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Right-wing nationalist leads in Serbian presidential elections
By Paul Mitchell
30 January 2008
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Tomislav Nikolic of the extreme right-wing nationalist Serbian
Radical Party (SRS) won the first round of the voting in the January
20 Serbian presidential elections. The SRS, which formed a coalition
with former president Slobodan Milosevics Socialist Party
during the 1990s in the period leading up to the Wests dismemberment
of Yugoslavia, is the largest party in the country. Its president,
Vojislav Seselj, is presently being tried for war crimes at the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
at The Hague.
The elections have been marked by an unusually high turnout
and polarisation of the vote. Nikolic won 40 percent to beat current
pro-Western president Boris Tadic, who heads the Democratic Party
(DS) and received 35 percent. Because no candidate won more than
50 percent, a second round between Nikolic and Tadic will take
place on February 3.
The result overturned opinion polls that predicted 21 percent
for Nikolic (and 19 percent for Tadic) and smashed the conception
held by many political analysts that there was a glass ceiling
to Nikolics support that would prevent him ever getting
more than 30 percent.
The votes for the top two candidates came at the expense of
the seven other candidates who stood. It was a particularly disastrous
result for Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica and his Democratic
Party of Serbia (DSS), which backed Infrastructure Minister Velimir
Ilic as candidate for the DSS-led Popular Coalition. He came a
distant third with just 8 percent of the votes. Just one year
ago, the DSS won 17 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections,
leading to its participation in a coalition government with the
DS.
Kostunica has prided himself on attempts to balance between
Tadic and Nikolic, supporting membership in the European Union
(EU) with a more managed economic transition and a
concerted appeal to nationalist resentment over the issue of Kosovan
independence.
However, the main issue facing the Serbian working class and
peasantry is the terrible social crisis. According to Balkans
analyst Patrick Moore, Voters are likely to be swayed not
just by Kosovo and other nationalist issues, but by their economic
concerns and how they perceive Tadic and Nikolic as being able
to deal with them. He points out, Serbia has a very
high poverty rate, and even those who are above the poverty line
often have difficulties making ends meet.
And the future looks even bleaker. Inflation is rising, and
the DS-DSS government is planning to privatise a whole cluster
of state assets, which will throw tens of thousands out of work.
Central bank governor Radovan Jelasic has warned about an inflation
rate of 10 percentsubstantially overshooting
the forecast 6.5 percent. Serbian Minister of Economy and Regional
Development Mladjan Dinkic has attempted to deflect hostility
to the privatisation of the power company Elektroprivreda Srbije,
airline company Jat Airways, telecommunications provider Telekom,
the Yugo car company, medical suppliers Galenika and the Nikola
Tesla Airport by announcing that from January 28 Serbian citizens
can apply for free shares worth 1,000.
The social crisis, uncertainty over Serbian EU membership and
the Wests push for Kosovo independence have created a crisis
for Serb politicians like Tadic who played a vital role for the
West in ousting Slobodan Milosevic.
Tadic has made EU membership a key point of his campaign, claiming
that the economic and social hardship facing the Serbian people
can be offset through EU integration. He points to the fact that
Italy and Germany are Serbias biggest economic partners,
worth about US$2.5 billion a year in trade. Tadic has tried to
argue that the status of Kosovo and Serbias integration
into Western institutions are two separate issues, but few believe
it when he says, We will never give up our European goal
or our Kosovo goal.
His position is undermined by the virtual certainty of a declaration
of Kosovo independence soon after the Serbian elections, which
the US and EU will recognise. There have also been growing calls
from within the EU that the process of enlargement be curtailed
with no guarantee that Serbia will be admitted. And more fundamentally,
closer ties with the EU are dependent on the further impoverishment
of the Balkan peoples as the structural reform programme demanded
by the international financial institutions is escalated.
During the election campaign, the EU tried to boost support
for Tadic by raising once more the prospect of fast-track Serbian
membership in the bloc. In the run-up to the first round of the
contest, it announced the possibility of a Stabilisation and Association
Agreement (SAA) being signed at an EU foreign ministers meeting
on January 28-29 as a first step towards membership. We
should...help Serbia on its approach to the European Union,
Slovenian Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel said last week. One
of the forms of such assistance, or a sign of closeness, should
be a signature of [the] SAA in the coming days.
However, some member states are opposed to any deal before
the ICTY says that Serbia is fully cooperating with it. The Netherlands
is particularly adamant that Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian-Serb general
indicted for war crimes relating to the massacre of several thousand
Muslims in the Bosnian town of Srebrenica in 1995, be handed over
before an agreement is signed. The countrys international
prestige was shattered when Dutch UN peacekeeping troops were
shown standing by as Serb militiamen rounded up the victims and
marched them off to their deaths.
It now seems unlikely the SAA will be signed in the foreseeable
future. But the EU has offered to start negotiations on visa-free
travel, and the new chief UN war crimes prosecutor, Serge Brammertz,
has postponed another assessment on Serbias cooperation
with the tribunal until he travels to the Balkans after the elections.
The EU has also tried to cool down the enormous anger resulting
from the US drive to establish an independent Kosovo. It has reined
in Albanian nationalist demands for immediate independence following
elections in the province last November until the Serbian elections
are over.
But these attempts have been seen as opportunist manoeuvres,
which the SRS has been able to exploit.
Nikolic declared, For seven years, we have been under
the influence of Western Europe. We have done all that was asked
of us by the West. That was our mistake. But the EU also made
a mistake. They should have given us full membership straight
away. Now we have a situation where the Russian Federation is
recovering very well, and the EU is depending on Russia for gas.
I think Serbia should be the place where Russian and Western power
is balanced....
He condemns those who mercilessly speak about [how] European
and world standards are getting richer by the day, [whilst] Serbia
is sinking into hopelessness and desperation.
In the past, Nikolic has made declarations to the effect that
Serbia would be better off as a Russian province than as an EU
member and Russia should set up a military base in Serbia to rival
the US presence at Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo. Today, as the prospect
of power beckons, he tempers these outbursts.
Moscow has also taken advantage of the crisis in Serbia. The
US plans for a new missile system, an attack on Iran and an independent
Kosovo have antagonised Russia, which has reacted by reasserting
itself in neighbouring states that it sees as its spheres of influence.
It has backed Serbias opposition to Kosovan independence,
warning that it contravenes international law and would bolster
similar claims by separatist movements elsewhere in the world.
Russia is eager to boost its position in the Balkans, where
it competes for influence with the EU and where its companies
have invested heavily, particularly in oil and gas pipelines.
On January 21, the energy giant Gazprom agreed a multibillion-dollar
gas pipeline project with Serbia, which promises to make the Balkan
nation a major hub for Russian energy supplies to Europe. The
South Stream will compete with the planned European pipeline,
Nabucco, and will transport gas from Russia across Bulgaria to
Serbia for further distribution. Gazprom also gained a controlling
stake in the state-owned Serbian oil company Naftna Industrija
Srbije (NIS) and promised to invest hundreds of millions of dollars.
Russian companies have already bought a number of Serbian companies,
among them the states biggest tourist agency, Putnik, and
Termoelektro, a large industrial engineering company.
Nikolic has promised to fight like a lion to preserve
Serbias national integrity and use the Serbian police and
army to drive the US and United Nations occupying
forces out of Kosovo. But recently, he has dropped his war-like
rhetoric in favour of punitive measures against Kosovo Albanians,
declaring, Well stop Kosovo Albanians coming to Serbia.
Well stop them travelling through Serbia. We wont
recognise their passports...well cut off the supply of goods
to Kosovo.
And on the issue of the ICTY, while Tadic has always insisted
that Serbia will cooperate with the tribunal, Nikolic has snubbed
calls for the arrest of the outstanding fugitives and threatened
to make Vojislav Seselj the prime minister of Serbia should he
win the election.
Whatever the final outcome of the election on February 3, neither
Mikolic nor Tadic offers a progressive answer to the problems
facing the Serbian working class or the intrigues of the imperialist
powers. The situation urgently requires the building of a socialist
internationalist party of the Fourth International based on the
perspective of the United Socialist States of the Balkans.
See Also:
European Union sends
rule of law mission to prepare for Kosovan independence
[24 December 2007]
European Union-Russia
summit a diplomatic debacle
[19 May 2007]
European Union demands
speedy formation of unity coalition in Serbia
[25 January 2007]
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