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- <text id=90TT2046>
- <link 91TT0599>
- <link 90TT0356>
- <title>
- Aug. 06, 1990: Yugoslavia:The Old Demons Rise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 06, 1990 Just Who Is David Souter?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- YUGOSLAVIA
- The Old Demons Arise
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After the collapse of totalitarianism in Central Europe, the
- fractious Balkans face new instability
- </p>
- <p>By John Borrell/Zagreb--With reporting by Gertraud
- Lessing/Vienna
- </p>
- <p> Neither centuries under Turkish and Austro-Hungarian
- domination nor more than four decades of communist rule have
- obliterated the ethnic passions that made the Balkans a synonym
- for fractious politics. Now, with the communist world
- crumbling, new instability may follow the glum quiet of the Pax
- Sovietica. The peril exists side by side with the opportunity
- for healthy change, but the current political ferment of
- Eastern Europe is an inherently volatile mix in which old
- demons--belligerent nationalism and demagogic populism--could win out as easily as liberal democracy.
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere are destabilizing and potentially disruptive forces
- more clearly displayed than in Yugoslavia, the fragile
- coalition of six republics and two semi-autonomous provinces.
- Over the past three months, the northern republics of Slovenia
- and Croatia have held elections, ejecting incumbent communist
- governments and staking out positions that fall just short of
- independence. Slovenia's new government has served notice that
- it will declare itself independent if the other states do not
- accept its demands to turn Yugoslavia into a grouping of
- sovereign republics.
- </p>
- <p> Federal President Borisav Jovic bowed to nationalist
- sentiment this month when he said the troubled country may soon
- hold a referendum to decide if Yugoslavia's six republics
- should split into separate nations. "The right of
- self-determination, including the right of secession," he said,
- "is a natural political right of each nationality."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, the semi-autonomous province of Kosovo,
- where ethnic Albanians outnumber Serbs 9 to 1 but which is
- administered by Serbia, is engaged in a bitter dispute with
- Belgrade over a recent attempt to break away. Serbia, the
- largest republic, with 36% of Yugoslavia's 23.6 million people,
- has suspended the Kosovo parliament and rushed more troops into
- the province. The move came after more than 100 Kosovo deputies
- declared their region's independence from Serbia and demanded
- full republic status within the Yugoslav federation.
- </p>
- <p> For Serbia's Communist leader, Slobodan Milosevic, the
- struggle over control of Kosovo may provide a last chance to
- revive his and his party's flagging fortunes. Milosevic came
- to power in 1986 on the force of his strident Serbian
- nationalism, but a deepening economic crisis and the party's
- refusal to permit open elections in the province have since
- undermined his authority. Just last year, hundreds of thousands
- of Serbs turned out at a Milosevic rally to hear him promise a
- new golden age for Serbia; last month 30,000 people demonstrated
- against him in Belgrade, burning pictures of him and chanting
- "Traitor, traitor." In a bid for survival, a Serbian Communist
- congress in Belgrade voted two weeks ago to merge with a front
- organization, the Socialist Alliance, to become the Serbian
- Socialist Party. The change is widely thought to be purely
- cosmetic: a few non-Communists were elected to the new party's
- leadership, but Milosevic was voted into the top post without
- opposition.
- </p>
- <p> Despite Milosevic's nationalism, few Serbs favor
- independence for their republic. Svetozar Stojanovic, a
- politics professor at the University of Belgrade, suggests that
- practical economics might discourage a total breakup of the
- federal state. He argues that the economies of the republics
- complement one another, an advantage that would be lost if all
- went their own way, and that separation would leave the
- question of the country's $16 billion foreign debt unresolved,
- discouraging any new foreign investment. Says Serbian
- economics professor Ljubisa Adamovic: "When they finally work
- out the costs of going it alone, they may be less anxious to
- do so."
- </p>
- <p> But the tougher Milosevic gets with Kosovo, the more likely
- it is that Slovenia and Croatia will accelerate their moves
- away from the center. "Whatever happens now, Yugoslavia as we
- have known it since World War II is finished," says Zvonko
- Baletic of the Institute of Economics in Zagreb. "The best we
- can hope for is a confederation of basically independent
- states."
- </p>
- <p> That solution would please Slovenia and Croatia. There is
- little disagreement there that these two economically advanced
- republics could go it alone--though at a cost. "In the open
- economy in Europe of the 1990s, the number of people is not
- important," says Ante Cicin-Sain of the Institute of Economics.
- "It is just as easy, and much more acceptable politically, for
- us to take directions from Brussels than from Belgrade."
- </p>
- <p> Yugoslavia's poorer, heavily subsidized southern republics,
- Macedonia and Montenegro, are far less enthusiastic about a
- breakup. They may yet join Serbia in resisting such a move, or
- enlist in a new political grouping with Belgrade as its base.
- Further disintegration could also lead to aggressive new moves
- by Serbia, which has said repeatedly that in the event of the
- federation's breakup, it will redraw its borders. That would
- probably mean an attempt to annex Kosovo and a struggle with
- Croatia over the future of the republic of Bosnia and
- Herzegovina, where 33% of the people are Serbs.
- </p>
- <p> Some 40% of Yugoslavia's 8.1 million Serbs live in other
- republics, making prospects for negotiated independence remote--and the threat of violent confrontations real if change is
- not handled carefully. "Any unilateral attempts to break up
- Yugoslavia will lead to civil war," says Dusan Bilandjic, a
- political scientist at the University of Croatia in Zagreb.
- "Once it starts, it will be difficult to stop."
- </p>
- <p> Historical forces are stoking nationalism in Yugoslavia. For
- more than a millennium, the cultures of east and west have
- collided in this mountainous corner of the Balkans, and each
- of today's conflicts exposes layers of the past. Friction
- between the various republics may reflect the conflict between
- Roman Catholicism and Greek Orthodoxy, or Islam and
- Christianity, or Slav and Turk, or Slav and German. Yugoslavs
- do not even share an alphabet: Serbia uses Cyrillic script;
- Croatia and Slovenia, Roman. As the old British dictum went,
- Yugoslavia is a small country with big problems--six
- republics, five nationalities, four languages, three religions,
- two alphabets and one political party. The only change today
- is a proliferation of parties as well.
- </p>
- <p> Stripped of ethnic and regional antagonisms, Yugoslav
- nationalism could be a positive force. It helped Tito maintain
- autonomy against the aggressive designs of Stalin--and in
- that sense was an early harbinger of the freedom Eastern Europe
- has now found. "Nationalism is not necessarily a bad thing,"
- argues Miroslav Hroch, a historian at Prague's Charles
- University. He believes after four decades of communism it is
- inevitable that people will seek a national identity. "An old
- order has collapsed, and people have to belong to something,"
- he says. "There is nothing wrong with their rallying to the
- flag." True, as long as the old demons do not wrap themselves
- in the flag as well.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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