Elections in Serbia – outcome irrelevant for Kosovo

02/04/2008

After yesterday’s re-election of Serbia’s pro-Western President Boris Tadić, the European Union is talking of speeding up Serbia’s progress towards membership while at the same time deciding to send 1,800 police and legal officials to Kosovo where they are to take over from the United Nations forces under UN Security Council resolution 1244 which refers to an international security presence. (see BBC)

I read Lisa’s post on the elections and have been thinking a bit. Tadić and Nikolić are not as different in their POV as portrayed, especially when it comes to Kosovo. I will go out on limb to suggest that possibly, Nikolić would have been (will be?) able to negotiate better when the initial after-independence-declaration limited outbursts of violence subside. Then again, I could be wrong.

A Take on Kosovo

01/31/2008

For a few months now, I’ve been trying to explain my POV on the Kosovo issue to friends, without making much headway. Some of my thoughts on the subject can be found here: Kosovo-Will Serbia go to War. Basically, I disagree with the position that Serbia is not giving up its territory and that it is in no position to have say in whether or rather on what terms the province should have its independence. One of the opposing views is that it is up to Kosovo to win its independence, not up to Serbia to ‘allow’ it.

Today, I came across a blog post by Tony Barber that for the most part puts ever so eloquently the disorganised thoughts running through my head. Here are a few quotes:

…From being top dogs in the multinational Yugoslav communist party, army and bureaucracy, they found themselves either penned into the smaller state of Serbia or converted into ethnic minorities…

…well-known sentiments regarding Kosovo…

…This sense of victimhood persists and blends with more specific grievances about Kosovo. Here it is not so much a question of memories of the Ottoman defeat of the Serbs at the 1389 battle of Kosovo Polje… in the century following Serbia’s recovery of Kosovo in 1912, the ethnic Albanian component of the province’s population has increased to the point that most Serbs can see for themselves that, in demographic terms, the struggle is all but lost…

…and the bit I agree with wholeheartedly…

…The EU is therefore misguided if it thinks it can sugar the pill of Kosovo’s independence with the offer of visas and some subsidised schooling for Serbs at a German or Portuguese university.

…and…

…most Serbs are unlikely to take seriously such well-intentioned foreign attempts to guide them down the path of virtue…

So again, I hope that whether or not Serbia is entitled to a say in the issue of Kosovo’s independence in the eyes of the EU or the US that keeps one of its largest military bases in the world in Kosovo, a region that is positioned strategically

The main purpose for the Bondsteel military base is to provide security for the construction of the Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian oil pipeline (AMBO). The AMBO trans-Balkan pipeline will link up with the corridors between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea basin, which holds close to 50 billion barrels of oil. (source)

and holds an enviable reserves of lignite, which are estimated at around 12 billion tonnes (source), other natural resources and fertile land with cheap labour to boot, I do hope that they offer Serbia what its people will consider fair compensation for lost territories and resources. Considering what’s at stake, it shouldn’t be so hard to offer the country something more tangible than the EU freer trade, visa liberalisation and educational exchanges carrot as Tony Barber put it.

To conclude, I do believe Kosovo should gain its independence, but on fair terms and in peace. While this may not be a popular sentiment here, I do not believe Slovenia should be the first to recognize Kosovo independence. If for no other reason, then for the sake of our investments in Serbia. They are massive and putting salt on open wounds is bound to be a turnoff even for the best of friends.

Istanbul in the Dark

01/29/2008

Istanbul at Night
Hagia Sophia on a January Night; photo by dr. Fil

Istanbul is such a beautiful city, but sometimes the lights are dimmed by more than nighttime. The elightenment brought to the country by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk has not gone far enough to reach today’s understanding of free speech and academic debate, as Professor Atilla Yayla found, having just been handed down a 15-month suspended jail term on account of insulting the state’s founder. (Source: BBC)

Slovenia – Europe’s Child Prodigy – Acting Up?

01/04/2008

In her article published yesterday in the Spiegel, Marion Kraske brands Slovenia as Europe’s not-so golden pupil. She analyses the situation in the country at the time of assuming the presidency of the European Union, noting that rampant inflation and journalists’ concerns about government censorship are causing problems in the country.

She goes on to present examples of people who’ve found ways to apply their entrepreneurial spirit very successfully in the ‘new’ environment and then describes some of the current hot issues in the country. I found her conclusion to be an interesting closing of an article on Slovenia in one of the leading German magazines:

    “Critics believe that Janez Jansa, 49, is the real problem. A former journalist who was involved in the communist youth organization in the 1980s and became an authoritarian conservative after the fall of communism, he has only one goal, says Spomenka Hribar, a respected Slovenian philosopher: “that the state should control everything.” It is because of sentiments like these that many Slovenians see the EU Council presidency as an opportunity for more democracy.”

I have not come across the abovementioned /rather naive?/ sentiment thus far and have also not heard of anyone else refer to Blaz Zgaga as “the Robin Hood of the Slovenian media community”. Things become increasingly interesting as Europe’s eye does seem to focus more on Slovenia than it did before, contrary to my personal expectations.

Kosovo – will Serbia go to war?

01/03/2008

This has been a major question lingering in the back of my mind for the past couple of months. Instability in the Serbia/Kosovo region would inevitably affect the rest of the broader Balkan area and Europe and could lead to an interesting development of events on the podium of world politics with the US and Russia playing major roles and the EU possibly trying to make an effort at sticking to an actual concrete common foreign policy.

Yesterday, the Serbian President Boris Tadić visited the buffer zone in Southern Serbia and stated that Serbia will never again send its soldiers to “senseless wars”, elaborating that thought by claiming that Serbia will “always use its army in accordance with Serbian and international law”. Reportedly (source and another source), he said that although many wish Serbia went to war again, this would lead to eventual loss of Kosovo and more victims, which is why the current Serbian government will not take that course.

As positive a sentiment as this is, I still cannot imagine Serbs not reacting to Kosovo’s proclamation of independence with violence. Perhaps not officionally sanctioned by the Government, but carried out by the “many who wish Serbia went to war again”. One type of militia or another. I have not seen Serbs being offered anything they would consider of true value in return for the surrender of a rather large piece of what is in essence Serbian territory. Some might claim that the ticket to accession to the EU is it, but I doubt that the privilege of starting negotiations to join a multinational economic and political superstructure to which the nation will delegate some of its sovereignty is something that the people of the country view as a fair trade-off for land. Not just any land, but land they feel particularly attached to.

The way I see things progressing, I suspect that the unilateral declaration of independence by the Kosovar, which can no longer be avoided as it enjoys too wide a support by some of the strong players, will provoke an outburst of violence in the Kosovska Mitrovica area as Serbian militia trickles across the border into the region to protect the cradle of the Serbian nation and more importantly the Serbs still living there. This violence would be retaliated by Kosovan Albanians attacking the NATO-guarded Serbian enclaves. It is not unrealistic to expect casualties in NATO’s Kosovo Force, which in turn might affect the sentiments and consequently course of action of the countries supporting Kosovo’s independence.

When taking a look at the situation, one should not dismiss Russia’s position on the subject or what Russia believes the greater consequences could be of setting a prejudice in Kosovo of externally promoting the separation of a part of a sovereign country against said country’s will. Russia’s military chief of staff Yury Baluevsky made it clear, for example, that Pridnestrovie gets recognition if Kosovo does. Several other countries would no doubt love to jump on that same bandwagon.

Nevertheless, I personally do hope that although the above outbursts of violence seem inevitable to me, they will at least have a short lifespan and that deals have already been made that we, the ignorant regular folks are blissfully unaware of. Hopefully, all powers that be basically want peace and progress for their respective nations and are willing to negotiate and strike up a compromise.

