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Kostunica Vows to Bring Down Serbia
AP Online | 10-14-2 | By DUSAN STOJANOVIC

Posted on 10/14/2002 1:52:02 PM PDT by Whitebread

Kostunica Vows to Bring Down Serbia
By DUSAN STOJANOVIC

14:15 ET
AP Online
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Yugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica vowed Monday to bring down Serbia's pro-Western government, a day after he failed to be elected president of the republic because of a voter boycott.

Kostunica, a moderate nationalist, won 67 percent of the vote in Sunday's election, more than twice as much as Miroljub Labus, a pro-Western deputy prime minister and an ally of Kostunica's main rival, Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic.

But the runoff election failed because turnout was 45.5 percent, falling short of the required 50 percent. Serbs will now have to vote again by Dec. 5, and the new election will be open to all candidates, including ultranationalist allies of former President Slobodan Milosevic, who is now on trial for war crimes.

Kostunica accused Djindjic of leading a "quiet boycott" of the elections "in order to stay in power."

During the elections, Kostunica vowed to topple Djindjic's government by calling new parliamentary elections next year if he becomes the Serbian president.

Constant bickering between Kostunica and Djindjic since they jointly ousted Milosevic in 2000 has slowed the pace of change in Serbia, impoverished by more than a decade of the former autocrat's rule.

"I want to see the end of Djindjic's regime," Kostunica said. "The political crisis has deepened."

Djindjic's Democratic Party responded by saying Kostunica should resign as Yugoslav president because he failed to be elected in the dominant Yugoslav republic.

"Kostunica campaigned by declaring that the elections will represent a popular referendum on the fate of the Serbian government and Djindjic," the party said. "Since the referendum failed, if Kostunica has morals, he would resign."

Djindjic, as prime minister, has more power than Kostunica. But Kostunica is far more popular because of his nationalist views, and his party is likely to get more votes in the eventual Serbian parliamentary elections that are likely to be held early next year. With a majority in the parliament, Kostunica's deputies can vote Djindjic's government out of power.

Zoran Stojiljkovic, a political analyst, said Djindjic stood to lose the current power struggle.

"Djindjic cannot remain in his post under any circumstance," Stojiljkovic said.

A repeat of the presidential election will give another chance at the presidency to Vojislav Seselj, an ultranationalist leader who had Milosevic's backing in the first round of voting on Sept. 29. Seselj finished third in that round and called for a boycott of the second.

On Monday, Seselj declared he felt like "a winner" because the elections failed. He vowed to hold talks with other Milosevic allies on a joint candidate for the next presidential vote.

Kostunica said that before another vote is held, new election laws should be adopted. International observers monitoring Sunday's vote agreed.

The monitors, from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, suggested that the 50-percent turnout requirement should be dropped before the next vote.

"This boycott is not understandable," said Hrair Balian, a spokesman for the OSCE monitors. "The boycott was totally self-defeating for Serbia because it produced uncertainty. Serbia does not need uncertainty - it needs reforms."

Elsewhere in Europe, voter turnout in elections this year was greater, including Sweden's 79 percent and Latvia's 73 percent. Bosnia's election had 55-percent turnout.

In the United States, voter turnout in the 2000 presidential election was approximately 51 percent.

The law mandating at least 50-percent voter turnout was imposed by Milosevic in 1997 as a way to manipulate election results and invalidate a possible victory by one of his political opponents who was seeking office at the time. The law was never repealed. Serbs had plenty of reasons to boycott the vote: Many had hoped for a faster improvement in living standards after Milosevic.

Although average salaries have gone up, they have barely kept pace with soaring prices, despite the relative stability of the national currency, the dinar. Unemployment stands at a staggering 40 percent.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: balkans; campaignfinance; serbia
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To: Tropoljac
Your picture prooves again, that the most beautifull girls of the planet are from the balkans!
21 posted on 10/14/2002 4:34:54 PM PDT by DestroyEraseImprove
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To: Banat
WELCOME BACK!
23 posted on 10/14/2002 4:38:35 PM PDT by smokegenerator
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To: Banat
Good map. Looks like a landslide to me, but CESID says 45.5% of voters voted, 4.5% short of the required number. You need to address this with CESID.

