http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20080512/107190669.html

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AGENCY NOVOSTI

Serbia again in for parliamentary troubles
12/05/2008 21:21

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Andrei
Fedyashin) - A pre-term parliamentary election did not bring stability to
Serbia. The country has not seen stability, for that matter, ever since
Milosevic's regime was overthrown and multiparty democracy was put in place.
No party has stayed in power longer than a year.

Seven parliaments have been swept off by big and small crises since 2000.
Now, the eighth Skupstina will have a hard time forming a government. No
party will have a large enough majority necessary for easy rule. That was
clear even before the elections, and became even clearer on the evening of
the election day. The final official figures will be announced no later than
May 15.

The situation is inevitable in a country harassed by problems brewing inside
and outside its borders for over ten years. The Kosovo situation has further
exacerbated the split into pro-Westerners and nationalists. Serbian
instability has a long history since instability in the Balkans is usually
whipped up deliberately.

Every party had a chance to get seats in parliament, and none won an
overwhelming majority, according to preliminary figures. President Boris
Tadic's Coalition for a European Serbia received 38.7% of the vote and 102
seats; Tomislav Nikolic's Serbian Radical Party 29.2% with 77 seats, at
most; former Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica's bloc of the Democratic and
New Serbia parties (the latter led by Velimir Ilic) has 11.3% with a
tentative 30 seats; Socialists (Milosevic's former party), led by Ivica
Dadic, 7.6% and up to 20 seats; and the Liberal Democrats-the only party
approving the secession of Kosovo-will have 14 seats, at the most. Ethnic
minority parties bring up the rear with a total of 7 seats.

Tadic is claiming victory, and says he has started talks on a coalition
Cabinet. This is wishful thinking since he is desperately short of allies.
Resolute pro-Westerners of the Liberal Democratic Party are his only
reliable partners at the moment. The two will not have a majority in the
parliament of 250 members. Radical leader Nikolic is also determined to form
the government. If he joins hands with Kostunica's Democrats and Ilic's
Socialists, they will have a flimsy but real majority of 127, at the least.

Meanwhile, almost all European Union leaders have congratulated President
Tadic. It is hard to find a more striking instance of EU intervention in any
other European election campaign. This intervention, politely described as
"stimulation," did a lot for Tadic.

The EU and Serbia signed a Stabilization and Association Agreement (SAA)
less than two weeks before the parliamentary elections. It was regarded as
an initial step toward talks on Serbia joining the EU. Serbia got the
promise of simplified visa regulations, and European Commission Vice
President Jacques Barrot said a week before the elections that Serbia's
isolation had finally ended. No one has ever mentioned a proviso for Serbian
membership in the EU-the government must assist the Hague Tribunal in
finding the war criminals who are still at large. This mainly refers to the
arrest and extradition of Bosnian Serb leader General Radko Mladic, who
still remains an idol to many Serbs.

Hearty support of Tadic makes other Balkan EU applicants envious. Macedonia,
for one, adapted its legislation, domestic policy, economy, trade, finance
and everything else to European standards a fairly long time ago. Now, it
says it is baffled-Serbia has not even done 10% of what it has achieved, but
is now the surest next EU candidate.

All this is hardly fair play, but then, the EU has a point. It has the right
to choose its new members. Besides, there was something worse in the
elections-an anti-Russian undercurrent.

President Tadic and the EU leadership both openly referred to the elections
as not only a Serbian domestic event but also a symbolic crossroads: will
Serbia choose a future with the EU or regress as Russia's satellite?
Meanwhile, an overwhelming majority of Serbs have long made their choice in
favor of the EU. Even despite the Serbian saying "God in heaven and Russia
on Earth," they see that Moscow cannot grant them the benefits offered by
Brussels. All Serbian political parties want their country to join the
EU-and Russia has no objections.

Still, we cannot be sure that none other than Tadic will form the new
Cabinet. The law stipulates a 90-day deadline after the first parliamentary
meeting for forming the government. The meeting must be held no later than
June 15, so Serbs may get a new government as late as September, especially
considering that the Balkans do everything positive at snail's pace, and
create problems in everything. Only conflicts flare up in no time at all in
that part of the world.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

Reply via email to