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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - <[email protected]> is the temporary home of the nettime-l list while desk.nl rebuilds its list-serving machine. please continue to send messages to <[email protected]> and your commands to <[email protected]>. nettime-l-temp should be active for approximately 2 weeks (11-28 Jun 99). - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ivo Skoric <[email protected]> Re: two questions (Fwd) From today's Turkish Daily News--Kosovar Turks fear Alba <...> The elusive victory Re: your questions Independent Media in Democracy (Fwd) [webstock] CACAK'S VOICE OF REASON - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <[email protected]> To: Bill Weinberg <[email protected]> Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 01:53:34 -0400 Subject: Re: two questions I don't know - but there was that Yugoslav lieutenant that was captured by KLA shortly after the 3 Americans. He was kept by Americans in Tirana. Pentagon (Bacon) said that he was being visited by Red Cross and treated accordingly with Geneva Convention. But his face was NEVER shown, and then the story just died (news that have no image are no news in the world of images...). Where is he now? Was he returned to Serbia or not? Why there is no story? Then there was that F-117 that crashed over Yugoslavia in the beginning of the war. The pilot was - reported by Pentagon - saved by the Special Forces action and then he went to a hospital in Italy, and NOBODY EVER saw him on TV. Now, I remember O'Grady who got a book deal after his plane was shot over Bosnia and after he ate grass for a few days until the Marines came to the rescue. Why nobody asks Pentagon a question what is going on with this pilot? Is he recovered? Can he give an interview? Is he a deaf-mute or something? ivo From: Bill Weinberg <[email protected]> Subject: Re: two questions To: [email protected] Date sent: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 16:37:29 -0400 (EDT) What are you implying, Ivo? > 1) Where is the pilot of the F-117 that crashed over Serbia early in > the war? Isn't it strange that the media did not get a hold of him > and that he did not yet get a book deal? > 2) Where is that Yugoslav Army officer that KLA captured and > delivered to Americans in Tirana? We never saw him? Isn't it > strange that the free media did not yet get his face? > > ivo - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 01:53:45 -0400 Subject: (Fwd) From today's Turkish Daily News--Kosovar Turks fear Alba The enemy of my enemy is not necessarilly my friend... ivo ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- http://www.turkishdailynews.com/FrTDN/latest/for.htm#f5 (This url will only get you this story today) Kosovar Turks fear Albanian nationalism and oppression SIBEL UTKU Ankara - Turkish Daily News The virtual end of the Serbian rule in Kosovo does not outline a bright prospect for the nearly 20,000 Turks in the province. They believe that Albanian nationalism is more dangerous and fear reprisal and oppression. Accused of siding with the Serbs during the Kosovo crisis, the Turks are deeply concerned that once the Albanians take over the administration of the province, they will face pressure and discrimination. And their worries are not baseless. The Turkish Daily News talked with Kosovar Turks who found refuge in Turkey during the crisis. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, for obvious reasons, the Kosovo Turks sounded pessimistic about a peaceful cohabitation between Turks and Albanians and warned that a mass exodus of Turks could start from the province if their security and rights are not guaranteed. They explained that from the very beginning of the Kosovo crisis in the early 1990s, when the Albanians started boycotting state institutions, the Turks came under pressure to join the rebellion. They did not. The Turks did not support the armed resistance of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), either. However, they say, this had nothing to with taking the Serbian side. The Turks have their schools and departments of Turkish philology in the universities, their political party and cultural associations. Radio and television broadcasts in Turkish are available, although in limited hours. They publish their newspapers and magazines, although with certain restraint. Religious activities are free. "We are a tiny community. We had our rights, and we were concerned that if we turned against Belgrade, we might lose what we had already gotten. We had to be impartial," said one of the refugees, stressing that when the Albanians started the mass boycotts of state institutions, Turkey advised them to stay at their jobs and continue their education. "Maybe the Serbs also disliked us, but at least they always respected us," a refugee from Pristina said. "We all admit that the Albanians faced unbelievable atrocities and oppression. But now that they think they are victorious, they want to exert the same oppression on us," he added. Albanian accusations of Turkish collaboration with the Serbs seem to be only the visible tip of the iceberg. The detestation is deep-rooted and stems from the Albanians' extremist nationalism, the Kosovar Turks say. The religious, linguistic