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Serbia: Serbs Leaving Sandzak
IWPR ^ | 26 July 02 | IWPR Staff

Posted on 07/30/2002 10:52:50 AM PDT by Dragonfly

Serbia: Serbs Leaving Sandzak

Departure of Serbs from Sandzak believed to be triggered by policies of Bosniak nationalists

By IWPR staff in London (BCR No 353, 26-Jul-02)

Serbs are beginning to leave the predominantly Muslim Sandzak region of south-west Serbia after losing public sector jobs, local Serb representatives say.

Some Serbs estimate that around 1,000 members of the community in the largest town in the region, Novi Pazar, have left over the last couple of years. New For Sale signs appear on Serb homes and land throughout the region almost daily.

More departures could have serious implications for the stability of the country, with some predicting a possible nationalist Serb backlash.

The exodus is believed to have been prompted by the predominantly Muslim Party of Democratic Action, SDA, which has dismissed Serb managers in state companies and local authorities since coming to power two years ago.

Federal Minister for National and Ethnic Communities Rasim Ljajic, who leads the moderate Bosniak Coalition for Sandzak, told IWPR that "the reasons for Serb departures are economic but one certainly shouldn't overlook other reasons linked to the actions of the SDA."

Head of the Serbian Radical Party, SRS, municipal committee Milan Veselinovic is more blunt, "The extremist statements and actions of the SDA have resulted in a situation in which over 70 Serb houses in the very centre of Novi Pazar have been sold in the past two years. There the Serb proportion of the population has dropped from 22 to around 17 per cent. "

The SDA led by Sulejman Ugljanin has long called for Sandzak to be made a republic and in the past prominent party members have also talked of secession from Serbia and annexation to Bosnia.

Widely-publicised statements made by Ugljanin in the 1990s include "the Muslims are well-armed, they just lack tanks" (Globus, October 1992) and "Sandzak would become a new, Muslim autonomous region in Serbia that will even secede" (Novosti, November 1990).

This was a period when convoys of Bosniaks - which is how local Muslims describe themselves - were fleeing Sandzak for Sarajevo or Turkey, fearing that the war in neighbouring Bosnia would spread and they would be targeted by the Milosevic regime.

However, while there is no longer public talk of a republic, Milosevic's fall in 2000 and a general change in Belgrade's policy direction does not appear to have done much to alter SDA thinking.

In June this year, a public statement from a session of the regional executive body the Bosniak National Council of Sandzak, which has close links with the SDA, said, "There are no reasons for us to ingratiate ourselves either to Belgrade or Podgorica, or the international community because Sandzak must be a separate territorial unit".

Participants at the session also declared that they must not give up on an illegal referendum held in 1991, in which a clear majority voted for autonomy.

Serb directors in Novi Pazar to lose their jobs include the head of the town's culture centre Dusan Raicevic; Raco Vuckovic of the Toplane heating company; Elektroras director Mile Cvetic; and Miroljub Djokanovic, director of the firm, Vojin Popovic.

In turn, appointments to local government at the end of 2000 saw Ugljanin's personal secretary Vasvija Gusinac become mayor of Sandzak, his brother, Sadik, head of the executive committee and driver, Nedzib Hodzic, deputy major.

The only Serb in authority, municipal secretary Milijan Belic "is just for decor and the local Serbs do not recognise him as their representative," said Radenko Jokovic, head of the United Peoples Party, SNS, in the Raska district.

Like Ljajic, the head of the Liberal Bosniak Organisation, Kasim Zoranic, said the major motivation behind the Serb withdrawal was economic, "The price of real-estate in Novi Pazar is three times higher than that in other parts of Serbia."

An apartment in Novi Pazar costs approximately 750 euros per square metre compared with 400 euros in the central Serbian cities of Kraljevo and Kragujevac. A Serb who had shifted from Novi Pazar to Kragujevac, and who insisted on anonymity, agreed that there was a range of motives for Serb departures.

"There was always some tension felt at work. There was no open pressure but one could feel insecurity and some kind of fear in the air. Maybe more a feeling of uncertainty of what could happen and what the Novi Pazar authorities could do," he said.

"On the other hand the difference in the price of a flat sold in Novi Pazar and one bought in Kragujevac is quite alluring especially for those who are in a difficult financial situation."

Whatever lies behind the Serb departures, SDA-ruled local authorities are showing no interest.

Assistant to the head of the Novi Pazar municipal executive committee Kimeta Ramovic recently told a Sandzak news agency that they had neither information nor any comment on the migration.

That local Serbs have lost the backing they enjoyed during Milosevic's rule has been made clear by the fact that the current Serbian leadership has not held a single meeting with them since they came to power.

