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Showing posts with label Serbs wonder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serbs wonder. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Recasting Serbia’s Image, Starting With a Fresh Face
THE public face of Serbia for years has been that of a wizened war criminal in the dock in The Hague. Now, as the once-outcast country presses for membership in the European Union, it is increasingly represented by the gap-toothed grin of its energetic young foreign minister, Vuk Jeremic, all of 34 and a graduate of Cambridge and Harvard.
It is not just appearances. He is a minister in the most westward-leaning government Serbia has ever had, one that is aggressively pursuing membership in the European Union and good relations with the United States. Yet at the top of his agenda stands the issue that brought so much trouble to Serbia: the breakaway province and self-declared nation of Kosovo.
To the consternation of powerful supporters of Kosovo’s independence, including the United States, the Serbian obsession runs much deeper than a handful of ultranationalists from the generation of Slobodan Milosevic. Even young liberals like Mr. Jeremic, whose fluent English sounds more Bronxville than Belgrade, cannot let go of Kosovo, though it could endanger Serbia’s chance to move beyond its recent troubled past.
“The fact that this kind of fervent, pro-European politician in Serbia happens to have this position on Kosovo confuses a lot of people,” Mr. Jeremic said in an interview on the eve of the Orthodox Christmas here last week.
“This place, Kosovo, is our Jerusalem; you just can’t treat it any other way than our Jerusalem,” he said.
As if to underscore the point, his mentor and psychology teacher two decades ago at the First Belgrade High School, the current Serbian president, Boris Tadic, spent the holiday at the Visoki Decani monastery in Kosovo, under guard amid protests by local ethnic Albanians.
Mr. Jeremic quickly added that Serbia was not pressing its case through the use of arms, directly or in the form of paramilitary groups, but through institutions like the International Court of Justice, which will rule on the manner in which Kosovo declared independence. But the stakes are different, with vastly improved relations with the European Union and an end to Serbia’s isolation on the line.
Mr. Jeremic is at pains to explain to Western audiences that Serbia’s reputation from the Milosevic years had overshadowed the reality that it is now a democracy, and one whose voters twice chose pro-Western candidates in the presidential and parliamentary elections in 2008 — despite the inflamed nationalist sentiment in the wake of Kosovo’s secession.
He was appointed foreign minister at 31, too young and inexperienced in the eyes of many Serbs to be trusted with their most important national issue — the impending secession of Kosovo. Yet, he has fought hard for Kosovo, lobbying governments around the world against recognizing its independence and becoming along the way one of Serbia’s most popular politicians.
Mr. Jeremic’s stridency on Kosovo has led his opponents to charge that he was a closet nationalist, talking one line when he was abroad and quite a different one at home in the Balkans. “Personally, I don’t think I’m a nationalist,” he said. “I’m half Bosnian and half Serb.”
Mr. Jeremic’s great-grandfather on his mother’s side was Nurija Pozderac, a prominent Muslim politician before World War II who joined Tito’s Partisans to fight the Nazis and was killed in 1943. His paternal grandfather was an officer in the king’s army and spent much of the war as a prisoner at Dachau. Once he was liberated by the Allies, he returned to Serbia on foot, Mr. Jeremic said.
HE described a normal childhood in Belgrade, including a close relationship with his psychology teacher, Mr. Tadic. But his father, who worked for the state-owned oil company, and his mother went into exile after running afoul of the regime, and Mr. Jeremic finished high school in London before moving on to Cambridge, where he studied theoretical physics.
His time at Cambridge, which coincided with the war in Bosnia, helped him to understand Serbia’s image abroad in a very personal way. “It was hard to explain that you come from Serbia and you’re not a children-eating radical,” said Mr. Jeremic, who had family members fighting on both sides of the war in Bosnia.
Mr. Jeremic opposed the regime of Mr. Milosevic and was a founder of the Organization of Serbian Students Abroad in 1997, but it was during the NATO bombing of Serbia that he hardened his resolve to work for his country. He said he had high school friends who were also opposed to Mr. Milosevic’s reign but were called up for compulsory army service at the time of the airstrikes in 1999. Once they were wearing their uniforms, they were “legitimate targets,” as he put it ruefully, and some were killed.
