Memory Lane.       It seems that some have never figured out that the
overthrow of Milosevic was not just a NATO maneuver, but also a popular
event.     Of course, those people celebrating were in actuality....///
'nothing more than 'rabbits, rats, and even hyenas'.

Let's take a trip down memory lane.........

Aabdo
________________________________

Milosevic's final days: from arrogance to panic to disgrace
1.25 p.m. ET (1739 GMT) October 7, 2000
By Dusan Stojanovic, Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) �  The chubby man in the red track suit
didn't know it, but he was about to make history.
Something � frustration, rage or just the heat of the moment � drove
him through a surprised knot of riot police and onto the steps of the
federal parliament. For a moment, he was there alone, standing on the
cusp of an uprising.

"Don't do it, there'll be a bloodbath!'' cried an opposition leader over
a loudspeaker.
The people in the crowd on Thursday � more than 200,000 angry
opponents of Slobodan Milosevic � weren't listening. They were
watching the lone man in the track suit. He was waving them on.

A few people stepped forward. Then more. Then a stampede that
overwhelmed the line of police.

With their votes, they had expressed their demand for change. Now, on a
brisk afternoon, they were literally trampling Milosevic's 13 years of
rule � a period of war, corruption and despair that saw Yugoslavia
ripped apart and reduced to a pariah, beggar nation.

Soon the wide, granite steps of the parliament were clogged with
protesters. They were at the front doors of the stately building,
surrounding the bronze horse statues that watch over the main entrance.

>From inside, police launched another barrage of tear gas and stun
grenades. But this time, there was no stopping the mob. They choked.
Their eyes stung. But still they came. Even the weather helped them: A
strong wind helped carry away the tear gas.

Within minutes, the parliament � a symbol of Milosevic's autocratic
rule � was set on fire and looted. The autocratic leader's dreaded
policemen were in disarray. They fled or tossed away shields and batons
to surrender to the demonstrators.

"He's finished!'' read a wrinkled opposition banner left dangling on the
assembly's doors.

Milosevic had called Yugoslav presidential and parliamentary elections
for Sept. 24, feeling it was his best bet to refresh his power before
another harsh winter with no heating and a lack of staple goods. He also
was counting on riding anti-Western sentiments stirred up by last year's
78-day NATO bombing.

Milosevic and his neo-communist cronies were brimming with confidence.
"We'll beat them 100-0,'' predicted Ivan Markovic, one of Milosevic's
closest allies.
But by early September, Milosevic was trailing badly in the polls behind
a stiff, unpolished law professor named Vojislav Kostunica. Milosevic
dismissed the results as "enemy'' propaganda financed by the West.

But when his Socialist did their own poll, revealing an even worse
shortfall for Milosevic, he threw a pollster out of his presidential
office in the heavily protected Dedinje district.

"You are lying,'' he shouted, according to sources close to the former
president. He ordered criminal charges to be filed against the
opposition polling companies, saying they were misinforming the public.
Milosevic was privately in panic by late September. He turned for help
to his Marxist wife, Mirjana Markovic, using her for what she does best:
launch merciless verbal attacks against perceived foes of Yugoslavia.

Milosevic, too, hit the road. At one rally in Montenegro, Serbia's
smaller partner in the two-republic Yugoslav federation, Milosevic
lashed out at his opponents, calling them "rats and hyenas.''
Serbian TV and the Politika daily newspaper � his chief pillars of
propaganda � inflated the number of those who took part in poorly
attended rallies.

The Vecernje Novosti daily carried a front-page photo from the
Montenegro rally, merging several pictures to make the crowd look huge.
The trick was so obvious it was mocked in public.

Milosevic's wife called the elections "a matter of life and death.'' But
according to party sources who spoke on condition of anonymity, she also
tried to dispel fears among party officials, saying: "The winner will be
the one who counts the vote and not the one who wins.''

On election night, Milosevic spokesman Nikola Sainovic was the messenger
bearing bad news.

He rushed to the president's White Palace in Dedinje to tell him that
Kostunica appeared to be surging toward an outright victory. Milosevic
reacted with fury, grabbing Sainovic by his mustache and telling him to
go and reverse the results, Socialist party sources said.

The Milosevic-controlled election commission is accused of shaving off
just enough votes from Kostunica to justify calling a run-off. Kostunica
refused the second round, saying new balloting would give the
beleaguered Milosevic enough time to regroup, cheat even more and try to
steal victory.

With Milosevic unlikely to concede the clear defeat and step down,
opposition leaders forged a plan that included widespread civil
disobedience and possible use of force. Massive strikes and road
blockades, unseen in Yugoslavia's 55-year history, spread throughout the
country.

On Oct. 2, in a last-ditch attempt to stem the tide, Milosevic used a
televised address to plead with Serbs to rally behind him, saying the
country would break apart and become a Western colony if he were not in
charge.

He later summoned his secret service chief, Rade Markovic, and another
close ally, army chief of staff Gen. Nebojsa Pavkovic, for a crisis
meeting. Milosevic urged them to prepare a crackdown against his
opponents, a source at the meeting said. But they told him there was a
simmering mutiny within the police and army and that officers were
likely to switch sides in case of an intervention, sources said.

"Milosevic looked like he was going to die,'' one source said. "And Mira
(Markovic) went into hysterics. Doctors had to give her a tranquilizer
injection.''
In Cacak, an opposition stronghold in the industrial belt south of
Belgrade, Mayor Velimir Ilic gathered a group of radicals including
known local gangsters, karate experts and a few former policemen. They
forged a plan to be put into effect in case Milosevic refused to step
down by their deadline: 3 p.m. on Oct. 5.

