Juraj Njavro | |
Office: | 1st Minister of Family, Veterans' Affairs and Intergenerational solidarity |
Term Start: | 19 December 1997 |
Term End: | 27 January 2000 |
Primeminister: | Zlatko Mateša |
Predecessor: | Office established |
Successor: | Ivica Pančić |
Office2: | Minister of Health |
Term Start2: | 12 August 1992 |
Term End2: | 13 October 1993 |
Primeminister2: | Hrvoje Šarinić (1992–1993) Nikica Valentić (1993) |
Predecessor2: | Andrija Hebrang |
Successor2: | Andrija Hebrang |
Birth Date: | 2 July 1938 |
Birth Place: | Neum, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
Death Place: | Zagreb, Croatia |
Party: | Croatian Democratic Union |
Alma Mater: | University of Zagreb (School of Medicine) |
Juraj Njavro (2 July 1938 - 15 September 2008) was a Croatian medical doctor and politician.
Njavro was born in Cerovica, near Neum in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (today part of Bosnia and Herzegovina). He attended elementary school here and gymnasium in Dubrovnik, Croatia.[1]
He served as a surgeon Vukovar's hospital during the city's intense siege within the Croatian War of Independence.[2] He continued to work in the hospital right up until the fall of the city to Serb forces.[3] Njavro was subsequently imprisoned and taken to the Sremska Mitrovica camp in Serbia.[2] In late 1991 Njavro was released as part of a prisoner exchange.[1]
He took part in Croatia's first post-independence parliamentary elections in 1992 and was elected as a member of the Croatian Democratic Union. From 12 August 1992, to 12 October 1993, he served as Croatia's Minister of Health.[4] He served as a minister without portfolio from 12 October 1993, to 7 November 1995, won reelection in 1995, and served again without portfolio from 13 November 1996, to 19 December 1997.[5] [6] From 19 December 1997, to 27 January 2000, he served as Minister of Defenders from the Homeland War.[6] He was reelected again in 2000 and retired in 2003.[7]
Njavro wrote a book about his internment during the war entitled Glava dolje, ruke na leđa. After his retirement he served as the president of the Association of Croatian volunteer doctors 1990–1991.[7]
He died on 15 September 2008, in Zagreb and was buried in the city's Mirogoj Cemetery.[8]