| The Break-Up of Yugoslavia – Part I |
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| Srđa Popović | |
| 08.10.2008. | |
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We pretend to resist their pretended secession The Serbs do not prize the truth. It is believed here that to rely on the truth, and to depend on it, is to be naive, stupid and weak. Sreten Ugričić ‘The wars of the 1990s on the territory of the former Yugoslavia were caused by separatist efforts on the part of Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina unconstitutionally to separate from Yugoslavia, which the SFRJ Presidency tried to prevent by use of the JNA’s military power , in order to protect the country’s constitutional order and territorial integrity.’ This more or less is the basic argument of Milošević’s propaganda, which he used from time to time to justify his actions. This argument also formed the basis of his defence before the Hague tribunal. Lastly, this argument is a monumental falsity, the parapet behind which Serb nationalism hides to this very day: hailing Karadžić and Mladić as heroes, because they were only defending the Serb people, which the separatists were attempting to wrench from the Serbian motherland; and insisting on the assertion that Serbia was not involved in the war, and that the conflict was in the nature of a spontaneously created civil war in which the JNA was merely trying to separate the warring parties and protect the people. The falsity of this thesis can best be proved by a thought experiment in which we assume that the SFRJ managed to survive (let’s say through an outside military intervention, something that according to his own testimony in the BBC programme The Death of Yugoslavia Karadžić greatly feared). In the context of such an experiment, the role and activities of Slobodan Milošević, Borisav Jović and Veljko Kadijević (as well as many others who implemented their orders) would have qualified according to the laws of that very same SFRJ as high treason punishable by death. The thought experiment that we propose is to formulate the elements of the indictment according to which Milošević, Jović and Kadijević would have been tried in a Yugoslav court, in accordance with the Yugoslav laws then valid, had they not succeeded in destroying the SFRJ. The charge against them would have included the following: Slobodan Milošević, in his capacity as President of the Presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Serbia (before 16 July 1990) , President of the Socialist Party of Serbia (from 16 July 1990), and President of the Republic of Serbia (from 9 December 1990), Borisav Jović, in his
capacity as President of the Presidency of SFRJ (from
Veljko Kadijević, in his
capacity as Federal Secretary for National Defence in the period from
formed a conspiracy in order, by abusing their political authority, 1. unconstitutionally and illegally to alter the national composition of the JNA, place the JNA under their effective control, and use it in the pursuit of the following aims: 2. forcibly to overthrow the governments of
3. forcibly to overthrow by a military coup the highest federal governmental bodies - the Federal Executive Council (SIV) and the Presidency; 4. forcibly or by unconstitutional means to alter the
borders of SFRJ, by excluding the
5. forcibly or by unconstitutional means to change the
borders of the
which caused the death of a large number of people, placed human lives in danger, and was accompanied by great acts of violence and extensive destruction; and by so doing they each individually, and collectively together, committed an extended criminal act on the basis of Article 136, para. 1, and of Article 116, paras.1. and.2,. in the most serious forms, punishable by Article 139 of the Criminal Code (Official SFRJ Journal, no. 44/76). The criminal acts cited contain the following dispositions: Article 136 says: 1. Whoever creates a conspiracy, circle, group or other association of persons for the purpose of perpetrating criminal acts as defined by articles 114 to 119, para 2., Articles 120 to 123, Articles 125 to 127 and Articles 131 to 132 of this law, or who creates a group for the purpose of moving or directing the citizens of SFRJ abroad to commit hostile activities against SFRJ, will be punished by imprisonment for no less than five years. Article 116 says: 1. Whoever commits an act designed forcibly or unconstitutionally to separate part of the SFRJ’s territory, or to add part of this territory to another state, will be punished by imprisonment of not less than five years. 