and cultural similarities between Kosovo's Turks and Albanians have failed to prevent the emergence of a confidence rift between them throughout the years. The Turks say that the overwhelming majority of Albanians reject their Turkish identity and maintain that they are actually Albanians. This intolerance has lead to visible discrimination. It has been also reflected in academic studies by Albanian scholars. The Kosovar Turks say that Albanian scholars such as Esat Haskuka and Malic Osi have written theories rejecting the Turkish presence in Kosovo. In another example, they remember with anger an article by an Albanian columnist in the early 1990s. The columnist, Teki Dervishi, maintained that "the Turks are the dirtiest nation in the world." The Greeks and the Serbs were respectfully the second and the third "runners-up" in this classification. The Kosovar Turks say that the Albanian head of Pristina Radio and Television refused to give permission in the early 1990s for a limited broadcast of TRT-INT on certain days of the week. In the same manner, the Albanian president of Pristina University did not allow the opening of a Turkish philology department. Permission for both was issued later, when Serbs headed the two institutions. The Kosovar Turks also say that they are usually discriminated against when applying for jobs in institutions headed by Albanians. The same barriers are equally visible in the very simplest matters of daily life. "If you go to a shop run by an Albanian or to an Albanian doctor, in most cases you will not receive any service if you do not speak in Albanian... The prices may change, depending on which language you speak," a Turkish Kosovar woman said. Her husband remembered how a Turkish religious site dedicated to the Ottoman Sultan Murat was attacked by Albanians in the years before the crisis started, and police had to intervene. "How can we side with them after living throughout all this? How can we trust [them]? What will be the gain of siding with the Albanians when they don't even want to accept us as Turks?" the Kosovar Turks ask. They admit that many Turks who were fed up with the pressure and who wanted to make their lives easier had accepted Albanian identity. "My cousin in Ipek says that he is an Albanian," a Turkish university student from Prizren comments. Now with reports coming from Kosovo about Albanian reprisals on Serbs and gypsies, the Turks' concerns are growing. "We've never rebelled against the state. We will be loyal to any government that ensures our rights, our identity and safety. We are Turks, and all we want is to be acknowledged as such," the student says. He stresses that Turkey should immediately take action to protect the Kosovar Turks. What the Kosovar Turks urgently ask is the opening of a Turkish consulate, either in Pristina or Prizren. They demand more attention from the motherland and believe that Turkey's intensive support can be their only guarantee. "If we continue to feel unsafe, the only way out is immigrating to Turkey," the Kosovar Turks agree. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 01:54:09 -0400 Subject: The elusive victory For me it is unimportant that NATO Operation Allied Force costed more than it is the entire Russia's military budget for this year. Could it be proved that this money helped save human lives, I would say it was well spent. But 220,000 $50,000 bombs and $750,000 missiles later it increasingly and disappointingly seems that Milosevic's armed forces are neither reduced nor substantially hurt. The news that the new barracks were not hit and that only 13 tanks were destroyed are at least disturbing. NATO's target criteria was apparently the un-movability of the target, since Clinton refused to let his airplanes fly below 15,000 feet, and from there only targets that do not move can be seen and hit with accuracy. So, there is a large number of dual-use objects like bridges, railroads, oil refining plants, power plants and TV transmitters that are destroyed, promising a humanitarian disaster in Serbia this winter. Milosevic, on the other hand, is not removed from the power. Instead he was given more favourable agreement to sign AFTER the bombing than he was presented with before the bombing in Rambouillet: I think everybody noticed by now that Kosovo Albanians lost the clause about the referendum for independence in three years. Clinton now wows how he is not going to give a "red cent" to Serbia while Milosevic is in power. Good. Milosevic is going to make sure that pictures of freezing, starving people from Serbia reach American viewer this winter, perhaps well timed with the beginning of the primaries. Milosevic does not care if his subjects die, as long as this picture provides a good proof of the consequences of the NATO's humanitarian intervention. There are and there will be people demonstrating against him, but, please, have no illusions: his people are weakened by this war, he is not; if they could not get rid off him two years ago, they stand less chances this winter. Switzerland announced that they are going to freeze Milosevic's assets if they find them, at the time when they could not find them any more. Kosovo Albanians are pouring back in Kosovo, only to find all their property destroyed and looted. Serbs