He recalled thinking at the time: “This regime, this government, this guy, Slobodan Milosevic, he has to be removed, because he’s going to get us all buried. If he stays, he’s going to get us all buried.”
Mr. Jeremic traveled to Serbia to support the student movement there, known as Otpor, the Serbian word for resistance. After Mr. Milosevic’s ouster Mr. Jeremic followed Mr. Tadic through a succession of ministries as an adviser, taking a break for a degree from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, before himself becoming foreign minister.
With Serbia’s scant resources and tattered public image, his options for fighting the diplomatic might of countries supporting Kosovo, like the United States, Germany and Britain, seemed limited. But Mr. Jeremic, who still looks and sounds a bit like an overachieving college class president, turned himself into a one-man road show, traveling to 90 countries in the two years since becoming foreign minister. Last year alone he spent 700 hours in the air, or roughly 29 days, much of that in a 30-year-old French-built Falcon 50 jet that was bought for Tito.
MR. JEREMIC sees his age, which many consider a weakness, as one of his assets. “When you’re young, and when you come and they see you for the first time, a lot of them are just kind of surprised. They say, ‘Who’s this kid?’
“That’s actually a good thing because it opens up their minds. They’re curious. They want to hear what you have to say to them because you’re different,” he said. An afternoon with Mr. Jeremic, whose wife, Natasa Lekic, is a news anchor on Serbian public television, is a pleasant but intense experience, not complete without a glass of Serbian Carigrad red wine and a stream of articulate defenses of the country’s claim to Kosovo.
Smoking a cigar and sipping his wine, Mr. Jeremic refused to say what Serbia would demand if it managed to force Kosovo back to the negotiating table by winning its case before the International Court of Justice. He insisted that the mistake the United States and its allies made before Kosovo’s declaration was dictating rather than discussing terms.
Their other big mistake, he said, was expecting Serbia simply to acquiesce to the loss of the province, cowed in the face of American and Western European recognition for Kosovo. “This energy we invested, you know, in going around the world, has surprised a lot of people,” Mr. Jeremic said. “A lot of people didn’t expect us to dare to try.”
Source:nytimes.com/
Bringing Croatia and Serbia together
The election of a new Croatian president, Ivo Josipovic – who defeated the mayor of Zagreb, Milan Bandic, in a second round run-off – is likely to contribute to a thaw in relations with neighbours Serbia. Aside from a much-lauded commitment to fight corruption and organised crime, Josipovic's early remarks reveal a constructive and pragmatic approach to the issues that have plagued ties between the two countries; particularly when contrasted with those of the man he will succeed as president, Stjepan Mesic.
In spite of Josipovic's refreshing stance, however, a number of obstacles remain that will continue to complicate matters, despite the expressed good intentions of both sides. During the final gasps of Mesic's second five-year term, relations between the two have sunk to their lowest ebb since Croatia recognized Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in March 2008.
A recent visit to Kosovo by Mesic (which was initially timed to coincide with Orthodox Christmas, but eventually shifted by a day), where he talked about the "new reality" of Kosovo's independence and called for further recognitions, caused consternation in Serbia, whose government has consistently called on countries to refrain from such comments while the International Court of Justice (ICJ) considers its verdict on the legality of Kosovo's declaration. In the same period, Mesic reduced the sentence handed down to Sinisa Rimac, a former Croatian police officer, who was convicted of killing 23 ethnic Serb civilians in Croatia in 1991: a decision that Serbia's president, Boris Tadic, condemned as an "anti-European and anti-civilisational gesture which cannot be justified by any means".
Josipovic's description of relations between Croatia and Serbia as "a strategic priority", however, provides an important opportunity for renewed progress. Part of this pragmatism derives from Croatia's deteriorating economic position (its economy is believed to have contracted by around 5% in 2009), with Josipovic emphasising how "co-operation with our neighbours is also important for our economy, because we are mainly exporting to these states... [and] we are expecting the arrival of new tourists too".