2. Whoever commits and act designed forcibly or unconstitutionally to alter the borders between the republics and the autonomous provinces will be punished by imprisonment of no less than one year. Article 139 says: For committing a criminal act - according to Article 114, Article 115 para 1, Articles 116 to 121, Articles 123 to 128, Article 132, and Article 136 para 1. of this law - that causes the death of some person, or places human life in danger, or is accompanied by great violence and extensive destruction, or has endangered the security, economic and military capacity of the country - or in other exceptionally grave cases - the perpetrator will be punished by imprisonment of no less than ten years or by death, Article 116 incriminates as an autonomous action preparatory activity and attempting to change borders. Article 118 para 3. determines what is considered preparatory activity in the case of such actions. Article 118, para. 3 says: When the law prescribes punishment for the preparation of a certain criminal act, the preparation may consist of acquisition or activation of the means for execution of the criminal act, removal of obstacles to the execution of the criminal act, negotiations, planning and organising with others to commit the criminal act, as well as other activities serving to create the conditions for immediate execution of the criminal act, but which do not represent the act of execution. The facts pointing to the execution of this act are based almost exclusively on Borisav Jović’s diary, published under the title Poslednji dani SFRJ [The Last Days of SFRJ, (Belgrade: Politika 1995), and Veljko Kadijević’s memoirs Moje viđenje raspada - vojska bez države [My View of the Break-Up - an army without a state] (Belgrade: Politika 1993). The credibility of the facts which these contain, and which relate to the creation of a conspiracy, derives (a) from the essential concordance of their testimonies; (b) from the fact that they testify to their own acts; as well as (c) from the fact that one cannot conceive of a credible motive for them to incriminate themselves falsely. In addition, not only did Milošević never deny the claims by Jović and Kadijević, but their books were also published by the Politika publishing company over which Milošević had full control. It is true that, at his trial in
Committee for Human Rights 2002, p.331): ‘Mihajlo Marković said - and the media published - that Milošević had handled Jović’s manuscript.’ Finally, the plans and intentions of the conspirators, as they themselves describe them, were concretely realised during the subsequent political and military events. Let us now turn to the activities by means of which they accomplished certain essential elements of these criminal acts. The Conspiracy Independently of the criminal aims of the conspiracy, the trio’s very modus operandi points to the conspiratorial-subversive nature of their activity. This took place through overstepping of their authority; execution of criminal acts in abuse of their office; acting outside the legal institutions or bodies to which they belonged and unbeknownst to such institutions. The fact that Milošević, Jović and Kadijević acted in this manner can be seen from the following notes made by B. Jović: In the first paragraph of his book, Jović describes his
becoming President of the Presidemcy of SFRJ on
‘Slobodan Milošević is sitting behind me. He tells me loudly: "Boro, I am behind you". I replied equally emphatically: "I am counting on it".’ (B. Jović, p.7). A year later, in April 1990, Jović writes: ‘It turns out that the manner in which we timed our further work was good, because the main things will occur in the [military] Council while I am its president, and in the Presidency when I become its president. It is clear that it could not be done otherwise.’ (BJ,139) During this same meeting Kadijević tells Jović of his plans that ‘SIV [the federal government] must be placed under the control of the [federal state] Presidency’; that the JNA had made plans ‘that in all crucial parts of the country, above all in Slovenia and Croatia, they have ensured that they can assume full control in the shortest time possible’; and that he was aware that they ‘can not win the whole Presidency for this, but can have the majority’ (BJ, 142). This is how Kadijević describes the nature of this meeting: ‘He insists that our meeting and talk are more important than any other meetings or talks one could have today in our country, nor are there bodies where we could discuss this.’ (BJ, 139). Jović notes in another place: ‘Veljko is in the habit of giving me these analyses, which for understandable reasons he cannot put before the whole Presidency’ (BJ, 68). During a conversation between Kadijević and Jović on
‘We believe that the resolution of the Yugoslav crisis should happen while I am at the head of the SFRJ Presidency. We would be totally powerless after that. This is why me must make the moves that lead towards it. (BJ, 176) On another occasion, on
‘He is very disappointed with the results of the meeting of
the Presidency. It does not fit into his plan (schema), "about which we
cannot talk on the phone". Because, he says, once the army has finally
covered the Serb territories in
