Zarana Papic on Fri, 04 Jun 1999 02:34:01 +0200 |
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fragments: BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 42]] |
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 42 Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 20:34:54 +0100 From: "Tony Borden" <[email protected]> THE NEXT SERBIAN CONFLICT Even if the troubling details of the Kosovo agreement can be resolved, Serbia faces new conflict at home. By Anthony Borden The acceptance by the Serbian parliament of NATO's terms for an end to the bombing campaign may open the way for a resolution of the Kosovo crisis. But many details remain to be resolved, and the settlement leaves open the fundamental question of political control in Belgrade, over which considerable conflict is likely in the coming months. The precise details of the agreement, including the wording of a resolution before the UN Security Council, and the speed and reliability of Serbian compliance with the document remain the key questions. An end to the NATO bombing campaign is conditioned upon successful movement on these points, particularly withdrawal of Yugoslav security forces. Yet even if these obstacles are overcome, the primary political problem for the Belgrade regime remains. For the 12-point document accepted by the Serbian parliament is fundamentally the same as the Rambouillet accords, and in some important details even harsher from their perspective. As such it represents both a substantial capitulation by Belgrade, and a testimonial to the futility of the past three months of defiance. Initial reports by the Serbian media have been unemotional and informational. But having led Yugoslavia into a confrontation with NATO and extensive destruction and loss of life, Milosevic and the regime media will have a difficult time portraying him now as the saviour of Serbia. "The issue is not whether Kosovo has been lost, but whether we have been lost--all of us," says an independent analyst in Belgrade. "Ten years of disasters and then two and a half months of bombing only to return to the Rambouillet accords. All of it was for nothing." In these circumstances, internal opposition is expected to mushroom. "Social discontent, especially on a local level, is substantial," says one Serbian human rights activist. "As a result of the war, power has become decentralised. Citizens, local initiatives and regional media are outside the control of Belgrade, and it is possible that they will become sources of new opposition." A critical indicator will be the response of Montenegro, the restive second republic within the federation, which can be expected only to increase its efforts to distance itself from Belgrade. Another unknown is the Albanian response. Kosovo Albanian leaders have not been privy to the agreement and find it difficult to accept the concept of autonomy within Serbia. Albanian sources have expressed particular concern over stipulations allowing Serbian involvement in border control. Moreover, the Kosovo Liberation Army is currently regrouping under a new commander-in-chief, Agip Ceku, and is unlikely to wish to disarm. Some figures within Serbia, meantime, are immediately positioning themselves for new roles as interlocutors with the West. Speaking at his own press conference, Serbian Renewal Movement leader Vuk Draskovic, ousted during the war as a deputy prime minister, was positioning himself for an early comeback. Signalling a new co-operation with Milosevic, he expressed support for the peace agreement and stressed the need for international reconstruction aid--clearly offering himself as the Western link with Belgrade. Yet the extremists are hardly ceding defeat. At a press conference immediately following the parliamentary vote in favour of the agreement, Deputy Prime Minister and leader of the Radical Party Vojislav Seselj strongly denounced the agreement as a major defeat for Milosevic. He severely criticised Milosevic for accepting it. While still holding out hope for "double-key" command of the international forces which would leave substantial control over parts of the province in Russian hands, he warned that, under pressure from Washington, the final terms of a UN resolution could be even more severe for Serbia. Threatening to leave the government, he insisted that the Radicals would consider all foreign troops in Kosovo "occupiers". Seselj's long-time role as the regime's in-house radical gives reason for scepticism about real intentions of any such statements. But they also fuel concern among Serbs that an end to the fighting in Kosovo will only bring conflict home--by direct violence if not by other means--to Serbia. Independent journalists, human rights activists and others in Belgrade have, throughout the bombing, feared that lists were being drawn up of those expressing "insufficient loyalty"--with retribution to be meted out in the aftermath. A key concern is the response of the military. The agreement calls for the withdrawal of all forces from Kosovo, and their willingness to comply will be the first key test of the accord. There may remain considerable haggling over the scope of any continued, even token, presence of Serbian forces in the province. Yet if they do return to Serbia proper, this could create substantial new internal tensions. Some troops may