yet when the building could be used again.
During yesterday's quake, an inmate in Sisak Prison was slightly injured and was given medical assistance, the Ministry of the Interior said after a 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck the area on Tuesday.
None of the prisoners and staff at the penitentiary in the nearby town of Glina were injured, the ministry said in a statement yesterday.