It is clear from this that the conversations held between Milošević, Jović and Kadijević are of a conspiratorial nature. These conversations - are conducted outside and hidden from the institutions to which they belong (the federal Presidency, the federal government); - cannot be conducted by telephone; - deal with matters that cannot be discussed in the institutions; - are more important to the interlocutors than those they can conduct in any other institution of the state; - use systematically the pronoun ‘we’ in an undefinable manner which the interlocutors nevertheless understand. These are the formal forms of a conspiracy, especially
bearing in mind the importance of the interlocutors’ positions - President of
the Presidency, President of the
The structure of the conspiracy The trio Milošević-Jović-Kadijević formed the core of the conspiracy. Milošević brought to the conspiracy his enormous popularity among the Serbs (in Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia), and in particular his power over the street (rallies at which legal governments were brought down); Jović his position as President of the Presidency and supreme military commander; Kadijević his office as federal secretary of National Defence (which together with the Presidency forms the supreme command ). Their motivations, aims and chosen means for realising these aims did not always and in everything coincide. Kadijević saw his aim as the preservation of socialism and
a centralised
‘The [Communist] bloc has collapsed. In a word, everything
is uncertain. Veljko is worried even about our own safety, should retrograde
processes occur in the
‘... what is worse for us is that he [Gorbachev - SP] has
damaged the balance of power in
‘The army must be clear about what will happen in our region in the long run, but we must survive as a state of socialist orientation.’ (BJ, 68) ‘Veljko is totally disappointed. He says that many Communists are frightened by the anti-Communist offensive. They do not fight back, do not react, as if they did not care about what is happening.’ (BJ, 94) ‘He believes that the advancing anti-Communist forces threaten retribution, and that if we do not do anything substantial to prevent their advance, there will follow a revanchism of the worst kind - we shall be hanged from the lamp posts just like that.’ (BJ, 91-2) ‘Veljko himself believes that if the right-wing and revanchist forces win [the elections - SP], then we shall be in a position (because everything is unconstitutional) to remove them by force. Force remains as a possibility.’ (BJ, 138) Jović shared with Kadijević the aim of preserving socialism, but gave up the idea of preserving Yugoslavia sooner than he did (something that he and Milošević hid from Kadijević, the better to make use of him). Jović thus notes on
‘Veljko Kadijević is confused and disappointed by the
decision of the Serbian leadership to go for a Socialist Party ... He thinks
that the Serbs should have kept the Communist name.’ (BJ, 152) (Milošević’s
wife subsequently formed the Communists for
Milošević, for his part, had the aim of consolidating and
enlarging his power; with that aim in mind, he temporarily adopted various
programmes, various partners and various aims (a centralised
Of the three, Milošević was the first to decide to solve
relations in
Once they had agreed to use force (the coup d’état planned for mid March 1991), they tried to outmaneuvre each other over who would take the blame. Milošević and Jović tried to make Kadijević responsible for it. Kadijević hesitated, and in the end did not dare to go for a pure military coup. Jović notes on
When Kadijević’s nerve failed, Jović wrote: ‘They were not true either to me or to Slobodan, and wanted us to give them political cover.’ (BJ, 310) Kadijević in time would agree to use the army without a legal decision by the Presidency, i.e. to follow the orders of at least ‘a group of members of the Presidency, though they do not form a qualified majority’. (BJ, 162) It took Jović, on the other hand, a long time to grasp the fact that, by adopting a constitution that made Serbia an independent state (‘which is not at war’), Milošević had formally placed the main responsibility for use of the army on the [rump] Presidency and Jović (even though Milošević, as the most important member of the ‘group of six’, did play a decisive role in the making of military decisions.) Milošević’s main contribution to the conspiracy’s activity consisted in his rejection of political means, his readiness to use force to realise the conspiracy’s aims, and his complete contempt for any legal order. Jović was more diffident in this regard, and at first made
mild objections to some of Milošević’s violent acts that provoked or fostered
conflicts in the SFRJ. Thus, for example, he criticised the suspension of
economic relations with
The conspiracy was subsequently joined by others (let us
say ‘the group of six’, which in addition to Milošević, Jović and Kadijević
included also Blagoje Adžić, Momir Bulatović and Branko Kostić, followed by
Babić, Martić, Karadžić, Koljević, Krajišnik, Mladić - BJ 371, 382-7, 391-2).
