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1996–1997 Serbian protests

In the winter of 1996–1997, university students and Serbian opposition parties organized a series of peaceful protests in the Republic of Serbia (then part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) in response to electoral fraud attempted by the Socialist Party of Serbia of President Slobodan Milošević after the 1996 local elections.

1996–1997 protests in Serbia
Part of 1996 Serbian local elections
Students marching in Belgrade in November 1996, carrying the "Belgrade is the world" banner
DateNovember 17, 1996 – March 22, 1997
Location
Caused by
Goals
  • Recognition of the 1996 local election results
Methods
Resulted in
  • 1996 local election results were recognized[3]
Parties

Anti-government protesters

  • Student and civilian protesters

Opposition parties:

Lead figures
Number
Up to 500,000 in Belgrade[4][3]
Up to 150,000 in Niš[2]
From 30,000[4] up to 50,000[1] in Belgrade
Casualties and losses
1 protester killed[5]

During the course of the rallies, students held their protests separately from the citizens' ones, led by opposition then gathered in coalition Zajedno (Together). The students' protest lasted until 22 March 1997, with additional requests of replacing the management of University of Belgrade and return of the university autonomy.

The protests started November 17, 1996 in Niš where thousands of opposition supporters gathered to protest against election fraud. Belgrade University students joined on November 19, 1996 and protests lasted even after February 11, 1997, when Milošević signed the "lex specialis", which accepted the opposition victory and instated local government in several cities, but without acknowledging any wrongdoing. The protests were strongest in the capital Belgrade, where they gathered up to 200,000 people, but spread over most cities and towns in Serbia.

Counter-protests edit

On December 24, 1996, the government coalition called "Za Srbiju" ("For Serbia") organized a large counter-protest in Terazije.[3] Milošević spoke to the crowd in Terazije, telling them "Serbia will not be controlled by someone else's hand".[3] The crowd chanted "Slobo, we love you", to which Milošević replied, "I love you too".[3]

The December 24 protests in Terazije resulted in massive riots, during which a young protester from the SPO[6] named Predrag Starčević was beaten to death.[3] Another SPO protester, Ivica Lazović, was shot in the head the same night by a SPS supporter Živko Sandić.[6] Although Lazović survived, he ended up with an arm and a leg paralyzed after a life-saving operation in the emergency room.[7] Lazović eventually met Sandić in court, where he asked him, "brother, why did you shoot me?"[7] Sandić allegedly replied, "I don't know", and Lazović forgave him in person, saying "if my sacrifice was needed to prevent civil war in Serbia, then so be it."[7]

After the December 24 violence, the government banned all street protests in Belgrade from December 26, 1996.[3] Nebojša Čović, the mayor of Belgrade and an SPS member, claimed to have criticized the government's idea of counter-protesting, but that a majority of the SPS party board supported it.[8] Milošević allegedly ordered police to stay disengaged from the counter-protest.[8] Čović suggested to other SPS members that the counter-protest was risky, and defied Milošević's orders by calling in riot police.[8] Čović was subsequently kicked out of the SPS in January 1997.[9] He stood by his decision years later, claiming that civil war could have begun if it were not for the intervention of riot police that night.[8]

Protest on Branko's Bridge edit

On the night of February 2–3, 1997, a confrontation occurred between riot police and protesters on Branko's Bridge, during which the police fired water cannons at the protesters, even though the outside temperature was −6 °C (21 °F).[10] Vesna Pešić, leader of the Civic Alliance of Serbia, was hit by the police on the same night.[11] According to Naša Borba, 29 protesters ended up in the Urgent Care emergency room, while the "Anlave" clinic received 50 patients that night.[10] After the incident, Yugoslav Left spokesman Aleksandar Vulin said: "They complain that the police used water cannons on the protesters at -10°C. Well, they're not going to pour hot water on them, are they?"[12]

