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- <text id=91TT0599>
- <link 91TT0443>
- <link 91TT0114>
- <title>
- Mar. 25, 1991: Yugoslavia:Mass Bedlam In Belgrade
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- YUGOSLAVIA
- Mass Bedlam in Belgrade
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After a turbulent week of protests, one Serbian leader resigns
- and another sees his grip on power weakened
- </p>
- <p>By James L. Graff/Belgrade
- </p>
- <p> Serbia, Yugoslavia's largest republic, has spent months
- poised on the brink of conflict with neighboring Croatia on
- behalf of the ethnic Serbs living there. But last week, the
- most harrowing for Yugoslavia since the end of World War II,
- Serbia was fighting battles entirely within its own borders.
- In a scenario that seems to have become a rite of passage in
- the new Europe, the people of the republic were pitted against
- an autocratic regime, Serbia's communist government. The
- showdown came in the capital, Belgrade, where anticommunist
- demonstrations paralyzed the city center for three tense days
- and nights after a weekend of violence.
- </p>
- <p> The chief political casualties from the week's ferment were
- Yugoslavia's two senior Serbs. On Friday, Borisav Jovic, the
- Serbian leader of Yugoslavia's eight-man presidency, resigned
- after a majority of his colleagues from the country's five
- other republics rejected an army proposal to declare a national
- state of emergency. The next day, two more presidency members
- who supported Jovic followed suit. Voicing fears that the
- country was headed inexorably toward civil war, Jovic said he
- was "not ready to go along with such decisions that are leading
- to the breakup of the country." For his part, Serbian
- president Slobodan Milosevic found his grip on power seriously
- weakened by the turmoil. With the prospect that the army might
- yet impose a crackdown, Yugoslavia was left teetering between
- hope and fear.
- </p>
- <p> The fulcrum of uncertainty was Milosevic, 49, who rose to
- power in 1986 on a populist wave of Serbian nationalism and was
- overwhelmingly confirmed as president--under the banner of
- the renamed Socialist Party of Serbia--in elections last
- December. In his efforts to fuel nationalist passions and to
- silence dissent, Milosevic exercised ironclad control over
- Serbia's state-owned media, which in turn waged a war of words
- against secessionist-minded Croatians and Slovenes and the
- equally nationalistic but more democratic Serbian opposition.
- On March 9 some 100,000 people crowded into Belgrade's
- Republic Square to register their opposition.
- </p>
- <p> A pitched battle broke out when Serbian riot police, firing
- rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons, charged the
- ralliers. Many of the protesters fought back with trash cans,
- paving blocks ripped from the sidewalks and even furniture from
- open-air cafes. As the crowd swarmed toward the Serbian
- parliament building, a 17-year-old boy, Branivoje Milinovic,
- was killed by police gunfire; more than 100 other people were
- injured, and a policeman later died of head wounds. The federal
- army, commanded by a largely Serbian officer corps, deployed
- tanks and armored personnel carriers at Serbia's request, in
- what Croatian prime minister Josip Manolic called "an act
- against the constitution."
- </p>
- <p> Early last week thousands of students gathered in protest
- on Terazije square, one of Belgrade's main thoroughfares. They
- demanded the resignation of state-controlled media managers and
- the Serbian minister of police, as well as the release of the
- more than 600 demonstrators who had been detained.
- </p>
- <p> As the protests persisted, Milosevic began parceling out
- concessions. His appointees at the head of RadioTelevision
- Belgrade resigned. Vuk Draskovic, leader of the opposition
- Serbian Renewal Movement, was released after spending three
- days in prison. Serbian minister of police Radmilo Bogdanovic,
- held responsible by the opposition for police violence, offered
- his resignation.
- </p>
- <p> But Milosevic and his regime are clearly not not going to
- bow out with a whimper. In three tense marathon sessions of the
- collective federal presidency (made up of representatives of
- all six republics and the two Serbian provinces of Vojvodina
- and Kosovo), Jovic, backed by the army chief of staff, had
- pressed for a military crackdown. "Milosevic is a fighting
- man," said Milovan Djilas, a dissident communist who was jailed
- repeatedly by Marshal Josip Broz Tito in the 1950s and '60s.
- "He won't go for a fundamental change of policy."
- </p>
- <p> Many Serbs, though hurt by a depression that saw the
- republic's industrial production drop 35% last year, back
- Milosevic because they fear the prospect of a painful switch
- to a market-oriented economy. Strong support also comes from
- the federal army, whose officers enjoy privileges that would
- probably be jettisoned by a liberal Serbian government.
- </p>
- <p> It may not be enough, however, to wrest the initiative back
- from the anticommunist movement. "Milosevic's castle has been
- destroyed," said Desimir Tosic, vice president of the
- opposition Democrats. "He could make a desperate move to stay
- in power, but it won't be the same power he held in the past."
- </p>
- <p> Such questions are moot, however, if the army decides to
- take matters into its own hands. The spate of presidential
- resignations last week left Yugoslavia in confusion over just
- what civilian authority ultimately commands the military. If
- the answer turns out to be Milosevic and the army leaders, the
- country could sink into an even grimmer cycle of violence.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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