express their dismay at returning to an impoverished and embittered country in street protests like those staged by relatives of soldiers in recent weeks. Others, however, angry at the capitulation in a war which, on the ground at least, they had reason to believe they were winning, may be keen for revenge against any internal opposition to the ruling structures. The stage is set for a nasty, and possibly violent, reckoning within Serbia. All of these factors are likely to be complicated by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, in The Hague. With Milosevic already under indictment for war crimes, Western countries will face increasing pressure not to provide any support that will help stabilise the regime. This will impede the provision of much-needed financial and reconstruction aid. With Kosovo under effective international protection, war crimes investigators will immediately begin intensive research into the recent events within Kosovo, and may even dredge up charges against the Belgrade leadership over the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. This will further isolate the existing establishment, and create further pressures for a change of regime. Assuming that does not occur soon, a vengeful and embittered Serbia may turn in on itself for its next conflict. Anthony Borden is executive director of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting. An IWPR correspondent in Belgrade contributed to this report. HARSH REALITY UNDER THE BOMBS Belgrade's bravado in the wake of NATO's early air strikes has disappeared as the reality of daily bombing has set in. By an independent journalist in Belgrade After more than 70 days of escalating bombing, the defiance and bravado with which Belgrade greeted the NATO air strikes have all but disappeared. Instead of singing and dancing on bridges and publicly pledging unending loyalty to Serbia's supreme leader and heroic military, Belgraders are forced to adapt to life with intermittent power and water supplies. They ask: "How much longer must this go on?" "Why do we have to put up with such conditions?" Despite many casualties and massive destruction, the city simulated normal life for the first two months of bombing, refusing to face reality, and living off its reserves of patriotism and anger. But apathy is taking hold of the inhabitants of the Yugoslav capital, especially among those who live in high-rise apartment blocks, the parents of young children and those who suffer from chronic illnesses. Trams and trolley buses are eerily empty, people hurry along the streets with pained expressions on their faces, and the queues for bread, cooking oil, sugar and cigarettes grow ever longer. At the beginning of the third month of NATO's bombing campaign, the power plants Obrenovac A and Drmno, which supply Belgrade with electricity, were targeted and sustained heavy damage. Since then, the city has been receiving about 6 per cent of its normal power supply. As a result, much of the city has to do without power. Even bakeries and health centres--including the fourteenth-floor Institute for Mother and Child--are often without water and electricity. "Life is horrible!" says Jovanka Blagojevic, a clerk from block 45 in New Belgrade who lives on the eighth floor, with a sick mother and two children. "There is no electricity, water, bread or milk," she says. "How can we go to the shops, come back to the flat, brush our teeth, wash dishes or prepare food for children?" "Everything is a problem, especially in the evenings, in candlelight. We are forced to spend our last reserves of food and money," she says. Most Belgrade families have in recent years become used to privations and had prepared for the possibility of a lengthy bombing campaign. Many equipped themselves with petroleum lamps and small gas- or alcohol-powered camping stoves when NATO first threatened air strikes in October last year. Otherwise, all the necessary accoutrements for life without power--batteries, candles and torches--are on sale in improvised stalls in the streets. The cheapest lighting burns cooking oil. Belgrade's flea market has been doing a roaring trade in camping stoves, small radios and (since digital telephones do not work without electricity) traditional telephones. Newspapers are full of articles offering "survival tips" which housewives cut out and share with their friends. These include pieces on how to cure illnesses without medicines, using herbs, teas and acupuncture, as well as advice how to prepare meals without electricity or gas. Other articles have examined traditional methods of preserving meat without freezers--by soaking it fat--and how to make bread last longer--by drying it in the oven at 100 degrees, when there is electricity. The results of the first war-time opinion poll, conducted by Belgrade's Institute for Policy Studies at the beginning of May, indicate that 71 per cent of citizens suffer privations caused by shortages of certain goods. The poll also determined that more than a half of those officially in employment are not working at present, or have lost their jobs as a result of the war. It also found that 42 per cent of citizens over 18 have had to leave their homes to move to a safer location. As many as 72 per cent of Serbia's citizens have been directly inconvenienced by destruction to bridges