Such complacency is astonishing as there's a danger that if more Serbs leave Sandzak, Bosniak nationalists could press for their demands for autonomy provoking another Balkan crisis.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: balkans; campaignfinance; milosevic; serbia
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Comment #41 Removed by Moderator

To: Banat; PaZaRaC; Jimer
Banat,easy does it!There is no point in petty arguments,because,everybody is,basically right!Money talks BS walks!People in Balkans live in a hard times and despite all the retorics from the politicians large summs of money can not be refuzed!Add a little of insecurity,lokal politician(Ugljanin)stiring trouble and...why not take money,as pazarac said aqnd leave???The same thing is happening now in Southern Serbia(Presevo,Bujanovac,Medvedja)Albanians with lots of money,offeringDM1000 for a m2 just like in Belgrade end....It is economy,but,also,friction and fear!Sad...
42 posted on 08/03/2002 10:43:24 PM PDT by branicap
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To: Jimer; Banat
Jimer,

I have Coat of Arms to!What is your point?

Yes,Sandzak is geograficc region known as Raska then administrative region imposed by Turks(name is a administrative unit .

Sandzak has regioness???Anything can have "regioness" if one decide to proclaim every vilage a "region and regional centre"!Viva Sjenica Republic!And Dutchy of Tutin!

43 posted on 08/03/2002 10:51:49 PM PDT by branicap
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To: branicap
I have Coat of Arms to!What is your point?
Blazonry is traditional and a coat of arms, like a flag, adds a little local color to the topic at hand.
Yes,Sandzak is geograficc region known as Raska then administrative region imposed by Turks(name is a administrative unit.
That's another interesting fact.
Sandzak has regioness???
Yes, for many generations, apparently.
Anything can have "regioness" if one decide to proclaim every vilage a "region and regional centre"!Viva Sjenica Republic!And Dutchy of Tutin!
If you say so.
44 posted on 08/03/2002 11:47:08 PM PDT by Consort
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To: Jimer; Banat
Sorry Jimer,I misjudged you!

I thought that you`re somebody else.Obviously not!

Apparently,Serbia is an ephemereal term,a ShangriLa that had egzisted only in fery tales!It is an nonegzistent country of nonegzistent people just like Atlantis!

For you a Turkish word Sandzak (of Novi Pazar) is "an interesting fact???Never mind!

tell you what my friend:I am little sick and tired of all of you who want to butcher that beautifull country(Serbia)and rip it appart with your Coats of Arms and Regions and Cultural centres and autonomies and provinces....there is more to Serbia than your "Sliced Pizza " scenario!

When I think that it was a Serbian poet Aleksa Santic who wrote that magnificent poem "Ostajte ovdje" ("Stay Here") dedicated to Bosnian Muslims leaving for Turkey in 19th century I want to cry!

Only a Serb can be so stupid and write odes to his sworn enemies!

What a fool!

45 posted on 08/04/2002 12:33:04 AM PDT by branicap
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To: branicap; *balkans
"Ostajte ovde" ("Stay here") was not a dedicated poem to Bosnian Muslims leaving for Turkey in 19th century. Has nothing to do with the Muslims.
The song was written because his compatriots were leaving their country for poverty reasons, thinking abroad they will find a better life.
Please read the poem again.
Aleksa Santic is a great Serbian patriot and a wonderful poet. How on earth can you call Santic a fool? Shame on you!
46 posted on 08/05/2002 4:38:17 AM PDT by Tamodaleko
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To: Tamodaleko; crazykatz
Dear friend,don`t try to be a "grater Catholic than a Pope",please!

I beleive that as a person born in Mostar just like Aleksa Santic,and a someone who knew members of his family first hand,I am perfectly entitled to post my opinion!

His poem was dedicated,if you want to split hairs, to the "Mostarci"(citizens of Mostar) leaving to foraign lands!Majority of them were,at that time Muslims going to Turkey!Aleksa was concerned with their problem together with his "pobratim" (blood brother),Osman Djikich(Muslim)!

But,that is irelevant and I don`t want to be engaged in a unneccesary argument!OK?

47 posted on 08/06/2002 10:44:02 AM PDT by branicap
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To: branicap
Wait! Didn't you say in #45

Only a Serb can be so stupid and write odes to his sworn enemies!
What a fool!

Was his pobratim Osman Djukic (muslim) a sworn enemy??? Did he see them as muslims, catholics or orthodox, or perhaps as his compatriots?
C'mon!
Neither Aleksa Santic is a fool, nor Serbs write odes to their sworn enemies. Your opinion re:#45, that you are entitled to of course, is simply: ridiculous!

48 posted on 08/06/2002 12:13:00 PM PDT by Tamodaleko
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To: Tamodaleko; crazykatz
I am sorry that I dared to have an opinion that you don`t aprove of!

It won`t happen again,o mighty one!And,its Osman Djikich not Djukich!

Sorry,I would like to chat with you but I am off now,gotta join Serbian Radical Party immediately!

Do you approve??

All my life expirience is telling me that Serbs,in general,are FOOLS!

49 posted on 08/06/2002 9:18:05 PM PDT by branicap
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