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<https://www.france24.com/en/20191120-literature-nobel-winner-handke-defends-support-of-serbs>
  


Literature Nobel winner Handke defends support of Serbs


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Issued on: 20/11/2019 - 17:18Modified: 20/11/2019 - 17:16

 

Berlin (AFP)

Austrian Nobel literature prize winner Peter Handke on Wednesday defended his 
vocal support for Serbs in the 1990s wars in the former Yugoslavia, but said he 
"never bowed down" before Slobodan Milosevic.

The Swedish academy's pick last month triggered outrage in the Balkans and 
beyond because of Handke's admiration for the late Serbian strongman.

As well as for his literary works, Handke was widely criticised for speaking at 
the 2006 funeral of Milosevic, who died awaiting trial for genocide, war crimes 
and crimes against humanity.

Speaking to German weekly Die Zeit, Handke said "of course" he had to be at 
Milosevic's funeral in 2006.

"He voted against dissolving Yugoslavia in one of the last ballots. His funeral 
was Yugoslavia's funeral too," Handke said. "Have people forgotten that this 
state was founded in opposition to Hitler's Reich?"

At the same time, Handke said he "not once bowed down before him -- not 
internally, not externally."

One journalist wrote "that I supposedly expressed sympathy for Milosevic. 
Never!" the author told Die Zeit.

The writer was just as unapologetic about his texts, even though he has been 
accused of minimising Serb war crimes in his 1997 book "A Journey to the 
Rivers: Justice for Serbia".

"Not one word I have written about Yugoslavia can be denounced, not a single 
one. It's literature," he said.

Back then, "reporting about Serbia was monotone and one-sided," Handke told Die 
Zeit.

"It was about justice for Serbia. How could Germany recognise Croatia, Slovenia 
and Bosnia-Herzegovina when around a third of people on the territory were 
Orthodox or Muslim Serbs?" Handke said.

"(Serbs) should suddenly be an inferior people in their own country? That had 
to cause a war," he added.

"Why does no one say the West is responsible, why was a peace conference not 
called immediately?"

Earlier this month, Bosnian women from Srebrenica -- site of the worst massacre 
during Yugoslavia's bloody collapse -- protested in the capital Sarajevo 
against Handke's Nobel award.

They said they would return to Stockholm's embassy each week until the prize is 
presented on December 10.

Some 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys were slaughtered at Srebrenica by 
Bosnian Serb forces in July 1995.

The women from the town held up pictures of Handke they said were taken on a 
visit he made to the hamlet less than a year after the killings.

"The Nobel prize for Handke is a vote in support of our humiliation" by 
genocide deniers, they wrote in a letter to the Swedish king and queen that 
they handed to the country's ambassador.

© 2019 AFP

 

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