BELGRADE MEDIA RESPONSES TO MESIC'S STATEMENT ON DRASKOVIC BELGRADE, May 11 (Hina) - Belgrade newspapers on Tuesday carried articles commenting on the response by Croatian President Stjepan Mesic to the announcement by
Serbia-Montenegro's Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic that he might accompany President Svetozar Marovic on an official visit to Zagreb.
BELGRADE, May 11 (Hina) - Belgrade newspapers on Tuesday carried
articles commenting on the response by Croatian President Stjepan
Mesic to the announcement by Serbia-Montenegro's Foreign Minister Vuk
Draskovic that he might accompany President Svetozar Marovic on an
official visit to Zagreb.#L#
Draskovic's aide Ognjen Pribicevic was quoted as saying that the
Foreign Minister would not travel to Zagreb, but would play host to
his Croatian counterpart Miomir Zuzul on his visit to Belgrade on May
28.
Vecernje Novosti, which devoted the entire second page to this
subject, carried responses to Mesic's statement that "President
Marovic is welcome" in Zagreb. Radical Party Secretary-General
Aleksandar Vucic was most critical: "Who are they to decide who will
represent Serbia-Montenegro on a visit?" Vucic went on to say that
Mesic "participated in the destruction of the former Yugoslavia and in
numerous crimes against Serbs, and he can come here whenever he
pleases without anyone raising this issue."
Vucic's statement was also carried by Glas Javnosti in an article
headlined "Serbia Silent as Croatia Hurls Insults". The daily quoted
Tomislav Nikolic, a Radical Party candidate for the president of
Serbia, as saying on the first day of the presidential campaign on
Monday that he hoped "one day the UN will make it possible for all
citizens, including Serbs, to live peacefully and safely on their
property." This will "again raise the issue of the status of the
Republic of Serb Krajina, which was in a way already recognised by the
UN and under its protection."
Vecernje Novosti ran a biography of the Croatian President, recalling
some of his statements dating from the early 1990s and noting that
Mesic had been "one of the founders and chief operatives of the HDZ
(Croatian Democratic Union)".
Unlike Vecernje Novosti, the daily Danas wrote about the Serbian
Guard, the army of Draskovic's Serbian Renewal Movement, established
at the start of the war in Croatia. The author of the article said
that none of the members of that paramilitary unit had ever been
brought to justice.
The article mentioned Djordje Bozovic Giska, one of the unit's
founders with "a criminal background and links to the State Security
Service" who was killed at Gospic in 1991, and Branislav Matic Beli,
the chief financier of Draskovic's party and his "inseparable" friend,
"a former criminal who owned several car dumps", who was killed in
Belgrade in late 1991.
Dealing with Draskovic's past in its editorial, Danas wrote that it
was "a part of the story about the Serbo-Croatian tragedy from the
1990s that cannot be erased". "After Tudjman and Milosevic, a new
political page was turned in both countries" and "Serbo-Croatian
relations have witnessed a significant easing of tension".
"Mesic has a reputation of being a wise and pragmatic politician, so
it is hard to believe that he would contribute to spoiling this
positive trend in relations between Belgrade and Zagreb," Danas
concluded.
(Hina) vm