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[news] VOJISLAV KOSTUNICA, THE PRESIDENT-IN-WAITING by Srdja Trifkovic

Miroslav Antic
Wed, 01 Oct 2003 14:55:53 -0700

 
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic/NewsST100103.html

October 1, 2003

VOJISLAV KOSTUNICA, THE PRESIDENT-IN-WAITING by Srdja Trifkovic

As the visitor enters Dr. Vojislav Kostunica's headquarters the atmosphere
and decorum are-not only by Belgrade standards-eminently presidential. The
oak-paneled walls, the conference room with a magnificent view of the
Kalemegdan Park, the villa's elite neighborhood right next to the French
Embassy, all testify that the occupant is not just another opposition
politician.

That Kostunica, the last president of Yugoslavia, remains the people's
choice of future Serbian president, was reconfirmed by an opinion poll
published September 30. The leader of the Democratic Party of Serbia remains
the most popular politician in the country by far, although his foes in the
ruling coalition have systematically vilified and slandered him for months.
Kostunica has already won an election for Serbian president, only to be
denied the post last fall by a Milosevic-era law requiring more than 50
percent of the electorate to vote in order for the result to stand. The
Serbian government has refused to repeal the controversial turnout law, thus
effectively compromising its "reformist" credentials and displaying its
willingness to resort to Milosevic's authoritarian legacy in order to keep
Kostunica out of office.

Kostunica regards his absence from top office as a temporary and not
unwelcome break in what has been and promises to continue being a remarkable
political career. Looking back at his turbulent two and a half years at the
helm of the last Yugoslavia he sees the problem of the relations between
Serbia and Montenegro as the greatest burden. "By reading Thomas Fleming's
book on Montenegro we get pretty clear picture of the situation there," he
says. "What we have here is a phenomenon of practically the same nation, the
same family, in some strange way being artificially divided into two
families and two nations":

Very important in these relations is the fact that Serbia Montenegro were
the only two independent states of the former Yugoslavia. They reached their
independence after the Congress in Berlin in 1878 and both of them-but
particularly Montenegro-are very conscious of its statehood. We've tried to
resolve this with a very strange sort of Constitution, the so-called
Constitutional Charter that will enable these two state units to remain
within one state from the international point of view, but also to save
their own autonomy . We are in favor of a larger state. It is very important
that this state is both middle European and Mediterranean. The advantage of
this strange state union is that Montenegro is on the coast of the Danube
and Serbia is on the coast of Adriatic Sea. [There are] other advantages of
this state union, like the fact that Serbs and Montenegrins are of the same
origin, and that many of them live in Serbia-proper. On the other hand we
have all witnessed problems and difficulties when states disintegrate, such
as social problems and vengeance. I am still an optimist. I think anything
is possible in the Balkans. This state goes through the American experience
with federalism. Being first a loose federation and than becoming "a more
perfect Union." What we have today will develop in the direction of a more
perfect Union.

Montenegrins are divided, Kostunica says, and in a referendum it is not
enough to have a bare majority. He invokes the Canadian experience with the
referendum in Quebec and the Clarity Act of 2000:


I believe that under normal circumstances-that means free and fair elections
or referendum-there would be a majority, not overwhelming, but a majority
nonetheless, in favor of Montenegro staying within the state union. As
things have changed in Serbia after Milosevic, they will change in
Montenegro as well after Djukanovic. They were partners in this game for
years. Djukanovic would have never made his career without Milosevic.

As for Kosovo, Kostunica is adamant that resolving its "final status" by
granting it independence is out of the question. He believes that all sides
will be forced to look into some unconventional solutions that will make
Kosovo a part of the Union of Serbia and Montenegro with a high degree of
autonomy, with the Serbs in Kosovo and their historical and cultural
monuments enjoying a high degree of autonomy within Kosovo:


One might think of the institutional solution such as the Republika Srpska
in Bosnia-Herzegovina or South Tyrol in Italy. That solution must be within
one state, however: Kosovo must stay within Serbia, and Serbia and
Montenegro within their Union. The idea of an independent Kosovo would cause
immediate and enormous problems not only to Serbia-Montenegro but also to
other states in the neighborhood, and specifically to Macedonia and Northern
Greece.

