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LBO-Talk October 2000: MILOSEVIC ASYLUM RUMOURS /JUL PLOTTED PO
MILOSEVIC ASYLUM RUMOURS /JUL PLOTTED POLL COUP



Subject: MILOSEVIC ASYLUM RUMOURS /JUL PLOTTED POLL COUP
From: Michael Pugliese ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Date: Sun Dec 31 2000 - 13:38:58 EST
IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 179, September 29, 2000
http://www.iwpr.net

MILOSEVIC ASYLUM RUMOURS

There's growing speculation that the Yugoslav president is planning to flee
the country.

By Zeljko Cvijanovic in Belgrade

Speculation that Slobodan Milosevic is preparing to flee the country was
fuelled on Wednesday when his wife Mira Markovic made a flying visit to
Moscow.

A diplomatic source in Moscow confirmed that Markovic was welcomed at the
airport by the president's brother, Yugoslav ambassador to Moscow Borislav
Milosevic. "It was a private visit and I can only say that Mrs Markovic did
not meet any government officials," another source told IWPR.

In Belgrade, the official media did not report on the trip and speculation
that Markovic was seeking to negotiate asylum for herself and her family was
neither confirmed nor denied.

Meanwhile, the Podgorica daily Vijesti reported that Markovic had suffered a
nervous breakdown which prompted her speedy return to Belgrade. Sources
within Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia, SPS, denied this, claiming the
president's wife had suffered "minor heart problems".

Milosevic's own conduct on Wednesday, however, offered no hints that he
might be preparing to seek asylum. He held two meetings, one for the
political and regional leadership of the SPS, another with the top officials
of the SPS, the United Yugoslav Left, JUL, and the Montenegrin Socialist
Peoples Party, SNP, headed by the Yugoslav prime minister, Momir Bulatovic.

An SPS source who attended one of the meetings says Milosevic managed to
"rally the shaken ranks of his party officials." The next day he ordered a
second round of voting in the presidential elections - and that evening
state television showed pictures of Milosevic and his officials in very good
humour.

The same source claims that SPS general secretary Gorica Gajovic told
officials that the president had been "disgusted" by television pictures of
a funereal-looking JUL leadership from the day before.

"The president gave the impression of being resolute and strong. I believe
that we stemmed any defections and there will no crises in the party before
the second round," the source added, refuting a claim by influential regime
supporter Mladjan Dinkic that many of Milosevic's officials had fled Serbia.

During a closed session of the meeting, Milosevic is said to have dismissed
speculation about a flight abroad as "propagandist nonsense". However, he
could not deny meeting Greek Foreign Minister Carlos Papoulias in Belgrade
last Monday.

IWPR's SPS source claims that two weeks before the elections, Papoulias
brought a proposal for possible political asylum - dubbed the Greek-Russian
offer. Milosevic was told that if he stepped down peacefully, asylum would
be arranged in Russia or another former Soviet state - a plan allegedly
agreed by most of the European Union.

The job of persuading the United States to accept the arrangement would rest
with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the source said. But Milosevic flatly
refused the offer, claiming he would win the elections with a wide margin.
Papoulias, who is considered to be the only Western politician Milosevic
trusts, informed him that the offer would still hold after the elections
"but not for long", the source added.

Numerous media reported on Monday that a meeting between Putin and German
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was devoted to the Yugoslav elections and to
seeking a way out for Milosevic. Moscow officially denied that asylum was
discussed at the meeting, but on Wednesday German minister Ludvig Folmer
publicly endorsed an idea from former Yugoslav prime minister Milan Panic,
that Russia should grant Milosevic asylum. "Granting Milosevic asylum seems
more reasonable that risking a civil war," he said.

IWPR's diplomatic source in Russia claims that while unenthusiastic about
the prospect of granting Milosevic refuge in Russia, Putin is now
considering it as a last resort, adding without much conviction that "an
ideal scenario for the Russians would be Kostunica as FRY President and
Milosevic as Prime Minster."

The same idea was proposed on Thursday by the official head of JUL and close
confidante of Mira Markovic, Ljubisa Ristic. "The Prime Minister wields the
real power in the FRY, which is why we shall demand that Milosevic is Prime
Minister. Even if the presidential function goes to Kostunica, Milosevic
will be Prime Minister," he told the Italian newspaper Manifesto, claiming
such an arrangement would satisfy the West which wants to see Milosevic step
down from the presidency "at any cost".