A number of key impediments remain, however, particularly concerning the mutual claims for genocide before the ICJ, with Croatia having filed a case, co-authored by Josipovic, in 1999 and Serbia responding with a countersuit earlier this year. These lawsuits have been deemed a setback in efforts to establish good neighbourly relations, a key element of the region's bid for membership of the EU. Immediately upon his election triumph, however, Josipovic publicly discussed the possibility of dropping Croatia's genocide case, in order to "see whether certain problems and obstacles can be resolved without lawsuits". Josipovic – who stated that many Croatian citizens "have certain unrealistic expectations about the lawsuit" – has instead proposed to "negotiate with Belgrade about missing persons, war crimes trials and the return of cultural treasures".
Dropping the respective cases would create the political and diplomatic space to attend to other issues, including those of "former and current refugees, the processing of war crimes, the exhumation and identification of the missing, the return of displaced persons, compensation for destroyed and seized property, a comprehensive solution for tenants' rights and the regulation of unpaid pensions". In tandem, the EU must invest some of its considerable leverage – as it has done in the battles against organised crime and corruption – to ensure that both Croatia and Serbia contend with the tangible legacies of the 1990s: legacies that despite afflicting the daily lives of hundreds of thousands have regularly been denied the recognition they deserve.
While the issue of Kosovo will remain a source of lingering discord, the early signs suggest that Josipovic will contribute to a much-needed improvement in relations between Serbia and Croatia. A plethora of challenges remain, however, to ensure that any improvement in ties has tangible benefits for those citizens afflicted by previous antagonisms. Such commitments to good neighbourly relations, rhetorically at least, will continue to rival anti-corruption as the "new nationalism" of the Balkans.
Source:guardian.co.uk/
In spite of Josipovic's refreshing stance, however, a number of obstacles remain that will continue to complicate matters, despite the expressed good intentions of both sides. During the final gasps of Mesic's second five-year term, relations between the two have sunk to their lowest ebb since Croatia recognized Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in March 2008.
A recent visit to Kosovo by Mesic (which was initially timed to coincide with Orthodox Christmas, but eventually shifted by a day), where he talked about the "new reality" of Kosovo's independence and called for further recognitions, caused consternation in Serbia, whose government has consistently called on countries to refrain from such comments while the International Court of Justice (ICJ) considers its verdict on the legality of Kosovo's declaration. In the same period, Mesic reduced the sentence handed down to Sinisa Rimac, a former Croatian police officer, who was convicted of killing 23 ethnic Serb civilians in Croatia in 1991: a decision that Serbia's president, Boris Tadic, condemned as an "anti-European and anti-civilisational gesture which cannot be justified by any means".
Josipovic's description of relations between Croatia and Serbia as "a strategic priority", however, provides an important opportunity for renewed progress. Part of this pragmatism derives from Croatia's deteriorating economic position (its economy is believed to have contracted by around 5% in 2009), with Josipovic emphasising how "co-operation with our neighbours is also important for our economy, because we are mainly exporting to these states... [and] we are expecting the arrival of new tourists too".
A number of key impediments remain, however, particularly concerning the mutual claims for genocide before the ICJ, with Croatia having filed a case, co-authored by Josipovic, in 1999 and Serbia responding with a countersuit earlier this year. These lawsuits have been deemed a setback in efforts to establish good neighbourly relations, a key element of the region's bid for membership of the EU. Immediately upon his election triumph, however, Josipovic publicly discussed the possibility of dropping Croatia's genocide case, in order to "see whether certain problems and obstacles can be resolved without lawsuits". Josipovic – who stated that many Croatian citizens "have certain unrealistic expectations about the lawsuit" – has instead proposed to "negotiate with Belgrade about missing persons, war crimes trials and the return of cultural treasures".
Dropping the respective cases would create the political and diplomatic space to attend to other issues, including those of "former and current refugees, the processing of war crimes, the exhumation and identification of the missing, the return of displaced persons, compensation for destroyed and seized property, a comprehensive solution for tenants' rights and the regulation of unpaid pensions". In tandem, the EU must invest some of its considerable leverage – as it has done in the battles against organised crime and corruption – to ensure that both Croatia and Serbia contend with the tangible legacies of the 1990s: legacies that despite afflicting the daily lives of hundreds of thousands have regularly been denied the recognition they deserve.
While the issue of Kosovo will remain a source of lingering discord, the early signs suggest that Josipovic will contribute to a much-needed improvement in relations between Serbia and Croatia. A plethora of challenges remain, however, to ensure that any improvement in ties has tangible benefits for those citizens afflicted by previous antagonisms. Such commitments to good neighbourly relations, rhetorically at least, will continue to rival anti-corruption as the "new nationalism" of the Balkans.