That morning, with Milosevic still clinging to power, they packed up a
front-end loader and drove to Belgrade. During the 60-mile drive to the
capital, the Cacak crowd swelled to more than 10,000. Nothing stood in
their way. They people pushed aside four police roadblocks � including
one with trucks loaded with sand � and marched to the front of the
parliament building.

"Everything was planned,'' Ilic said. "We said we won't return to Cacak
until Milosevic was gone. And why hide it? Many of our men were armed
and they knew exactly what they were doing.''
Ilic said the takeover plan included the onslaughts that eventually
materialized at the parliament, the state broadcasting headquarters and
the Politika newspaper.

At the TV headquarters, a front-end loader plowed down the doors and the
crowd streamed in. Several well-known reporters were severely beaten by
the vengeful crowd as payback for years of feeding the public the warped
Milosevic version of reality. At parliament, members of the crowd who
surged past the police cordon took over the building. Fires broke out
inside as protesters trashed offices, hurling pictures of Milosevic
supporters out the windows.

Having been virtually deserted by top allies and fearing reprisals,
Milosevic and his wife fled their usual residence and went into hiding
in another house in Dedinje.

On Friday, a day after the downtown rampage, Milosevic finally conceded
the electoral defeat. The once-formidable Yugoslav president looked like
a shadow of his former self.

"I intend to rest a bit and spend some more time with my family and
especially with my grandson, Marko, and after that to help my party gain
force and contribute to future prosperity,'' he said in a televised
address.

Many weren't ready to let it go at that.
"Milosevic and his wife should hang,'' exclaimed student Miroslav
Jankovic during the carnival-like celebration, which stretched well into
Friday before jubilation turned to happy exhaustion. "Only then we'll be
certain they won't torment us again.''

EDITORS NOTE: Dusan Stojanovic has covered all four Balkan wars
triggered by Milosevic and uprisings in neighboring Romania and
Bulgaria.
_______________________________
Tensions rise as Milosevic faces defeat
US navy sends reinforcements to Adriatic ahead of poll
Special report: Serbia
Jonathan Steele
Thursday September 21, 2000
The Guardian

The Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, flew to an army base in
Montenegro yesterday to denounce his opponents as "rabbits, rats and
even hyenas" and warn the west not to interfere in elections on Sunday,
which the opinion polls indicate that he cannot win.

Scores of Mr Milosevic's critics have been detained and with tension
rising the chief opposition candidate, Vojislav Kostunica, has warned
that the president could use fraud to stay in power. Western governments
fear he will use the army to crush protests if he is declared the
winner. A US aircraft carrier is being sent to the Adriatic.

It was Mr Milosevic's first visit to Montenegro - which with Serbia
makes up Yugoslavia - since he became federal president three years ago.
His helicopter brought him to the rally near the town of Berane, within
15 miles of Kosovo, where Nato-led troops could have arrested him on war
crimes charges brought by the Hague tribunal last year.

The republic of Montenegro is deeply divided and its pro-western
government, led by Milo Djukanovic, is boycotting the Yugoslav election.
A former Serbian information minister, Aleksandar Tijanic, warned that
Mr Milosevic was preparing to arrest the Montenegrin president.
Mr Djukanovic said last night that Montenegro would defend itself if Mr
Milosevic provoked a military clash.

Speaking to Russian television, he said: "If Milosevic decides to
provoke a military conflict with Montenegro, we would have no choice but
to defend our freedom."

A US navy spokeswoman confirmed yesterday that the aircraft carrier
George Washington would arrive in the Adriatic from the Persian Gulf on
about September 30. "This is much the normal tour of duty," the
spokeswoman said. "There hasn't been a carrier in the Adriatic for about
three or four months and the George Washington is on its way back to the
Atlantic."

Mr Milosevic yesterday told a crowd of 10,000 supporters bussed in from
nearby towns: "Our country is the focus of much attention from the
world's strongest nations, as if mankind has no other worries but how
... Serbs and Montenegrins will govern their joint state." Many in the
crowd shouted "Slobo, Slobo" and "We are all Yugoslavia".

He has clamped down on the independent media and ordered police to
confiscate computers and other material from Serbian election monitoring
groups. Under the law, independent observers have no right to enter
polling stations or attend the count.

Despite the pressures, the opposition has done remarkably well by
uniting behind Mr Kostunica, a Belgrade lawyer, Only the maverick
Serbian Renewal Movement is running a separate candidate. An opinion
poll by the Belgrade-based Strategic Marketing agency gave Mr Kostunica
32.5% of the vote to Mr Milosevic's 26.6%. The Centre for Policy Studies
gave Mr Kostunica 41% to Mr Milosevic's 20%.

Mr Milosevic has support in rural areas and has manipulated the campaign
through control of state television. State controls on the price of
staple goods have also cushioned the realities of a weak economy. But
years of war and corruption at the top have disillusioned many urban
voters.

Warning of vote rigging, Mr Kostunica told a rally at the weekend: "They
are bullies, liars and thieves and have stolen years of our lives and
dignity. Now they are preparing to steal the elections".

Mr Milosevic could cheat by falsifying votes from Kosovo. The UN has
allowed the poll to go ahead there but will not be running or
supervising it. In the last Serbian presidential elections as many as
200,000 Albanians supposedly voted for Mr Milosevic's right-hand man.
Because of the boycott in Montenegro, Mr Milosevic can also steal votes
which are cast in army camps and town halls run by the pro-Belgrade
party.

The EU has offered to lift sanctions if the election "leads to
democratic change". The wording was chosen with care as the Yugoslav
constitution is so ambiguous it could allow Mr Milosevic to serve out
his term until next July, even if the opposition wins. But most
observers believe he is more likely simply to declare victory and hope
to ride out - or shoot out - any protests.










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