are leaving only to be turned back, since neither Milosevic nor NATO victory would be sustainable if there are Serb refugees from Kosovo. When they come back they find the same: their homes burned and looted by Albanians in revenge. Yugoslav Army left, but there are still armed Serbs sniping around. And there is KLA, that started as a terrorist organization, then became a glorified liberation front that relayed targeting information to NATO and now it is a bitter ex-ally that NATO looks to disarm and dispose off a.s.a.p. There are stories of killing, burning, looting, rape, internal purges and vandalism abound. NATO was promising Russia participation in Kosovo, while in the meantime making that participation impossible on the ground. Russia then moved into the Kosovo on its own, as a rogue force. Yeltsin and his subordinates gave a series of conflicting statements in reference to that move. The entire stand-off in Prishtina reminds me of the bygone cold war era, very far from the level of cooperation between the U.S. and Russia achieved in Bosnia. Position of Macedonia is weaker than ever: ostracized by Serbia for offering NATO the stomping ground and ostracized by the Albanians who might want the autonomy there too. The entire region is substantially weakened by the destruction of the Danube trade and devastating influence that the war right before the summer season has on turism. And the only thing KFOR unearths in abundance in Kosovo are minefields and mass-graves, testifying to the enormous level of killing Serb forces were able to carry-out during (and in spite of) NATO bombing. All this makes me question the validity of names "just war" and "humanitarian intervention." Maybe I fail to see the forest from the trees? Bill Clinton, after Milosevic signed the agreement, said: "I can report to the American people that we have achieved a victory for a safer world, for our democratic values and for a stronger America." I challenge him to prove me everything but the last part of this statement. As he said that, the State Department announced possibility of closing down embassies in Africa due to the terrorist threat of Osama Bin Laden. During NATO bombing of Yugoslavia both the war between two 'rogue' nuclear powers - India and Pakistan - and the war between the two Koreas (South Korea sunk several North Korea ships) escalated substantially. One of the first orders of business of the new Israeli prime minister, who ascended to power during the last stages of the NATO war against Yugoslavia, was to bomb Lebanese power plants and bridges, mimicking NATO strategy - punishing Lebanon for providing safe haven to the terrorist organization Hezbolah (Hezbolah retaliated surrounding Israeli villages: Barak forgot that Serbia has no land border with the U.S. while Lebanon has one with Israel). Russia is openly discussing upgrading its tactical nuclear capabilities. World to me looks about as safe as during the Cuban missile crisis. Maybe Clinton lives in a different world, I don't know. We already forgot what's going on in Somalia or Afghanistan - but this does not mean that it stopped. Colombia is on the brink of civil war, with terrorist/liberation forces kidnapping churchfulls of people. Sudan has so widespread problem of child slave trade that even its government started asking for help. Indonesian forces are in the process of ethnic cleansing/genocide over East Timorese population. Russia had pulverized Chechenya. China has denied Tibet. Turkey, which is a NATO member and which continues to ethnically cleanse Turks, did not yet respond to the Kurdish leader's (Ocalan) offer to cease fire for amnesty, renounce violence and accept political fight under Turkish rule (similar deal that Sinn Fein had won in Northern Ireland). Today, the U.S. Coast Guard arrested and placed in the deportation proceedings several young Cubans who risked their lifes to reach this country in a small raft in the tunderstorm. We are very far from the victory for our democratic values. The victory for the humanitarian intervention cannot be accomplished if the rules of humanity do not apply to those, who desire to apply them to others. On top of that, we live in the world where this story will be untold or at least un-noticed. News that are not accompanied with an image live very shortly. During the war, when Milosevic censored all the images leaving Yugoslavia: we saw only civilian objects being bombed in Yugoslavia - we haven't seen a single military target being hit. And the Yugoslav scores against NATO were repeatedly shown ad nauseam. Since there was only one airplane shot down (or crashed due to technological malfunction) we saw a lot of it. When NATO moved to Kosovo, CNN followed, so we saw a destroyed Serbian museum piece T-55 tank, charcoaled. And we saw that tank over and over, because apparently they couldn't find any other, since mighty Warthogs destroyed mostly inflatable tanks. And we never saw the pilot of the crashed F-117. And we, also, never saw the captured Yugoslav lieutenant (who is now perhaps released and back in Serbia): I find lack of interest among media for those two stories particularly interesting. There is a lot of unfinished business about this war and I think that it is way premature to call it a victory yet. ivo - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 01:53:45 -0400 From: Ivo Skoric <[email protected]> To: Erwin Bolwidt <[email protected]>, [email protected] Subject: Re: your questions We live in the world of images. News that come without an image are destined to live shortly and be easily forgotten. There is a reason behind not showing a picture of either of those two men. It seems that most of the media and the public forgot about them, because they haven't seen them. I got a few jovial suggestions from a human rights worker and from an ex-psy-ops guy from Bosnia. Generally, we can asume that the pilot is back in the Air-Force. I am sure he is not proud of loosing the "invisible" plane, and I am sure the Pentagon is not happy with Stealth technology now in Russian hands. I see good reasons why he is keeping low profile. I don't understand why, however, the media do not seek to find him. As for the Serb lieutenant, Bacon made the point that his face will not be shown on TV as a matter of complying with the Geneva Convention. But what happens now when the war is over? Does he go back to Serbia? He is not a prisoner any more, is he? And more importantly: why no Western and no Serbian media are interested to find that out? ivo Date sent: Tue, 29 Jun 1999 16:17:53 +0200 From: Erwin Bolwidt <[email protected]> Organization: Tryllian BV To: [email protected] Copies to: [email protected] Subject: Re: your questions > 1) Where is the pilot of the F-117 that crashed over Serbia early in > the war? Isn't it strange that the media did not get a hold of him > and that he did not yet get a book deal? Perhaps this guy is in the army and has to obey the orders of his commanding officers? > 2) Where is that Yugoslav Army officer that KLA captured and > delivered to Americans in Tirana? We never saw him? Isn't it > strange that the free media did not yet get his face? That's easy, that's forbidden by the Geneva convention, something which NATO took seriously, in contrast with the Yugoslavs. > ivo Erwin Ivo Skoric 1773 Lexington Ave New York NY 10029 212.369.9197 [email protected] http://balkansnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 14:35:54 -0400 Subject: Independent Media in Democracy Sometimes during the bombing campaign I watched William Saphire on MSNBC, I think. He did not sound quite different than Strobe Tallbot. They are both political columnists. Only Tallbot is now Deputy Secretary of State, and Saphire just sounds like he'd like the same job sometimes in the future. There is nothing that a political columnist covets more than the taste of raw power. American journalists are always ready to pun columnists of Serbian regime press, who often side with the government and on occassions become members of the government themselves (like it was the case with Aleksander Tijanic, briefly). Yet, when similar parrotting of government positions occur among their own they are ready to turn a blind eye. Saphire to me did not sound quite different than a Politika columnist, echoing whatever Bacon and Shea said that day. I accept that he might have genuinely shared their beliefs: however, in that case my opinion about him as a jornalist is severely diminished for his failure to question his sources, for his failure to be curious and inquisitive - the qualities that are conspicuously absent from the mainstream U.S. media more and more, as it is plainly obvious with nobody asking questions about the pilot of the F-117 that crashed over Serbia and about the Yugoslav officer that was kept as POW by Americans in Tirana during the bombing campaign. I see no difference between fierce loyalty to the status quo found among the establishment journalists both in Serbia and in the U.S. Here is the example of how two essentially similar world crises receive different editorial treatment in that bastion of free thinking - New York Times - solely based on how they fit in the American foreign policy perspective: ivo ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- ******************************************************************* Similar Crises Get Divergent Treatment in The New York Times by Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) An article in the June 24 New York Times reported on the trial in Turkey of captured Kurdish guerrilla leader Abdullah Ocalan. The Times provided background on the war between Kurdish separatist guerrillas and Turkish security forces: "The war that Ocalan has waged has cost more than 30,000 lives and made him the object of intense hatred. It has also made him a heroic figure to many Kurds who live in Turkey's southeast." Contrast this description with the way The New York Times presents the background of another, very similar, separatist war (3/27/99): "The Serbian campaign against the ethnic Albanians has seen more than 2,000 killed in the last year, with hundreds of thousands of Kosovars driven from their homes, according to the United Nations." The two news articles quoted above appear to assign responsibility for casualties in each war to one or the other side in the conflict: In the case of Turkey, blame for the 30,000, mostly Kurdish, dead goes to the leader of the Kurdish rebels. In the case of Yugoslavia, blame for the 2,000, mostly ethnic Albanian, dead is put squarely on the shoulders of the Serbian