But during the most important period of the start of the wars in the former
A plea for lawlessness Nevertheless, the motor of the conspiracy was Slobodan Milošević, who advocated violent methods as early as the start of 1989, at the 20th session of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, when he publicly made his ‘plea for lawlessness’. On that occasion, carried along by the eruption of militant nationalism among the Serbs, he motivated before his colleagues - the representatives of the other republics - his readiness to abuse his position and act illegally and to use all available means in this way: ‘In places [meaning, according to the contemporary jargon, ‘in republics’ - SP] and with respect to problems where the absence of sentiment for change has been greatest, and where it has not been possible to do anything in the normal way, through the institutions, yet things have to be changed because the people find them intolerable and they have gone on too long, they must be changed extra-institutionally.’ Further: ‘But the solution will not be found through procedure, its small and large snares, its small and large craftiness, intrigues and tricks. It will be arrived at through a policy endorsed by the majority of the people of this land, institutionally and extra-institutionally, through the statutes and outside of them, in the streets and off them, in a populist and an elitist manner, through argument and without argument, but in any case in such a way that it becomes clear that it is a policy for Yugoslavia, in which people will live as one, as equals, in a richer and more cultured fashion.’ (Dragoš Ivanović, Bolest vladanja [The Sickness of Rule], Belgrade: Republika 2000, p. 39) In an interview with NIN on
‘We must achieve unity, if as the largest and most populous
republic we wish to dictate the course of events in the future. It is a
question of frontiers - essential matters of state. And as you know frontiers
are always drawn by the strong, never by the weak.... I have ordered
mobilisation of the police reserve. We are further engaged in the creation of
additional police forces, while the government has been entrusted with the task
of preparing the relevant formations which will make us secure in any event:
i.e. enable us to defend the interests of our republic, and of the Serb people
outside
Continuity of the conspiratorial mode of government As may also be relevant here, this conspiratorial system of government (outside institutions, outside regular lines of decision-making, by way of the streets, by violence) remained the dominant feature of Slobodan Milošević’s regime until the end of his rule. Here are some striking examples: 1. ‘In the autumn of 1992, during a rainy night, members of the pro-Milošević republican police seized in a surprise attack the building of the federal police, which was then outside their control (this was at the time when Dobrica Ćosić was federal [FRY] president and Milan Panić federal prime minister). Neither the parliament nor any other state body made any protest against this unprecedented transgression.’ (Dragoš Ivanović, pp. 41-2). 2. ‘The government conducted what was undoubtedly its greatest plundering offensive against its own people in 1993 with a planned stoking of inflation. This was designed to finance a continuation of the war, i.e. state expenditure outside public control. The value of the dinar fell day by day. In the second half of the year, the inflation acquired a galloping tempo, turning everything into a desert ... At the end of 1993, one German mark was worth one billion dinars on the black market... In January 1994, when it suited it, the state arrested this inflational typhoon, which had reached a fantastic 313 million per cent, through a monetary reform.’ (Dragoš Ivanović, p. 47) In January 1994, ‘prices rose on average 62 per cent per day, 2 per cent per hour and 0.029 per minute’ (Mlađan Dinkić, Ekonomija destrukcije [The Economy of Destruction], Belgrade 1995, p.43). 3. The next example might be the proven electoral fraud in 1996, which led to three months of protest by Serbian citizens and ended with the adoption of the so-called lex specialis, that recognised the electoral fraud de facto but without calling anyone to account. (Lex, whistles and lies’, Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava, Belgrade 1997, p.322). 4. On the eve of the presidential elections in 2000,
elections that Milošević would lose, there were three assassination attempts
against two potential anti-Milošević candidates (Vuk Drašković, Ivan
Stambolić), during which four people died. It was established that the
political police had kept both under strict observation until immediately prior
to the attacks (Dragoljub Todorović, ‘Razlozi za konstituisanje’ [Reasons for
constitution-making], Srpska reč, no. 297,
5. The next example might be Milošević’s refusal to
recognise the results of the 2000 presidential elections, and his readiness to
use the army to prevent a legal change of government. ‘Did the former Yugoslav
[FRY] president call you during the evening [of
