Serbia: Trouble In Sandzak
  Sunday, 19 September 2010 23:48
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Just as Belgrade gains serious momentum towards EU membership, Bosniaks in
Serbia’s Sandzak (predominately Muslim) area raise tensions. But while the
conflict there claims to be about Bosniak minority rights, in reality it’s
about internal politics and the struggle for power, Igor Jovanovic writes
for ISN Security Watch.

By Igor Jovanovic

When the Turkish national basketball team beat Serbia in the World
Championship semifinal on 11 September, hundreds of young people took to the
streets of Novi Pazar, a town in southwestern Serbia with a majority Bosniak
population, carrying Turkish flags and chanting: “Sandzak [the name of the
old Turkish region that spans territory in Serbia and Montenegro] is not
Serbia” and “This is Turkey.” Although just a few hundred young people came
out onto the streets of Novi Pazar, the event showed that the Belgrade
authorities have reason to be concerned by the events in the region.

What started as a struggle for dominance between rival Bosniak factions in
the region could easily escalate into a crisis that may involve the EU.
Namely, one of the sides in the inter-Bosniak conflict, the Islamic
Community in Serbia, led by chief mufti Muamer Zukorlic, has already urged
the EU to send international monitors to Sandzak to prove, as they put it,
that religious and ethnic discrimination against the Bosniak minority is at
work in the region.

Until last year, the Sandzak municipalities were overshadowed by the
political rivalry between Rasim Ljajic’s Sandzak Democratic Party and
Sulejman Ugljanin’s Party of Democratic Action. Although both are cabinet
ministers, Ljajic and Ugljanin’s supporters often engaged even in physical
clashes for the sake of dominance in Sandzak. The conflict peaked in the
September 2006 local election, when a candidate of Ugljanin’s party was
murdered at a polling station. The Serbian government had never gotten
publicly involved in the conflict and Ljajic and Ugljanin last year reached
agreement on resolving disputes in a peaceful manner, working in the
interest of Sandzak and attracting foreign investment.

Matters deteriorated additionally in February 2009, when a rift appeared in
the Islamic Community, splitting it into two factions - one led by mufti
Zukorlic, which recognizes the supreme authority of the reis in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and the other - headed by reis Adem Zilkic, which claims
that the Muslims in Serbia should not fall under Bosnian authority, but
should rather have their own administrative bodies.

Zukorlic accused the Belgrade authorities of favoring the rival faction,
while the Ministry of Religion briefly stated that it could not arbitrate
the dispute between the two communities and called on the Muslims to find
their own way out of this situation. But instead of a solution, supporters
of the two communities went deeper into conflict and fighting for control of
mosques in Sandzak.

This June saw the holding of an election for the Bosniak National Council, a
non-political body with jurisdiction in the field of minority rights. Apart
from the tickets practically backed by Ugljanin and Ljajic, a novelty was
the ticket headed by mufti Zukorlic. Thanks to his statements on the
endangerment of Bosniak rights in Serbia and criticism of rival forces and
their alleged betrayal of Bosniak interests for the sake of a position in
Belgrade, the mufti won 17 out of the 35 council seats.

But no other leader wanted to form a coalition with the mufti, which led to
problems in forming the council. It seemed as though a way out of the
stalemate was found when two representatives from Ljajic’s ticket switched
over to Zukorlic’s camp, but the Human and Minority Rights Ministry then
changed the rules for convening the Bosniak council and announced that could
not be done without a two-thirds majority.

*The shifting nature of the conflict*

From that moment on, the conflict within Bosniak circles turned into
Zukorlic’s conflict with the Belgrade authorities, in which the mufti claims
that the national and religious rights of Bosniaks in Serbia are in
jeopardy.

Zukorlic’s supporters and police clashed at a protest rally organized by the
Islamic Community in Serbia on 4 September over claims that the Novi Pazar
municipal administration had illegally stripped the community of a piece of
land. Four police officers were injured in the ensuing riots.

