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Yugoslavia: Serbian Assembly restores partial autonomy to
Vojvodina
By Paul Mitchell
22 March 2002
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In February, the Serbian Assembly narrowly voted for an omnibus
law restoring partial autonomy to the province of Vojvodina.
Vojvodina and Kosovo are provinces in the Republic of Serbia that
together with the Republic of Montenegro comprise the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY).
The issue of Vojvodinas autonomy, like the status of
Kosovo, which is presently administered as a NATO protectorate
but where the ethnic Albanian government is pressing for independence,
is unresolved. In Montenegro, the government has been campaigning
for a referendum on independence, which was temporarily suspended
as a result of a deal brokered by the European Union (EU) last
week to rename the FRY Serbia and Montenegro. The
agreement keeps open the possibility of a referendum on independence
in three years time.
Since the overthrow of former FRY President Slobodan Milosevic,
the policy of the United States and the EU has been official recognition
of the FRY whilst calling for talks over its redefinition.
When Milosevic was in power the US and EU supported forces pursuing
separation from FRY to the point where Kosovo and Montenegro functioned
as de facto independent states. At the same time, they imposed
economic sanctions in order to destabilise the FRY. With Milosevic
ousted, they switched to support of the federation and the Democratic
Opposition of Serbia (DOS) coalition government that promised
to implement a shock structural adjustment plan and resolve FRYs
huge indebtedness to Western banks.
The new governments policies have worsened an already
terrible social catastrophe. All of Yugoslav industry has been
or is threatened with privatisation or liquidation in the next
three years. Official unemployment stands at 50 percent. The resulting
poverty, scarcity and scramble for the remaining resources of
the federation are again destabilising Yugoslavia and threatening
the disintegration of the DOS coalition.
Who controls the resources of Vojvodina and profits from their
privatisation is at the heart of the dispute over autonomy. This
particularly affects Vojvodina because it is highly industrialised,
including the federations two oil refineries. The province
is at the crossroads of the most important north to south Balkan
communications route and the Danube canal system, a geo-strategic
knot on the traffic corridors that have been targeted for
special European investment funds. The fertile plains of Vojvodina
are known as the breadbasket of Serbia producing 80 per cent of
the countrys cereals. Those wanting more autonomy complain
that Vojvodina provides 40 percent of Serbian state revenues,
but only gets five percent of the budget.
The tension between the richer and poorer areas in Yugoslavia
was one of the greatest problems facing the government of Communist
Party leader Josip Tito after World War II. Large areas were functioning
under semi-feudal conditions. Tito abandoned the call for a socialist
federation of all the Balkan peoples and attempted instead to
create a new Yugoslav nationalism that over time became increasingly
tied to a pro-market policy. In such a backward economy, Yugoslav
nationalism inevitably dissipated while regional and ethnic tensions
emerged. The first signs occurred in Croatia in 1971, with violent
demonstrations and the virtual break of the Croatian Communist
Party from Belgrade. Tito suppressed the Croatian separatists,
but implemented many of their economic demands. The 1974 Yugoslav
Constitution declared the republics to be economically sovereign
and encouraged the independent development of both the republics
and the newly created autonomous regions, including Vojvodina.
Vojvodina had acquired de facto Republic status and the power
of veto in the Serbian Assembly.
In the late 1980s, in response to its increasing indebtedness,
the Yugoslav government implemented an International Monetary
Fund inspired austerity programme that saw the economy crash.
This encouraged the richer republics of Slovenia and Croatia to
split away and led to the establishment of the first autochthonous
(indigenous, native) Vojvodinian organisations. In a bureaucratic
attempt to prevent further separatist movements, the government
of Slobodan Milosevic revoked the autonomy of Vojvodina and Kosovo.
Under the new omnibus law, the Vojvodina Assembly will regain
a measure of its former autonomy including greater control over
the budget, privatisation, health and social security, agriculture,
media, use of languages, water resources management and tourism.
The most populist proponent of autonomy is the leader of the
League of Vojvodina Social Democrats (LSV) and Vojvodina Assembly
Speaker, Nenad Canak. He has been an outspoken supporter of Montenegrin
independence and often threatened a referendum on Vojvodinas
status to force discussion on autonomy. Last year Canak appeared
wearing a bandanna saying, Vojvodina is occupied today as
it was 13 years ago... This bandanna is a symbol of the fact that
the people of Vojvodina still do not own their own land, that
they are tenants in their own homes, that Vojvodinas property
is being sold at will, that we are still putting up with insults
and humiliation from Belgrade barons.