Kolarčeva street protest and the Serbian Orthodox Church edit

In January 1997, a large column of riot police blocked off Kolarčeva street in Belgrade for several weeks, in spite of the continuation of a standoff with the student protesters.[9] However, on January 27, 1997, the riot police opened Kolarčeva street, after which Patriarch Pavle and other members of the Serbian Orthodox clergy led a silent crowd of approximately 300,000 to the Church of Saint Sava.[9] Contrary to what was reported at the time, the riot police left Kolarčeva street several hours before, as they anticipated the Patriarch and the crowd he would take to the Church of Saint Sava.[13]

Alleged role of the internet edit

In early 1997, Wired journalist David Bennahum met philosophy professor Novica Milić at a conference in Berlin called the "Data Conflicts: Cyberspace and the Geo-Politics of Eastern Europe", after which Milić invited him to apply for a visa to visit Yugoslavia during the protests.[14] Bennahum applied, eventually entered Yugoslavia and wrote about his experience and the alleged role of the internet in the protest mobilization in an article called "The Internet Revolution".[14] Bennahum wrote about the existence of an internet stream called Sezam Pro, which broadcast the independent radio station B92 after it had been censored by the Yugoslav government on December 3, 1996.[14] Voice of America and BBC recorded these internet streams and broadcast them back to Belgrade through short-wave frequencies, whose signals were picked up by the radio.[15] At the time of the protests, at least 8 million people were living in Yugoslavia, of which no more than 10,000 had access to the internet.[15] Speaking to Nedeljnik, Milan Božić, a math professor who met with Bennahum to discuss internet access in Yugoslavia, claimed that Bennahum endangered him and Milić by publishing their names in his article, adding that there had been an agreement to keep their identities hidden from the authorities.[15] Milić also commented for Nedeljnik, stating that Bennahum "severely exaggerated" the role of the internet in the 1996–1997 protests.[15]

Reactions edit

Richard Holbrooke commented on the issue in his memoirs, recalling that the Americans were not able to support the protests due to the transitional period to the Clinton II Administration:

"A remarkable challenge to Milošević unfolded in the street of Belgrade in December [1996], led by three politicians who banded together in a movement called Zajedno, or the Together Movement. For weeks, hundreds of thousands of Belgrade citizens braved subfreezing weather to call for democracy. But Washington missed a chance to affect events; except for one ineffectual trip to Washington, Zajedno had no contact with senior American government officials, and the Administrations sent no senior officials to Belgrade for fear that their visits would be used by Milošević to show support. For the first time in eighteen months, Milošević felt no significant American pressure, and turned back towards the extreme nationalists, including Karadžić, for support. His tactical skills saved him again, and within weeks, the Together Movement was together no more, as its leaders split among themselves."[16]

See also edit

Notes edit

  • ^1 The Socialist Party of Serbia is abbreviated as SPS.
  • ^2 The Serbian Renewal Movement is abbreviated as SPO, the acronym for the movement's name in Serbian, Srpski pokret obnove.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Čedomir Antić (November 24, 2006). "Politika: David pobedio Golijata" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  2. ^ a b ""Magazin NIN — 2404, 24 JAN 1997"" (in Serbian). January 24, 1997. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Danas: Studenti su ozbiljno uzdrmali režim Slobodana Miloševića" (in Serbian). November 17, 2016. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  4. ^ a b (in Serbian). April 15, 2000. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  5. ^ Bojan Bilbija (December 25, 2006). "Politika: Srbija nadmudrila režim" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  6. ^ a b Slobodanka Ast (November 6, 1999). (in Serbian). Archived from the original on May 4, 2010. Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c Z. Nikolić (December 25, 2006). "Novosti: Glava jača od metka" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d O. Radulović (December 23, 2006). (in Serbian). Archived from the original on August 14, 2017. Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Siniša Dedeić (November 30, 2011). "Istinomer: "Kordonom protiv kordona" (10. deo)" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  10. ^ a b Siniša Dedeić (December 1, 2011). "Istinomer: Vodeni topovi na minus šest (11. deo)" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  11. ^ "At least 40 hurt as riot police clash with protesters". The Irish Times. 3 February 1997. p. 1.
  12. ^ "Razvojni put Minpukija: Izjave za pamćenje" (in Serbian). 13 December 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2022.
  13. ^ Tamara Skrozza (December 22, 2005). "Vreme: Skromnost i tumačenja" (in Serbian). Retrieved August 14, 2017.
  14. ^ a b c Bennahum, David S. (1 April 1997). "The Internet Revolution". Wired. Retrieved August 13, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d Prelević, Marko (1 March 2016). [Welcome to Serbia, the country of the first internet revolution]. Nedeljnik (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  16. ^ Richard Holbrooke, To End a War, p. 345

