http://glassrbije.org/E/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=9646&Itemid=26


Serbian Radio
January 11, 2010


Request for a referendum on Serbia’s joining NATO    


A group of eminent persons in Serbia has submitted a request to competent 
institutions for a referendum on the issue of Serbia’s joining NATO. 

In their request, read out by academician and writer Matija Beckovic at a press 
conference, the signatories stressed the military neutrality of Serbia would be 
no exception at all and that there was one more reason for such a status – the 
NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999. They also claim that, by entering NATO, Serbia 
would recognize independence of Kosovo.
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http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2010&mm=01&dd=11&nav_id=64393


Beta News Agency
January 11, 2010


200 intellectuals want referendum on NATO 


BELGRADE: A group of 200 intellectuals has asked the Serbian parliament to call 
a referendum on the country’s possible future NATO membership.
  
“Serbia has many times, from the world’s most important podiums, said it will 
‘never recognize an independent state of Kosovo’, and that means that Serbia 
will never join NATO.”

“‘Independent Kosovo’ is NATO’s doing, it created this phony state and gave 
itself supreme and unchallenged powers [there],” the group said in its request, 
read during a news conference in Belgrade this Monday by author and member of 
the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (SANU) Matija Beckovic. 

The letter adds that a “militarily neutral Serbia, true to herself and her own 
traditions, is no exception”. 

“Serbia also has another reason [not to join], that no other country has, and 
that is the criminal NATO bombing and destruction of Serbia and her people, 
while trampling on sacrosanct norms of international law. That reason has not 
been produced from times immemorial, nor is some other NATO, rather than this 
one, responsible for that crime,“ the intellectuals wrote, in reference to the 
1999 attacks the Western military alliance staged against then Federal Republic 
of Yugoslavia (SRJ). 

This is a reason that the Serb people cannot ignore, without ignoring their own 
memory and their own dignity, the intellectuals further said. 

Beckovic said that while Serbia’s NATO membership is “discussed in every family 
in the country”, there is fear that this could be done behind citizens’ backs 
and behind closed doors. 

“If that is not the case, all the better, but, once bitten, twice shy. It would 
not be a first for some institution to solve an issue of common importance. 
This question is such that no one party, government, or even parliament can 
solve. No nation would hand an issue of this kind over to someone else,” he 
said. 

Association of Journalists of Serbia (UNS) President Ljiljana Smajlovic, who 
signed the document on her own behalf, said there is a general national 
consensus about Serbia’s NATO membership, and that is not visible because of 
otherwise deep political divisions. 

“That consensus does not favor Serbia’s NATO membership, and we are asking that 
the citizens be given an opportunity to express this consensus in a 
referendum.” 

She reminded that NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen was quoted as 
saying that “Serbia needs a debate” on joining the alliance. 

“Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac says that the best answer about Serbia’s 
NATO membership would be provided by the business and security people and that 
the real issue is whether it’s best to have real estate worth more or less. 
High real estate prices are favorable to those who have lots of real estate. 
There is this manner of the people in power in Serbia to start off from 
whatever suits those who have a lot,” Smajlovic said. 

She pointed out that “whether real estate prices will go up or down” is not 
Serbia’s major issue. 

Member of the Council of the Broadcasting Agency Svetozar Stojanovic, who 
signed the document as a private citizen, also took part in the news conference 
today and reminded that Serbian citizens’ will regarding the country’s military 
neutrality was expressed only indirectly through parliament, which adopted a 
declaration to that end. 

“It’s surprising that people in power are making statements which are contrary 
to the parliamentary declaration,” Stojanovic commented, and added that he 
believed Serbians would say no to NATO membership if given a chance in a 
referendum. 

The document was, among others, signed by former PM Vojislav Kostunica, film 
director Emir Kustrica, SPC Metropolitan Amfilohije, Bishop Atanasije, and 
former Interior Minister Dusan Mihajlovic.  
===========================
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