authorities putting down the rebellion. This disparity is typical in Times coverage of the two conflicts. In an editorial on the Ocalan trial (6/24/99), the Times explained the Kurdish war: "In response to Mr. Ocalan's violence, the country's armed forces have devastated Kurdish-inhabited areas of southeastern Turkey, razing villages, and driving tens of thousands of refugees to Ankara and Istanbul." On the other hand, in a March 24 editorial about NATO's bombing ("The Rationale for Air Strikes"), the Times' editoral writers describe the Kosovo conflict this way: "Serbian forces are shelling and burning villages, forcing tens of thousands to flee. They have also been killing ethnic Albanian civilians." In these editorials, the two very similar conflicts are described in very similar terms. But the editorial about Turkey makes it clear that the security forces are acting "in response to Mr. Ocalan's violence"; whereas the editorial about Kosovo does not mention the existence of the Kosovar guerrillas at all. In fact, a reader who knows nothing about the Kosovo conflict would have literally no inkling, from reading this editorial laying out "The Rationale for Air Strikes," that an insurgency has ever taken place there. Why the discrepancy? The two conflicts are notable for the remarkable parallels between them. In each case, a local ethnic minority has seen its cultural, civil and human rights abused by the central government. In each case, members of the minority responded by organizing an armed guerrilla force in their local territory, aimed at secession and independence. In each case, the guerrillas used terrorism--e.g., sniping at police officers and civilians--to provoke a response from security forces. And in each case, the security forces responded with overwhelming force--brutally clearing out villages suspected of providing support to the rebels and committing widespread human-rights abuses against civilians--all the while claiming they were merely preventing terrorists from threatening the territorial integrity of their country. In both countries, the human costs of both campaigns were enormous. When The New York Times published its description of the Kosovo campaign, in addition to the 2,000 dead, an estimated 200 villages had been partly or completely destroyed, with approximately 450,000 people displaced in one year of heavy fighting. In Turkey, according to Human Rights Watch, 35,000 people have been killed, while more than 3,000 villages have been destroyed, and an estimated 2 million people have been displaced in 15 years of fighting. But the two conflicts differ in one crucial respect: The U.S. militarily opposed Yugoslavia's actions in Kosovo. Turkey, on the other hand, is a close U.S. ally. As a State Department official told reporters in 1992, when Turkey's human rights abuses were reaching a peak: "There is no question of halting U.S. military assistance to Turkey. The U.S. sees nothing objectionable in a friendly or allied country using American weapons to secure internal order or to repel an attack against its territorial unity." Clearly the U.S. has a double standard when it comes to civil wars-- but that doesn't mean that The New York Times ought to. ACTION: Please write to The New York Times and ask them to use a single standard when covering similar situations. If the editors believe that the Kurdish and Kosovo situations are fundamentally different, please ask them to explain what the differences are that deserve such markedly divergent treatment. Contact: Andrew Rosenthal Foreign Editor [email protected] <<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<> Drak W. Rabbit Sound Studio New York City <<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<><<> "Love is all. Love is the Law." Aliester Crowley (1875-1947) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Ivo Skoric" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Date: Wed, 30 Jun 1999 15:52:55 -0400 Subject: (Fwd) [webstock] CACAK'S VOICE OF REASON ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- CACAK'S VOICE OF REASON Opposition Mayor Ilic made a triumphant return at the first post-war anti-Milosevic rally, setting the stage for further demonstrations in other cities within Serbia. By a journalist from Belgrade Demonstrations in the city centre of Cacak drew thousands of people in a enthusiastic opposition gathering--the first since the end of the war. Serbian police prevented a few busloads of demonstrators, and some international journalists, from reaching the rally. Local members of opposition parties also received warnings or were detained for "informative talks" in an effort to get them to call off the protest. Despite this harassment, activists with the coalition Alliance for Change mounted the first public manifestation, June 29, since the war of opposition to the regime of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. Making his first public appearance since going into hiding during the war, Cacak Mayor Velimir Ilic addressed the chanting rally and waded into the crowd to shake hands and greet supporters. He was joined on the platform by Social Democrat leader Vuk Obradovic, Civic Alliance of Serbia (GSS) leader Goran Svilanovic, Mayor Zoran Zivkovic of Nis and civic activists from Cacak as well as Kraljevo. "For