eurasiareview.com 
<https://www.eurasiareview.com/22022022-yet-another-attempt-of-assassination-of-serbia-oped/>
  


Yet Another Attempt Of ‘Assassination Of Serbia?’ – OpEd


IFIMES

11-13 minutes

  _____  

In the Republic of Serbia, regular presidential elections, extraordinary 
parliamentary elections and regular local elections for the capital of Belgrade 
and 12 towns and municipalities are scheduled to take place on 3 April 2022. 

At the parliamentary elections, according to the proportionate system, 250 
representatives of the people will be elected for the Republic of Serbia 
National Assembly.  Around 6.6 million registered voters are entitled to vote. 
On Kosovo, which Serbia still considers its autonomous province, pursuant to 
its current Constitution, the parliamentary elections will be held with the 
assistance of the international community and in the areas where the Serbs 
live. It should not be forgotten that the Serbs have entered Kosovo 
institutions under the condition that they be allowed to vote on Kosovo at all 
elections organized in Serbia. If the Kosovo Serbs are not allowed to vote at 
elections organized in Serbia, Serb political representatives could withdraw 
from Kosovo institutions or Serbs could decide not to participate at the next 
elections on Kosovo. 

According to the current Election Law, the Republic of Serbia constitutes one 
electoral unit. The parliamentary mandates are distributed proportionately to 
the number of votes won. For political parties of ethnic minority do not pass 
the election threshold of 3%, the so-called “natural threshold” will be 
applied. The “natural threshold” is calculated by dividing the number of valid 
votes with the number of representatives, that is 250, for each position in the 
parliament, which depending on the turnout at the election varies between 
12,000 and 16,000 votes. 


Serb opposition did not learn from the mistakes of the Bulgarian opposition


Majority of opposition in Serbia had not participated at the last parliamentary 
elections and therefore could not have participated in the parliamentary life, 
including the decision-making process or monitoring of the work of the 
government and acting as a corrective to the government. Therefore, the work of 
the opposition reminded more of the work of nongovernmental organizations than 
of engagement of political parties. The conduct of opposition parties created 
deep disappointment among citizens, who expect from their respective political 
parties to actively participate in the political life and represent their 
interests. 

The heterogeneous political opposition in Serbia did not create the synergy 
effect, which would have been generated had the opposition parties managed to 
interconnect and unite. Namely, these parties are ideology-wise diametrically 
opposite political parties headed mainly by leaders who already have a 
political history and many of they still have “political mortgage” from their 
previous political engagements. 

Analysts believe that the Serb opposition should have learned from the mistakes 
of the Bulgarian opposition, which was aware that the ideological differences 
among them were too big, so they participated at the elections in “a number of 
columns” and with new faces with no previous “political mortgages”. As a 
result, they were successful in their third attempt and at the third 
extraordinary elections toppled Bojko Borisov’s (GERB) regime.


A lost century and yet another attempt of “assassination of Serbia”?


Serbia recently marked the 218th anniversary of the beginning of First Serbian 
Uprising in 1804, which was a turning point in the creation of a modern Serbian 
state and the adoption of the so-called Sretenje Constitution (1835), which was 
very liberal and progressive for its time. 

However, the XX century was tragic for the Serbs and Serbia. The tremendous 
sufferings in World War I and World War II and the tragic dissolution of former 
Yugoslavia left traumatic consequences. 

The first democratically elected and assassinated Serbian Prime Minister Zoran 
Đinđić said in this context, inter alia, the following: “the issue of a better 
tomorrow is always raised. I would like the people to start believing that 
tomorrow can be better than today. My philosophy of the Serbian history is that 
we wasted the entire XX century, and I am sure that the XXI century can be the 
century of our achievements.”[2] 
<https://www.ifimes.org/en/researches/2022-elections-in-serbia-yet-another-attempt-of-assassination-of-serbia/4999?#_ftn2>
 

In 2000, with the arrival of Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić to power Serbia 
initiated strong democratization and numerous reforms, which resulted in 
progress in all areas. Serbia became the epicenter of developments in the 
region and the leader in reforms. This historic progress was interrupted with 
the assassination of Prime Minister Đinđić on 12 March 2003. 

After the arrival of Aleksandar Vučić and his Serb Progressive Party (SNS) to 
power, Serbia has once again become the epicenter of developments in the region 
and the engine of European integration. Significant economic results and 
accelerated progress on the path to EU membership have been recorded. Serbian 
President Vučić, together with Macedonian and Albanian prime ministers launched 
the most important regional initiative “Open Balkan”, which promotes regional 
cooperation and offers opportunities for economic prosperity of the region. 
Serbia has managed to maintain at the annual level a high level of foreign 
investments. Specifically, foreign investments in Serbia are at the level of 
around four billion Euros per year, which is more than in all other countries 
in the region together. It transpired that for Serbia the XXI century has 
become the century of opportunities and achievements. Throughout the history, 
whenever Serbia begun to move forward speedily, there were always attempts to 
slow down or halt its progress. A testimony of this from the recent history is 
the assassination of Zoran Đinđić, which was also a kind of “assassination of 
Serbia.”

