Ahead of Serbian vote, the pull of Russia is felt

Political motives lay behind the decision of Serbia's second-largest city to
declare Vladimir Putin an 'honorary citizen'

By Andrew Wander | Contributor 

from the January 31, 2008 edition

Pristina, Kosovo - Serbia's drift toward Russia continued ahead of the
country's presidential election with the news that Russian President
Vladimir Putin has been made an honorary citizen of its second-largest city.


The criteria for becoming an honorary citizen of Novi Sad states that the
nominee must have deep personal ties to the city and must have significantly
contributed to its development. But Mr. Putin has not visited Novi Sad while
in office – nor has he made any special contribution to the city. Analysts
say that the honor – which has also been given by a number of other Serbian
towns – was bestowed in an attempt to boost the prospects of the pro-Russian
presidential candidate Tomislav Nikolic ahead of this weekend's election. 

The hard-line nationalist won the first round of voting by a narrow margin
and will face the moderate incumbent, Boris Tadic, in a second round on
Sunday. The vote is being billed as a referendum on Serbia's future. 

Novi Sad's local government is led by Mr. Nikolic's Serbian Radical Party,
which advocates turning its back on European integration in favor of closer
ties with a resurgent Russia. But in the first round of the election, more
voters in the city turned out for pro-Western Mr. Tadic. The decision to
honor Putin is being seen as a bid by the local government to increase
pro-Russian sentiment at a crucial moment. 

Mayor Milorad Mircic of the Radical Party said on Friday that "Putin
contributed to the improvement of Serbian-Russian relations." He went on to
mention a controversial energy deal signed between Moscow and Belgrade last
week as part of the reason that Putin received the honorary citizenship. "We
should be grateful to Putin for his activities aimed at signing an energy
deal between Serbia and Russia," he told the assembly. 

The $2.2 billion deal, completed in Moscow on Friday, handed control of
Serbia's state-owned energy company NIS to the Russian energy giant Gazprom.


The deal also allows Serbian land to be used for the South Stream gas
pipeline, a direct competitor to the US-backed Nabucco pipeline that was
planned to relieve Europe's reliance on Russia for energy. 

If built, the South Stream pipeline would cement the Kremlin's grip on
Europe's gas supplies, prompting fears that Moscow would use its position as
Europe's primary energy supplier for political advantage. 

A confidential Serbian government document obtained by Reuters last week
showed how concerned Washington was with the deal. 

"The US side warned about the political influence Moscow would gain by
controlling energy resources in Serbia and the region, and expressed a
negative assessment about the economic justification of South Stream," said
the minutes of a meeting between top US and Serbian officials in Belgrade. 

Analysts express little doubt that Serbia faces an important choice this
weekend. "There has always been a strong difference of opinion within Serbia
over the direction the country should take," says James Lyon of the
International Crisis Group. "The spectrum of anti-Western political parties
who look toward the east are in the ascendancy at the moment. Putin's
honorary citizenship is obviously connected to the election campaign. He has
no connection with Novi Sad. It's just electioneering." 

Serbia's relations with Russia have strengthened in recent months due to
Moscow's opposition to Kosovo's bid for independence. Russia has refused to
back any resolution at the United Nations Security Council that would make
the breakaway province able to declare independence within the UN framework,
and Putin said last week that "Russia is categorically against a unilateral
declaration of independence" by Kosovo. 

In Serbia, where Kosovo is considered the cradle of Serbian civilization,
this has translated into a major boost for the pro-Russian political
parties, including Nikolic's Radicals. Many Serbs are now looking to Russia
rather than Europe for their future. 

The concern in European capitals over Serbia's recent trajectory became
clear on Monday, when EU foreign ministers hastily agreed upon a package for
Serbia that would set up regular political ties, open up trade, and end visa
restrictions. 

But they fell short of offering Serbia the opportunity to sign a key
premembership accord because of Belgrade's failure to hand over war-crimes
suspects to The Hague. 

"This offer sends a very strong signal to the Serbian people on their
European future which is real and tangible," EU Enlargement Commissioner
Olli Rehn said. 

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