Serbs Regret Years Lost After Milosevic

By Ellie Tzortzi 

Reuters 

BELGRADE, Serbia -- On the anniversary of the street revolution that toppled
Slobodan Milosevic, Serbs are reflecting with little fanfare and much
soul-searching on five years of lost opportunities and promises of progress
still unfulfilled. 

There was no flag-waving for the day in October 2000 when thousands stormed
parliament after a wave of strikes, forcing the autocratic Milosevic to
concede his election defeat at the hands of Vojislav Kostunica. 

The country still faces anguish over the possible loss of Montenegro and
Kosovo, its treatment of war crimes fugitives, the slow pace of accession to
the European Union, and economic prospects that are uncertain at best. 

Oct. 5 was "the year zero," said Vladeta Jankovic, an aide to Kostunica, who
is now prime minister. "Five years on we are still far from the smooth
waters we promised the people then." 

The talk then was of revolution, liberation and a new dawn for a nation that
had been isolated for a decade as villain of the bloody wars that marked the
breakup of Yugoslavia. 

"Milosevic was afraid of us. We were afraid of the army and the police,"
said Serb President Boris Tadic, then an opposition backbencher. "The police
were afraid of the army, the army was afraid of the police. With fear
everywhere, and at the same time courage everywhere, October 5th came
about." 

  
Five years on, Serbia faces divorce from Montenegro, if its old ally votes
for independence next spring. It may also lose its cherished Kosovo, if the
province also becomes independent in 2006. 

Their potential loss increases the sense of disappointment. "We could have
done more," said the daily Blic. 

Serbia returned slowly to the international fold after Milosevic was ousted.
Accepted back into the United Nations and international financial bodies,
the country this week won EU approval to start the long membership process. 

Serbs believe that had it not been for Milosevic, extreme nationalism and
wars, their country could have been an EU member state far sooner than
former Soviet satellites now in the Union. 

But they also know the "revolution" was far from complete. Those opposed to
it are held responsible for assassinating Serbia's first post-communist
prime minister, Zoran Djindjic, in March 2003, plunging the nation into
crisis. 

Milosevic's "network of crime" was not dismantled, says Foreign Minister Vuk
Draskovic, himself the target of an assassination bid. He says Milosevic
cronies still wield power. 

Former Djindjic deputy Cedomir Jovanovic says Serbs were ready for sweeping
change in 2000 but that politicians faltered. "With each anniversary, we are
really getting away from what was the quality of that day," he said. 

The current government is a fragile coalition of moderate nationalists,
royalists and pro-Western technocrats which relies on Milosevic's weakened
Socialists for support in parliament. 

The economy suffers from uncertainty. Growth rates are strong, but the taint
of graft, murky privatizations, watered-down reform and red tape has kept
major foreign investors away. 

Serbia still does not easily face up to its aggressor role in the wars of
the 1990s. It has buckled to Western pressure over the past 12 months,
organizing the voluntary surrenders of over a dozen fugitives, but Belgrade
still must meet the demand by Hague prosecutor Carla del Ponte for the
arrest of Ratko Mladic, accused of genocide in Bosnia.


http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2005/10/07/253.html









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