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First parliamentary elections in independent Montenegro to be held on Sunday

PODGORICA, Sept 8 (Hina) - The first parliamentary elections in independent Montenegro will be held on September 10, with some 480,000 registered voters going to the polls to elect to the parliament 81 deputies from seven coalitions, four parties and associations of citizens.
PODGORICA, Sept 8 (Hina) - The first parliamentary elections in independent Montenegro will be held on September 10, with some 480,000 registered voters going to the polls to elect to the parliament 81 deputies from seven coalitions, four parties and associations of citizens.

The latest opinion polls show that no major changes are expected. The currently ruling coalition of the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) is quite close to being re-elected.

The Opposition is divided and lacks the strength to threaten the incumbent prime minister, Milo Djukanovic, and his DPS party.

The pro-Serbian bloc is divided in two parts - the Socialist People's Party (SNP), together with the People's Party (NS) and the Democratic Serb Party (DSS), is trying to replace its nationalist image with a civic one, while the Socialist People's Party and the Radical Party are not giving up on their pro-Serbian orientation and are promising the voters the renewal of the state union with Serbia.

The Movement for Changes, a former NGO, has grown into a party which has promised to fight against tycoons, introduce higher taxes for those who have acquired their wealth fast, and punish those who "plundered" Montenegro.

The only Croat political party - the Croatian Civic Initiative (HGI) has joined a pre-election coalition with the DPS and the SDP thus securing at least one seat in the parliament.

Back on the political scene are also Bosniaks (Muslims), whose parties withdrew from the scene during the 1990s war and distributed their votes among civic parties - the DPS, the SDP and the Liberals. Now seven small parties gathering Bosniaks, who make almost one-fifth of Montenegro's entire population, have joined into a single party, which together with the Liberal Party counts on winning a dozen parliamentary seats.

The Albanian population, which makes seven percent of the total population, has a privileged status because the election threshold for that group has been lowered from five to three percent. The candidates of five Albanian parties are expected to achieve good results in the areas predominantly populated by Albanians.

During the election campaign, the ruling coalition has claimed as its own results the declaration of the country's independence, the fastest process of international recognition and admission to the United Nations, and the forthcoming admission to NATO's Partnership for Peace programme. Construction work has started on many facilities in days before the elections. The current authorities claim the arrival of the first foreign ambassadors as their own achievement. Their optimism about election victory is based mostly on the enthusiasm of most citizens about independence, which is why the elections have been scheduled to take place during the tourist and holiday season.

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