Immediately after the incident, Zukorlic called on EU Foreign Security
Policy High Representative Catherine Ashton to send monitors to Sandzak.
Soon afterwards, Zukorlic also called for autonomy for Sandzak. In an
interview with the Montenegrin daily Vijesti, the mufti said Sandzak’s
autonomy would be “an inevitable social process,” adding that “the matter
should be discussed on time” for the sake of the stability of Serbia and
Montenegro.

That demand, however, was met with negative statements in the Bosniak
community in Serbia and Montenegro. Rasim Ljajic’s close aide Meho Omerovic
told ISN Security Watch that the demands for autonomy were “mufti Zukorlic’s
dangerous dreams,” adding that foreign monitors in Sandzak would not see
discrimination against Bosniaks, but rather merely “the fixation and desire
for power of the leader of the Islamic Community in Serbia.”

At the same time, head of the Matica Muslimanska organization in Montenegro
Avdul Kurpejovic said that Zukorlic was “an Islamic extremist.”

“Sandzak does not exist as a political and territorial unit, or as a
geographic entity, but is in fact a creation of the Ottoman Empire that
vanished along with the empire,” Kurpejovic told the Montenegrin media.

However, mufti Zukorlic’s spokesman Samir Tandir told ISN Security Watch
that this was not a nationalist project, but rather the necessity of
additionally protecting Bosniak rights. “The autonomy we are seeking is in
tune with European regionalization standards. I fear that, if we do not get
that status, the only solution will be the arrival of foreign monitors in
Sandzak,” Tandir said.

In response to the remark that other Bosniak parties are dismissing his
demands and taking part in the Serbian government, Tandir said that Ljajic
and Ugljanin had forgotten about Bosniak rights for the sake of “positions
in Belgrade” and could no longer represent the Bosniak community.

Belgrade Faculty of Security professor Zoran Dragisic told the Belgrade
media that the situation in Sandzak and the conflict between the two Islamic
communities was a serious problem for the state and pointed out that the
government must not ignore the need to solve that problem.

"That, in any case, is a serious problem, more so since Muslims are not an
insignificant part of the population. It will take a great deal of stately
wisdom to solve the problem,” Dragisic said.

Novi Pazar political analyst Isak Slezovic shares that opinion and says
there is “too much vanity in Sandzak that prevents the Bosniak politicians
from reaching a compromise on their own. I do not think Sandzak can become a
regional problem, but I do believe we will see more local incidents. That is
why the state should get involved in the whole thing,” Slezovic told ISN
Security Watch.

Tandir says that, for the time being, mufti Zukorlic has not received an
invitation for talks with Belgrade officials, but points out that “informal
contacts have been established,” about which he cannot be more specific at
the moment. “I hope that talks with state officials will be held soon,
because they are the ones who should calm tensions in Sandzak. Otherwise, I
am afraid there will be more incidents,” Tandir said.

Since the worsening of the situation in Sandzak, the opposition Democratic
Party of Serbia - led by former prime minister Vojislav Kostunica - has
urged the government to immediately start resolving the issue, before
Sandzak turns into a new Kosovo problem.

The government has made no statements yet regarding the events in Sandzak.
Only Labor Minister Rasim Ljajic said the region should not be compared with
the Kosovo crisis. “The Kosovo crisis cannot repeat in Sandzak, because
there is no potential for that there,” Ljajic told Serbian state TV RTS. He
accused Zukorlic of “being happy with any kind of confrontation,” but added
that “under the given circumstances, a moderate and restrained policy is the
only sort that can yield results in the long term.”

However, the fact that restraint is one of the least used terms in the
Balkans does not run in Ljajic’s favor. If that happens in Sandzak, the
Belgrade authorities will have another security challenge in the region,
which will only increase with the further delay of Belgrade’s European
integration.

*Igor Jovanovic* is ISN Security Watch's senior correspondent in Serbia and
Kosovo. He is based in Belgrade.


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