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The Milosevic Trial: Last prime minister of Yugoslavia breaks
12-year silence
By Paul Mitchell
11 November 2003
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The last prime minister of Yugoslavia has broken his 12-year
long silence to speak in public about events during the breakup
of his country in the 1990s.
Ante Markovic was prime minister of the Socialist Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia (SFRY) between March 1989 and December 1991. He
recently appeared as a prosecution witness in the trial of former
Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic at the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) at The Hague. For the
last two years, Milosevic has been on trial on charges of war
crimes and genocide in Kosovo, Bosnia and Croatia.
Markovic was the latest in a line of former Yugoslav leaders
to appear at the ICTY, all of whom have denied any responsibility
for the civil wars that erupted as the former Yugoslavia disintegrated.
They all blame Milosevic entirely. Of all those who have appeared
at The Hague so far to absolve themselves, Markovic could be truly
said to have laid the seeds for the break up of Yugoslavia.
He told the court he had started his career as an electrical
engineer and entered politics in 1982 after becoming a successful
businessman. For 24 years he was head of one of Yugoslavias
largest companies, Rade Koncar. He became a leading figure in
the Yugoslavia Bank of Economic Cooperation and then President
of the Republic of Croatia. In 1989 he was elected Prime Minister
of the SFRY, a country saddled with debts of $21 billion and inflation
at thousands of percent. In 1990 he formed his own political party,
the Alliance of Reform Forces of Yugoslavia.
Markovic said the whole federal government was committed to
his reform programmestabilisation, privatisation
and democracy. He told the court how thunderous applause
and ovations greeted his announcement at the Federal Assembly
that the currency would become convertible. However Markovic noted
that some individuals complained in private that his policies
would enrich the richer parts of the country and would further
impoverish the poorer parts.
He was a favourite of the West and features prominently in
the memoirs of US ambassador to Belgrade Warren Zimmerman, who
said Markovic was a man of large ego, [who] saw himself
as a messiah for Yugoslavia. After he became Yugoslav prime minister,
his dynamism and supreme self-confidence impressed visiting Westerners.
The financier-philanthropist George Soros, a shrewd judge of Eastern
European politicians, told me after a visit to Belgrade that Markovic
was one of the most remarkable leaders he had met.
Markovic told Zimmerman he needed the clear support of the
administration of George Bush Senior and that above all
he wanted money. How much? Well, he said with his
infectious smile, Im playing a big game, and it requires
big money. I think four billion dollars would be a good start
to help a reform thats going further than anything in eastern
Europe.
Reform in Yugoslavia did indeed go further than anywhere else
in eastern Europe regarding efforts to dismantle the state-run
economy and reintroduce capitalism. Within months half of the
nations industry was closed down, throwing two million workers
out of their jobs. Nearly 65,000 companies were privatised. Money
due to be paid to the individual republics was frozen to pay off
the national debt to international creditors.
Markovic expressed surprise at the ICTY that his policies led
to the struggle of everybody against everybody else.
When Milosevic (who is conducting his own defence) suggested he
played a significant role in events having as prime minister de
facto and de jure control over the federal government for
several years, Markovic insisted his office had very modest
competencies and that he was unable to do anything about
Yugoslavias disintegration. In one telling episode he pointed
to the form the disintegration took. He told the court how Milosevic
demanded the post of Interior Minister and thus control of the
federal intelligence services in Markovics new government
in 1989. Markovic said it was of little consequence since all
the republics and the army had their own intelligence services
and everyone was bugging each other.
Markovic produced in court a tape he had received from Bosnian
president Alija Izetbegovic in 1991, purporting to show Milosevic
planning to send paramilitary units to Bosnia.
He described to the court how Yugoslavia descended into chaos
as the leadership in each republic and the Yugoslav Peoples
Army sought to protect its own privileges. The Serbian National
Bank transferred some $2 billion from federal funds to itself.
The authorities in Slovenia and Croatia refused to pay taxes into
the federal budget, 81 percent of which financed the army. With
the working class out on the streets600,000 workers were
on strike in Belgradethe army contemplated a military coup.
The Army General Staff planned to arrest the Slovenian and Croatian
leadership and looked to Milosevic. Chief of Staff General Veljko
Kadijevic told Markovic, Milosevic is the only one fighting
for Yugoslavia and who would back this up if it wasnt for
him? and offered to install Markovic as president.
Now that his reform programme had indeed produced the struggle
of everybody against everybody else, Markovic resigned and
flew to Austria in December of 1991. In his resignation speech
he complained that his Federal Executive Council was completely
incapable of preventing the economic catastrophe
from becoming deeper with the growth of hyper-inflation,
millions of people unemployed, the production reductions, a great
deal of poverty for millions of peoplethe citizens of this
country who are not to blame for any of thisand which will
necessarily lead to a social explosion of unprecedented proportions.
See Also:
Behind the Milosevic
trial: the US, Europe and the Balkan catastrophe
[4 July 2001]
Political disaffection spreads
throughout the former Yugoslavia
[31 January 2003]
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