Sources edit

  • Chris Hedges (8 December 1996). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on February 20, 2006. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  • Milan Milošević (15 February 1997). . Vreme. Archived from the original on 22 June 2008. Retrieved 21 May 2007.
  • Balkan Peace Team (23 January 1997). "Protests in Belgrade and throughout Yugoslavia—1996/1997". Hartford Web Publishing. from the original on 4 May 2007. Retrieved 21 May 2007.
  • Lazić, Mladen (1999). Protest in Belgrade: Winter of Discontent. Central European University Press. ISBN 963-9116-45-9.

External links edit

  • . Archived from the original on 11 June 2007. Retrieved 21 May 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)

1996, 1997, serbian, protests, winter, 1996, 1997, university, students, serbian, opposition, parties, organized, series, peaceful, protests, republic, serbia, then, part, federal, republic, yugoslavia, response, electoral, fraud, attempted, socialist, party, . In the winter of 1996 1997 university students and Serbian opposition parties organized a series of peaceful protests in the Republic of Serbia then part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in response to electoral fraud attempted by the Socialist Party of Serbia of President Slobodan Milosevic after the 1996 local elections 1996 1997 protests in SerbiaPart of 1996 Serbian local electionsStudents marching in Belgrade in November 1996 carrying the Belgrade is the world bannerDateNovember 17 1996 March 22 1997LocationBelgrade 1 Nis 2 1 Novi Sad 1 Kragujevac 1 Caused byRefusal of incumbent parties to recognize 1996 local elections resultsGoalsRecognition of the 1996 local election resultsMethodsDemonstrations Occupations Rioting Police violenceResulted in1996 local election results were recognized 3 PartiesAnti government protesters Student and civilian protesters Opposition parties Coalition Zajedno Together Serbian Renewal Movement2 Civic Alliance of Serbia Democratic Party Democratic Party of Serbia Government of FR Yugoslavia State Security Service Police of Serbia Government parties Socialist Party of Serbia1 Yugoslav LeftLead figuresVuk Draskovic Vesna PesicZoran Đinđic Slobodan Milosevic Mirjana Markovic Nebojsa CovicNumberUp to 500 000 in Belgrade 4 3 Up to 150 000 in Nis 2 From 30 000 4 up to 50 000 1 in BelgradeCasualties and losses1 protester killed 5 During the course of the rallies students held their protests separately from the citizens ones led by opposition then gathered in coalition Zajedno Together The students protest lasted until 22 March 1997 with additional requests of replacing the management of University of Belgrade and return of the university autonomy The protests started November 17 1996 in Nis where thousands of opposition supporters gathered to protest against election fraud Belgrade University students joined on November 19 1996 and protests lasted even after February 11 1997 when Milosevic signed the lex specialis which accepted the opposition victory and instated local government in several cities but without acknowledging any wrongdoing The protests were strongest in the capital Belgrade where they gathered up to 200 000 people but spread over most cities and towns in Serbia Contents 1 Counter protests 2 Protest on Branko s Bridge 3 Kolarceva street protest and the Serbian Orthodox Church 4 Alleged role of the internet 5 Reactions 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksCounter protests editOn December 24 1996 the government coalition called Za Srbiju For Serbia organized a large counter protest in Terazije 3 Milosevic spoke to the crowd in Terazije telling them Serbia will not be controlled by someone else s hand 3 The crowd chanted Slobo we love you to which Milosevic replied I love you too 3 The December 24 protests in Terazije resulted in massive riots during which a young protester from the SPO 6 named Predrag Starcevic was beaten to death 3 Another SPO protester Ivica Lazovic was shot in the head the same night by a SPS supporter Zivko Sandic 6 