Freedom, For Cacak," read posters plastered around the town. Cacak has been a focus of opposition since its first anti-Milosevic demonstrations in 1992. In the 1996 local elections, opposition politicians from the Democratic Party of Zoran Djindjic, the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO) of Vuk Draskovic and others gained seats and took overall control. But it was in the midst of the heaviest NATO bombing that Cacak secured its reputation as an opposition stronghold by organising anti-regime demonstrations despite the state of war. On May 18-20, local activists organised a Citizens' Parliament, which held three days of protests attended by thousands of people. After such meetings were banned, opposition-oriented gatherings continued in panel discussions and other private meetings. "The Citizens' Parliament was formed so that the people of Cacak could speak openly about everything that is happening to us," explains Verica Barac, a municipal attorney associated with the Parliament. "We wanted the voice of reason to be heard, to fight for the last man, and not to the last man. But it seems the regime . . . wants as many people as possible to die." During the bombing, euphoric nationalism swept Serbia--including officially sponsored rallies in Cacak "against the NATO aggressor." The municipal assembly, dominated by opposition parties, and Mayor Ilic of the New Serbia party, sought to explain to citizens that such "patriotic protests" were staged by local representatives of the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia and its communist partner, the Yugoslav United Left. Thus while air raid sirens wailed, and soldiers bodies were returned from Kosovo, citizens of Cacak condemned such patriotic defiance. Yet with the media blockade, they had little impact. Even the local private TV station, Galaksija 32, lent itself out as the official parties' mouthpiece. In these circumstances, the initial aims of the Citizens' Parliament were formally apolitical. The focus was on ending the war and saving people's lives. A modest industrial town of 80 000, Cacak lies 120 kilometres south of Belgrade. The destruction of its economy contributed to the feeling among jobless residents that the patriotic fervour pumped out by the regime and its loyal media cannot offer them a real future. With desperate young soldiers returning from Kosovo, people in Cacak were also under no illusion that the war against NATO could be won. The regime responded with ham-fisted attempts to stifle dissent in Cacak. The first to be attacked was Ilic, the assembly speaker. Based on statements he made to Radio Free Europe, he was accused of revealing military targets and undermining the defence of the country. The authorities attempted to arrest him, but Ilic was able to slip into hiding, where he remained until this afternoon. But the persecution of Ilic only enhanced the dissatisfaction of people in Cacak. He has enjoyed strong local support for a long time, since his outspoken role several years ago as an activist in the SPO when he opposed leader Draskovic for openly flirting with the regime. Trumped-up charges were also brought against leading members of the Citizens' Parliament for holding unregistered gatherings during a state of war. Dr. Mirjana Hercog, a children's GP; Professor Nada Despotovic; Vesna Bjelic, a journalist for BETA news agency; Barac, the public attorney, and Milan Bozovic, a retired professor, were all sentenced and fined 3,000 German Marks. "The situation in the town is extremely repressive," says Dr. Svetlana Eric, who was also charged. "Only in Cacak were people arrested because of their opinion." Eric says that during her hearing, she was criticised by the judge for writing a letter to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. "According to the judge, Annan is a fascist. The UN is a fascist organisation. You see to what extent their madness goes," Eric exclaims. Within the town, the political initiatives appear to have widespread support. "Serbia is shrinking year by year and its citizens are ever poorer," says Milisav Kovacevic, an unemployed factory worker. "I am left without a job, and what do I get in return? Bogus patriotism precisely from people who managed to get rich . . . on other people's misery." He sees the Cacak initiatives as a sign that people realise they have to take responsibility for Serbia's future. "Sooner or later the regime will have to answer before its own people," he says. The question is whether Cacak's Citizens' Parliament and other activities can emerge as a serious new political force. Similar fora have been founded in Kraljevo, Paracin and Subotica--all gathering civic-oriented forces, and Kraljevo activists participated in the Cacak rally. In the coming weeks, fresh demonstrations are scheduled for Uzice and Kraljevo, where Democratic Party leader Djindjic, the former mayor of Belgrade, is expected to speak. The contributor is a journalist with a newspaper in Belgrade whose name has been withheld. IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Just Tell Us What You Want... Respond.com - Shopping the World for You! http://clickhere.egroups.com/click/390 eGroups.com home: http://www.egroups.com/group/webstock http://www.egroups.com - Simplifying group communications