As for the internal situation in Serbia, Kostunica sees the biggest problem
in corruption and organized crime that have jointly established control over
Serbia's government:

It is not only a specific relationship and a marriage between the
government, the organized crime and corruption in Serbia. It is more
serious. In many ways the organized crime is controlling the government. One
might say that we have some sort of para-government in Serbia, with an
official and an unofficial government. This may be compared with the
experience of some Latin American countries, but in my estimation in some
ways it is even worse than that . We lack the rule of law, or as the Germans
would say, Rechtstaat. The institutions are weak and the criminals are
strong . [which] is why we have ministers that have their own private
businesses and firms engaged in all sort of illegal activities.

Kostunica is adamant that fresh parliamentary elections must be held before
the presidential ones. The parliamentary elections in December 2000 were
against the former regime, says he, they were not for something positive:

The only solution for Serbia to go on is to have an early election. It is
regularly scheduled for December 2004, but that would be too late. The
situation in the society I very difficult. The rate of unemployed has
increased since October 2000. The economy is practically dead, and its
profitable parts have been sold. The government tries to use tricks to show
that things look better than they are. For example the average salary is
calculated according to the number of persons who actually get their
salary..
But, we have many people who are employed but have not received their salary
for a few months, or a year, or even more than a year. These people are not
included in these numbers.

On the external front Kostunica sees more support for the integrity of the
common Serbian-Montenegrin state in Brussels that in Washington. This, he
says, is partly due to the power of money deployed by the Albanian mafia in
the US:

The most prosperous, the most dangerous and the most influential criminal
group, not only in Serbia and Montenegro but also in the region as a whole,
is the Albanian Mafia. It is engaged in all sorts of trafficking, drugs and
so on. It poses a serious danger to the region as a whole. Practically all
the activities of the supporters of Kosovo independence and also some
American lobbies are financed by the Albanian Mafia.

Had there been more reasoning and will in Serbia not to accept everything
and not to offer more that it is asked by the international community,
Kostunica says, the country would have been better off. When it comes to the
cooperation with the Hague Tribunal there would be more space for
maneuvering if there was will for that maneuvering, like Croatia. And also,
I think that there is a chance if you rely more on Brussels and European
countries such as France, Italy, and Russian Federation. It is possible,
particularly after this division over the Iraq war. There is a room for
that. But there must be a will and common strategy.

Looking to the future, Kostunica sees as his first task after returning to
power the drafting of the new Constitution; then an effort to make the
current loose link with Montenegro stronger; to strengthen links with the
Serbs living in the Serbian entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina; and to build
the rule of law within Serbia:

>From the very beginning of my career I got two characteristics: One was 
>that
I was a nationalist, or as they would say in Washington, a "moderate
nationalist." The second one was the "legalist" label. That has to do with
my efforts to build a rule of law as a basic principle in this country. I
was attacked because of that . We really need to have strong institutions,
rule of law, stable state and an independent judiciary. Our judiciary has
been destroyed, abused by the minister of justice who controls the
apparatus, dismisses judges etc. The most important institution in the
Federalist Papers is the least dangerous branch of government-the judiciary.
For countries in transition the most important branch of government is the
judiciary. The rule of law, an independent judiciary, giving Parliament a
chance to be independent of the government, that is the separation of
powers, and something we need.

Kostunica concludes by stating that he would not run in the recently called
presidential election. He says that that the purpose of the authorities was
to call a presidential election that is certain to fail in order to postpone
the parliamentary elections at any cost. And yet parliamentary elections are
badly needed, for many reasons. He repeats that people voting at the
previous general election in December 2000 were voting "against" the old
regime rather than "for" the government we have today. The result, he says,
is an Assembly that does not represent the will of the people today, and no
longer reflects the will of the people back in December 2000.


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  • [news] VOJISLAV KOSTUNICA, THE PRESIDENT-IN-WAITING by Srdja Trifkovic Miroslav Antic