Source:guardian.co.uk/
Saturday, November 28, 2009
TEAM PROFILE: Serbs wonder - finally a real team?
Belgrade - Serbia is looking forward to the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa mixing hope that it finally has a "real team" with fear of another huge disappointment. Serbia qualified directly and surefooted for the tournament, but it did the same four years ago, then as Serbia-Montenegro, only to be cast out after the opening stage with three humiliating defeats.
That disaster was further aggravated when Serbia failed to qualify for the finals of Euro and again embarassed itself, in Olympic Games, provoking an effective boycott of the national team by its fans.
So though Serbia hired a star coach, its own Radomir Antic, in August 2008, just days before World Cup qualifications began, no euphoria followed promises of a "new start."
Antic's debut, a 2-0 win over the Faroe Islands in September two years ago, was seen by a few thousand spectators dotting the 50,000- seater Red Star Belgrade stadium.
The same stadium was packed on October 10, in Serbia's homecoming qualifier, in which the capacity crowd saw the team off to Africa following a brilliant 5-0 drubbing of Romania.
In the two years meanwhile Antic has turned around and strongly pulled together a team previously plagued by clashing vanities and, reportedly, interests of shadowy managers pulling strings to push their merchandise into the squad in order to raise their price.
"He returned the cult of the national team and all players now take it very seriously," said Mladen Krstajic, a defender who took part in the 2006 World Cup.
Serbia and Montenegro then allowed only one goal in 10 rounds of qualifications, but capitulated 10 times in just 270 minutes the team had in the tournament.
Antic has built the team around big stars with immaculate working ethics, as Manchester United's Nemanja Vidic and Chelsea's Bane Ivanovic in defence, Inter Milan's midfielder Dejan Stankovic and Serbia's top up-and-comer, CSKA Moscow's striker Milos Krasic.
In between, the big names are several others with strong playing time in the Bundesliga, Italy and Spain, like strikers Nikola Zigic and Marko Pantelic.
"I think this time it can finally be it," says Isak Bogucanin, 40, who will travel to South Africa to watch Serbia play despite the exasperation of his expedition to Germany four years earlier.
"We were always let down by star players," Bogucanin says, reciting a history of missed penalties, wasted chances and red cards on the record of leading players in crunch time.
Like tens of thousands of others, he now hopes that the tough Antic and the new breed of players will not play worse for Serbia than they do in their teams. According to Bogucanin, "that is all it would take to secure that we at least not pack our bags to go home after the first phase."
The Coach:
Radomir Antic, 61, took Serbia over with the reputation of a crisis coach and the only man ever who had led the big Spanish three of Real and Atletico Madrid and Barcelona. Before becoming coach, he played for Partizan Belgrade, Fenerbahce Istanbul, Real Zaragoza and Luton in England.
Following a learning period as assistant coach at Partizan in the mid-1980s, Zaragoza, invited him to return at the bench. Real Madrid called him in 1991 and he later also coached Atletico and Barcelona.
Though he previously refused offers to coach Serbia, he changed his mind in August 2008, ending a four-year vacation. Previously boycotted by fans over poor results, the team qualified for the World Cup on top of the group, ahead of reigning world vice-champions, France.
The Star:
Manchester United's defender and yet often crunchtime goalscorer Nemanja Vidic, 28, now reigns as Serbia's top player, towering even above his captain and undisputed team leader, Inter Milan's midfielder Dejan Stankovic.
Formerly with Red Star Belgrade, Vidic arrived in Manchester in 2006 after travelling the roundabout route which has become usual for Serbian players over the past two decades, via Russia and Spartak Moscow.
Tall and powerfully built, he is a part of formidable defensive tandems both in Manchester, with Rio Ferdinand, and in the national team, with Chelsea's Bane Ivanovic. Since his move to Manchester for 7 million pounds (12 million dollars), the price tag for his contract has quadrupled.
