rferl.org <https://www.rferl.org/a/30806995.html>  


Even 'Proud Friend' Serbia Is Silent As EU's Balkan Aspirants Cautious About 
Belarus


Iva Martinovic

9-12 minutes

  _____  

As Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka has tried to beat back a wave of 
public anger over the mishandling of what critics say is his latest rigged 
election, voices have been raised all over Europe against the violence against 
protesters.

"The people of Belarus want change. And they want it now," European Commission 
President Ursula von der Leyen declared on August 19, midway through the second 
week of unrest in Minsk and other cities.

Her statement followed a meeting with EU officials and European Council 
President Charles Michel at which political support and millions of euros were 
pledged to help Belarusians who had been fired, detained, and/or beaten for 
demonstrating peacefully.

It also expressed an EU willingness "to accompany peaceful democratic 
transition of power in Belarus."

It is too early to say how actively neighboring Russia and the West will 
ultimately respond to the Belarusians' unprecedentedly blunt calls for 
democratic change in one of the least reformed countries in the post-Soviet 
world.

And neither is likely to be looking for ideas from the gaggle of Yugoslav 
successor states eagerly seeking EU membership.

But even as official abuses have seemingly mounted against the democratic 
groundswell in Belarus, governments in the Balkans -- a region with its own 
recent and dramatic experiences with democratic reform -- have been 
uncharacteristically silent.

Only the caretaker government of North Macedonia has expressly taken sides, 
emphatically supporting Brussels' looming sanctions to punish five-term 
President Lukashenka and his regime for its latest crackdown after allegations 
of rigging the presidential election.

The responses of aspiring Balkan power Serbia and neighbors Bosnia-Herzegovina, 
Kosovo, and Montenegro have all been more muted -- possibly wary of provoking 
Belarus's "union state" partner, Russia, which has especially close relations 
with Belgrade.

But publicly cozying up to Lukashenka, whose largely coerced domestic support 
is badly dented and whose support abroad seems up in the air, would be highly 
risky, according to Florian Bieber, author of the recent book, The Rise Of 
Authoritarianism In The Western Balkans.

"It is not a surprise that the [Western Balkan] leaders are silent, especially 
[Serbian President Aleksandar] Vucic, as aligning themselves too much with 
Lukashenka is a high-risk strategy...[that] would put them at odds with the 
EU…as even signals from Russia are ambivalent," Bieber told RFE/RL.

Crickets In Belgrade

The dilemma over how to respond publicly to the Belarusian protests is the 
thorniest for Serbia, which only a month ago cracked down on its own 
postelection protests and whose president eagerly courted Lukashenka as 
recently as last month.

Serbia's close ties with Moscow have been a source of Western concern as 
critics accuse Vucic of chipping away at Serbian institutions, free media, and 
the rule of law instead of embracing EU values.

Standing alongside Vucic in Belgrade in December, Lukashenka boasted that the 
Serbian and Belarusian people were "united by centuries-old ties and common 
visions of the future."

"We are proud of our Belarusian friends," Vucic gushed to Belarusian state TV 
<https://eng.belta.by/politics/view/serbia-president-we-are-proud-of-our-belarusian-friends-126451-2019/>
 . 

Since then, partly boycotted elections in June gave Vucic's Progressive Party 
and its allies a supermajority and contributed to opposition protests and a 
crackdown in Serbia.

Vucic has also doubled down on his strategy of trying to play the European 
Union off diplomatically against less-democratic rival Russia and communist 
China without endangering Belgrade's hopes of early EU membership.

But Vucic held off on any congratulatory message to the Belarusian president 
and has avoided mention of the Minsk trip he promised to take soon after the 
election.

Moscow's somewhat cautious approach so far to the Belarusian unrest -- amid 
Western fears that Russia could try to swallow up its smaller neighbor -- 
appears to have left Belgrade guessing.

Bieber noted that swaths of Serbia's opposition are potentially hamstrung, too, 
since some of the governing national populists' biggest critics are broadly 
pro-Russian parties.

Belgrade's situation was complicated by images 
<https://twitter.com/franakviacorka/status/1294638612676575232>  -- 
subsequently dismissed by Serbian officials as old or misleadingly interpreted 
-- purporting to show Serbian troops present in Belarus seemingly in support of 
local security measures on election day and during the unrest.

Not All Quiet Within Serbia

A number of nongovernmental groups, activists, and a smallish opposition party 
in Serbia have not shied away from expressing support for Belarusian protesters.