Fuzzy math seems to be a factor here. Perhaps CESID is counting Albanians eligible to vote as part of the deal! That would be interesting.

Another interesting thing is: look where Labus won. Very telling indeed.

24 posted on 10/14/2002 4:40:30 PM PDT by kosta50
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To: Tropoljac; smokegenerator; DestroyEraseImprove; kosta50; Banat
From B92 today:


Kostunica party claims election success | 21:33 | Beta

BELGRADE -- Monday – A senior official of the Democratic party of Serbia claimed tonight that the party did not accept the failure of the second round of the Serbian presidential elections.

Nebojsa Bakarec claimed that the party, which is led by presidential front runner Vojislav Kostunica, had evidence that the voter turnout had been over the critical fifty per cent mark.

Bakarec made his sensational announcement at today’s meeting of the Serbian Election Commission, saying that if the commission’s final result was that the election had failed, his party would lodge an appeal.

“We will submit an objection because we are in possession of proof that the presidential elections were successful,” he told the commission.

In a statement released after the meeting, the party claimed that, based on data obtained from the City of Belgrade, there were more than 124,000 names of non-existent voters on electoral rolls for Belgrade alone.

“The most drastic example is the Belgrade district of Vracar, which has 4,300 more voters than residents which, when minors are taken into account, means 12,900 false voter registrations,” claimed the party.

When this figure is statistically extrapolated, claimed the Democratic Party of Serbia, it can be presumed that the total number of illegitimately registered voters in Serbia is more than 630,000.

The stripping of these names from the rolls would mean that more than fifty per cent of valid registered voters had voted in yesterday’s second round, and this would validate the election, securing victory for the party’s leader, Vojislav Kostunica.
26 posted on 10/14/2002 4:49:05 PM PDT by Tamodaleko
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To: Tropoljac
Kosovo i Metohija

(V.K) 31.000 91,6
(Labus)2.000 5,9

Nevaz- 1.000 2,5
Izlaz- 34.000 31,8

28 posted on 10/14/2002 4:50:54 PM PDT by smokegenerator
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To: Tropoljac
We might have a Florida situation in Belgrade

Help! Floridiots are coming!

29 posted on 10/14/2002 5:19:53 PM PDT by kosta50
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To: Tropoljac
Yup, Sandzak Muslims and Magyars

The "domestic foreigners" and their block vote.

30 posted on 10/14/2002 5:22:04 PM PDT by kosta50
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: Banat
Looks like the Bush - Gore county map from the last U.S. Presidential election!
32 posted on 10/14/2002 5:43:04 PM PDT by F-117A
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Comment #33 Removed by Moderator

To: Tropoljac; Tamodaleko; Banat; smokegenerator; Destro; Kate22; joan; Voronin; F-117A; *balkans
Now imagine 2 million Albanians

About one million are not citizens, and of the other million only about 2/3 are old enough to vote, so 650,000 votes max.

Out of 6.5 million eligible voters in Serbia, that's not such as terribly strong block vote.

What is noteworthy is that "domestic foreigners" do vote as a block, which means that the issues are not the deciding factor, but rather who is perceived as "less of a Serb." Obviously, economics do not play a significant factor either -- the Magyars live relatively well compared to the rashka's "Bosniaks," so they come fromt wo different economic ends of a spectrum, yet they vote along the same lines.

BTW, Labus is a Jew, or at least his family used to be. I am curious when will the model democracies of the West, especially the US, nominate a Jew for their head of state? So much for Serb "intolerance."

34 posted on 10/14/2002 5:45:23 PM PDT by kosta50
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Comment #35 Removed by Moderator

To: Tropoljac
Seems to me that the Albanians in Presevo and Bujanovac boycotted since Kostunica took those as well

Yes they did. That's their call.

36 posted on 10/14/2002 5:51:30 PM PDT by kosta50
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To: Tropoljac
Half the Ustashe were married to Jews, or were Jewish by blood themselves

That's a new one, but what's that got to do with my question?

37 posted on 10/14/2002 5:58:31 PM PDT by kosta50
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Comment #38 Removed by Moderator

To: kosta50
"BTW, Labus is a Jew, or at least his family used to be."

I thought Heyderich "evacuated" all the Jews from that area? You mean to say that he missed a few?

39 posted on 10/14/2002 6:01:16 PM PDT by Godebert
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