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Croat Minority Praises Serbian President


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ZAGREB, August 25, 2018 - Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić has proven to be a 
credible, proactive and responsible person as regards demands of the ethnic 
Croat community brought to his attention on February 20 after his official 
visit to Zagreb, the leader of the Democratic Alliance of Vojvodina Croats 
(DSHV) party and member of parliament Tomislav Žigmanov told Hina, noting that 
not all of the assumed obligations had been fulfilled.

Commenting on Vučić's statement of Thursday that all 26 demands for the 
improvement of the status of the Croat minority in Serbia had been met in line 
with the Subotica Declaration, Žigmanov said that the demands the Serbian 
president cited had been met owing to "Vučić's direct engagement."

Žigmanov said the demands concerned problems encountered by the Croat minority 
in the context of exercising their minority rights. "That primarily refers to 
the financing of some associations, the opening of a Croatian language 
instruction office at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Studies in Novi Sad, 
the introduction of new high school educational profiles in the Croatian 
language, communal facilities and infrastructure... in Monostor and Tavankut, 
the purchase of a part of the house where Ban Josip Jelačić was born in 
Petrovaradin, the opening of dialogue with bishops of the Roman Catholic 
Church, and participation of representatives of the Croat community in the work 
of the government of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina," said Žigmanov.

"The only outstanding issue is the issue of restitution of the Croat community 
centre in Sremska Mitrovica to the local Croat community, which Vučić himself 
has admitted," Žigmanov told Hina.

At the same time, Zigmanov noted that "Croats in Serbia still encounter 
problems in exercising their rights."

"The latest case concerns obstruction regarding the establishment of a Croatian 
language class in Bereg and the putting up of a bust honouring poet Aleksa 
Kokić in Subotica," Žigmanov said, assessing this as "a consequence of an 
inadequate rule of law and undeveloped minority policies."

Žigmanov pointed to the first point of the Subotica Declaration on the 
promotion of bilateral protection of minorities – the Croat minority in Serbia 
and the Serb minority in Croatia – in line with an agreement between the two 
countries "which also explicitly speaks about the representation of minorities 
in legislative authorities at all levels, and executive authorities at the 
local level."

 

"That still has not been resolved," he said, stressing other issues too such as 
"the issue of proportional representation in state administration bodies" and 
"the right to participation in the administration of educational and cultural 
institutions and the right to the official use of the language and script."

"Last but not least, we have as a consequence of disagreements and tensions in 
Croatian-Serbian relations an almost permanent, strong anti-Croat sentiment in 
a part of the public, which results in fear and unwillingness of Croats to take 
part in public life," said Žigmanov, the only representative of the Croat 
minority in the Serbian parliament, elected on the slate of the opposition 
Democratic Party.

He said that the Croat community in Serbia "positively views any progress 
resulting from President Vučić's direct engagement."

Vučić said on Thursday that all 26 demands for the improvement of the status of 
the Croat minority, as foreseen in the Subotica Declaration that he signed two 
years ago together with his Croatian counterpart, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, had 
been fulfilled.

"I think that we Serbs should be proud of what we are doing to improve the 
status of the Croat minority in Serbia," Vučić told reporters, underscoring 
that the list of demands was "100% completed" and that he would speak about it 
in greater detail in about three weeks.

The Subotica Declaration on advancing relations and resolving outstanding 
issues between the two countries was signed in 2016 by Vučić in the capacity of 
Serbia's prime minister and Croatian President Grabar-Kitarović, after the two 
met with representatives of the Serb ethnic minority in eastern Slavonia and 
the Croat minority in Bačka, Serbia.

 

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