Posted on 03/12/2003 7:29:58 AM PST by robowombat
BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro, March 12 Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic - a key leader of the revolt that toppled former President Slobodan Milosevic in October 2000 - was assassinated Wednesday by gunmen who ambushed him outside the government complex, police sources said. Hes dead, a source from his Democratic Party told Reuters.
If someone thinks the law and the reforms can be stopped by eliminating me, then that is a huge delusion. ZORAN DJINDJIC Serbian prime minister DJINDJIC, 50, was shot in the chest by two large caliber sniper bullets fired from a distance, a police source told Reuters earlier. Police arrested two suspects. The government building where Djindjic was ambushed was sealed off by heavy state security, and three ambulances were parked in front. Police stopped traffic in downtown Belgrade, searching through cars and checking passengers. Djindjic, 50, appeared to have been targeted last month, when a truck suddenly cut into the lane in which his motorcade was traveling to Belgrades airport. The motorcade narrowly avoided a collision, and Djindjic later dismissed the Feb. 21 alleged assassination attempt as a futile effort that could not stop democratic reforms. If someone thinks the law and the reforms can be stopped by eliminating me, then that is a huge delusion, Djindjic was quoted as saying by the Politika newspaper at the time. DJINDJIC HAD MANY ENEMIES Djindjic, who spearheaded the popular revolt that toppled Milosevic in October 2000, had many enemies because of his pro-reformist and Western stands. He was key in Milosevics extradition to the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. Djindjic was often criticized by his opponents for seeking too much power and for mercilessly attacking his political rivals. A German-educated technocrat known to supporters as The Manager for his organizational skills and as Little Slobo to his detractors for his authoritarian tendencies, Djindjic nonetheless managed to gain some political capital from his willingness to surrender Milosevic despite a constitutional ban on extraditing Serbian citizens.
Though derided for his fondness for big cars and flashy suits, Djindjics trade of Milosevic for $1.2 billion in international economic aid appeared to have won respect from people desperate to improve a living standard that ranks among the lowest in Europe. Djindjic, a pro-Western leader, saw Serbias fate as linked to the West and favored greater cooperation with the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, where Milosevic now is standing trial on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity. He was pivotal in arresting and handing Milosevic to the war crimes tribunal in June 2001. For this, he was blasted by Serbian nationalists, including his former ally Vojislav Kostunica, who stepped down as Yugoslav president earlier this month after the formation of a new state, Serbia and Montenegro. Djindjics feud with Kostunica since the two jointly toppled Milosevic had virtually paralyzed the countrys much-needed economic and social reforms. FROM JAILED DISSIDENT TO PM Jailed as a dissident student in the 1970s, frustrated as a popular protest leader in the 1990s, Djindjic rebounded in a lightning street uprising in 2000 to become leader-in-waiting of a new democratic Serbia. A fitness enthusiast, Djindjic was born in Bosanski Samac, in Bosnia, the son of a Yugoslav Peoples Army officer. Djindjic, who spoke German and English, was married with two children.
Agreed.
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