and roads. And 96 per cent suffer from psychological problems caused by worry for their own future and the future of their families. Belgrade's newest graffiti reflects the changing mood of the city. Although NATO, US President Bill Clinton and the West are still perceived as the principal enemies, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is once the again the butt of much vitriol. "Slobo, why did you destroy Vukovar?" has just been scrawled on the wall of a building in the centre of Belgrade. It is if Belgraders are slowing beginning to recognise the enormity of the crime committed in that once-beautiful Croatian town which was systematically levelled by the Yugoslav army in 1991. After Milosevic's Beli Dvor residence was hit by a NATO bomb, more graffiti appeared on walls throughout the Yugoslav capital complaining: "Slobo, when we needed you most you were not at home." The author is an independent journalist from Belgrade whose identity has been concealed. THE DEAD DON'T CARE ABOUT KOSOVO Anti-war protesters in southern Serbia have argued that Serb lives are more important than Serb control over Kosovo. By a journalist in Belgrade The wives and mothers of Yugoslav soldiers mobilised to fight in Kosovo who have vented their frustration in street protests are motivated by fears for the safety of loved ones and not politics. But their actions are likely to have political repercussions. The demonstrations were launched three weeks ago without any coordination or broader organisation in the southern Serbian towns of Krusevac, Aleksandrovac and Cacak. But they have put the lie to official propaganda about the willingness of all Serbs to endure all manner of suffering in order to ensure that Kosovo remains an integral part of Serbia. The reasons that have motivated ordinary people to defy authority vary. But the message from the various demonstrations has been identical--namely that the war should be ended as soon as possible and the priority must be human lives, not the political future of Kosovo. As one placard said "The dead don't need Kosovo." Faced with this spontaneous outpouring of anger at the war and mounting casualties, Belgrade has been put on notice that it cannot rely indefinitely on appeals to patriotism and the defence of Kosovo to maintain authority at home. Without presenting a single political demand, the protesters have effectively challenged the entire ideological construction on which the Milosevic regime is based simply by asserting that they care more about the lives of their nearest and dearest than they do about Kosovo. The conundrum is this: these Serbs are suggesting that they are more concerned about the preservation of Serb lives than maintaining Serb rule over Kosovo. But if this is so, then the Milosevic regime, which from day one has made the defence of Serb interests in Kosovo the cornerstone of its platform, loses its political raison d'etre. Since coming to power in Serbia in 1987 Milosevic has managed the conflict in Kosovo by invariably resorting to force rather than pursuing dialogue. As long as the enemy was only a poX-Mozilla-Status: 0009ration Army (KLA) and Serbs living in Serbia proper were spared any fall-out from the conflict, this approach yielded results. But by choosing to take on the most powerful military alliance in the history of the world, Milosevic may have miscalculated. No matter how harmless the protesting mothers and wives appear at first sight, their stance is more damaging to Milosevic's longer-term prospects of survival than any overtly political challenge to his rule. By charging into a conflict with NATO, Milosevic has brought home the reality of war to Serbs in Serbia proper and placed the very survival of both his country and its citizens in danger. As the casualty toll--a figure which is never mentioned in official media--mounts, more reservists abandon their positions in Kosovo refusing to die for a conflict which is not of their making. That said, the protesters and deserters do not wish to see Serbia surrender Kosovo, nor do they wish to topple Milosevic. They just want Belgrade to seek a political solution and agree to a settlement as soon as possible, no matter how humiliating the terms. The problem for Milosevic is that the only deal on the table--NATO's five points, or their reformulation in the G-8 plan--effectively amounts to capitulation. If, therefore, he does sign on to such an agreement, his room for manoeuvre will be severely limited. Many in the opposition fear that Milosevic will use the breathing space offered by a peace agreement to revamp authoritarian rule with a clampdown against the internal enemy, whom he will attempt to hold responsible for the country's woes. Since the only political party to condemn the anti-war demonstrations outright is the Serbian Radical Party, many fear that its leader, Vojislav Seselj, may play a decisive role in the immediate post-war period. By tirelessly uncovering "traitors" and proposing ever more original ways to eliminate them, Seselj and his Radicals may be fighting a rear-guard action on behalf of extreme Serb nationalism. But it is a losing battle. Ordinary people cannot stomach much more. The author is an independent journalist from Belgrade whose identity has been concealed. IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 42 -- ### --