Although Lazovic survived he ended up with an arm and a leg paralyzed after a life saving operation in the emergency room 7 Lazovic eventually met Sandic in court where he asked him brother why did you shoot me 7 Sandic allegedly replied I don t know and Lazovic forgave him in person saying if my sacrifice was needed to prevent civil war in Serbia then so be it 7 After the December 24 violence the government banned all street protests in Belgrade from December 26 1996 3 Nebojsa Covic the mayor of Belgrade and an SPS member claimed to have criticized the government s idea of counter protesting but that a majority of the SPS party board supported it 8 Milosevic allegedly ordered police to stay disengaged from the counter protest 8 Covic suggested to other SPS members that the counter protest was risky and defied Milosevic s orders by calling in riot police 8 Covic was subsequently kicked out of the SPS in January 1997 9 He stood by his decision years later claiming that civil war could have begun if it were not for the intervention of riot police that night 8 Protest on Branko s Bridge editOn the night of February 2 3 1997 a confrontation occurred between riot police and protesters on Branko s Bridge during which the police fired water cannons at the protesters even though the outside temperature was 6 C 21 F 10 Vesna Pesic leader of the Civic Alliance of Serbia was hit by the police on the same night 11 According to Nasa Borba 29 protesters ended up in the Urgent Care emergency room while the Anlave clinic received 50 patients that night 10 After the incident Yugoslav Left spokesman Aleksandar Vulin said They complain that the police used water cannons on the protesters at 10 C Well they re not going to pour hot water on them are they 12 Kolarceva street protest and the Serbian Orthodox Church editIn January 1997 a large column of riot police blocked off Kolarceva street in Belgrade for several weeks in spite of the continuation of a standoff with the student protesters 9 However on January 27 1997 the riot police opened Kolarceva street after which Patriarch Pavle and other members of the Serbian Orthodox clergy led a silent crowd of approximately 300 000 to the Church of Saint Sava 9 Contrary to what was reported at the time the riot police left Kolarceva street several hours before as they anticipated the Patriarch and the crowd he would take to the Church of Saint Sava 13 Alleged role of the internet editIn early 1997 Wired journalist David Bennahum met philosophy professor Novica Milic at a conference in Berlin called the Data Conflicts Cyberspace and the Geo Politics of Eastern Europe after which Milic invited him to apply for a visa to visit Yugoslavia during the protests 14 Bennahum applied eventually entered Yugoslavia and wrote about his experience and the alleged role of the internet in the protest mobilization in an article called The Internet Revolution 14 Bennahum wrote about the existence of an internet stream called Sezam Pro which broadcast the independent radio station B92 after it had been censored by the Yugoslav government on December 3 1996 14 Voice of America and BBC recorded these internet streams and broadcast them back to Belgrade through short wave frequencies whose signals were picked up by the radio 15 At the time of the protests at least 8 million people were living in Yugoslavia of which no more than 10 000 had access to the internet 15 Speaking to Nedeljnik Milan Bozic a math professor who met with Bennahum to discuss internet access in Yugoslavia claimed that Bennahum endangered him and Milic by publishing their names in his article adding that there had been an agreement to keep their identities hidden from the authorities 15 Milic also commented for Nedeljnik stating that Bennahum severely exaggerated the role of the internet in the 1996 1997 protests 15 Reactions editRichard Holbrooke commented on the issue in his memoirs recalling that the Americans were not able to support the protests due to the transitional period to the Clinton II Administration A remarkable