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Serbian government faces collapse following presidential election
By Paul Mitchell
7 February 2008
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On February 4, voters re-elected Boris Tadic president of Serbia
in a second-round contest against Tomislav Nikolic of the extreme
right-wing nationalist Serbian Radical Party (SRS). Only 120,000
votes separated the two candidates. Tadic, leader of the Democratic
Party (DS), received 2.3 million votes, and Nikolic got 2.18 million
in a turnout of nearly 68 percent of the electorate.
Western leaders greeted Tadics victory, claiming the
result was an endorsement of their policies. US State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack said that the Bush administration would
work with Tadic to promote Serbias cooperation with the
West. President Tadic promised voters a European future
for Serbia, McCormack said. We will work with President
Tadic and Serbia to see that promise fulfilled and Serbia firmly
on the path to European integration.
European Union (EU) foreign policy chief Javier Solana said
he hoped Serbia would now move as rapidly as possible
towards European integration. I think that the resultsfor
me at leastsignalled the wish of the majority of the people
in Serbia who want to continue the path towards Europe, and Id
like to say Europe is very happy with that, Solana added.
The rush by EU leaders, within hours of the election result,
to approve a mission to the breakaway province of Kosovo and to
demand that Serbia sign a cooperation agreement with the bloc
by February 7 caused the euphoria over Tadics victory to
rapidly evaporate. It has provoked a political crisis that could
lead to the collapse of the Serbian government.
The 1,800-strong mission of police officers, judges and prosecutors
is intended to oversee the transition to Kosovan independence,
working alongside more than 7,000 local police officers and 17,000
NATO peacekeepers. Only one EU member state, Cyprus, opposed the
moveconcerned that it could set a precedent for the recognition
of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus set up after the Turkish
invasion of the island in 1974. Some other states such as Romania,
Spain and Slovakia voted for the mission but remain wary of Kosovan
independence fearing the effect it could have on minority populations
in their own countries.
The most frequently mentioned date for the missions deployment
is February 18, when EU foreign ministers are due to meet. Some
commentators believe its deployment will signal that Kosovos
declaration of independence is imminent...a view bolstered by
recent comments made by Kosovo politicians. The elections
in Serbia have nothing to do with us, they are the elections of
a neighbouring country, Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu said
during polling. There are only a few days left before we
declare independence.
Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci added, Independence
is here. In close coordination with our US and EU allies, my government
and the Kosovo Parliament will declare it in days.
The February 7 cooperation agreement focuses on free trade
arrangements and relaxed visa requirements. Brussels offered the
deal last week instead of a Stabilisation and Association Agreementthe
first step to EU membershipwhich the Netherlands blocked
over Serbias failure to hand over Bosnian Serb fugitives
General Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic to The Hague-based UN
war crimes tribunal.
Yesterday, the EU announced that it would not sign the pact
on ties with Serbia as planned after Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica
blocked the move, denouncing it as a trick.
The government could collapse, triggering new elections. The
government was already fragile after it took months of wrangling
before something could be cobbled together in May of last year.
Although the SRS was the biggest party following parliamentary
elections in early 2007, it did not have a majority. In the end,
Tadics DS formed a coalition with the Democratic Party of
Serbia (DSS) headed by Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica and two
smaller parties, New Serbia and G17 Plus.
The rifts in the government deepened when Kostunica, despite
being a coalition partner, refused to endorse Tadic as presidential
candidate because of Tadics pledge to pursue EU membership
no matter what happened in Kosovo. Tadic made EU membership a
key point of his campaign, claiming that the economic and social
hardship facing the Serbian people could be overcome through EU
integration. Unemployment is around 30 percent in Serbia, and
living standards remain amongst the lowest in the region.
As polling day approached, Kostunica publicly announced that
he didnt know if he would even bother to vote, because presidential
elections were not so important since the presidents powers
were just ceremonial.
Kostunica has attempted to balance between Tadic and Nikolic
by supporting EU membership with a more managed economic transition
and a concerted appeal to nationalist resentment over the issue
of Kosovan independence. But his room to manoeuvre has been squeezed.
Although Nikolic also supports EU membership, he blames the bloc
for Serbias hopelessness and desperation and
puts greater emphasis on relations with Russia, which he sees
as more supportive, a partner that does not put any conditions.
Whilst both candidates are opposed to Kosovan independence, Nikolic
has threatened punitive measures against the province and countries
that back a declaration of independence.
Kostunica has called for an urgent parliament session to discuss
the crisis, saying that signing of any agreement on February 7
represents trickery aimed at getting Serbias
assent for Kosovos independence.
The EUs proposal to sign a political agreement
with Serbia while at the same time sending a mission to break
apart our state is a deception aimed at getting Serbia effectively
to sign its agreement to Kosovo independence, Kostunica
added.
Serbias investment minister, Velimir Ilic, who leads
the New Serbia party, said that if Tadics ministers sign
the agreement with the EU on Thursday, the cabinet could fall.
Thursday is D-day, Ilic said. If they sign,
anything can happen with the government.
If someone wants to enter the EU at any price, and the
EU wants to snatch 15 percent of our territory, I will not sit
in that government, Ilic added.
The SRS has indicated it would support Kostunica in parliament
and give him the votes to block the signing. SRS officials point
that it was only last December that Serbias parliament passed
a resolution calling for Belgrade to cut off diplomatic relations
with any state, including the EU that recognises Kosovos
independence. The DS and G17 Plus, which are unable to form a
majority in parliament, have tried to argue that the agreement
should be signed because it is only an interim and general
character and therefore does not require parliamentary approval.
If the government does fall, Kostunica could either seek new
elections or try to form a new administration with Nikolic.
In Russia, ministers and officials, whilst generally supportive
of Tadics victory, warned once more about the issue of Kosovan
independence. Russian Duma Deputy Konstantin Zatulin said the
West and Russia should unite in welcoming Tadics victory,
but warned that the EU should review its position
on Kosovo. Russia should use every opportunity at its disposal
to block Kosovos admission to the United Nations as an independent
state, added Konstantin Kosachev, head of the Dumas International
Affairs Committee.
Fears are being raised openly in the ruling elite in the US
about the Bush administrations Kosovo policy. Former Ambassador
to the UN John Bolton, former Assistant Secretary of Defence Peter
Rodman and former Secretary of State Lawrence S. Eagleburger penned
an op-ed piece in the Washington Times last week warning
about the risk of ignoring Russias opposition to Kosovo
independence and the impetus recognition could give to other separatist
movements. An imposed settlement of the Kosovo question
and seeking to partition Serbias sovereign territory without
its consent is not in the interest of the United States,
they wrote.
Rodman added, A lot of people [in the Bush administration]
had been silently muttering about this issue for a good while.
The policy on Kosovo had been sailing merrily along for
a good while, with the State Department just assuring everybody
that this was doable, he said. But I know a lot of
people were nervous about it, in Washington and among some of
our European allies.
See Also:
Right-wing nationalist leads
in Serbian presidential elections
[30 January 2008]
European Union sends
rule of law mission to prepare for Kosovan independence
[24 December 2007]
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