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Yugoslavia's Perestroika
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15645 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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2 / 1989 |
2,649 Words |
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Momcilo Selic Momcilo Selic is coeditor of The Clock, the first Yugoslav
literary samizdat magazine, started with Milovan Djilas and
Mihajlo Mihajlov. |
After two years of street protests, strikes, and speeches against Yugoslavia's economic, political, and ethnic status quo--credited by friend and foe alike to the late Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia--one million Serbs gathered on November 19, 1988, in Belgrade to listen to one of theirs, Slobodan Milosevic, the president of the Communist Party of Serbia.
Born and raised in the small Serbian town of Pozarevac, the 47-year-old Milosevic today is the only Yugoslav leader not personally invested by Tito. And like Mikhail Gorbachev in the USSR, he is nudging his compatriots toward an open rebellion against their recent past.
Unlike Gorbachev, however, Milosevic and the Serbs do not hold the sway over Yugoslavia that their history and numbers would suggest. Before he died in 1980, Josip Broz Tito had seen to that.
After his allied-aided, Yalta-sanctioned victory over Serbian loyalists in World War II, Tito--a Croat and a former Austro-Hungarian master sergeant--divided Yugoslavia so that every nationality but the Serbs got an ethnic homeland. After creating Yugoslavia by their military prowess in 1918, and resisting the communists in 1941-45, the Serbs were treated like a defeated people. Despite their costly victories in two Balkan and two world wars, in 1945 the Serbs were deprived by Tito of a third of their population and half of their national territory. What was left--a rump Serbia--was further portioned into three independent parts, one of which, the Autonomous province of Kosovo, was turned over to the non-Slav, Muslim Albanians.
During the
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