Factfile:
Nicknames: Beli Orlovi (White Eagles); Previously Plavi (The Blues) Founded: 1889 FIFA affiliation: 1904 Highest FIFA ranking: 8 - May 1998 Lowest FIFA ranking: 47 - December 2005 Previous World Cup appearances: 10 (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1974, 1982, 1990, 1998, 2006) Best World Cup performance: Fourth (1930, 1962) as Yugoslavia Date qualified for finals: October 10, 2009
Source:earthtimes.org
That disaster was further aggravated when Serbia failed to qualify for the finals of Euro and again embarassed itself, in Olympic Games, provoking an effective boycott of the national team by its fans.
So though Serbia hired a star coach, its own Radomir Antic, in August 2008, just days before World Cup qualifications began, no euphoria followed promises of a "new start."
Antic's debut, a 2-0 win over the Faroe Islands in September two years ago, was seen by a few thousand spectators dotting the 50,000- seater Red Star Belgrade stadium.
The same stadium was packed on October 10, in Serbia's homecoming qualifier, in which the capacity crowd saw the team off to Africa following a brilliant 5-0 drubbing of Romania.
In the two years meanwhile Antic has turned around and strongly pulled together a team previously plagued by clashing vanities and, reportedly, interests of shadowy managers pulling strings to push their merchandise into the squad in order to raise their price.
"He returned the cult of the national team and all players now take it very seriously," said Mladen Krstajic, a defender who took part in the 2006 World Cup.
Serbia and Montenegro then allowed only one goal in 10 rounds of qualifications, but capitulated 10 times in just 270 minutes the team had in the tournament.
Antic has built the team around big stars with immaculate working ethics, as Manchester United's Nemanja Vidic and Chelsea's Bane Ivanovic in defence, Inter Milan's midfielder Dejan Stankovic and Serbia's top up-and-comer, CSKA Moscow's striker Milos Krasic.
In between, the big names are several others with strong playing time in the Bundesliga, Italy and Spain, like strikers Nikola Zigic and Marko Pantelic.
"I think this time it can finally be it," says Isak Bogucanin, 40, who will travel to South Africa to watch Serbia play despite the exasperation of his expedition to Germany four years earlier.
"We were always let down by star players," Bogucanin says, reciting a history of missed penalties, wasted chances and red cards on the record of leading players in crunch time.
Like tens of thousands of others, he now hopes that the tough Antic and the new breed of players will not play worse for Serbia than they do in their teams. According to Bogucanin, "that is all it would take to secure that we at least not pack our bags to go home after the first phase."
The Coach:
Radomir Antic, 61, took Serbia over with the reputation of a crisis coach and the only man ever who had led the big Spanish three of Real and Atletico Madrid and Barcelona. Before becoming coach, he played for Partizan Belgrade, Fenerbahce Istanbul, Real Zaragoza and Luton in England.
Following a learning period as assistant coach at Partizan in the mid-1980s, Zaragoza, invited him to return at the bench. Real Madrid called him in 1991 and he later also coached Atletico and Barcelona.
Though he previously refused offers to coach Serbia, he changed his mind in August 2008, ending a four-year vacation. Previously boycotted by fans over poor results, the team qualified for the World Cup on top of the group, ahead of reigning world vice-champions, France.
The Star:
Manchester United's defender and yet often crunchtime goalscorer Nemanja Vidic, 28, now reigns as Serbia's top player, towering even above his captain and undisputed team leader, Inter Milan's midfielder Dejan Stankovic.
Formerly with Red Star Belgrade, Vidic arrived in Manchester in 2006 after travelling the roundabout route which has become usual for Serbian players over the past two decades, via Russia and Spartak Moscow.
Tall and powerfully built, he is a part of formidable defensive tandems both in Manchester, with Rio Ferdinand, and in the national team, with Chelsea's Bane Ivanovic. Since his move to Manchester for 7 million pounds (12 million dollars), the price tag for his contract has quadrupled.
Factfile:
Nicknames: Beli Orlovi (White Eagles); Previously Plavi (The Blues) Founded: 1889 FIFA affiliation: 1904 Highest FIFA ranking: 8 - May 1998 Lowest FIFA ranking: 47 - December 2005 Previous World Cup appearances: 10 (1930, 1950, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1974, 1982, 1990, 1998, 2006) Best World Cup performance: Fourth (1930, 1962) as Yugoslavia Date qualified for finals: October 10, 2009
Source:earthtimes.org
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