Geert Lovink on Wed, 15 Jan 97 07:56 MET |
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nettime: Ivo Skoric/Peace and Democracy |
qi From: "Ivo Skoric" <iskoric@igc.apc.org> Subject: Peace and Democracy Zagreb's Radio 101 and Belgrade's Radio B92 are by know the most listened Internet Radio stations: their broadcasts are daily updated on web pages around the world and hours of daily broadcasts are avilable from various Real Audio servers. Check them out through: http://www.peacenet.org/balkans/indie.html#101 http://www.peacenet.org/balkans/indie.html#b92 -/- In its response to Croatian government's accusations of tax evasion Open Society Fund stood by its employees in Croatia, emphasising that they understood their position in Croatia as a humanitarian organization s=which was by law tax-exempt. The method which was used in prosecution of OSI-Croatia's top executives - to declare them guilty in public before the trial - underlines the political nature of the process. President Tudjman, on numerous occasions, accused OSI of working against him, his government and his state, describing OSI's efforts in helping independent media in Croatia as "dangerous alien ideology." His accusations often were untrue - like when he said that OSI gave money to opposition parties in Croatia. Also, the OSI statement describes a recent event in which Croatian police unlawfully seized $65,000 from two OSI employees on Slovenian-Croatian border crossing. You know the old proverb: the one who lies, shall also steal... On January 22 Radio 101's temporary license will expire. While I expect that they will be allowed to broadcast for the next 8 or 9 days until the Telecommunications Council reconvene, we cannot predict what will be the vote this time, and would they be able to win its permanent license or not. Obviously, pressuring the government that it must grant 101 the permanent license, undermines the local democratic process. Ideally, Telecommunications Council will apply common sense and grant that license 'cum grano salis', but Croatia is far from an ideal country. Telecommunications Council is a bureaucratic body comprised of brown-noses from different walks of government which makes its decisions usually arbitrary and perhaps capriciously against those who do not carry out the governing party directives. Further developments therefore should be closely watched. -/- During the celebration of Serbian New Year (Orthodox Christians still hold on to the old calendar, so holidays are two weeks later) half a million people crowded Belgrade streets. Police allowed holidays to pass undisturbed, so demonstrants and opposition leaders behaved victoriously. Some of them maybe too victoriously. Vuk Draskovic (who for some reasons irresistibly reminds me of Franjo Tudjman), tasting the power, had his bodyguard Zvonko Osmanlic hold student leader Cedo Antic for his collar in order to prevent him reaching the stage and wishing fellow Serbs a Happy New Year in the name of the Student Protest board. Is this the 'democracy' Vuk is promising to Serbs? If he behaves like that now (students were good to make counter-cordons against Milosevic's police, but they are not welcome to share the spotlight when the police danger is not around), what would he do if he actually seizes the power? Will he be just another in a sad procession of Balkan leaders who believe that democracy is a good political principle only while it serves their own political promotion? Kristalnacht: also, during the New Years celebration the windows of Belgrade Mosque were smashed. It was seventh time during the wartime years that Belgrade Mosque was damaged. This also leaves us with a bitter taste... -/- In Kosovo, Kosovo Libaration Army (KLA) executed an Albanian collaborator with the Serbian regime. KLA, which awfully reminds of IRA, is however not nearly as effective. In fact, for all those years of war in former Yugoslavia, Kosovo Albanians kept curiously low profile. Of course, they were under complete military control by Belgrade government. Anyway, it always stroke me as strange that neither Tudjman nor Izetbegovic found military useful to sponsor KLA, let's say, to blow up a few buildings in Belgrade. Such tactics might have woken up Belgrade citizens against their regime much earlier. Of course KLA would not be able to do it without an outside support. Which never came. Although a thought about sponsoring a terrorist organization is despicable as it is, I see the logistic advantage for Croatia and Bosnia in doing that. The fact that their governments did not do it, just contributes to the various conspiracy theories about secret agreements... ...or maybe KLA is actually sponsored by Slobo, after all they killed an Albanian, and they make Albanians look bad. -/- The letter that Biljana Plavsic, the iron lady of Republika Srpska, sent to UN, if it wouldn't be considering such a serious matter like extradition of war criminals, would be laughable. Her main point is that since the war crimes are not committed any more, the war criminals should not be prosecuted, because they are essential for rebuilding of Republika Srpska's society. If she consulted any lawyer on the planet, she would be told that there is no statute of expiration for war crimes. Some of Nazi war criminals were prosecuted well 40 years after the war was over and Germany was already a prosperous democratic state, which it became without any contribution of its past war criminals. As for Republika Srpska war criminals like Dr. Karadzic being good neighbors and family men, well, we all know that Dr. Mengele was a good, silent neighbor and an exemplar pater familias as well. -/- One of my Croat friends wrote to me that the Balkans has a saying: may God help that my neighbor's cow dies. He also said that what we are observing now is a Serbian cow dying (Milosevic), while he always thought that if you hate the neighbor, why would you wish his cow - a relatively innocent unknowing being - to die, instead of just wishing your neighbor slow and painful death? I.e. he'd rather see Serbia destroyed (utterly, completely, like Hiroshima), than Milosevic ousted of power and Serbia eerily rehabilitated facing the world. I sensed such thinking among a lot of Croats and Bosnians. It is emotional stance with the for Balkans not atypical lack of common sense: if we pulverize Belgrade with atomic bomb there will be radioactive dust everywhere and not long after it will cover Zagreb and Sarajevo as well. This is just a metaphor of how important for the Balkans is to have Serbia as a stable democracy, and not as a terrorist breeding ground and a continuous menacing threat to Bosnia and Croatia. But, on the other hands, maybe Croatian and Bosnian regime want Serbia just as it is, so that they can keep themselves in power based on that perceived threat. ivo Ivo Skoric ***** iskoric@igc.apc.org 212.369.9197 PO Box 46, NYC NY 10029, USA http://www.peacenet.org/balkans/ivo.html -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de