6. The testimony of [state security service chief] Rade Marković before the Hague tribunal shows that Milošević treated money belonging to the state budget (i.e. customs revenue) as his own, which allowed him to pay in cash anyone he wanted and the sums he wanted ( Tribunal archives concerning Milošević’s case). This was made possible only by the conspiratorial nature of government and complete contempt for any legal order. Undermining the Federal Government - taking control of the Federal Presidency In order to realise their aims, the plotters had to destroy or take control of the federal institutions of government that stood between them and the JNA. Kadijević, for example, was responsible both to the federal presidency as supreme commander and to the federal government of which he was a member. The plotters acquired a majority on the SFRJ presidency by relatively simple means. First, through Milošević’s agreement with Slovenia’s president, Milan Kučan, on 24 January 1991 that Slovenia could leave Yugoslavia unhindered; and secondly through the anti-constitutional election on 10 May 1991 of the Kosovo representative on the presidency (he was elected by the Serbian assembly, rather than - as Article 321 of the SFRJ constitution prescribed - by the Kosovo assembly). However, for Kadijević to have a free hand to act in line with the plotters’ aims, it was necessary to liberate him also from another politically superior institution: the federal government (SIV). Only by achieving this would they be able to ‘dictate the future course of events’ (Milošević). Accordingly they not only acted behind the back of the legitimate government, but also tried to sabotage that government, to bring it down or place it under their control. This is what Jović says about it: ‘"Coordination" in the Serbian presidency [office]. Conference on what should be done... [Serbian prime minister] Stanko Radmilović gives initial information... Sloba [Milošević] remains silent, waiting. Only [chairman of the central committee of the Serbian League of Communists] Bogdan [Trifunović] says that we are being left in the lurch, because everyone else supports SIV.’ (BJ, 87). A conversation between Kadijević and Jović on
Milošević tells Jović: ‘We must bring him ([federal premier] Ante Marković) down. If he were to survive now, he would remain another four years, and we don’t have confidence in him(Ante)’. (BJ, 82) ‘We spend the whole day on the boat and the sea (on Mljet)
- the excursion party: Veljko, Sloba, Bogdan (Trifunović) and I with our
families. ... We all agree that Ante Marković is no longer acceptable to us and
that we don’t trust him. We are all convinced now that he is simply a
‘I have written a series of three articles "The Truth about Ante Marković" and sent them to Slobodan. He sent them for publication to Politika. They will serialise it on 5, 6 and 7 under a pseudonym. We must expose him, because the people are deeply mistaken about who and what he is. Many view him as a saviour.’ (BJ, 173) ‘Veljko Kadijević informs me about the preparations for the arrests in Croatia... asks whether they should formally inform me and Ante Marković before or after the arrests ... we agreed that Ante need not be formally informed, because he could make trouble.’ (BJ, 227-8) ‘SIV has today announced a meeting [in response to Jović’s
resignation from the presidency and Milošević’s declaration that "
‘Kadijević tells me about his talk with [Soviet defence minister] Yazov. A few days ago (by telephone) he put clear questions to Yazov about whether the USSR could protect us in the event of a Western military intervention, and whether it could sell us certain matériel that we lack (bombs and kerosene). The answer was negative on both accounts. More precisely, they could not protect us, and as for the matériel - only through regular channels, by way of the SFRJ government (but we are seeking to bypass the government, because Ante Marković is preventing the government from acting).’ (BJ, 360) The Serbian constitution The decisive blow against the [federal] government (and the
SFRJ state, which Milošević ‘is only formally supporting’) (BJ, 159) was
delivered, however, by Milošević with the new Serbian constitution adopted on
Jović notes on
Jović further notes on
This shows that Milošević was the true author of the Serbian constitution. According to Article 135 para 2 of the new Serbian constitution: ‘When acts of the federal organs or acts of the organs of another republic violate the equal status of the Republic of Serbia, in respect of the rights and duties that it enjoys under the SFRJ constitution, or when its interests are threatened in some other way without securing compensation, the [Serbian] republican organs introduce acts to protect the interests of the Republic of Serbia.’ Application of the constitution - the legislature That these provisions were not adopted only ‘on paper’ is testified to by the busy legislative activity of the Serbian assembly, which derogated federal laws and usurped existing powers of the federation. Here are some examples: 1. On the basis of this provision, the Serbian assembly adopted a law for a special tax on trade in goods and services of specified origin, and for special taxes (Official Gazette of the RS, no. 6/90, p.151) which, in Article 1, envisaged:‘Trade in services of a specified origin is subject to a special tax on trade in goods and services. The special tax is paid on establishment of a firm, use of business space and building land.’ Goods and services of specified origin, in the sense of this law, refer to ‘goods produced, or services supplied by legal persons and active individuals located or residing on the territory of another republic that fails to implement assumed obligations, or refuses to participate in the establishment or implementation of a policy of even-handed development of an agrarian policy in the interest of the whole country, or places the Republic of Serbia in some other way in a position of inequality.’ Article 2 para. 1 envisaged: ‘The executive council
