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- <text id=91TT0443>
- <link 91TT0599>
- <link 90TT2046>
- <title>
- Feb. 25, 1991: Yugoslavia:Breaking Up Is Hard
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 25, 1991 Beginning Of The End
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 56
- YUGOSLAVIA
- Breaking Up Is Hard
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>But rising nationalism makes it seem increasingly inevitable,
- and the only real question is whether violence can be avoided
- </p>
- <p>By Jesse Birnbaum--Reported by James P. Fish/Belgrade and
- James L. Graff/Ljubljana
- </p>
- <p> It was a measure of the degree of tension, not to say the
- depths of paranoia bedeviling the country. When they arrived
- at the federal parliament in Belgrade last week, two Croatian
- Deputies and their bodyguards were obliged to check their
- handguns at the door. The gun toters all went home later in one
- piece, but that was more than could be said for the state of
- the nation. As of last week, leaders of Yugoslavia's six
- contentious republics had held four fruitless rounds of talks
- in an effort to resolve a fateful drive toward secession, and
- the roiling crisis is tearing the country apart. The only
- question is whether the process of dismemberment can be
- achieved without civil war, and if so, how--if at all--the
- republics can survive as separate entities.
- </p>
- <p> The threads that have stitched together an unwieldy
- federation of rivalrous ethnic groups since World War II have
- been unraveling for years. Since 1981, the 1.7 million
- Albanians in the Serbian-controlled province of Kosovo have
- been agitating for separate status. Last spring and summer the
- relatively prosperous northern republics of Slovenia and
- Croatia voted in free elections to install noncommunist,
- Western-oriented governments, while Serbia, the largest
- republic, chose to retain its communist government--lately
- renamed socialist--under hard-line President Slobodan
- Milosevic. Those divisive events were followed by a landslide
- referendum in which 88% of Slovenia's 2.1 million citizens
- voted for independence from Belgrade. Since then, the federal
- tax and monetary systems have all but broken down, and Slovenia
- stands ready to print its own currency.
- </p>
- <p> Similar secessionist fever in Croatia, meanwhile, nearly
- erupted in war when Belgrade accused Croatian defense minister
- Martin Spegelj of fomenting an armed insurrection. Federal
- troops were called in, and a tense standoff was resolved only
- when Croatia agreed to demobilize--but not disarm--its
- police reservists. Unrepentant, Slaven Letica, an aide to
- Croatian president Franjo Tudjman, declared, "If it comes to
- civil war, Croatia is willing to fight and confident that it
- will prevail."
- </p>
- <p> What is certain to prevail is the intractable conflict that
- has riven Yugoslavia's two major nationalities since the
- country was established. The Serbs, who threw off Turkish rule
- in the 19th century, are Christian Orthodox; the Croatians, who
- were subjugated by the Habsburg Empire, are Catholics. Their
- mutual hatred and distrust keep growing more virulent as
- nationalist ambitions seethe throughout Eastern Europe. Only
- the suzerainty of socialism imposed by Josip Broz Tito after
- World War II managed for a time to keep the rivalry in check.
- </p>
- <p> Now that is crumbling. What else can hold the union
- together? And if Croatia (pop. 4.6 million) should secede, what
- would become of its 600,000 Serbian minority? "All Serbs," says
- Milosevic, "must have the right to live in one state." This
- implies that he would lay claim to a "greater Serbia" by
- annexing the Serbian regions not only of Croatia but of
- adjacent Bosnia and Herzegovina as well.
- </p>
- <p> Such a move would also be an invitation to civil strife, as
- even Serbian nationalist politician Vuk Draskovic concedes.
- "Many parts of Bosnia and Croatia are like a leopard's skin,"
- he says. "There is no magic solution that could peacefully
- redraw the borders." A greater Serbia, adds Croatian economics
- professor Zvonimir Baletic, "would include more than 2 million
- Croats, 2 million Muslims and 2 million Albanians. That's
- simply not a solution."
