Posted on 05/23/2006 8:06:27 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
Serbia accepts Montenegro result Serbia President Boris Tadic Boris Tadic said Serbia would always be a friend of Montenegro Serbian President Boris Tadic has recognised the results of Montenegro's vote for independence, in the first official response from Serbia.
"I accept the preliminary results reached by the referendum commission," Mr Tadic told a news conference.
Official results of Sunday's referendum in Montenegro put the pro-independence votes at 55.5% - just half a percentage point above the threshold for victory.
But a demand by pro-Serbian unionist parties for a recount was rejected.
"As you know, I was in favour of maintaining the common state... but as a democrat and president of a democratic country, I'm fully ready to accept the decision of the majority of the citizens of Montenegro," Mr Tadic said.
"Montenegro will always have in Serbia a reliable partner and friend," said Mr Tadic.
Later, Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica - a nationalist and fierce opponent of Montenegrin secession - said Serbia was ready to acknowledge the results "once they become final".
"A referendum is an important event and the smallest doubt about its regularity has to be removed," Mr Kostunica told reporters in Belgrade, the Serbian capital.
A dispute over 19,000 votes in the capital Podgorica delayed announcement of the final results on Monday.
High turnout
The referendum commission head Frantisek Lipka said the completed preliminary results showed 230,711 people, 55.5%, had voted for Montenegro to become an independent state.
HAVE YOUR SAY Things will get worse for Montenegro now, I believe Dejan Knezevic, Niksic, Montenegro
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He said 184,954 voters, 44.5%, had voted to remain with Serbia.
The results will be made final on Saturday after the expiry of a period in which they can be challenged. Turnout was 86.3%.
Several leaders of the pro-union bloc led by the Socialist People's Party signed a statement calling for a recount of the ballots.
But Mr Lipka dismissed their complaints, and the final result received the backing of European Parliament observers and the EU's Austrian presidency.
EU boost
The European Commission said Montenegro could begin talks with the EU on closer ties and eventual membership.
"The European perspective is open to Montenegro," enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn said.
Montenegrins arrive to celebrate the independence vote in the medieval capital of Cetinje, west of Podgorica
What next for Montenegro?
Serbia has seen its EU ambitions hampered by the failure to arrest key war crimes suspects, but Montenegrin Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic was optimistic about his nation's prospects.
"I am convinced Montenegro could be the next country from this region to join the European Union, after Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia, which are further along the process," he told Reuters news agency.
The process of disentangling Montenegro and Serbia is likely to involve detailed negotiations between the two governments, the BBC's Nick Hawton in Montenegro says.
Independent again
The union of Serbia and Montenegro was all that remained of the federation of six republics that made up Yugoslavia before the independence wars of the 1990s.
The question of independence has proved divisive in Montenegro, with opponents arguing it will damage economic, family and political ties with Serbia.
Serb politicians, Orthodox church leaders and Montenegrins from the mountainous inland regions bordering Serbia broadly opposed secession.
However, ethnic Montenegrins and Albanians from the coastal area largely backed the prime minister and favoured independence.
The last time Montenegro was independent was nearly 90 years ago at the end of World War I, when it was absorbed into the newly formed Yugoslavia.
what's bttt, and how come the moderators can alter titles of posts and remove comments which aren't offensive at all (suggesting something for a freeper's ping list)?
ping
That will leave some Montenegrins coughing up lots of money for tuition as early as this Fall. Perhaps the Montenegrins can ask the EU for some financial help for their university students.
What possibility do the Montenegrins have of forming an economically viable state?
bttt: "Bump to the Top"
The BBC touches on how Montenegro will be much more economically weaker without union, and that they are largely banking on developing a thriving tourist industry.
Yep. They WILL absolutely a have THRIVING economy... especaily since the French already own all the major hotels in Montenegro and we know how financially capable the French are. LOL!!
Gee, if the Serbs had been so accomodating with the other states of former Yugoslavia they would have saved themselves some major heartburn.
What's up, bro? :)
LOL
Do you have a beef with these guys, or what? :P
Lion's right. This post pretty much says it all:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1637608/posts
Just how long do think it will be before the "poohr widdle defensless Muslims" in Montenegro start bitching about "the big bad Montenegrins"?
What was it? Five minutes before they started the "you owe us" stuff?
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