"The fundamental condition for successful government performance will be the establishment of successful cooperation with nationally oriented political parties and organisations in Serbia, the Serb Orthodox Church as well as with proven patriots," read a document distributed among the press under the title "RSK Government in Exile Programme Tasks".
The RSK was an unrecognised statelet set up by Croatian Serb rebels in the early 1990s. Its so-called parliament re-convened in Belgrade last weekend while the so-called government in exile was established earlier this week.
The establishment of the RSK government has been condemned by Serbian President Boris Tadic and Serbia and Montenegro Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic. Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has said Croatia and Serbia should develop relations only in line with bilaterally signed agreements.
The RSK government in exile has been explicitly supported by representatives of the Serbian Radical Party. One of its senior officials was seen on the premises where the RSK parliament met last weekend.
Commenting on the negative reactions to the re-establishment of RSK bodies, one of its self-styled ministers, Ratko Licina, said they were part of an "orchestrated campaign" which has Serbs from Croatia "talking not on the basis of reality but coercion and fear".
Commenting on the fact that only Vojislav Seselj's Radicals had supported the re-establishment of RSK bodies, while Tadic and Draskovic had condemned it, one-time RSK parliament speaker Rajko Lezajic said "we expect the support of the entire justice-loving world".