The president of the pro-EU New Party, Uros Elekovic, signed onto a joint 
statement opposing "the trampling upon of democratic principles, freedom of 
speech, and freedom of the media" and urging pressure on Belarusian officials 
"responsible for the unprecedented repression" there.



Serbian youth activists lay flowers in front of the entrance to the Belarusian 
Embassy in Belgrade on August 14 as an expression of support for the citizens 
of Belarus. 

Activists from the Youth Initiative for Human Rights (YIHR) in Belgrade, 
meanwhile, laid flowers at the entrance to the Belarusian Embassy. On August 14 
they said "there is no friendship" with Lukashenka, whom they accused of 
"sacrificing the lives and freedoms of citizens in order to stay in power 
forever."

The YIHR urged Vucic and Prime Minister Ana Brnabic to cancel joint military 
exercises with Belarus and "join the international initiative, led by the 
European Union and its member states, to find a democratic, peaceful path out 
of the crisis brought on by fraud in the Belarusian election results."

If protests persist and Lukashenka's position seems more tenuous despite his 
increasingly desperate appeals for help from Moscow, any potential benefits for 
Balkan leaders of speaking out in support of him could evaporate altogether.

Kosovo Recognition?

With relatively meager trade and energy ties between Belarus and the Western 
Balkans, much of their interactions are transactional: a few donated MiG-29s 
here, some visa-free entry there.

But one of Belgrade's persistent foreign-policy priorities has been its legal 
and diplomatic opposition to the 2008 declaration of sovereignty by Kosovo, its 
former autonomous province.

"The behavior of the Serbian authorities with respect to Lukashenko is not 
illogical, keeping in mind long-term cooperation and mutual support and 
understanding, especially keeping in mind that Serbian diplomacy is based on 
taking care not to criticize countries that support Serbia's policy towards 
Kosovo," Bojan Stojanovic, of the Belgrade Center for Human Rights, told 
RFE/RL's Balkan Service.

His center posted a message on Instagram hailing the "struggle and strength of 
the youth" in Belarus in pursuit of "truth, goodness, and true values."

The specter of any of the non-Baltic former Soviet republics recognizing 
Kosovo's independence is likely to send shivers down Vucic's spine.

"One of the things that Belgrade will be interested to know is whether, if 
[Lukashenka] falls, his successor might reorient the country's foreign policy 
to the West and whether this could lead to the recognition of Kosovo," James 
Ker-Lindsay told RFE/RL.

Such a shift might be a long shot even if Lukashenka were pushed out quickly, 
as Belarus's opposition has seemingly coalesced around domestic problems rather 
than the country's international orientation.

"It might not be the first thing on their mind [in Belgrade], but they will be 
thinking about it," said Ker-Lindsay.

Mostly Quiet, But With Contrasts

North Macedonia is said to be among the furthest along of the Balkans' EU 
candidate states in implementing the bloc's regulations, and Macedonians are 
fresh off July 15 elections that appeared to consolidate their country's 
Western trajectory.



North Macedonia's foreign minister, Nikola Dimitrov. (file photo) 

North Macedonia's foreign minister, Nikola Dimitrov, tweeted praise  
<https://twitter.com/Dimitrov_Nikola/status/1294391142696529927> for 
Belarusians' "resolve for democratic change" that made them "the heroes of 
Europe today." He also welcomed the preparation of sanctions against 
Lukashenka's regime to punish "the violence, arbitrary arrests, and election 
fraud."

In Bosnia-Herzegovina, the separatist Serbian member of that country's 
tripartite presidency, Milorad Dodik, quickly issued his "warmest 
congratulations" to Lukashenka and wishes for "continuing cooperation with you 
bilaterally and multilaterally" to "strengthen friendly and fraternal relations 
between our peoples."

But both the full Bosnian Presidency that's responsible for the ethnically 
splintered country's foreign policy and its Foreign Ministry greeted the 
official Belarusian announcement that Lukashenka had won around 80 percent of 
the vote with silence.

In Montenegro, another EU candidate country with a significant pro-Russian 
opposition, officials have said they are following "with particular attention 
the relevant information on the excessive use of force against peaceful 
protesters" in Belarus, as well as restrictions on media and free expression. 
They have stopped short, however, of condemning Lukashenka's actions or 
explicitly supporting the EU's sanctions effort.

The government in Kosovo, Europe's newest state, has been mum on Belarus.

Its attention is focused more squarely on its own efforts to win recognition 
from Serbia and international bodies while absorbing the recent blow when 
powerful President Hashim Thaci was named in an indictment for alleged war 
crimes that include murder and torture dating back to Kosovo's war for 
independence in 1998-99.

 

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