What I’m trying to say is that I hope that Serbia is offered a substantial reward for letting go of land it’s all but lost a long time ago and that the proud nation will do the world a favour and release the land and its people as peacefully as possible. Perhaps retaining approximately 20% of the north-most territory (…and there the story continues).

The snowball is already rolling… The question is: how big will (the international community let) it become before it melts and allows Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo to thrive.

I am sticking to my one big Christmas/New Year wish I’ve had for many years now:
May 2008 bring peace and love to this World.

Danes je dan republike – Republic Day

11/29/2007

Today is would have been the Day of the Republic

If you were not ‘Born in the S.F.R.J.’ or you are just too young to remember the days, you may want to read up on the ex holiday of an ex country here.

All the World’s a Stage

11/20/2007

New Kolizej in Ljubljana
The new Ljubljana Opera House project presented at Ljubljana City Hall
(Novi Kolizej)

As the Bluff was called and all the main players took the stage on national TV last night, I couldn’t help but think of the Immortal Bard. The dethroned Lord of Bluff remains Slovenia’s Prime Minister. May he and his entourage serve the country well in the year that remains of their term.

All the World’s a Stage
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms.
And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like snail
Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad
Made to his mistress’ eyebrow. Then a soldier,
Full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard,
Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,
Seeking the bubble reputation
Even in the cannon’s mouth. And then the justice,
In fair round belly with good capon lined,
With eyes severe and beard of formal cut,
Full of wise saws and modern instances;
And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slipper’d pantaloon,
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side,
His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide
For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.

Where Have All the Bread Loaves Gone?

11/16/2007

Photo of the Week in Mladina by Binula
Photo of the Week in Mladina magazine; visit the author’s blog: Binula

While the Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša struggles to discipline his coalition partners, people still find it difficult to forget some of the recent statements considered to be in rather poor taste.

In our office‘s backyard, my dear colleague (meet Sabina) took a photo of a question posed by an annonymous voter or voter-to-be who apparently dug through the trash container for loaves of bread in vain. He or she most probably came across no milk and honey, either.

Today, Sabina’s photo of the container with the sign: “Janša, where are the bread loaves?” was published in Mladina magazine as the “photo of the week”. Incidentally, Barbara Brezigar, featured to the left of the photo used to share Sabina’s last name. And possibly a drop of blood or two. Hey, it’s a small country 😉

Bravo to Binula the blogger on becoming a published photographer!

The Bluff Continues

11/15/2007

On National TV, the Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša just stated that the Government will propose a motion of confidence (“vote of confidence”). You can read more on what that means here.

(If the Government does not receive the support of a majority vote of all deputies, the National Assembly must elect within thirty days a new President of the Government or in a new vote express its confidence in the incumbent President of the Government, or failing this, the President of the Republic dissolves the National Assembly and calls new elections.)

And so, the Lord of Bluff continues his rule…

The Lord of Bluff

11/14/2007

Janez Janša
Janez Janša, Slovenian Prime Minister; (photo source)

I may be notoriously recalcitrant (hey, I just learned a new word 🙂 ) but I think just about everyone can see that yesterday’s statement by the Slovenian Prime Minister that the option of the entire Government stepping down is not out of the question is nothing short of a brilliant bluff.

By giving this statement, the Strategist who functions best at times of duress effectively stopped the down-with-the-government campaign before it could begin. He will be turning from a villain to a victim in no time, blaming the EU Presidency (supported by everyone) for any and all problems that may arise. The poor-me/conspiracy card works like a charm.

I am doing a great job and if you think you can do better, go for it! A year before the elections and with the EU Presidency adventure inbetween? We all remember what happened 7 years ago with the player roles reversed, right?

One has to admire the way JJ is playing his hand. He has placed the opponents into a no-win position. Call his bluff and lose the elections or don’t call it and silently admit that he is needed and adequate at his job.

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