[government] of the Republic of Serbia decides which goods and services, or
legal persons and active individuals located or residing on the territory of
another republic, are liable to payment of a special tax on trade in services
and goods, and to special taxes.’ And, according to Article 8: ‘Revenue
realised in accordance with this law is paid into a separate account of the
2. A law on changes and additions to the law on social
control of prices (Official Gazette of RS, no. 6/90, p. 151) was also
brought in on
‘In exceptional cases when acts of the federal organs or acts of the organs of other republics infringe in the domain of prices the equality of companies in regard to the conditions of production, or endanger in some other way the economic interest of the Republic without securing compensation, the executive council [government] may prescribe measures of direct control of prices, and other measures for goods and services which are specified by federal law as products and services of interest for the whole country.’ 3. Application of the same provision of the Serbian constitution led to the adoption also of a law on trade in goods ((Official Gazette of RS , no. 6/90, p. 153), which introduced a new Article 34a according to which: ‘Companies and other legal subjects may issue purchasing credits to citizens for goods produced on the territory of the Republic of Serbia.’ 4. Application of the same constitutional provision led to
the adoption also of a law on incurring debts and issuing guarantees and
super-guarantees on specified foreign credits on the part of the
‘The Republic of Serbia may take financial and other credits abroad for the sake of maintaining current liquidity in payments abroad, for productive and property restructuring, for carrying out investment activities abroad, and for other purposes that are in harmony with the policy and developmental plan of the Republic.’ And its Article 4 says: ‘The executive committee of the Serbian assembly decides on the indebtedness of the Republic, and on the issuing of guarantees and super-guarantees up to ten million US dollars.’ And in Article 5: ‘The National Bank of
5. The same provision of the Serbian constitution led to
adoption of a law on the measures that may be taken in order to prevent
distortions in production, trade and development in the
‘The executive council of the Republic of Serbia may provisionally: prescribe the obligation that part of the revenue derived from the basic tax on trade in goods and services that belongs to the federation, as well as part of the outstanding customs duties and other import taxes, should be paid into a separate account of the Republic of Serbia during a period in which organs of the federation are not implementing assumed obligations towards the Republic of Serbia, and when there is a failure to establish or implement an economic policy for which the federation is responsible, thereby threatening the economic interests of the Republic of Serbia.’ 6. Predrag Tašić, the spokesman for SIV [the federal government], describes in the chapter ‘The Serbian pillage of the decade’ of his book Kako sam branio Antu Markovića (Defending Ante Marković, NIP Mugri 21, Skopje 1993) the ‘attack on the monetary system’ when Serbia ‘borrowed’ illegally $1.4 billion from the primary emission: ‘On 28 December, at the time when Ante Marković was
speaking in the Yugoslav assembly about next year’s economic policy, the
Council of Associated Labour of the Serbian assembly adopted two legal acts
that attacked the Yugoslav monetary system. Both these acts were adopted in
secret. They were marked "strictly confidential" and "official
secret". They were distributed to delegates on the very day of the
session, thrust into the hands of each in an envelope. Following their adoption
(and they were adopted unanimously and without discussion), the delegates had
to place them back into the envelope and return them. These provisions of the
‘To make it possible this time to take more money in one
go, his [Milošević’s - SP] man at the National Bank of Yugoslavia proposed that
it be "legalised" by the Republic of Serbia borrowing from the
National Bank of Serbia, with appropriate provisions being adopted by the
Serbian assembly! The money would not be taken, of course, from the National
Bank of
‘On
This is how Jović describes these events:
He continues on
Unconstitutionality The activity of the plotters as described above - 1.