Canak said the return of assets he claimed have been confiscated
by Serbia is of paramount importance. Last December
he accused Serbian Privatisation Minister Aleksandar Vlahovic
of illegally selling the Beocin Cement Plant in Vojvodina to the
French company Lafarge for $51 million. Canak said Vojvodina is
adamantly opposed to five percent of the proceeds from privatisation
being the final amount of funds earmarked for the Vojvodina province.
Eventually it was agreed that half of the money from privatisation
would go to finance programmes in Vojvodina, but only after approval
by the Serbian government. The province and Beocin town council
would receive five percent each.
The LSV call for the self-definition of Vojvodina
and insists the term does not mean self-determination or secession.
Canak says he does not see Vojvodina outside Serbia, but
within a democratic and decentralised Serbia. However, the
partys main document is called, Republic of VojvodinaRoad
to Peace, Development and Stability.
The largest party voting for the omnibus law was the Democratic
Party of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic. The Western powers
see Djindjic as the most reliable instrument for carrying out
structural adjustment and privatisation. A New Left supporter
as a student, Djindjic left Yugoslavia to study under Jürgen
Habermas in Germany. He returned to Yugoslavia and became a founder
member with current FRY President Vojislav Kostunica of the Democratic
Party in 1990. The party was committed to the market economy,
decentralisation of power and privatisation that would reintegrate
Serbia and Yugoslavia into the international community.
In a recent article in the Economist, Djindjic, was described
as a pragmatist who is bravely thinking about a humbler
kind of country. He represents the new Serbian elite who
want to cut the costs of the overlapping Serbian and federal bureaucracies
and are prepared to jettison the poorer areas of the federation.
The vote for limited autonomy in Vojvodina is an attempt to keep
the richer area within Serbia and pre-empt a breakaway movement.
Others see the vote for limited autonomy as just the beginning.
Miodrag Isakov, president of the Vojvodina Reformists, said, Personally,
I do not expect that the omnibus [law] will bring any essential
changes in the position of Vojvodina and its residents. What is
important to us is that its passing opens the process of restoring
autonomy. He reiterated his statement made in 1998, Were
not asking for much ... we just want to be the bosses of our own
land.
The majority of pro-autonomy parties have said the autonomy
dispute does not involve any ethnic struggle. However, there have
been attempts to prove the Serbs in Vojvodina are different to
Serbs elsewhere in the FRY. They are portrayed as a more homogenous
and established grouping, home to two of the oldest Serbian institutionsthe
Serbian Library and the Serbian National Theatrefounded
in the early 19th century when the area was ruled by Hungary.
The question of Hungarian influence is explosive. Vojvodina
was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After its defeat in World
War I and the crushing of the 1919 Hungarian Soviet of Bela Kun,
Vojvodina became part of Serbia under the Treaty of Trianon. At
the time Hungarian speakers comprised about 40 percent of the
population. Since then this figure has declined to 10-15 percent
through a combination of emigration and the arrival of Serb refugees.
With the intense NATO bombing of Vojvodina in 1999, the collapse
of the Yugoslav economy and mass unemployment, the emigration
of Hungarian speakers has increased. Lying just across the border,
Hungary hasat six percentone of the lowest unemployment
rates in Eastern Europe, the highest inward investment in the
area and has experienced consistent growth rates of 4-5 percent.
The government has recently awarded significant minimum wage and
pension increases.
To prevent further immigration into Hungarythere are
340,000 Hungarian speakers in Yugoslavia, 600,000 in Slovakia
and two million in the Transylvanian region of Romaniathe
Hungarian government introduced a new status law granting preferences
to ethnic Hungarians in neighbouring countries in January. Those
who apply will receive the same employment, education, healthcare
and travel provisions experienced by Hungarian citizens. However,
anyone who applies for full citizenship in Hungary and fails could
lose their right to the provisions. The EU has described the law
as discriminatory and demanded Hungary drop the extension of the
law to ethnic Hungarians living in the EU member state of Austria.
Jozsef Kasza, chair of the largest Hungarian party in Vojvodina,
the Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians, said, The preference
law is not about preferences, not about jobs, but about the fact
that at last, the Hungarian nation can belong together, at least
spiritually, and that these threads can be tied to the mother
country. There was no precedence for this in the past 80 years
and this feeling urges the Hungarian population in Vojvodina to
make use of the opportunities.
