[spectre] eurotopics review on Slobodan Milosevic's death
Andreas Broeckmann
abroeck at transmediale.de
Mon Mar 13 16:09:12 CET 2006
[here is today's eurotopics dossier - the daily newsletter gives a
good overview over current debates in the daily newspapers of
different european countries; subscribe to the newsletter in english,
french or german on the website; -ab]
http://www.eurotopics.net/
Press review of 13/03/2006
DOSSIER
International politics/South East Europe
Slobodan Milosevic's death
The ex-president of Yugoslavia was found dead in his prison cell at
the UN War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague on March 11. Since 1999, he
had stood accused of committing war crimes and crimes against
humanity in The Hague. His trial began in February 2002. He was
accused of having committed 66 war crimes in Croatia,
Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo during the Balkan Wars in the 1990s.
The European press discusses the repercussions of MIlosevic's death
for Serbia, Southeast Europe, Europe and the UN tribunal.
With articles from the following publications:
Italy - La Repubblica, Hungary - Nepszabadsag, United Kingdom - The
Independent, Germany - Süddeutsche Zeitung, Switzerland - Neue
Zürcher Zeitung, France - Libération, Slovenia - Delo, Denmark -
Dagbladet Information
United Kingdom - The Independent
"Milosevic brought shame and disaster on the great Serb people. They
are now known in far too much of the world as the people who
perpetrated aggression and killing at places such as Srebrenica,"
Paddy Ashdown, a former high representative of the international
community in Bosnia (May 2002-January 2006), writes in a commentary.
"In the end the Serbs realised who he was, which is why they got rid
of him. But Milosevic fooled too many Western statesmen for too long.
The intervention came too late. The scales fell from the eyes of the
international community over Kosovo. If they had realised earlier he
was not part of the solution but part of the problem, tens of
thousands of people would have lived and millions would not have been
driven from their homes".
» http://comment.independent.co.uk/
» http://www.ohr.int
Slovenia - Delo
Milosevic combined fascism and socialism, says Ervin
Hladnik-Milharcic, and stresses that he had great support in doing
so: "From one stage to the next, he won election after election by a
convinicing majority. It's not what he did that's so shocking but the
fact that the nation backed him. Now that he's dead there is the
danger that this could be forgotten. Millions of accomplices will
assert that they didn't know what Milosevic was doing."
» http://www.delo.si/index.php?sv_path=43,49&id=eba4[...]
Switzerland - Neue Zürcher Zeitung
"His sudden death means that he can no longer be sentenced, and when
you think of Milosevic's cynicism and the way he mocked people and
facts, it's difficult to control your anger, writes Serb author Bora
Cosic. "Because of his extraditon and because my people have such a
vivid imagination and are so sadly naive, I can already see how the
former dictator will continue to haunt them. This is simply because
they feel that they have no leader, that they're marginalised and
have no sense of belonging. That's why the dead dicator will continue
to haunt them... I wonder how long it will take us to free ourselves
of this ghost. Slobodan Milosevic's life on earth has come to an end,
but he has still not paid for his most evil and necrophilic deeds."
» http://www.nzz.ch/2006/03/13/fe/articleDNSTD.html
Germany - Süddeutsche Zeitung
According to author Richard Swartz, the symbiotic relationship
between Milosevic and his wife was a Balkan speciality. "Slobodan
Milosevic and Mira Markovic were the Serb counterparts of Nicolae and
Elena Ceausescu in Romania, Enver and Nexhmije Hoxha in Albania,
Todor Zhivkov and his daughter Ludmilla in Bulgaria. We see a man in
power, but behind him stands a woman, and she's the one who really
rules. Bonds of blood take precedence over all other loyalties,
whether to people or ideas. This profound alliance of power is
characterised by a slight madness, nepotism, and all kinds of bizarre
and extravagant projects; by astrology and occultism and, if
necessary, a fanaticism that does not shy away from violence."
» http://www.sueddeutsche.de
Hungary - Nepszabadsag
"It was thanks to television that Slobodan Milosevic came to
power.... And he ended his career in The Hague in the knowledge that
the trial would be watched on television by millions of viewers back
home," writes Serbian-based György Szerbhorvát. "He was aggressive.
He never stopped smiling that familiar, cynical smile of his.
Sometimes his face was red, but he never appeared to be in a
desperate, bad mood, and certainly never ill. It's not true that he
was a convinced communist or nationalist. He was interested in power,
and to achieve it he became a great actor who knew very well how to
do one thing: use television to his own advantage."
» http://www.nol.hu/cikk/397106/
France - Libération
For editorial writer Gérard Dupuy, the trial and death of the former
Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, illustrate the limits of
European policy. "If practically no voice is being raised in defense
of Milosevic, this reproving unanimity must not make us forget that
at one point he came close to success in what must be called the last
war of conquest in European history, whose code name was 'Greater
Serbia'. By remaining passive for too long, the Europeans allowed
this evil ambition to take hold and sow widespread disturbances which
only American firepower was ultimately able to stop. Right up to the
uneasiness caused by his death, which spells the end of a largely
unsatisfying trial, Milosevic showed a contemptuous mirror to his Old
Continent cousins."
» http://www.libe.fr/page.php?Article=366579
Denmark - Dagbladet Information
Torben Krogh disputes the accusations that the war crimes tribunal in
The Hague worked too slowly. "The trial was to be conducted under
full observance of the legal security of the accused. This is what
distinguishes a society which respects human rights from the regime
led by Milosevic. Meanwhile, the international community pronounced
judgement on him long ago. What was missing on his death was the
judge's sentence, which would have been particularly important for
the families of the many victims of his brutal regime.... Nobody -
excepting, perhaps, the Serb groups that continue to regard him as a
hero - doubts that Slobodan Milosevic was a war criminal of the worst
sort."
» http://www.information.dk
Italy - La Repubblica
The Bosnian filmmaker Danis Tanovic, whose film 'No man's' won the
Oscar for best foreign film in 2002, reacts to Milosevic's death in
an interview. "Slobo is dangerous even in death. Today, many Serbs
consider him a martyr. I am scared to see how nationalist Serb groups
will react. ... Serb policy has not changed. As long as the [Serb]
president Boris Tadic continues to support the nationalists, it won't
be possible to renew ties with Bosnia. Bosnia's problem is that it
shares more then half of its border with Serbia. And when something
goes wrong in Belgrade, it has repercussions in Sarajevo."
» http://www.repubblica.it
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