According to analysts, Serbia has successfully repositioned and rebranded 
itself in regional and international relations, primarily thanks to the Serbian 
President Aleksandar Vučić, who has managed to turn Serbia from an object into 
a subject in international relations. This is most evident through the dialogue 
between official Belgrade and Pristina in which Vučić managed to impose the 
“they cannot get everything, while we get nothing” paradigm. Subsequently, the 
US took the stance that the Brussels and Washington agreements have to be fully 
implemented – with an emphasis on the establishment of the “Community of Serb 
Municipalities” (ZSO). The letter that US congressmen had recently sent to US 
President Joseph Biden is a major recognition and support to Serbia, as well as 
the confirmation of the rightfulness of the policy Aleksandar Vučić has pursued 
so far. The letter refers to Serbian achievements in the area of economy, as 
well as the initiative the Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić had launched with 
several other regional leaders related to creation of “Open Balkan”, as a zone 
of free trade and free movement of people, goods, capital and services, which 
was described as a new paradigm of the Serbian policy. 

The death threats recently made to President Vučić should be taken extremely 
seriously because of the experiences from the recent past and the assassination 
of Prime Minister Đinđić. Furthermore, such an “assassination of Serbia” must 
be stopped once and for all. In this context, the role of the Serb opposition 
is important. However, the opposition has still not made a clear and quality 
contribution to development of democracy, as the opposition in Bulgaria 
recently had. 


Vučić’s position is most difficult


In the current constellation of political relations, the current President of 
the Republic of Serbia Aleksandar Vučić is by far in the most difficult 
position. Although Serbia, the region and the world are in a period of the 
corona crisis and security tensions and threats, Serbia and its President have 
proven themselves as a factor of peace and stability. It is important to 
finalize the dialogue between official Belgrade and Pristina with the signing 
of a comprehensive and legally binding agreement so that Serbia would have a 
prosperous and predictable future. In this respect, the most important task 
include economic recovery, development of the state and affirmation of Serbia 
in regional and international relations, as well as stopping the trend of 
emigration of population from Serbia and increasing the birthrate. In practice, 
there are constant attempts to undermine President Vučić and his government 
through joint actions that even include individuals from the Serb Progressive 
Party (SNS), who act in conjunction with a part of the foreign factor. 

Analysts believe that because of the decision on declaration of military 
neutrality, Serbia and its President Vučić are under intensive international 
pressure to recognize independence of Kosovo, align the Serbian foreign policy 
with the EU, and particularly to introduce sanctions to Russia. The concept of 
Serbian foreign policy is founded on the EU – US – China – Russia + 
Nonalignment Movement rectangle. It is incomprehensible that the EU requests 
from Serbia to subject its foreign policy to the EU, while there are no 
guarantees that it will ever become an EU member. 


Elections on future of Serbia


After arduous negotiations, the government and the opposition have managed to 
agree on the conditions and create an ambience for holding of free and fair 
elections. The opposition predominantly insisted on media representation and 
control of the election process. Political practice has shown that presence in 
the media is not of key importance for winning the elections. The most 
important element is to offer quality political programs, as well as credible 
and competent candidates who have the trust of citizens. At the last elections, 
the opposition made a mistake by boycotting the elections and/or focusing in 
its political “fights” on Aleksandar Vučić personally, while not offering any 
quality political programs and candidates who can convince the citizens to 
trust them and vote for them. 

According to the public opinion polls the list of the Serb Progressive Party 
“Aleksandar Vučić – Together we can do everything” stands by far the biggest 
chances at the parliamentary elections. Due to the lowering of the election 
threshold to 3%, smaller political parties and parties of ethnic minorities 
also stand a chance to win mandates in the Republic of Serbia National 
Assembly. As for the presidential elections, the favorite is the current 
President Aleksandar Vučić, while the competition at the local elections and 
elections in the city of Belgrade will be most uncertain. It is expected that 
the turnout at the elections will be above 50%. For the future of parliamentary 
democracy in Serbia, it is important that in the coming period there is a 
strong and proactive opposition as a corrective of the government, which has 
not been the case so far- particularly because of the boycott by a part of the 
opposition. Furthermore, it is also important that the government and the 
opposition take a common and single stance on issues of national interest. 

  _____  

[1] IFIMES – The International Institute for Middle East and Balkan Studies 
(IFIMES) from Ljubljana, Slovenia, has a special consultative status with the 
Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC)/UN since 2018.

[2] Source: Zoran Đinđić https://www.zorandjindjic.org/eng/quotes/ 

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
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/03fc01d827c6%247cbd53a0%247637fae0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to