- </p>
- <p> A secessionist Croatia might not be the solution either. But
- the Croats, along with the Slovenes, are determined to free
- themselves from the central government's yoke. They complain
- that Belgrade's policies have become more and more blatantly
- an instrument for Serbian hegemony. During the last quarter of
- 1990, they say, the National Bank of Serbia secretly handed out
- $1.8 billion in loans to the Serbian government, which it spent
- to keep failing local enterprises--and itself--afloat. They
- also charge that the National Bank of Yugoslavia, which
- coordinates monetary policy among the six republics, ignored
- the transgression, which only served to increase Yugoslavia's
- grotesque 600% inflation rate.
- </p>
- <p> It happens that the country's inflation and high
- foreign-exchange rate for the dinar do more harm to the foreign
- trade-oriented regions of Slovenia and Croatia than to the
- command economy of Serbia. Though Slovenia, for example,
- accounts for only 9% of Yugoslavia's population, it produces
- more than 30% of its exports to the West; now, because of the
- overvalued dinar, Slovenia's prices are too high.
- </p>
- <p> Equally distressing, Serbia has imposed confiscatory taxes
- on the local operations of Slovenian and Croatian businesses.
- In turn, Slovenia and Croatia have stopped paying the sales tax
- they collect to federal authorities. "Right now all we pay to
- Belgrade is customs duties," says Joze Mencinger, Slovenia's
- deputy prime minister for economic matters. "And we pay that
- because we recognize that an army that gets paid is less
- dangerous than one that doesn't. To some extent we're
- destroying the Yugoslav legal system, just like everyone else.
- But we see no alternative."
- </p>
- <p> Now, having voted overwhelmingly for independence, the
- Slovenes, like the Croats, are pushing toward complete
- separation--and, some say, possible disaster. This week the
- Slovenian parliament will begin introducing amendments to
- excise all mention of Yugoslavia from its constitution. Says
- Joze Pucnik, president of the Slovenian Social Democratic
- Party: "By the end of June at the latest, Slovenia will be a
- sovereign country." If so, the republic will only confront new
- problems, including a doubling of its unemployment rolls from
- the current 6.1% in a work force of 1 million and a drop in
- personal income of more than 30%.
- </p>
- <p> The Croats won't have an easy time of secession either,
- though they persist in planning for a prosperous future. "From
- an economic point of view," says Croatia's Letica, "it is easy
- to envisage a sovereign territory. There are seven states in
- Europe smaller than an independent Croatia would be." One
- strong suit: Croatia earns 90% of Yugoslavia's tourism income,
- primarily in its summer resorts along the Adriatic coast.
- </p>
- <p> Neither the Croats nor the Slovenes seem concerned about how
- Yugoslavia would pay its foreign debt in the event of a
- breakup. Of the $16.7 billion total, Croatia owes $3 billion,
- Slovenia $1.8 billion, and each is responsible for some portion
- of the $3.6 billion on the books as federal debt. Says Ante
- Cicin-Sain, governor of the National Bank of Croatia: "Paying
- it back shouldn't be a big problem as long as we don't destroy
- our debt-servicing capacity."
- </p>
- <p> Such destruction, of course, is what would happen if civil
- war broke out--a real possibility if Serbia remains
- determined to hold the federation together at any cost. But,
- says Peter Stanovik, director of Ljubljana's Institute for
- Economic Research, "politicians in every republic know that
- Europe is watching. War would immediately dry up the credit and
- foreign capital we so desperately need."
- </p>
- <p> That alone is reason enough to keep Yugoslavia from violent
- disintegration. Perhaps the best that Belgrade can hope for is
- a compromise that would lessen its control over all of
- Yugoslavia's republics and replace the current system with some
- loose confederation of independent states. That might placate
- some secessionists, but probably not all of them. Compromise
- will be on the agenda once again late this week, when the
- contending parties are scheduled to meet in Sarajevo. It will
- not be lost on any of them that it was in Sarajevo in 1914
- that World War I began with the assassination of Archduke Franz
- Ferdinand.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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