January 12, 2024

UK Embassy says Serbia not viewed as Russian proxy

n1info.rs

Beta: UK Embassy says Serbia not viewed as Russian proxy

Beta

~2 minutes


The British embassy in Belgrade told the Beta news agency on Thursday that London does not view Serbia as a Russian proxy as Foreign Secretary David Cameron was reported to have said.

Cameron told the parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee that "Russia wants to do more to destabilize the Balkans, wants to do more through its proxies, including Serbia".

The embassy spokespeople said that there are certain elements in the country acting in the interest of Russia and threatening the stability and democratic capacities of the region, adding that the UK will continue to cooperate with Serbia on common priorities.

Beta was told that Cameron was referring to elements in Serbia that he believes are acting in Russia's interest and not to the state of Serbia.

Serbia is an independent, sovereign state and we welcome the clear position of the Serbian government in opposition to the war in Ukraine. We will continue encouraging Serbia to implement sanctions against Russia. We may not agree fully, but we welcome the regular dialogue with the Serbian government on these issue, Beta quoted the embassy sources as saying.

 

January 04, 2024

Why Do Both Russia and the US Support Serbia's Populist Leader?

bylinetimes.com

Why Do Both Russia and the US Support Serbia's Populist Leader? – Byline Times

Nikola Mikovic

6–7 minutes


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While Europe was celebrating Christmas and New Year's Eve, Serbian pro-Western opposition held a series of rallies over the alleged electoral fraud. But the fact that both the United States and Russia – despite being geopolitical rivals – openly support Serbia's populist President Aleksandar Vucic, gives the opposition leaders very little hope in their struggle for the annulment of the vote. 

On December 17, the southeastern European country held snap parliamentary and municipal elections, in which the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) won 46.72% of the votes. Ever since, the opposition has held several daily protests, expressing disagreement with the election results. 

Marinika Tepic, one of the opposition leaders, was on hunger strike, demanding the annulment of the country's parliamentary and local elections, while the main opposition alliance, Serbia Against Violence, claims the election was stolen, particularly in the vote for the Belgrade city authorities.

Moreover, international observers from the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), the European Parliament and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, said that the SNS had "gained an unfair advantage through media bias, pressure on public sector employees and misuse of public resources". 

Although The Independent broadcasted the opposition rally on December 30, the West does not seem to be unified when it comes to the situation in Serbia. The United States, as the major foreign power operating in the Balkans, seems to have openly backed the SNS-dominated Serbian government. 


After protesters, on December 24, tried to enter Belgrade's city council and clashed with the riot police, the US Ambassador to Serbia Christopher Hill wrote on X that "the legitimacy of democratic processes depends upon transparency and on the readiness of all parties, winning or losing, to respect the will of the people as expressed at the ballot box". He also stressed that "violence and vandalism against state institutions have no place in a democratic society".

Such a statement was a clear signal that Washington, despite urging Serbia to work with the OSCE to address "unjust conditions" surrounding the electoral process, is unlikely to support what Moscow portrays as a "Maidan-style coup attempt" in Belgrade.

 Indeed, both the Kremlin and pro-government media in Serbia have been spreading the "new Maidan" narrative, referring to the expulsion of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych from power in 2014. It is, therefore, not surprising that, following the violent protest on December 26, Vucic met with the Russian Ambassador to Serbia, Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko, who accused Western countries of "trying to retaliate against the Serbian leader" because he reportedly refuses to join anti-Russian sanctions imposed on Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine.

Serbian pro-government tabloids have adopted the same rhetoric, claiming that Germany is involved in the ongoing protests over Belgrade's policy regarding Moscow. In reality, neither Germany nor any other Western country has ever put serious pressure on Serbia to impose sanctions on Russia, but the Kremlin uses such a narrative to create an illusion at home that Putin still has friends in Europe. 

Vucic also benefits from such a Russian rhetoric, since in the eyes of his pro-Russian voters he can portray himself as a "statesman who refuses to follow Western orders and impose sanctions on Moscow".

That is why he is among three European leaders (Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan being two others) who got letters with New Year's greetings from the Russian President. 


The United States, for its part, does not seem to be paying much attention to this charade. Washington remains focused on Belgrade's implementation of the European Union's proposal regarding the normalization of relations between Serbia and Kosovo.

Thus, it is unlikely a pure coincidence that the Serbian government, following Hill's statement, recognised Kosovo-issued license plates, a move that can be interpreted as Serbia's implicit recognition of Kosovo's 2008 unilaterally declared independence. 

Quite aware of that, Kosovan Prime Minister Albin Kurti said that Belgrade's decision was made "in an attempt to reduce the criticism of the international community after irregularities and fraud" in the recent election. But his government seems to have followed Serbia's path and also made a "goodwill gesture". 

According to reports, Kosovo's Chief Prosecutor of the Special Prosecution lifted the arrest warrant against Vucic's ally Milan Radoicic, who played the major role in the September 24 gun battle with the ethnic Albanian-led Kosovo police in the Serb-dominated northern Kosovo that killed four people.

Therefore, both Belgrade and Pristina use the alleged Serbian election irregularities as a bargaining chip, while they quietly work on normalization of relations, which is what seems to be one of the US top priorities in the region.

