Rafael "Ranko" Boban (22 December 1907 â disappearance in 1945) was a Croatian military commander who served in the Ustaà ¡e Militia and Croatian Armed Forces during World War II. Having participated in the Velebit uprising in 1932, he joined the Royal Italian Army and returned to Croatia following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941. He fought with the Ustaà ¡e until the end of the war, when he is reported to have evaded the Yugoslav Partisans and reached the Austrian town of Bleiburg. Nothing is known of what happened to him afterwards, and it was rumoured that he was either killed in Podravina in 1945, died fighting with the Crusaders in Herzegovina in 1947, or, less likely, emigrated to the United States via Argentina, joined the United States Army and fought Communist forces in the Korean War. In 1951, he was named the Croatian Minister of Defence in-exile by Ustaà ¡e leader Ante PaveliÃÂ.
Rafael Boban was born on 22 December 1907 in the village of SoviÃÂi, near the town of Grude, Austria-Hungary. He was a Roman Catholic Herzegovinian Croat. He served as an officer in the Royal Yugoslav Army prior to joining Ustaà ¡e units based in Fascist Italy in the summer of 1932. In September 1932, he returned to Yugoslavia and participated in the Ustaà ¡e-led Velebit uprising against Yugoslav rule. Afterwards, he traveled to Italian-controlled Zadar to request Italian citizenship and protection. In May 1934, Ustaà ¡e leader Ante Paveliàpromoted Boban to the rank of sergeant in the Ustaà ¡e and he became a member of PaveliÃÂ's inner circle. The following year, Boban became a deputy commander of a Royal Italian Army company based in Lipari before being transferred to Calabria. At the beginning of December 1937, Italian authorities arrested him and other members of the Ustaà ¡e on suspicion that they were planning to assassinate Yugoslav Prime Minister Milan StojadinoviÃÂ. They were all quickly released.
With the creation of the Independent State of Croatia (, NDH) in April 1941, Boban returned to Croatia and joined the Ustaà ¡e Militia. He went to Kupres with 250 Ustaà ¡e under his command and organized mass murder of local Serbs.
During the June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina Boban was member of group of Ustaà ¡e officers led by Mijo Babiàwhich reinforced Ustaà ¡e troops attacking the Serb rebels. Their aim was to suppress the uprising and completely destroy Serb population. On 3 July 1941 Boban commanded one of three main groups of Ustaà ¡e forces that attacked the rebels along the line: Vranjkuk - Rupari - Trusina - à  uà ¡njatica. On 24 July 1941 Boban commanded a group of Ustaà ¡e from MeÃÂugorje and ÃÂitluk that imprisoned 20 Serb villagers from village BaÃÂeviÃÂi and killed them in MeÃÂugorje, disposing their bodies in a nearby pit.
He was promoted to the rank of captain in November and later became commander of the Black Legion alongside Jure FrancetiÃÂ. Boban assumed full command of the legion following FrancetiÃÂ's death in December 1942. Ustaà ¡e propaganda declared him FrancetiÃÂ's natural successor. The legion operated in various parts of the NDH under his command.
Boban was promoted to the rank of general in December 1944 and became the head of the Podravina-based Fifth Ustaà ¡e Active Brigade of the Croatian Armed Forces that month. That autumn, he was responsible for guarding the imprisoned politicians Mladen Lorkoviàand Ante Vokiàin the town of Koprivnica. He held the rank of colonel within the Ustaà ¡e Militia by April 1945. In May, he withdrew with the Ustaà ¡e towards Austria and is reported to have successfully reached the town of Bleiburg, alongside Paveliàand Vjekoslav LuburiÃÂ.
Many theories exist about what happened to him. One theory states that he was killed in Podravina in 1945, while another states that he either died fighting with the Crusaders in Herzegovina in 1947 or that he emigrated to the United States via Argentina, joined the United States Army and fought Communist forces in the Korean War.
In 1951, Boban was named the Croatian Minister of Defence in-exile by PaveliÃÂ. During the Bosnian War, a brigade of the Croatian Defence Council (HVO) was named after him. The Roman Catholic church in the Herzegovinian village of Bobani is decorated with his pictures. In July 2022, twenty-five of the Mostar city council's thirty-five members voted to remove street names named after figures linked to the World War II fascist and genocidal Ustaà ¡e movement, among them Boban, Mile Budak, Mladen LorkoviÃÂ, Ante VokiÃÂ, ÃÂuro Spuà ¾eviÃÂ, Jure Francetiàand Ivo Zelenek. This decision was welcomed by the United States Embassy in Sarajevo and Christian Schmidt, then High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina.