Slobodan Milošević
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| Slobodan Milošević Слободан Милошевић |
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| In office 8 May 1989 – 23 July 1997 |
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| Prime Minister | Desimir Jevtić Stanko Radmilović Dragutin Zelenović Radoman Božović Nikola Šainović Mirko Marjanović |
| Preceded by | Office created |
| Succeeded by | Dragan Tomić (Acting) |
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| In office 23 July 1997 – 5 October 2000 |
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| Prime Minister | Radoje Kontić Momir Bulatović |
| Preceded by | Zoran Lilić |
| Succeeded by | Vojislav Koštunica |
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| Born | 20 August 1941 Požarevac, Yugoslavia |
| Died | 11 March 2006 (aged 64) The Hague, Netherlands |
| Nationality | Montenegrin |
| Political party | Socialist Party of Serbia |
| Spouse | Mirjana Marković |
| Religion | Atheist |
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Slobodan Milošević (pronounced [sloˈbodan miˈloʃevitɕ] listen ; Serbian Cyrillic: Слободан Милошевић) (August 20, 1941, Požarevac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia – March 11, 2006, The Hague, Netherlands) was President of Serbia and of Yugoslavia. He served as the President of Serbia from 1989 until 1997 and as President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from 1997 to 2000. He also led Serbia's Socialist Party from its foundation in 1990.
He resigned the Yugoslav presidency amid demonstrations, following the disputed presidential election of September 24, 2000.
Milošević was a controversial figure. His detractors called him the "Butcher of the Balkans" and accused him of starting four wars. His supporters say he was a peacemaker who did everything in his power to avert war and put a stop to the violence.
Milošević was arrested by Serbian authorities early on Sunday, April 1, 2001, on suspicion of corruption, abuse of power, and embezzlement. [1] [2] The initial investigation into Milošević faltered for lack of hard evidence, prompting the Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić to send him to The Hague to stand trial for alleged war crimes instead. [3]
The Hague war crimes tribunal charged Milošević with crimes against humanity, violating the laws or customs of war, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions and genocide for his role during the wars in Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo.
Milošević conducted his own defense, but the trial ended without a verdict because he died during the proceedings. [4] Milošević suffered from heart ailments and high blood pressure. He died of a heart attack [5] [6]after the court denied his request to seek specialized medical treatment at a cardiology clinic in Moscow. [7] [8]
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[edit] Early life
Milošević, by origin, was a Vasojevići tribe Montenegrin, born in Požarevac, Serbia during the Axis occupation. His parents separated soon after the war; his father, Svetozar Milošević, committed suicide in 1962, and his mother, Stanislava Milošević née Koljenšić, a school teacher and also an active member of the Communist Party, hung herself in 1974.
He went on to study law at Belgrade University, where he became the head of the ideology committee of the Yugoslav Communist League's (SKJ) student branch (SSOJ). While at the university, he befriended Ivan Stambolić, whose uncle Petar Stambolić had been a president of Serbian Executive Council (the Communist equivalent of a prime minister). This was to prove a crucial connection for Milošević's career prospects, as Stambolić sponsored his rise through the SKJ hierarchy.
On leaving university in 1960, Milošević became an economic advisor to the Mayor of Belgrade. Five years later, he married Mirjana Marković, whom he had known since childhood. Marković would have some influence on her husband's political career both before and after his rise to power; she was also leader of Milošević's junior coalition partner, Yugoslav Left (JUL) in the 1990s. In 1968 he got a job at the Tehnogas company, where Stambolić was working, and became its chairman in 1973. By 1978, Stambolić's sponsorship had enabled Milošević to become the head of Beobanka, one of Yugoslavia's largest banks; his frequent trips to Paris and New York gave him the opportunity to learn English.
[edit] Rise to power
On April 16, 1984 Slobodan Milošević was elected to a two-year term as president of the Belgrade League of Communists City Committee. [9]
On February 21, 1986 the Socialist Alliance of Working People unanimously supported him as presidential candidate for the SKJ's Serbian branch Central Committee. [10] Milošević was elected by a majority vote at the 10th Congress of the Serbian League of Communists on May 28, 1986. [11]
Milošević emerged in 1987 as a force in Serbian politics. The Hague indictment alleges that, starting in 1987, Milošević "endorsed a Serbian nationalist agenda" and "exploited a growing wave of Serbian nationalism in order to strengthen centralised rule in the SFRY." [12]
Milošević always denied allegations that he exploited Serbian nationalism in his rise to power. In a 1995 interview with TIME, he said: "All my speeches up to '89 were published in my book. You can see that there was no nationalism in those speeches. We were explaining why we think it is good to preserve Yugoslavia for all Serbs, all Croats, all Muslims and all Slovenians as our joint country. Nothing else." [13]
As animosity between Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo deepened during the 1980s, Milošević was sent to address a crowd of Serbs in Kosovo Polje on April 24, 1987. While Milošević was talking to the leadership inside the local cultural hall demonstrators outside clashed with the local Kosovo-Albanian police force.
The New York Times reported that "a crowd of 15,000 Serbs and Montenegrins hurled stones at the police after they used truncheons to push people away from the entrance to the cultural center of Kosovo Polje." [14]
Milošević heard the commotion and was sent outside to calm the situation. A videotape of the event shows Milošević responding to complaints from the crowd that the police were beating people by saying "You will not be beaten". [15] Later that evening, Serbian television aired the video of Milošević's encounter.
In Adam LeBor's biography of Milošević, he describes that the crowd attacked the police and Milošević's response was "No one should dare to beat you again!" [16]
The Federal Secretariat of the SFRY Interior Ministry however, condemned the police's use of rubber truncheons as not in keeping within the provisions of Articles 100 and 101 of the rules of procedure for "conducting the work of law enforcement", they had found that "the total conduct of the citizenry in the mass rally before the cultural hall in Kosovo Polje cannot be assessed as negative or extremist. There was no significant violation of law and order." [17]
Although Milošević was only addressing a small group of people around him -- not the public,[18] a great deal of significance has been attached to that remark. Stambolić, after his reign as President, said that he had seen that day as "the end of Yugoslavia".
Dragiša Pavlović, a Stambolic ally and Milošević's successor at the head of the Belgrade Committee of the party, was expelled from the party during the 8th Session of the League of Communists of Serbia after he publicly criticized the party's Kosovo policy. The central committee voted overwhelmingly for his dismissal: 106 members voted for his expulsion, eight voted against, and 18 abstained. [19]
Stambolić was fired after Communist officials in Belgrade accused him of abusing his office during the Pavlović affair. Stambolic was accused of sending a secret letter to the party Presidium, in what was seen as an attempt to misuse the weight of his position as Serbian President, to prevent the central committee's vote on Pavlović's expulsion from the party. [20] [21]
In 2002 Adam LeBor and Louis Sell would write that Pavlović was really dismissed because he opposed Milošević's policies towards Kosovo-Serbs. They contend that, contrary to advice from Stambolić, Milošević had denounced Pavlović as being soft on Albanian radicals. LeBor and Sell assert that Milošević prepared the ground for his ascent to power by quietly replacing Stambolić's supporters with his own people, thereby forcing Pavlović and Stambolić from power.[22][23]
In February 1988, Stambolić's resignation was formalized, allowing Milošević to take his place as Serbia's President.
[edit] Anti-bureaucratic revolution
Starting in 1988 the so-called "anti-bureaucratic revolution" led to the resignation of the governments of Vojvodina and Montenegro and to the election of officials allied with Milošević.
Slovenian leader Milan Kučan accused Serbia of deliberately fanning nationalist passions and Slovene newspapers published articles comparing Milošević to Mussolini. Milošević contended that such criticism was unfounded and amounted to “spreading fear of Serbia”.[24]
In Vojvodina, where 54 percent of the population was Serbian, an estimated 100,000 demonstrators rallied outside the Communist Party headquarters in Novi Sad on October 6, 1988 to demand the resignation of the provincial leadership. The majority of protesters were workers from the Vojvodina town of Bačka Palanka, 40 kilometres west of Novi Sad. They were supportive of Milošević and opposed the provincial government's moves to block forthcoming amendments to the Serbian Constitution. [25] [26] [27]
The demonstrations were successful. The provincial leadership resigned, and Vojvodina League of Communists elected a new leadership. [28]
In the elections that followed Dr. Dragutin Zelenović, a Milošević ally, was elected member of the SFRY Presidency from Vojvodina [29]
On January 10, 1989 the anti-bureaucratic revolution continued in Montenegro, which had the lowest average monthly wage in Yugoslavia, an unemployment rate of nearly 25 percent, and where one-fifth of the population lived below the poverty line. 50,000 demonstrators gathered in the Montenegrin capital of Titograd (now Podgorica) to protest the republic's economic situation and to demand the resignation of its leadership. [30]
The next day Montenegro's state presidency tendered its collective resignation along with the Montenegrin delegates in the Yugoslav Politburo. Montenegro's representative on the federal presidency, Veselin Đuranović, said the decision to step down "was motivated by a sense of responsibility for the economic situation." [31] [32]
Demonstrators were seen carrying portraits of Milošević and shouting his name, but the New York Times reported "there is no evidence that the Serbian leader played an organizing role" in the demonstrations.[33]
Multiparty elections were held in Montenegro for the first time after the anti-bureaucratic revolution. Nenad Bućin, an opponent of Milošević's policies, was elected Montenegro's representative on Yugoslavia's collective presidency [34] and Momir Bulatović, a Milošević ally, was elected Montenegrin President. [35] [36]
[edit] 1989 amendments to the Serbian constitution
Starting in 1982 and 1983, in response to nationalist Albanian riots in Kosovo, the Central Committee of the SFRY League of Communists adopted a set of conclusions aimed at centralizing Serbia’s control over law enforcement and the judiciary in its Kosovo and Vojvodina provinces. [37]
In 1986 Serbian president Ivan Stambolic established a commission to amend the Serbian Constitution inkeeping with conclusions adopted by the federal Communist Party. [38]
The constitutional commission worked for three years to harmonize its positions and in 1989 an amended Serbian constitution was submitted to the governments of Kosovo, Vojvodina and Serbia for approval.
On March 10, 1989 the Vojvodina Assembly approved the amendments, followed by the Kosovo Assembly on March 23, and the Serbian Assembly on March 28. [39] [40] [41]
In the Kosovo Assembly 187 of the 190 assembly members were present when the vote was taken: 10 voted against the amendments, two abstained, and the remaining 175 voted in favor of the amendments. [42] [43]
Although the ethnic composition of the Kosovo Assembly was over 70 percent Albanian [44], Kosovo-Albanian nationalists reacted violently to the constitutional amendments. The UPI wire service reported that "unrest began [in Kosovo] when amendments were approved returning to Serbia control over the province's police, courts, national defense and foreign affairs ... mass demonstrations turned into violent street rioting when demonstrators began using firearms against police." According to the report the rioting killed 29 people and injured 30 policemen and 97 civilians. [45]
In the wake of the unrest following the 1989 constitutional amendments, ethnic Albanians in Kosovo largely boycotted the provincial government and refused to vote in the elections.[46] [47] Azem Vllasi, leader of the League of Communists of Kosovo, was arrested for inciting rioting amid a strike by Kosovo-Albanian miners.[48] In the wake of the Albanian boycott, supporters of Slobodan Milošević were elected to positions of authority by the remaining Serbian voters in Kosovo.
The anti-bureaucratic revolutions in Montenegro and Vojvodina coupled with the Albanian boycott in Kosovo effectively meant that Slobodan Milošević and his supporters held power in four out of the eight republics and autonomus provinces that made-up the Yugoslav federation. Whether this was cynically engineered by Milošević is a matter of controversey between his critics and his supporters.
Because Milošević's supporters controlled half of the votes in the SFRY presidency, his critics charge that he undermined the Yugoslav federation. This, his detractors argue, upset the balance of power in Yugoslavia and provoked sepratism elsewhere in the federation.
Milošević's supporters contend that the representatives of the SFRY presidency were elected according to the law. They say that Milošević enjoyed genuine popular support so it was perfectly logical for his allies to be elected to the presidency. His supporters dismiss allegations that he upset the balance of power in Yugoslavia as a propaganda ploy designed to justify sepratism.
[edit] Milošević’s Role in The Yugoslav Wars
Milošević's role in the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s is a matter of considerable controversy. His detractors accuse him of starting the wars in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo. They accuse him of inciting Serbian nationalism in a murderous drive to carve "Greater Serbia" from the ruins of Yugoslavia. His supporters say that he vehemently opposed ethnic nationalism and never advocated the creation of a Greater Serbia. They blame the outbreak of war on the republics that chose to breakaway from Yugoslavia.
[edit] Milošević's Role According to His Critics
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton articulated the view of many Milosevic critics when he told a veterans group that Milošević "sought to expand his power, by inciting religious and ethnic hatred in the cause of Greater Serbia; by demonizing and dehumanizing people, especially the Bosnian and Kosovar Muslims ... He unleashed wars in Bosnia and Croatia, creating 2 million refugees and leaving a quarter of a million people dead ... he stripped Kosovo of its constitutional self-government, and began harassing and oppressing its people." [49]
Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeline Albright explained the U.S. Government's view that, "Slobodan Milošević initiated four wars during the 1990s, including a devastating campaign of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo which killed thousands and drove almost a million people from their homes." [50]
In a speech before the U.S. Congress, Rep. Cristopher Smith (R-NJ) brought up a common view among Milošević's critics when he said Milošević "relied on virulent Serbian nationalism to instigate conflict". [51] Milošević was motivated to start the wars, his critics say, because of his murderous ambition to create an ethnically pure Greater Serbian state.
The CIA World Fact book says, "Under Milošević's leadership, Serbia led various military campaigns to unite ethnic Serbs in neighboring republics into a 'Greater Serbia.'"[52] Milošević's critics claim that forces under his command committed "atrocities against civilians as part of a systematic campaign to secure territory for an ethnically 'pure' Serb state." [53]
The foundation of the war crimes charges against Milošević is based on the allegation that he sought the establishment of a "Greater Serbia". Prosecutors at the Hague argued that "the [Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo] indictments were all part of a common scheme, strategy or plan on the part of the accused [Milošević] to create a 'Greater Serbia', a centralized Serbian state encompassing the Serb-populated areas of Croatia and Bosnia and all of Kosovo, and that this plan was to be achieved by forcibly removing non-Serbs from large geographical areas through the commission of the crimes charged in the indictments. Although the events in Kosovo were separated from those in Croatia and Bosnia by more than three years, they were no more than a continuation of that plan, and they could only be understood completely by reference to what had happened in Croatia and Bosnia." [54]
[edit] Milošević's Role According to His Supporters
Milošević's supporters say he was a peacemaker who wanted to preserve Yugoslavia. James Bissett, Canada's former Ambassador to Yugoslavia said, "the idea that Milošević entered into any sort of criminal conspiracy to establish a Greater Serbia is pure fantasy. I think the record speaks for itself, Milošević was personally involved in every attempt to negotiate a peace agreement and stop the fighting ... this goes right from the first Vance-Owen Plan, the Vance-Stoltenberg Plan, both plans which were subverted not by the Serbian side but by others." [55]
Former Russian Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov categorically stated the Russian Government's view that Milošević "had no plans and conducted no actions to achieve a Greater Serbia". [56]
Milošević's supporters deny allegations that Serbia attacked its neighbors in the Yugoslav federation. They say that war broke-out because secessionists in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, and Kosovo unilaterally seized Yugoslav territory and launched attacks against its security forces.
Former U.S. Secretary of State, James Baker said: Yugoslavia "broke up through the unilateral declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia and the seizing by these two countries' republics of their border posts, which was an act of force and a violation of the Helsinki principles. But the European powers and the United States ultimately recognised Slovenia and then Croatia and Bosnia as independent countries, and admitted them to the United Nations. The real problem was that there was a unilateral declaration of independence and a use of force to gain that independence rather than a peaceful negotiation of independence, which is the way it should have happened." [57]
Milošević's supporters deny allegations that Croatia and Bosnia were attacked by Serbia. They say these were civil wars in which the indigenous Serb population living in those republics resisted their forcible separation from Yugoslavia.
Milošević's supporters claim that Hague Prosecutors could not produce a single order issued by his government to Serbian fighters in Croatia or Bosnia. Near the end of the Prosecuton's case, Prosecution analyst Reynaud Theunens admitted under cross-examination that the Prosecution didn't have any orders issued by Milošević's government to any of fighters in Croatia or Bosnia. Theunens was quick to point out, "the fact that we don't have orders doesn't mean that they don't exist" and Milošević replied "There are none, that's why you haven't got one." [58]
Although Milošević's supporters deny that he commanded the Serbian war effort in Croatia and Bosnia, they don't deny that he provided those Serbs with financial and humanitarian assistance during the war. They also readily admit that as the President of Yugoslavia, Milosevic commanded Serbian security forces in Kosovo during the war.
[edit] Milošević's views
A large number of Slobodan Milošević's interviews have been collected online[59]. Milošević argued that the Serbian Constitution gave self-determination to peoples, not to nations. On this basis, he states that the Croatian Serbs and later the Bosnian Serbs should not have been subject to the declarations of independence by the nations of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
He denies that Serbia was at war during the wars in Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia. Milošević was President of Serbia, not of Yugoslavia, and claims that his government was only indirectly involved through support for Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia at some points. Biographer Adam LeBor writes that Milošević cut off links with the Bosnian Serbs due to hyperinflation in Serbia rather than to objections over their tactics.
Milošević spent most of 1988–89 focusing his politics on the "Kosovo problem". In Kosovo, Milošević alleges that he supported the right of the Albanians to "self-determination", but not to independence, as he claimed that Kosovo was an essential part of Serbia due to its history and its numerous churches and cultural relics. He also claimed that the KLA were a neo-Nazi organisation that sought an ethnically pure Kosovo, and he argued that independence would deliver Kosovo to their hands[60].
Milošević denies that he gave orders to massacre Albanians in 1998. He claims that the deaths were sporadic events confined to rural areas of West Kosovo committed by paramilitaries and by rebels in the armed forces. Those from the Serbian army or police who were involved were all, he claims, arrested and many were sentenced to long prison sentences[61].
Former United States ambassador to Yugoslavia, Warren Zimmerman, during his conversations with Milošević claimed that he was not a genuine nationalist, but rather a political opportunist.[62] Zimmerman has claimed that unlike other politicians which he had discussions with during the collapse of Yugoslavia, such as Franjo Tudjman and Radovan Karadzic, Milošević in public did not emphasis any hatred of ethnic groups and emphasized that Serbia would continue to be a multiethnic republic in Yugoslavia. Zimmerman has claimed that Milošević opportunistically used nationalism to allow him to rise to power in the Communist establishment in Serbia as Communism in eastern Europe became increasingly unpopular, and continued to advocate a nationalist agenda to draw in support for his government.[63] However on another occasion Milošević revealed to Zimmerman his negative attitude towards ethnic Albanians who had demanded autonomy and in the 1990s, independence from Serbia and Yugoslavia. Milošević told Zimmerman jokingly that the Albanians of Kosovo were the most pampered minority in Europe.[64] Zimmerman later reported that Milošević's unusual and conflicting positions and mannerisms made him believe that Milošević may have had a multiple personality disorder, as at times Milošević would behave in an arrogant, stubborn, authoritarian and aggressive in manner towards others, which staunchly supported Serbian nationalism against all opponents, while at other times he would be polite, conciliatory, and be eager and willing to find moderate and peaceful solutions to the crisis in Yugoslavia.[65] Zimmerman has concluded however that Milošević constantly demonstrated that he primarily saw Yugoslavia as a state for insuring the unity of Serbs, and did not have much interest in preserving the unity Yugoslavia outside of areas of Serb national interests.[66]
Accusations against Milošević of supporting nationalism and creating a "Greater Serbia" have been challenged. While Milošević portrayed himself as the leading the Serb people in Yugoslavia, unlike traditional Serbian nationalists, Milošević accepted the Republic of Macedonia as being an independent country and maintained modest relations. Furthermore despite growing Serbian nationalism, Milošević opposed Greater Serbian nationalists demands to absorb Montenegro into Serbia, and allowed Montenegro to continue to be a constituent republic with its own government throughout his tenure as President of Serbia and of Yugoslavia. Milošević saw Yugoslavia as continuing to be the state which could unify the Serb people and others like Montenegrins who at the time wished to remain in Yugoslavia. Milošević remained adamant however that a Yugoslav state respect the rights of the Serb majority and that neither Bosnia nor Croatia be allowed to leave Yugoslavia without allowing Serb-populated territories to remain within Yugoslavia. Milošević did however endorse nationalist forces during the Yugoslav wars that would allow Serb self-determination in Bosnia and Croatia within Yugoslavia as most Serbs wished to remain in Yugoslavia while the governments of Bosnia and Croatia wished to become independent of Yugoslavia. However Milošević's desire for Serb self-determination and support of ultranationalist paramilitaries who could achieve this, did not respect self-determination of Bosniaks and Croats who were murdered by Serb ultranationalist paramilitaries.
[edit] Death of political opponents
In the summer of 2000 former Serbian President Ivan Stambolić was kidnapped; his body was found in 2003 and Milošević was charged with ordering his murder. In 2005, several members of the Serbian secret police and criminal gangs were convicted in Belgrade for a number of murders, including Stambolić's. These were the same people who arrested Milošević in April 2001. Later, Interior Minister Dušan Mihajlović denied that Milošević had been involved in Stambolić's death at Fruška Gora.[67]
In June 2006 the Supreme Court of Serbia ruled that Milošević had ordered the murders of Stambolić and Vuk Drašković. The Supreme Court accepted the previous ruling of the Special Court for Organized Crime in Belgrade which targeted Milošević as the main abettor of politically motivated murders in the 1990s.
Milošević's attorneys said the Court's ruling was of little value because he was never formally charged or given an opportunity to defend himself against the accusations.
Moreover, most of these murders were of Serbian and Yugoslavian government officials, such as high police official Radovan Stojijić Badza, Defence Minister Pavle Bulatović, and the head of Yugoslav airlines JAT.
[edit] Downfall of presidency
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On February 4, 1997, Milošević recognized the opposition victories in some local elections, after mass protests lasting 96 days.
Constitutionally limited to two terms as Serbian president, on July 23, 1997, Milošević assumed the presidency of the Yugoslav Federation (the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia).
Armed actions by Albanian separatist groups and Serbian police and military counter-action in Serbia's previously autonomous (and 90 percent Albanian) province of Kosovo culminated in escalating warfare in 1998, NATO air strikes against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia between March and June 1999, and finally a full withdrawal of all Yugoslav security forces from the province.
During the Kosovo War he was indicted on May 27, 1999, for war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed in Kosovo, and he was standing trial, up until his death, at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. He attempted to assert that the trial was illegal, having been established in contravention of the UN charter.[68]
Milošević's permissive rule featured a very free press, much of it financed by Yugoslavia's enemies. Despite attempts by the Serbian Radical Party to tighten the space open to those serving Yugoslavia's enemies, attempts that included the October 1998 media law, a whole rebel infrastructure operated financed by Yugoslavia's enemies. This included media such as B92, described by Vojislav Seselj as a "treacherous medium", and a parallel election counting agency, CeSID, that openly advocated the overthrow of the government. Milošević appeared not to fear this formidable enemy and took no substantial measures against it, and did so to his own disadvantage.
Milošević's rejection of claims of a first-round opposition victory in new elections for the Federal parliament and presidency in September 2000 led to mass demonstrations in Belgrade on October 5, known as the Bulldozer Revolution. The Yugoslav constitution called for a second election round with all but the two leading candidates eliminated, in the event that no candidate won more than 50 percent of the vote. Official results put Koštunica ahead of Milošević but at under 50 percent. The U.S.-financed CeSID claimed otherwise, though its story changed throughout the two weeks between 24 September and 5 October.
On cue, the rebel infrastructure sprung into action with paid strikes and demonstrations. The regime's authority collapsed when security forces refused to put down the protests and the Milošević controlled public broadcaster, RTS was taken over by fellow "Joint Criminal Enterprise" co-conspirator Captain Dragan. The Yugoslav parliament was set on fire and ballots burned, so that no one would ever know the truth about the vote.
Milošević lost power not because of the presidential election, but because of the coup d'etat against the Serbian government of Mirko Marjanović, carried out by armed groups with the help of the JSO unit of special operations. Marjanović held the most powerful official post in Yugoslavia but as a subordinate in the SPS run by Milošević, that power was effectively Milošević's. The illegal overthrow of the Serbian government was what ended his power.
Milošević was forced to accept this when commanders of the army whom he had expected to support him had indicated that in this instance they would not, and would permit the violent overthrow of the Serbian government. On October 6, Milošević met with opposition presidential candidate leader Vojislav Koštunica and publicly accepted defeat. Koštunica finally took office as Yugoslav president on October 7 following Milošević's announcement.
Ironically, Milošević lost his grip on power by losing in elections which he scheduled prematurely (before the end of his mandate) and which he did not even need to win in order to retain power which was centered in the parliaments which his party and its associates controlled.
He did so because of successes in the reconstruction effort led by Milutin Mrkonjić, and because the main opposition leaders, Zoran Đinđić and Vuk Drašković, could not agree to unite against him and because they both were caught shaking Bill Clinton's hand in one case, and kissing Madeleine Albright's hand in the other.
According to American polling, only Vojislav Koštunica had a chance to defeat Milošević. This was because of his decision to sit out the Serbian political struggles since the mid-1990s and because of his nationalism. He did not participate in Zajedno nor did he participate in the 1997 Serbian parliamentary and presidential elections. He was effectively Fortinbras, entering the fray as other Serbian politicians were beating each other to death.
He ran for Zoran Đinđić's Democratic Opposition of Serbia; Đinđić was the real candidate against Milošević, effectively, as Milošević warned the Serbian people on 2 October 2000. Koštunica claimed that he took no money from NATO powers, claiming such money to be the "kiss of death", and said "no to NATO, no to Milošević", and was able to obtain many votes from those angry at Milošević for his concessions to the West during the 1993-98 period, and for allowing himself to be fooled into permitting a NATO occupation of Kosovo-Metohija. His candidacy served as a trojan horse for a planned coup d'etat planned by Đinđić and his foreign sponsors.
The coup d'etat placed Democratic Opposition of Serbia leader Zoran Đinđić in power. He forced the Serbian parliament to create a new government under his effective control, with DOS leading (Hungarian autonomist politicians who joined the DOS provided its parliamentary presence) and with the SPS and SPO as window dressing. The Serbian Radical Party refused to participate in this illegal act and went into opposition. With the entire media under his control, Đinđić arranged for Serbian parliamentary elections; in order to trick Serbian voters, Vojislav Koštunica's name headlined the DOS list. DOS swept that vote and Đinđić formalised his power as Serbia's ruler with the post of Serbian Prime Minister.
Following a warrant for his arrest by the Yugoslav authorities on charges of corruption and abuse of power, Milošević was forced to surrender to security forces on March 31, 2001 following an armed stand off at his fortified villa in Belgrade. On June 28 of the same year, Milošević was transferred by Yugoslav government officials from the jail in Belgrade where he was being held to United Nations custody just inside Bosnian territory. He was then transported to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav Constitution prohibited extradition of Yugoslav citizens and Koštunica formally on legal grounds opposed the transfer that has been ordered by Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić.[citation needed]
[edit] Relations with other countries
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[edit] Relations with Russia
Historically, Russia has consistently had very close relations with Serbia and the former Yugoslavia, with Russian influence on Serbia/Yugoslavia often strong. Russia and Serbia have significant affinities, including majority populations of Slavic ethno-linguistic groups, Orthodox Christianity, multi-ethnic polities. Russia is remembered by Serbs for giving assistance in becoming autonomous from the Ottoman and establishing the Kingdom of Serbia in 19th century. During Milošević's rule, Russia pursued policies that generally supported the Milošević regime. During the Kosovo conflict in 1999, some observers suggested the possibility of Russia deploying troops in support of Serbia.[69] However, in spite of being considered as a great friend in need for Serbia, Russia has provided political asylum to Milosevic's family, which the families of those killed in the conflicts have protested.[70]
[edit] Relations with China
Milošević first visited China in the early 1980s while head of Beobank. Milošević visited China again in 1997, after an invitation by Chinese president Jiang Zemin. Milošević was often popularly known in China by the nickname "Lao Mi" (老米), a shortened form of the informal Chinese-style nickname "Old Milošević" (老米洛舍维奇); among the state-operated media in China, Milošević was often referred to as "Comrade Milošević" (米洛舍维奇同志). Many sources hold that the Chinese government asserted strong backing of Milošević throughout his presidency until his surrender, and was one of the few countries supportive of him and the Yugoslav regime,[71] at a time when most Western countries were strongly critical of the Milošević government. The New York Times states that China was "one of Mr. Milošević's staunchest supporters" during the Kosovo conflict.[72] China vocally opposed NATO armed intervention in Kosovo throughout the campaign. Chinese parliamentary leader Li Peng, was presented by Milošević with Yugoslavia's highest medal (the Great Star) in Belgrade in 2000.[73]
The New York Times observed that Milošević, and particularly his wife Marković had "long viewed Beijing and its Communist party" as allied and "the sort of ideological comrades" lacking in Eastern Europe after the fall of Communism in the 1990s.[74] After Milošević's indictment, China's public statements shifted toward emphasizing Yugoslav-Chinese relations rather than focusing on its support for Milošević, while after the election of Vojislav Koštunica as Yugoslav president, Chinese foreign ministry officially stated that "China respects the choice of the Yugoslavian people."[75]
[edit] Trial
Milošević was indicted in May 1999, during the Kosovo War, by the UN's International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia for crimes against humanity in Kosovo. Charges of violating the laws or customs of war, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions in Croatia and Bosnia and genocide in Bosnia were added a year and a half later.
Following Milošević's transfer, the original charges of war crimes in Kosovo were upgraded by adding charges of genocide in Bosnia and war crimes in Croatia. On January 30, 2002, Milošević accused the war crimes tribunal of an "evil and hostile attack" against him. The trial began at The Hague on February 12, 2002, with Milošević defending himself while refusing to recognize the legality of the court's jurisdiction.[citation needed]
Milošević had a team in Belgrade that helped him, often sending him information available from the secret police files.[citation needed] Serbian insiders often supported Milošević's point of view, while Bosnian and Croatian witnesses have offered much testimony supporting the indictments.[citation needed]
The trial was a controversial issue and has featured many conflicting testimonies. For example:
- the statement by William Walker, the US former ambassador to El Salvador during its war, that he did not remember phoning several senior US officials to say that, at Račak, he had discovered a justification for a NATO war. He did not dispute that officials who said they had received his calls were telling the truth, however.[citation needed]
- Rade Marković's statement that a written statement he had made implicating Milošević had been extracted from him by ill-treatment legally amounting to torture by named NATO officers[76] Judge May declared this to be "irrelevant", but Milošević stated that it was forbidden under the 1988 rules concerning evidence gained by torture.
- the statement by Lord Owen (author of the Vance Owen Plan) that Milošević was not a racist, a radical nationalist or an "ethnic purist". Owen said he didn't think "that he (Milošević) was one of those who wanted all Muslims out of Republika Srpska any more than he wanted all Muslims out of Serbia."[citation needed]
The prosecution took two years to present its case in the first part of the trial, where they covered the wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. Throughout the two-year period, the trial was being closely followed by the publics of the involved former Yugoslav republics as it covered various notable events from the war and included several high-profile witnesses.
Milošević became increasingly ill during this time (high blood pressure and severe flu), which caused intermissions and prolonged the trial by at least six months. In early 2004, when he finally appeared in court in order to start presenting his defense (announcing over 1,200 witnesses), the two ICTY judges decided to appoint him two defense lawyers in accordance with the medical opinions of the resident cardiologists. This action was opposed by Milošević himself and the pair of British lawyers appointed to him.[citation needed]
In October 2004, the trial was resumed after being suspended for a month to allow counsel Steven Kay, who complained Milošević was not cooperating, to prepare the defense. Steven Kay has since asked to be allowed to resign from his court appointed position, complaining that of the 1200 witnesses he has only been able to get five to testify. Many of the other witnesses refused to testify in protest of ICTY's decision not to permit Milošević to defend himself.[citation needed]
In late 2004, former Soviet Premier Nikolai Ryzhkov became the first high profile witness to testify for the defence.[citation needed]
It was considered likely that, if allowed to present his case, Milošević would attempt to establish that NATO's attack on Yugoslavia was aggressive, thus being a war crime under international law and that, while supporting the KLA, were aware that they had practiced and intended to continue practicing genocide.[citation needed] If a prima facie case for either claim were established, the ICTY would be legally obliged under its terms of reference to prepare an indictment against the leaders of most of the NATO countries, even though the prosecutor had already concluded an "inquiry" against the NATO leaders.[citation needed]
A two-hour documentary entitled Milosevic on Trial documents the trial against Milošević.
[edit] Milošević's defenders
A great number of professors, writers and journalists, among them political scientist Michael Parenti in his book To Kill a Nation, have argued that the actions of Milošević, and of the Serbs more broadly, were systematically exaggerated by the Western media and politicians during the Bosnian War in order to provide justification for military intervention. [77]
Adam Lebor, a biographer of Milošević, states that Milošević was not a dictator, suggesting that Serbia under Milošević was not a totalitarian regime. Lebor points out that the opposition continued to operate throughout his rule, and Slobodan even negotiated with and made concessions to a leader of student demonstrations on one occasion. LeBor also points out that when election results in Serbia were disputed, the government had called in international observers to evaluate the validity of the elections and accepted their verdict when it was judged that Milošević's Socialist Party had been involved in electoral fraud.[78]
Lebor also believes that Milošević's role in the Slovenian War was restricted to making weighty demands on the use of Slovene airports, and being a passive supporter of the Yugoslav military in the Ten Day War. Some had seen the conflict as the first of four wars that Milošević was responsible for. Many reports from the time do not mention Milošević at all [79].
In her book Fool's Crusade Paris-based journalist Diana Johnstone contends that Milošević's actions during the conflict in the Balkans were no worse than the crimes of the Croats or the Bosnian Muslims, asserting also that the massacre in Srebrenica has been exaggerated. Political scientist Edward Herman endorsed Johnstone's findings in his review of Fool's Crusade in the Monthly Review [80].
In another book, The New Military Humanism, Noam Chomsky, who at times writes collaboratively with Herman, disagrees with Johnstone's views on Milošević, the Serbs, and Srebrenica in particular. While Chomsky believes that the massacres at Srebrenica did occur, he does not believe that Milošević was involved, pointing to the Dutch report that claimed that he was horrified to hear of it.[81] He has described Milošević as a "terrible person", but still believes that he was not a dictator and that his crimes have been exaggerated while the crimes of the Kosovo Liberation Army have been ignored.[82] In a 1999 interview, Chomsky sparked controversy with his view that to call the deaths in Kosovo a "genocide" was "an insult to the victims of Hitler".[83]
Leadership of the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milošević (ICDSM) includes: Professor Velko Valkanov (President of the Bulgarian Committee for Human Rights, Honorary President of the Bulgarian Antifascist Union, former Member of Parliament, and founder of ICDSM, Bulgaria); Ramsey Clark, former United States Attorney General; Professor Alexander Zinoviev, a Russian philosopher and writer; and Canadian lawyer Christopher Black, co-founder, vice-chairman, and chair of ICDSM's legal committee. In 2004 Clark wrote a letter to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan stating that "the Prosecution has failed to present significant or compelling evidence of any criminal act or intention of President Milošević" [84]. Those who have joined the ICDSM include (in 2001) playwright and Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter, who also signed the "Artists’ Appeal for Milošević" (Mar./Apr. 2004), a statement protesting unfair and biased conduct of the Tribunal, asserting its failure to prove Milošević's guilt justly, and calling for his immediate release [85].
As to his personal characteristics, former acquaintances have said that in private Milošević was patriarchal and conservative, devoted to his family and wife. His personality was marked by stubbornness—a trait of which he was proud; and his most devoted followers were older people, who had spent most of their lives in an era characterised by a moral code which they believed Milošević embodied. His stubbornness and unwillingness to compromise may be partly credited for the political problems and wars which marked his years in power, as well as his unrelenting defence in his trial. His lifelong devotion to his wife was reflected in the place of his burial, which is under the tree where they first kissed in 1958.
His defenders deny that Milošević was a nationalist; Jared Israel even offered a $500 reward for anyone to find incitements to racial hatred in any of his speeches[86].
[edit] Death
Milošević was found dead in his cell on March 11, 2006, in the UN war crimes tribunal's detention center, located in the Scheveningen section of The Hague.
Autopsies soon established that Milošević had died of a heart attack. He had been suffering from heart problems and high blood pressure. However, many suspicions were voiced to the effect that the heart attack had been caused or made possible deliberately - by the ICTY, according to sympathizers, or by himself, according to critics. Shortly before his death, Milošević had requested to be treated in a Russian heart surgery center, but the Tribunal had refused to permit that, citing mistrust of Russian guarantees that an escape would be made impossible. At the same time, Milošević had expressed fears that he was being poisoned. A scandal emerged when it was found that, according to an earlier medical test from January 12, Milošević's blood contained rifampicin, an antibiotic that is normally used to treat leprosy and tuberculosis and which would have neutralized some of the effects of his medicines for his high blood pressure and heart condition. Milošević had complained about the presence of a leprosis drug in his blood in a letter to the Russian foreign ministry. After that fact was disclosed, some hypothesized that the Tribunal medical staff had administered the drug deliberately, while others believed that he had taken it himself to worsen his heart condition and thus force the Tribunal to let him travel to Russia and escape. It is, however, questionable that he would have been able to smuggle in such drugs, since all his visitors were searched at least once before gaining access to him in response to an incident in September 2005 in which he had taken medicine from a Serbian doctor without the approval of the Hague doctors. Blood tests conducted as part of his post mortem showed that it was unlikely that Milošević had ingested rifampicin in the last few days before his death.
Several medical experts, such as Leo Bokeria (the director of the Russian heart surgery centre, where Milošević had requested to be treated) and The Times' medical columnist Thomas Stuttaford, asserted that Milošević's heart attack could and should have been prevented easily by means of standard medical procedures.
The reactions to the death were mixed: officials and sympathisers of the ICTY Prosecution lamented what they saw as Milošević's having remained unpunished, while opponents, mostly Serbian and Russian figures, stressed what they viewed as the responsibility of the Tribunal for what had happened.
ICTY Chief Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte made the following statement after his death :
I deeply regret the death of Slobodan Milosevic. It deprives the victims of the justice they need and deserve. In the indictment which was judicially confirmed in 2001, Milosevic was accused of 66 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo between 1991 and 1999. These crimes affected hundreds of thousands of victims throughout the former Yugoslavia. During the prosecution case, 295 witnesses testified and 5000 exhibits were presented to the court. This represents a wealth of evidence that is on the record. After the presentation of the prosecution case, the Trial Chamber, on 16 June 2004, rejected a defense motion to dismiss the charges for lack of evidence, thereby confirming, in accordance with Rule 98bis, that the prosecution case contains sufficient evidence capable of supporting a conviction on all 66 counts. The Defense was given the same amount of time as the prosecution to present its case. There were in total 466 hearing days. 4 hours per day. 'Only 40 hours were left in the Defense case, and the trial was likely to be completed by the end of the spring. It is a great pity for justice that the trial will not be completed and no verdict will be rendered. However, other senior leaders have been indicted for the crimes for which Slobodan Milosevic was also accused. Later this year, the trial of eight senior leaders accused of the Srebrenica genocide will begin. Furthermore, also this year, six most senior former Serbian leaders will be tried for crimes committed in Kosovo. But the most senior perpetrators are still at large. Now more than ever, I expect Serbia to finally arrest and transfer Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadžic to The Hague as soon as possible. The death of Slobodan Milosevic makes it even more urgent for them to face justice. Finally, I would like to share a thought for Zoran Đinđic, his wife and his family. Exactly three years ago, he was murdered in Belgrade. He is the man who had the courage to bring Slobodan Milosevic to The Hague so that he could face justice.
A funeral was held in Milošević's home town Požarevac, after tens of thousands of supporters attended a farewell ceremony in Belgrade. The return of the body of this former president but alleged war criminal to Serbia and of his widow (who had not traveled to Serbia to attend her husband's funeral, as she would have been arrested immediately upon her arrival due to current arrest warrant issued related to fraud charges) was very controversial, leading to great difficulties before their resolution.
Emblematic of Milošević's detractors was Miroslav Milošević (no relation), a former member of OTPOR and self-described vampire hunter, arrested in 2007 after leading a group who told police that they had driven "a three-foot-long wooden stake into the ground and through the late president's heart" to prevent him from "returning from the dead". It is unclear whether the group actually believed in vampires, or if the act was politically motivated. [87][88][89]
The last opinion poll taken in Serbia before Milošević's death listed him as the third most favorably rated politician in Serbia behind Serbian Radical Party chairman Tomislav Nikolić #1, and current Serbian President Boris Tadić #2. [90]
[edit] Aftermath
In February 2007, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) cleared Serbia of genocide, but ICJ's president stated that Milošević was aware of the risk of massacres occurring and did not act to prevent them.[91]
[edit] Further reading
- Clark, Janine (May 2007). "National Minorities and the Milošević Regime". Nationalities Papers 35 (2): 317-339.
- Crnobrnja, Mihailo, "The Yugoslav Drama" (McGill 1996)
- Herman, Edward S. and David Peterson, Marlise Simons on the Yugoslavia Tribunal: A Study in Total Propaganda Service, ZNet, 2004.
- Herman, Edward S. and David Peterson, Milosevic's Death in the Propaganda System, ZNet, May 14, 2006.
- Herman, Edward S. and David Peterson, Marlise Simons and the New York Times on the International Court of Justice Decision on Serbia and Genocide in Bosnia, ZNet, 2007.
- Kelly, Michael J., Nowhere to Hide: Defeat of the Sovereign Immunity Defense for Crimes of Genocide & the Trials of Slobodan Milosevic and Saddam Hussein (Peter Lang 2005).
- Sell, Louis D., Slobodan Milosevic and the Destruction of Yugoslavia (Duke University Press, 2002)
- Vladisavljevic, Nebojsa (March 2004). "Institutional power and the rise of Milošević". Nationalities Papers 32 (1): 183-205.
[edit] References
- ^ CNN Transcript; Slobodan Milošević to Stand Trial in Serbia; Aired March 31, 2001 - 10:25 p.m. ET; http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0103/31/bn.03.html
- ^ BBC News | EUROPE | Milosevic arrested
- ^ The New York Times, Serbian Tells of Spiriting Milošević Away, July 1, 2001; http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C06EFDF1339F932A35754C0A9679C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
- ^ ICTY Trial Transcript, March 14, 2006, Page 49191; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/060314IT.htm
- ^ Report to the President Death of Slobodan Milosevic; May 2006; Pg. 4 para. 3; www.un.org/icty/milosevic/parkerreport.pdf
- ^ Decision on Assigned Counsel Request for Provisional Release; 23 February 2006; http://www.un.org/icty/milosevic/trialc/decision-e/060224.htm
- ^ Report to the President Death of Slobodan Milošević; May 2006; Pg. 4 para. 3; www.un.org/icty/milosevic/parkerreport.pdf
- ^ Decision on Assigned Counsel Request for Provisional Release; 23 February 2006; http://www.un.org/icty/milosevic/trialc/decision-e/060224.htm
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; April 18, 1984, Wednesday; Belgrade LC City Committee officials elected; Source: Yugoslav News Agency 1229 gmt 16 Apr 84
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; February 27, 1986, Thursday; Presidential candidate for Serbian LC named; Source: Belgrade home service 1800 gmt 21 Feb 86
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; May 30, 1986, Friday; Serbian LC Congress ends
- ^ Second Amended Indictment; Case No. IT-99-37-PT; Prosecutor v. Slobodan Milošević; October 16, 2001; http://www.un.org/icty/indictment/english/mil-2ai011029e.htm
- ^ Time magazine; I Am Just An Ordinary Man, Monday, Jul. 17, 1995; By James R. Gaines, Karsten Prager, Massimo Calabresi, and Marguerite Michaels; http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,983190-2,00.html
- ^ The New York Times; Protest Staged by Serbs In an Albanian Region; April 26, 1987, Sunday, Late City Final Edition
- ^ ICTY (2005). trial transcript, pg. 35947.
- ^ LeBor, Adam (2002). Milosevic: A Biography. New Haven: Yale University Press, 79-84.
- ^ ICTY (2005). trial transcript, pg. 35686-87.
- ^ ICTY (2005). trial transcript, pg. 35654.
- ^ The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; SEPTEMBER 25, 1987, FRIDAY; Senior Yugoslav Party Official Sacked Over Kosovo Issue; Belgrade, September 25; ITEM NO: 0925148
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; BELGRADE COMMUNISTS GIVE VIEWS ON STAMBOLIC'S RELATIONS WITH DRAGISA PAVLOVIC; November 27, 1987, Friday; SOURCE: Belgrade home service 2100 gmt 24 Nov 87
- ^ The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; DECEMBER 14, 1987, MONDAY; Leader of Yugoslavia's Serbia Republic Sacked; ITEM NO: 1214003
- ^ Sell, Louis (2002). Slobodan Milosevic and the Destruction of Yugoslavia. Durham: Duke University Press, 47-49.
- ^ LeBor, Adam (2002). Milosevic: A Biography. New Haven: Yale University Press, 92-94.
- ^ Communism O Nationalism!, TIME Magazine, October 24, 1988
- ^ The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; OCTOBER 6, 1988, THURSDAY; Yugoslav Protesters Demand Provincial Leaders' Resignation; ITEM NO: 1006181
- ^ The Times (London); October 7 1988, Friday; Angry Serbs topple the leadership of Vojvodina province; Demonstrations against the Communist Party; Yugoslavia
- ^ The Globe and Mail (Canada); October 6, 1988 Thursday; Yugoslavs demand new leader
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; January 25, 1989, Wednesday; SECOND DAY OF VOJVODINA LC CONFERENCE NEW LEADERSHIP ELECTED
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; May 9, 1989, Tuesday; Election of SFRY Presidency member from Vojvodina confirmed; SOURCE: Yugoslav News Agency in Serbo-Croat 1534 gmt 4 May 89
- ^ The Guardian (London); January 11, 1989; 50,000 in Titograd protest
- ^ The Guardian (London); January 12, 1989; Montenegro leaders quit en masse
- ^ The Associated Press; January 13, 1989, Friday, AM cycle; Government Leadership Resigns En Masse
- ^ The New York Times; January 22, 1989, Sunday, Late City Final Edition; The Yugoslav Republic That Roared; By HENRY KAMM
- ^ The Associated Press; April 10, 1989, Monday, AM cycle; Reformer Elected in Montenegro Presidential Election
- ^ Xinhua General News Service; DECEMBER 24, 1990, MONDAY; Bulatovic Elected Montenegro President
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; December 28, 1990, Friday; Momcir(sic) Bulatovic elected President of Montenegro
- ^ Milosevic Trial Transcript; December 1, 2004; pg. 34030; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/041201IT.htm
- ^ Milošević Trial Transcript; December 1, 2004; pg. 34031; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/041201IT.htm
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; March 16, 1989, Thursday; PARTY AND GOVERNMENT Vojvodina agrees to Serbian constitutional changes; SOURCE: Excerpts Yugoslav News Agency in English 1815 gmt 10 Mar 89
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; March 24, 1989, Friday; Kosovo Assembly adopts changes to Serbian Constitution
- ^ The Washington Post; March 29, 1989, Wednesday, Final Edition; 21 Dead in Two Days Of Yugoslav Rioting; Federal Assembly Ratifies Changes at Issue
- ^ The Xinhua General Overseas News Service; MARCH 23, 1989, THURSDAY; Kosovo adopts constitutional changes
- ^ Milošević Trial Transcript; December 1, 2004; pg. 34046; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/041201IT.htm
- ^ Milošević Trial Transcript; December 1, 2004; pg. 34049; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/041201IT.htm
- ^ United Press International; March 29, 1989, Wednesday, BC cycle; Tense calm maintained in restive province
- ^ United Press International; December 14, 1990, Friday, BC cycle; Ethnic Albanians reject Serbia's first multi-party polls
- ^ BBC Summary of World Broadcasts; December 23, 1993, Thursday; ATA: a million Kosovo Albanians boycott Serbian elections; SOURCE: Albanian Telegraph Agency news agency, Tirana, in English 0911 gmt 21 Dec 93
- ^ The Associated Press; November 24, 1989, Friday, AM cycle; Prosecutors Try 15 Ethnic Albanians; Former Vice President Charged
- ^ Remarks by the President to Veterans Groups on Kosovo; Eisenhower Hall, Ft. McNair; May 13, 1999
- ^ Address by Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright To the UN Human Rights Commission; Palais des Nations; March 23, 2000; http://geneva.usmission.gov/humanrights/2000/albright.html
- ^ United States of America Proceedings and Debates of the 106th Congress, 1st Session; Wednesday, March 10, 1999 before the U.S. House of Representatives
- ^ CIA World Factbook; Serbia; https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/print/rb.html
- ^ Norman Cigar & Paul Williams; Indictment at the Hague: The Milosevic Regime and Crimes of the Balkan Wars; New York University Press; 2002
- ^ Decision of the ICTY Appeals Chamber; 18 April 2002; Reasons for the Decision on Prosecution Interlocutory Appeal from Refusal to Order Joinder; Paragraph 8
- ^ Milosevic Trial Transcript; Friday, 24 February 2006; Page 48776; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/060224IT.htm
- ^ Milosevic Trial Transcript; Tuesday, 30 November 2004; Page 33882; 33884; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/041130IT.htm
- ^ Milosevic Trial Transcript; Wednesday, 1 February 2006; Page 47710; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/060201IT.htm
- ^ Milosevic Trial Transcript; Tuesday, 27 January 2004; Page 31676 - 31577; http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/040127IT.htm
- ^ MILOSEVIC: Speeches & Interviews
- ^ Washington Post Interview
- ^ UPI 1999 Interview
- ^ Zimmerman, Warren. 1996. The Origins of a Catastrophe: Yugoslavia and its Destroyers - America's Last Ambassador Tells What Happened and Hhy. New York: Times Books. Pp. 25.
- ^ Zimmerman, Warren. 1996. The Origins of a Catastrophe: Yugoslavia and its Destroyers - America's Last Ambassador Tells What Happened and Hhy. New York: Times Books. Pp. 25.
- ^ Zimmerman, Pp. 25.
- ^ Zimmerman, Pp. 26.
- ^ Zimmerman, Pp. 27.
- ^ Analysis: Stambolic Murder Trial (English). BBC News (February 23, 2004). Retrieved on 2007-12-04.
- ^ Transcript
- ^ Antiwar.com article, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_conflict#The_NATO_bombing_campaign Kosovo Conflict] (Wikipedia article)
- ^ Congoo News
- ^ Milošević's China dream flops, Chinatown-Belgrade booms Boris Babic Sep 9, 2006
- ^ SHOWDOWN IN YUGOSLAVIA: AN ALLY; China, Once a Supporter of Milošević Against NATO, Sends Its Congratulations to Koštunica Erik Eckholm, Oct. 8, 2000
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ 020726IT
- ^ The Demonization of Slobodan Milosevic by Michael Parenti, December 2003
- ^ Web page of Adam LeBor
- ^ BBC ON THIS DAY | 27 | 1991: Yugoslav troops move against Slovenia
- ^ Monthly Review February 2003 | Commentary | Edward S. Herman
- ^ On Iraq, Iran and Blair, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Andrew Stephen
- ^ On the NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Danilo Mandic
- ^ Kosovo, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Patrick Cain
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ Milosevic Deserves Credit for Peace
- ^ Vampire hunters drove stake through Milošević's heart, Ananova.com, retrieved 9 November 2007
- ^ Vampire slayer impales Milošević to stop return by Gabriel Ronay, Sunday-Herald.com, retrieved 9 November 2007
- ^ [3] The Register.com, retrieved 30 November 2007
- ^ OPINION POLL SHOWS MILOSEVIC MORE POPULAR IN SERBIA THAN PREMIER; BBC Monitoring International Reports, April 22, 2005 (translation of FoNet news agency dispatch, Belgrade, in Serbian 1320 gmt 22 Apr 05) http://www.slobodan-milosevic.org/news/fonet042205.htm
- ^ UN clears Serbia of genocide (2007).
[edit] External links
| The external links in this article may not follow Wikipedia's content policies or guidelines. Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links. |
BBC News, March 11, 2006
- Milosevic years: An orgy of war, April 24, 2002
- In-Depth Specials: Milošević On Trial
- From Balkan tyranny to a lonely cell, Tim Judah, March 12, 2006
- Obituary: Slobodan Milošević, March 13, 2006
- Milošević trial news and resources
- Meltdown at the Milošević Trial: A Much Delayed Rush to Judgment
- The Milošević Trial Legacy: If Not Outcome, Hope
Other links
- The Butcher of the Balkans, Time magazine, June 8, 1992
- Cornell International Law Journal Symposium on Trials of Hussein and Milosevic Articles and Video Content Regarding Two Seminal International Trials
- Bildt Comments blog: Slobodan Milošević, March 11, 2006
- Chronology of Milošević's career, The Boston Globe, March 12, 2006
- Obituaries: Slobodan Milošević, The Times, March 13, 2006
- Milošević Trial Public Archive, Bard College
- Rewards for Justice page on Slobodan Milošević, U.S. Department of State
- Srebrenica: A Cry from the Grave, Public Broadcasting Service
- The Trial of Slobodan Milošević, United Nations’ ICTY
- Milošević and the Balkan Wars photo galleries from The Washington Post
| Party political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Ivan Stambolić |
Chairman of the League of Communists of Serbia 1986 – 1989 |
Succeeded by Bogdan Trifunović |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by Office created |
post created President of Serbia 1989 – 1997 |
Succeeded by Dragan Tomić Acting |
| Preceded by Zoran Lilić |
President of Yugoslavia 1997 – 2000 |
Succeeded by Vojislav Koštunica |
|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Milošević, Slobodan |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | President of Serbia and Yugoslavia |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 20 August 1941 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Požarevac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
| DATE OF DEATH | 11 March 2006 |
| PLACE OF DEATH | The Hague, Netherlands |