challenge to Milosevic unfolded in the street of Belgrade in December 1996 led by three politicians who banded together in a movement called Zajedno or the Together Movement For weeks hundreds of thousands of Belgrade citizens braved subfreezing weather to call for democracy But Washington missed a chance to affect events except for one ineffectual trip to Washington Zajedno had no contact with senior American government officials and the Administrations sent no senior officials to Belgrade for fear that their visits would be used by Milosevic to show support For the first time in eighteen months Milosevic felt no significant American pressure and turned back towards the extreme nationalists including Karadzic for support His tactical skills saved him again and within weeks the Together Movement was together no more as its leaders split among themselves 16 See also editAnti bureaucratic revolution March 1991 protests in Belgrade Overthrow of Slobodan MilosevicNotes edit 1 The Socialist Party of Serbia is abbreviated as SPS 2 The Serbian Renewal Movement is abbreviated as SPO the acronym for the movement s name in Serbian Srpski pokret obnove References edit a b c d e Cedomir Antic November 24 2006 Politika David pobedio Golijata in Serbian Retrieved August 14 2017 a b Magazin NIN 2404 24 JAN 1997 in Serbian January 24 1997 Retrieved August 13 2017 a b c d e f g Danas Studenti su ozbiljno uzdrmali rezim Slobodana Milosevica in Serbian November 17 2016 Retrieved August 13 2017 a b Vreme br 484 Vreme 2000 Sta ce biti 15 aprila in Serbian April 15 2000 Archived from the original on January 6 2010 Retrieved August 13 2017 Bojan Bilbija December 25 2006 Politika Srbija nadmudrila rezim in Serbian Retrieved August 13 2017 a b Slobodanka Ast November 6 1999 Vreme br 461 Deset Milosevicevih godina u deset slika 7 in Serbian Archived from the original on May 4 2010 Retrieved August 14 2017 a b c Z Nikolic December 25 2006 Novosti Glava jaca od metka in Serbian Retrieved August 13 2017 a b c d O Radulovic December 23 2006 Press Online KONTRAMITING in Serbian Archived from the original on August 14 2017 Retrieved August 14 2017 a b c Sinisa Dedeic November 30 2011 Istinomer Kordonom protiv kordona 10 deo in Serbian Retrieved August 14 2017 a b Sinisa Dedeic December 1 2011 Istinomer Vodeni topovi na minus sest 11 deo in Serbian Retrieved August 14 2017 At least 40 hurt as riot police clash with protesters The Irish Times 3 February 1997 p 1 Razvojni put Minpukija Izjave za pamcenje in Serbian 13 December 2021 Retrieved February 8 2022 Tamara Skrozza December 22 2005 Vreme Skromnost i tumacenja in Serbian Retrieved August 14 2017 a b c Bennahum David S 1 April 1997 The Internet Revolution Wired Retrieved August 13 2017 a b c d Prelevic Marko 1 March 2016 Dobrodosli u Srbiju zemlju prve internet revolucije Welcome to Serbia the country of the first internet revolution Nedeljnik in Serbian Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Richard Holbrooke To End a War p 345Sources editChris Hedges 8 December 1996 Serbian Response to Tyranny Take the Movement to the Web The New York Times Archived from the original on February 20 2006 Retrieved 8 December 2015 Milan Milosevic 15 February 1997 What Now Vreme Archived from the original on 22 June 2008 Retrieved 21 May 2007 Balkan Peace Team 23 January 1997 Protests in Belgrade and throughout Yugoslavia 1996 1997 Hartford Web Publishing Archived from the original on 4 May 2007 Retrieved 21 May 2007 Lazic Mladen 1999 Protest in Belgrade Winter of Discontent Central European University Press ISBN 963 9116 45 9 External links editPortals nbsp 1990s nbsp Serbia The original website of Students protest Archived from the original on 11 June 2007 Retrieved 21 May 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The website dedicated to 10th anniversary of the protest Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1996 1997 Serbian protests amp oldid 1220962520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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