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The show is over for Milosevic
Mr. Milosevic's last stand too was predictable - sabre-rattling
and a show of strength which ended in humiliation and
unconditional capitulation, says Vaiju Naravane.
IT WAS a small envelope containing a three-page note that led to
the dramatic arrest last weekend of the former Yugoslav
President, Mr. Slobodan Milosevic. It is unclear as to whose
signature was appended at the bottom of the page. It has been
strongly hinted in Belgrade that the letter, handed over to
Yugoslavia's new President, Mr. Vojislav Kostunica, was signed by
``W'' himself.
The letter was personally handed over to Mr. Kostunica by the
U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia, Mr. William D. Montgomery. An
unequivocal ultimatum, the letter told Mr. Kostunica in no
uncertain terms that failure to imprison Mr. Milosevic by March
31 would mean kissing good-bye to the first half of a $100-
million development aid package from the U.S. Government, vital
to jump-start the jammed Yugoslav economy.
Sources in Belgrade say that the U.S. President, Mr. George Bush,
``ordered'' Mr. Kostunica to ``continue to cooperate'' with the
International Criminal Tribunal on The Former Yugoslavia (ICTFY)
and to ''ensure`` that Mr. Milosevic is brought to ''a speedy
trial`` in the international court.
The U.S. dikat could not have been more crudely put. The arrest
and transfer to prison had to take place by March 31. If not, the
U.S. Congress would vote against the $50 million aid package to
Belgrade for this year. More importantly, the U.S. would oppose
any World Bank or International Monetary fund credits to the
former Yugoslavia.
Neither Mr. Kostunica nor the Prime Minister, Mr. Zoran Djindjic,
had much choice in the matter. However, the country's new leaders
did not have much to lose beyond a bit of nationalistic pride.
And even that has become a rare commodity in Yugoslavia today.
Opinion polls indicate that Yugoslavs no longer care about what
happens to the ''Butcher of the Balkans``.
Over 70 per cent of those questioned say they want his arrest.
''All we want is to be like ordinary citizens. ``We have realised
that heroism is not for us. We want bread and meat in our
stomachs, shoes on our feet, education for our children and a
decent, peaceful lifestyle. We are tired of war. We have been
humiliated so much already. Much of that was caused by Mr.
Milosevic. Now let him pay the price for his folly,'' said Ms.
Braka Stepanovic, a journalist, explaining the fairly
straightforward way in which the Milosevic arrest was carried
out. ``The former President did try to make a stand, did try to
mobilise the population but he managed to get only a couple of
hundred up-country bumpkins. Belgrade remained supremely unmoved.
That is when he decided to throw in the towel and give himself
up,'' she says.
Mr. Milosevic's last stand too was predictable - sabre-rattling
and a show of strength which ended in humiliation and
unconditional capitulation. During the preceding decade, he had
unerringly and consistently played out the same scenario with his
country, losing huge swathes of territory, sowing seeds of
hatred, extremism and discord, reducing a once-proud people to
political and economic dwarfdom.
``Milosevic's arrest revealed the man's weakness and
inconsistencies. He started out defiantly, his heavily armed
guards firing back at the special police units sent to arrest
him. Towards the end he was a pathetic figure, threatening to
blow up his own family, assassinate his wife and daughter. That
was a coward's last stand. And the Yugoslav people finally saw
him for what he really is, a pathetic, hollow, insecure little
man, all threat and bluster but without any real courage, not
even the courage to take his own life. We discovered a veritable
ammunition depot in his house in Dedjine - rocket launchers,
mortars, enough arms and ammunition to keep a little army going
for several month,'' says the special services officer, Mr. Jajco
Stepic.
Mr. Slobodan Milosevic stands accused of crimes against humanity
for the excesses committed in Kosovo by the Yugoslav army and
paramilitary forces. NATO and western leaders are asking that he
be extradited to the International Criminal Tribunal at The
Hague. For the time being he has been charged with corruption and
fraud, for stealing from the Yugoslav people and the state. It is
unclear how long Yugoslav leaders will be able to resist
international pressure to hand him over to the chief war crimes
prosecutor.
The U.S. letter did not set down any cut-off date by which Mr.
Milosevic should be handed over to the international court,
stipulating simply that ``the Yugoslav Government should finally
cooperate with the ICTFY on the question of Mr. Milosevic's
arrest''. Washington is now likely to pressure Belgrade to expel
other wanted Bosnian Serb war criminals like General Ratko Mladic
or Radovan Karazdic who have found safe havens in Serbia.
Following the death of the dictatorial Franzo Tudjman and the
establishment of a democratically-elected Government in Croatia,
the authorities there have begun cooperating with the
international court. For the first time Croatia appears
determined to truly examine the horrors committed in the name of
nationalism and the misplaced ideal of ``Greater Croatia.''
With the arrest of Mr. Milosevic on the demands of the U.S., the
capitulation of Serbia is now complete. Many Yugoslavs feel they
have to ``fall in line'' like the other Balkan states and like
the rest of ``pacified and globalised'' former eastern Europe.
``What Serbia needs is an absence of aggression, of hostility, of
war. We must set up a national truth and reconciliation
commission and look at what we have done to ourselves, to others
these past ten years. I think we have lost Kosovo and we must
come to terms with that,'' says Dragan Predrag, a journalist.
But people like Ljubisa Ristic, a noted theatre director, an
advocate of a certain idea of Serbia and a die-hard supporter of
the Milosevics looks at the tragedy of the former Yugoslavia and
the present state of Serbia as ``the inevitable result of a
process of neo-colonisation.'' For him this only a passing phase.
``They wanted to destroy the Balkans. They have done it. Serbia
has been humbled. The Balkans has been decimated. The West has
won again. But my people shall rise up. We have done so in the
past, again and again. We are not the types to accept humiliation
for long.''
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