As a result, Serbian opposition is unlikely to achieve its goals and get the election annulled. Although it advocates faster EU integration, fair elections, freedom of the media, and rule of law, for certain influential political forces in the West, particularly in the United States, stabilitocracy in the Balkans – and especially in Serbia – seems to have priority over democracy.

 

January 03, 2024

Dragan Đilas: How the West lost the plot on Serbia

politico.eu

How the West lost the plot on Serbia

Dragan Đilas

6–8 minutes


Dragan Đilas is the president of the Party of Freedom and Justice and a member of the Serbia Against Violence coalition. He served as the mayor of Belgrade (2008–2013) and the president of the Democratic Party, Serbia's main opposition party (2012–2014).

When Serbia was ruled by Slobodan Milošević, the West — with the United States in the lead — strongly supported democratic change in the country. But now, as Serbia backslides toward autocracy under President Aleksandar Vučić, this commitment seems to have disappeared.

Last week, there were protests on the streets of Belgrade, as citizens marched against deeply flawed parliamentary and local elections in the capital. Afterward, outgoing Prime Minister Ana Brnabić thanked Russian security services for notifying the Serbian government about the planned demonstrations, which were, she claimed, orchestrated by "some Western services."

Briefing the Russian Ambassador to Serbia on the unrest in the capital, Vučić and the envoy also agreed that the protests were organized by the West, while U.S. Ambassador to Serbia Christopher Hill condemned the "violence and vandalism against state institutions" as having no place in a "democratic society."

 It would thus appear that the views of the Russian and the U.S. envoys are aligned, with both seemingly more concerned about the stability of the Serbian government than electoral fraud. And even in today's complex world, such Western support for the Serbian leader, who accuses it of fomenting unrest in his country, is mind-boggling.

The Serbian elections that took place on December 17 were massively rigged, and were denounced by international observers as not having offered voters a choice free of undue influence. In Belgrade in particular, there was evidence of large-scale organized voter migration, bringing in voters from other regions in Serbia and from abroad.

This means the president and his party declared a victory they didn't achieve.

It is Serbia Against Violence, an opposition coalition of which my party is a core member, that won the city election, and we have called for a repeat. Supported by many young people, who have had enough of living in a country where violence is common and institutions don't matter, we invited citizens to protest peacefully until our demands were met, while Marinika Tepić and several other members of parliament went on hunger strike.

December 24 then saw one of the biggest protest so far. Councilors demanded they be allowed to enter their offices in the city assembly, which was not permitted by police. Clashes ensued, and relying on excessive force, police arrested 38 protesters.

In the face of all this, official reactions from the European Union and the U.S. have been muted at best. Initially, European Parliament Rapporteur for Serbia Vladimir Bilčik didn't even notice the election's "major irregularities." And even more strikingly, there was no reaction to the offences and verbal abuse suffered by the international and domestic election observers who publicly spoke about their findings.

Sadly, we have come to expect such behavior from our Western partners. With wars and violence raging in Europe's neighborhood and the Middle East, they don't seem to have the bandwidth to devote to Serbia, and thus pursue a nakedly transactional relationship with Vučić instead.

The transaction is easy to understand. At home, Vučić plays to his populist audience, decrying the West for disregarding the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Serbia while upholding that of Ukraine. He has refused to impose sanctions on Russia, has arrested or blocked Russian citizens who are opposed to the war on Ukraine from staying in Serbia, and has derogatorily likened the Belgrade protests to Maidan.

At the same time, he fuels belligerent sentiments toward Kosovo, alleging that everybody who disagrees with him is a traitor. And he has controlled most of the media space in Serbia for over a decade.

Abroad, however, Vučić delivers what the West wants to hear. This week, his government started implementing a decision recognizing Kosovo-issued vehicle license plates. The country has increased its production of ammunition that gets sent to Ukraine, substantially shoring up its supplies. And Vučić has also been looking for ways to revive lithium mining — something the EU could significantly benefit from, as it would allow for the re-shoring of a vital resource at a time of growing geopolitical tension and competition.

The deal is great for everybody — except for Serbian citizens.

We are witnessing a steady and relentless deterioration of political rights and civil liberties, the reason why the country was downgraded from "free" to "partly free" by Freedom House a few years ago. Meanwhile, abroad, Serbia is seen as a pariah — a country that has sided with Russia and has no understanding or empathy for the horrors Ukraine is enduring.

But what Vučić's Western interlocutors need to understand is that if they persist in turning a blind eye — like ambassador Hill, who says he is "really looking forward" to continued cooperation with the Serbian government — the country's institutions and reputation will be left in tatters, its direction easily changed at the whim of a leader.

Last May, after a mass shooting in a Belgrade school sparked massive protests, we sent a letter to both EU and U.S. officials warning that Vučić would likely attempt to resolve the crisis by calling an early election without acceptable electoral conditions. And we asked for their help to make sure that the recommendations of the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights published after the April 2022 elections were implemented fully.

However, we received no conclusive response. If anything, they were only too happy to praise the flawed steps the Serbian government had taken to create the impression of compliance.

So, if Western democratic governments find it too difficult to live up to the values they espouse, call for repeat elections and insist they take place under conditions that make them free and fair, then maybe it would be better if they just said nothing at all.