Hungarian-Serbian reconciliation
In 2009, marking the beginning of the reconciliation process, the Hungarian and Serbian Presidents agreed on the joint research of the atrocities committed by the armed forces of the two states in the period between 1941 and 1948. The Serbian internal conditions for the success of the Hungarian-Serbian reconciliation had been created from the early 2000s, including provision for cultural autonomy for national minorities and territorial autonomy for Vojvodina. On 26 June 2013, in Čurug, Serbia, the heads of state of the two countries paid tribute jointly to the victims. On 2 November 2014, in Subotica, Serbia, the Serbian Prime Minister participated at the commemoration of the ethnic Hungarian victims executed by Yugoslav partisans in 1944-45. Prior to this event, on 30 October 2014, the Serbian government repealed the 1944-45 resolutions declaring the collective guilt of the Hungarian inhabitants of Čurug, Zabalj, and Mošorin municipalities. The particularity of the Hungarian-Serbian reconciliation lies in the facts that it does not intend to reach reconciliation by forgetting history, but to confront with the mistakes committed in the past, and also to provide collective rights to national minorities.