The Hungarian-American Coalition (HAC) in the US, which has
close connections to several senators in Washington, openly advocates
Hungarian nationalism. Edit Lauer, the chair of HAC, says the
organisation wants, to put an end to the Hungarians
inclination to assimilate... to prevent massive Hungarian migration
[and] bring about spiritual togetherness. During the NATO
bombardment of Yugoslavia, just after Hungary became a NATO member
and allowed the refuelling of bombers, HAC campaigned for NATO
to detach the northern Hungarian speaking quarter
of Vojvodina.
The Hungarian government has always downplayed its regional
interests, claiming the status law was the idea of Hungarian organisations
outside Hungary. According to Prime Minister Viktor Orban, If
the Vojvodina Hungarians raise that the Hungarian government should
move towards dual citizenship, then we will do so. Using
this same pretext of demands emanating from separatists overseas,
the government has mediated a three-tiered autonomy
plan for Vojvodinas Hungarians with the Vojvodina
parties. The first stage comprises personal autonomy,
i.e. language rights, then local autonomycontrol
of police and councilsand finally territorial
autonomy. At last Augusts National Day in Hungary, Orban
made a provocative call for the cross-border reunification
of the Hungarian nation that even drew criticism from Jozsef
Kasza.
Kasza, who is also Serbian deputy prime minister, has criticised
Canak in the past as an extremistincluding his threats to
hold a referendum. However, Kasza himself is playing with fire.
Recently he had to make it explicit, there will be no referendum
on the status of Vojvodina of the sort promoted by Canakafter
apparently calling for one himself. I made the statement
on a referendum in Vojvodina jokingly, Kasza continued.
Journalists were provoking me and I made a passing remark
that there will be a referendum, after the Montenegrin one.
No, no way. Any kind of referendum is out of the question.
Those who voted against the omnibus law see in Vojvodina a
province significant and advantageous for Serbia.
The federal structures are seen as a source of employment, a vehicle
for control of privatisation and enrichment and a bulwark of Serbian
nationalism. For Borislav Pelevic of the Party of Serbian Unity,
The agreement reached among the Vojvodina parties is the
first step towards the creation of an independent republic of
Vojvodina. After that there will follow the requirements by Jozsef
Kasza to make Vojvodina a part of Hungary. It is sad that Yugoslav
President Vojislav Kostunica is not informed again and that he
keeps silent.
Kostunicas Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) abstained
in the omnibus law vote. His view is, We must resist centrifugal
aspirations which threaten to divide us, fragment us, to pluck
at our state and national tissue and carve up border zones in
our homeland. He said these words at the 175th anniversary
of the Serbian Library. Beside him was Bosidar Kovacek, president
of the organisation, who complained of the stress on ideology
of integral Yugoslovenism... the sidelining of Serbian national
institutions in post World War II... subjected to a quiet but
persistent and covert dictate of internationalism which neutralised
its national unity, power and sway.
The DSS is proposing a new constitution that divides Serbia
into five regions centred on Belgrade, Kragujevac, Nis, Novi Sad
(provincial centre of Vojvodina) and Uzice. Kosovo-Metohija
is an integral part of Yugoslavia and thereby Serbia and it would
be the sixth region in Serbia after the issue of its status is
resolved, said Dragan Marsicanin, deputy chair of the DSS.
The DSS proposal for five regions is similar to one launched
previously by Canaks LSV. Canak criticised the DSS version,
saying, they are advocating an equalising approach, that
all regions have symmetrical status. And I have to draw your attention
to the fact that, unlike other regions, Kosovo and Vojvodina were
federal elements of the former federation... So, there is a serious
misunderstanding here. You cannot equal, with all due respect,
the region of Nis with Vojvodina. In order to dress six different
persons well, six different sizes need to be done... What I do
not agree with is that a constitution be made according to the
one man-one vote principle... Three murderers cannot agree on
murdering one person. That is not democracy, that is violence.
It is clear that the autonomy issue has aggravated the tensions
in FRY and the DOS coalition. All the pro-autonomy parties and
Kostunicas DSS are currently members. Immediately after
the omnibus law was passed, Canak announced a government reshuffle
of the Vojvodina Assembly, saying, there will be no room...
for representatives of the DSS and other parties that are obstructing
the efforts to achieve Vojvodinas full autonomy. The
Assembly voted in a new executive committee excluding representatives
of Kostunicas DSS and Canak is campaigning for it to be
thrown out of DOS altogether.
See Also:
Correspondence on Serbian nationalism
and Vojvodina
[6 March 2002]
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