Former EU peace negotiator Lord David Owen proposes that Milosevic should
acknowledge Kostunica's victory, and that the latter should name him as
ambassador to Beijing, where he would enjoy the security of the Chinese
authorities. Although unrealistic, Owen's idea is astute as it incorporates
political office and international guarantees, which Milosevic considers his
best protection.

Whatever the president's tactics are, the course of the next ten days
largely depends on the opposition. The first question is whether they will
manage to organise mass protests and a general strike. If they do, will
Milosevic refrain from using violence until the second round of the
elections, scheduled for October 8.

He probably will, as he believes that will place Kostunica in a difficult
dilemma - he can either oppose the second round, thereby counting himself
out of the game, or he can agree to take part, which he would probably find
humiliating. Milosevic is thought to believe that this dilemma has created
space for negotiation with the opposition, in which the SPS can demand a
share of power and a political office for the president.

If Milosevic doesn't win the second round or strike a compromise in which he
gains political office, the remaining options are the use of naked force or
exile. Certainly asylum has occupied the minds of Milosevic and his circle
for at least a year, but it is not his chief concern at the moment.

Milosevic is in a corner, but he is not finished yet.

Zeljko Cvijanovic is a regular IWPR contributor

JUL PLOTTED POLL COUP

JUL officials called on Milosevic to annul the opposition's electoral
victory

Zdravko Petrovic in Belgrade

Slobodan Milosevic's ruling coalition partner the United Yugoslav Left, JUL,
urged to him to declare victory "at all costs" after the first round of
voting in the presidential elections.

The proposal was the most radical of three plans put to Milosevic by rival
factions in the governing alliance, as news of his electoral demise began to
emerge earlier this week.

The president rejected the JUL suggestion in favour of a proposal to call
for a second round of voting in the Yugoslav leadership ballot. This after
admitting that his rival Vojislav Kostunica got more votes than him in the
first round of voting.

Milosevic and his cohorts are said to have been shocked by the scale of
their electoral defeat. The president was so angered by the results that he
is reported to have thrown the head of his election team, Nikola Sainovic,
out of his office.

"Although the chief was prepared for some losses, I am sure he didn't
envisage such a bad performance, " said a member of the election team.

Milosevic's demise left him with little room for manoeuvre. Over the last
fews days, the lights at the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia, SPS,
headquarters were on round-the-lock as officials frantically deliberated
over how to respond to the poll catastrophe.

Members of the ruling coalition were deeply divided on the government's
response to the ballot results. In addition to the JUL plan, a small SPS
grouping, remarkably, suggested accepting the opposition victory. It was
Milosevic's inner circle which pushed for a second round of voting.

The JUL officials urged Milosevic to ignore the will of the people and
declare electoral victory "at all cost" . This implied introducing emergency
measures, provoking unrest and using force to restore order.

The most enthusiastic advocates of this plan were corrupt federal
officials.This group of around three hundred people have grown rich over the
last decade or so by being loyal servants of Milosevic and his wife, JUL
leader, Mira Markovic.

During the government's aggressive pre-election campaign, the group called
on the people to choose between Milosevic's "forces for development" and the
opposition's "NATO parties bent on destroying the country".

There was a strong possibility that Milosevic would opt for the JUL plan.
Under threat from The Hague war crimes tribunal and abandoned by his
extremist ally Vojislav Sesjl, the Yugoslav leader is becoming increasingly
isolated. But he is known to be an unscrupulous fighter who would not easily
relinquish his grip on power.

The army and the police have not been much in evidence during the elections,
but only because they've yet to receive an order from their chief.

In complete contrast to the JUL plan, a small group of SPS officials argued
that the party's best interests would be served if Milosevic recognised the
opposition victory. Some of those behind the proposal fell out with the
president last year over JUL's growing influence in the ruling coalition.

There was even evidence that SPS municipal committees in the Valjevo region
congratulated opposition representatives after the poll results came
through. "In some ways I'd be quite content if we stepped down. I hope that
Milosevic will also be smart, " said one SPS official from Valjevo.

In the end, Milosevic accepted the advise of his closest party allies to
call a second round of voting. The officials believed this would give them
all breathing space in which to come up with a more considered response to
the election results. From their shocked appearance after the poll, SPS
officials certainly looked as though they needed time to recover from the
debacle.

Zdravko Petrovic is a pseudonym for a Belgrade-based journalist

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