Milosevic death adds new "unknown"
in EU equation
Mon Mar 13, 2006 10:21 AM ET
Mon Mar 13, 2006 10:21 AM ET
By Mark
John
EU officials are quietly
relieved that the death of the war crimes indictee in a United Nations tribunal
cell has not so far stirred up a wave of nationalist sentiment in
Serbia that could turn popular
opinion against the bloc.
But they recognize it
could complicate efforts to get other indictees such as Bosnian Serb general
Ratko Mladic to the Hague tribunal, and could harm efforts to convince Serbs
that the EU seriously sees a future for them within the
bloc.
"We are all hoping that
this shows Serbia has moved on. But it is a bit
of a dangerous situation given all the other factors," said Gergana Noutcheva at
the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels .
Noutcheva said Milosevic's
death was a complicating factor at a time of high pressure for Belgrade , embroiled in talks on the status of the Kosovo
province and facing a referendum in its state union partner Montenegro on
possible independence.
Apart from a weekend vigil
by 100 diehard and mostly elderly supporters at the Socialist Party office,
there has been little outpouring of emotion for Milosevic, who led
Serbia into war, poverty and
international pariah status.
"The reaction has been
mixed. We suspect it could be closed quite quickly. It could even be cathartic,"
said one EU official, saying Brussels hoped it would enable Serbs to turn
the page more quickly on the Bosnian wars of the 1990s.
"We must hope Milosevic
will be quietly forgotten," echoed Croatia 's pro-EU daily Jutarnji List,
fearing that Milosevic's death might stir up unwelcome memories in the
region.
WORST-CASE
SCENARIO
EU foreign ministers
meeting in the Austrian city of Salzburg on
Saturday insisted Milosevic's death did not alter their demand that Belgrade arrest and hand
over Mladic by the end of this month or risk derailing talks on closer EU
ties.
Many said Milosevic's
death before the end of his trial had cheated the families of Bosnian war
victims of the satisfaction of seeing justice done, making it more urgent to
bring Mladic and wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic to
trial.
But some EU officials
acknowledged that Milosevic's prison death could make Mladic -- believed to be
enjoying protection from loyalists in the security services -- more reluctant to
hand himself in to the very same tribunal.
News of Milosevic's death
upstaged what the EU intended as a message of reassurance from Salzburg , confirming that EU entry was the "ultimate goal"
for the states of the former Yugoslavia .
Noutcheva said the
worst-case scenario would be nationalist politicians using Milosevic's death to
drum up sentiment against the West and the EU.
While Mladic's transfer
to the Hague remains vital for any progress on
Serbia 's ties with the EU, analysts
say it is time for the bloc to give more
encouragement.
"If this really is the
decisive year for the Balkans, the carrots offered by the EU are extremely
thin," said Aleksandar Mitic, an analyst on south-east Europe and the EU.
Mitic, who also works
for Serbian state news agency Tanjug, said the Salzburg statement would disappoint many in
Serbia with its insistence on the
EU's ability to absorb future members as a proviso to further
enlargement.
The European Stability
Initiative think-tank agreed. "This (Salzburg meeting) was an opportunity to
reassure the region that its European prospects are not slipping into the
distant future. This opportunity was missed," it said in a
report.
Financial help and
promises to make it easier for Serbs to obtain visas to travel to the EU had had
little impact on public opinion so far, Mitic added.
Noutcheva also said it
was time for the EU to reach out to Serbs more, suggesting it was vital that
preliminary talks on a so-called "stabilization and accession agreement" -- a
key rung on the ladder to entry -- were concluded this
year.
"That would be a big
boost (for the pro-EU camp in Serbia ) and it could be done," she
said.
-- by Mark John,
Reuters
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