intpolicydigest.org 
<https://intpolicydigest.org/2020/03/29/why-is-montenegro-fighting-the-serbian-orthodox-church/>
  


Why is Montenegro Fighting the Serbian Orthodox Church?


Martin Banks

5-6 minutes

  _____  

Largely unnoticed in the wake of the global coronavirus outbreak and the 
Turkey-Greece refugee crisis, another drama is unfolding in the EU backyard.

Since the beginning of the year, tens of thousands of Montenegrins have been 
rallying across the tiny Adriatic country to protest against a new “religion 
law” signed by the country’s long time ruler Milo Djukanovic on December 29.

The massive protests – of a scale barely seen in the past – have shaken all 
major Montenegro’s cities, including the capital Podgorica, along with Bar, 
Budva, Niksic, Cetinje and many others, and several times have become violent 
with police firing tear gas.

The new controversial religion law gives the government authority over 
properties that religious organizations in the country have been using for at 
least a century and, in particular, take control of hundreds of properties used 
by the Serbian Orthodox Church. More than 70% of Montenegrins declare 
themselves Orthodox and over two-thirds of them follow the Serbian Orthodox 
Church.

So, what could be Djukanovic’s motives to apparently pit himself against over 
half of the country’s population?

The answer becomes clearer if you look at his profile.

He is the longest-serving leader in Europe, in power longer than Vladimir Putin 
in Russia, Alexander Lukashenko in Belarus and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey.

He has managed to stay in power so long by constantly “reinventing” himself and 
changing with the times. In the 1990s, he was a protégé of Yugoslavia’s leader 
Slobodan Milošević. In the early 2000s, he led the separation from Serbia and, 
after gaining independence for Montenegro in 2006, the country became a close 
ally of Russia and got billions of dollars of Russian investments as well as 
millions of Russian tourists who contributed to more than half of the state 
budget revenues. But relations with Russia cooled down since Podgorica joined 
Western sanctions against Moscow in 2014 and then joined NATO in 2017. Now its 
leader is trying to be portrayed as a pro-Western democrat who leads the 
country to join the EU.

Djukanovic has reportedly used various means to stay in power. These tactics 
have, it is claimed, run the gamut from allegations of voter fraud, blackmail, 
demobilizing potential opposition voters, threatening police violence, and, it 
is claimed, outright vote-buying. At least three times on the eve of elections 
there were so-called “attacks on the state” or “coup attempts” that, some have 
claimed, were staged by Djukanovic to keep power. Anti-corruption watchdogs 
believe up to 15 percent of the votes in the October 2016 elections, when his 
party failed to get the majority in the Parliament, may have been fraudulent.

Italy’s anti-mafia unit is also said to have implicated the leader in an 
alleged cigarette-smuggling ring with evidence presented in courts in Italy and 
Switzerland including transcripts from wiretapped conversations. Djukanovic was 
not charged.

Djukanovic, it has to be stressed, has robustly refuted any wrongdoing.

Even so, attacks on independent media and critical voices have become common in 
the country. In 2004, the editor of the opposition newspaper Dan was 
assassinated. In August 2013, investigative journalist Tufik Softic was the 
target of a bombing attack. In December 2013, an explosive device was detonated 
outside the offices of Vijesti, an independent daily in Podgorica. In October 
2015, Jovo Martinovic, a journalist covering Montenegro’s organized crime 
scene, was jailed for fifteen months on trumped-up drug-smuggling charges. In 
May 2018, Olivera Lakić, a journalist reporting on corruption, was shot outside 
her apartment in Podgorica.

Again, Djukanovic denies doing anything wrong but, according to a Global 
Initiative Report, Montenegrin ports Bar, Budva, and Kotor in recent years have 
become a hub for cocaine trafficking from Latin America to Europe with a bloody 
vendetta between Montenegrin drug-smuggling gangs spilling over the country’s 
border to European capitals.

Campaigners say it is clear that if Djukanovic loses power he will have to 
“face justice” in Montenegro and beyond – “and he will do everything to avoid 
it.” He certainly doesn’t want to follow the fate of the former leader of 
neighboring Croatia, Ivo Sanader, who was sentenced for six years in prison for 
corruption.

The only institution left in Montenegro thought capable of posing a serious 
threat to his rule is probably the Serbian Orthodox Church with public opinion 
polls showing that in Montenegro it enjoys by far more trust than the country’s 
president, government, parliament or judiciary.

Djukanovic’s plan was believed to be to turn over church properties with no 
economic value to an uncanonical organization under his control and politically 
weaken the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro. It appears not to have worked 
and he did not expect such massive protests.

One critic said, “Now he will resort to desperate measures to stay in power. 
This will, in turn, provoke an ever-greater confrontation in Montenegro.”

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/084901d60806%2474db8da0%245e92a8e0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to