sabotaging and undermining SIV; 2. adopting the
1. ‘Placing SIV under the [federal] presidency’s control’ According to Article 347 para. 9 of the SFRJ constitution: ‘The Federal Executive Council ... harmonises and directs the work of the federal administrative organs for the purpose of securing the policy and implementation of the laws, other provisions and general acts of the SFRJ assembly; supervises the work of the federal administrative organs, and suspends provisions of federal administrative organs that contradict federal law, other provisions or general acts of the SFRJ assembly, or any provision it has itself adopted for the purpose of implementation of federal law, other provisions or general acts; and may annul the provisions of those organs, under conditions established by federal law.’ Kadijević, therefore, found himself constitutionally under the supervision of the federal government and the federal prime minister, Ante Marković, who directed his work. As for the president of the federal presidency, Jović, in the event of his disagreeing with the federal prime minister, as a member of the presidency he had the right and the obligation to bring the contested issues to arbitration by the federal assembly. According to Article 329 paras 3 and 4 of the SFRJ constitution: ‘The SFRJ presidency has the right to delay the execution of SIV regulations of a general political nature before their announcement.’ ‘If the SFRJ presidency delays the execution of a SIV regulation, it will bring the contested issue before the appropriate council of the SFRJ assembly for a decision.’ The idea of placing the [federal] government under the control of the [federal] presidency is also unconstitutional: ‘The SFRJ presidency does not have a hierarchical but a constitutionally determined and restricted relationship vis-à -vis the federal executive council.’ (According to Prof. Jovan Đorđević, Constitutional Law, Savremena administracija, Belgrade 1982). Constitution of the
The provisions of the Serbian constitution are contrary, of
course, to the provisions of the SFRJ constitution. Thus, for example, it
usurps three basic powers of the federation: in international relations (Art.
281 para. 7 of the SFRJ constitution), national defence (Art. 281 para. 6 ) and
state security (Art. 281 para. 8). It does so with the provisions contained in
articles 72 para 1. (‘The
Even more importantly, by virtue of Article 135 para 2. of
the republic’s constitution
What is most important, however, is that the Serbian
constitution of
Article 72 specifies that
‘The
With this provision,
If this is so, and it is, then one should question the meaning of the provision of Article 135 para 1 of the Serbian constitution, which says: ‘The rights and duties which the Republic of Serbia, which is part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, has in accordance with this constitution, and which according to the federal constitution are realised in the federation, will be realised in accordance with the federal constitution.’ The meaning of this provision is that the independent
The meaning of the expression that the independent Republic of Serbia was ‘part of the SFRJ’ can be understood only as a claim devoid of all legal basis to continue to execute the rights which it used to enjoy as a member of the federation, even after it had constituted itself as an independent state, without having any obligations towards the SFRJ. (How and why the other republics agreed (while they did agree) to accept this situation, in which Serbia ‘exercised its rights’ in the federation without having any obligations towards it (and to which as an independent state it did not belong), can be understood only in light of the fact that Serbia controlled the army, and persistently threatened with it: i.e. only because of their fear of war, and desire somehow to avoid it.) At the same time, this independent state, being ‘part of SFRJ’, managed to enter the monetary system of another state (SFRJ) and ‘borrow’ $1.4 billion unilaterally from its primary emission! (Part Two follows)
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Excerpts from two recently published books by Peščanik: Mirko Đorđević's Patriarh Pavle's Umbrella and Srđa Popović's Those Bitter Tears Afterwards. Also, read an excerpt from Vladimir Gligorov's book Why do Countries Break Up? The Case of Yugoslavia.
Read again: