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Minorities Flex their Political Muscles
Bosnian and Albanian parties in Montenegro are
trading on their position as masters of "swing
votes" on key issues in order to promote their
own agendas
Author: Sead Sadikovic
Source: Balkan Insight
Montenegro's Bosniak and Albanian minorities are
using their potentially significant influence over
the future of the republic's state union with Serbia,
in an effort to get promises from the pro-independence
authorities to improve their position.
When independence is put to a referendum on May
21, 55 per cent of voters who go to the polls will
need to support separation from Serbia in order for
the vote to be seen as valid.
The Albanian and Bosniak communities as a whole
are thought almost certain to vote for a break from
Serbia.
But with the opposing camps on the question of independence
finely balanced and their own votes potentially crucial
to the outcome, representatives of the minorities
have decided that now is a good time to seek concessions
from the authorities.
With a population of 670,000, Montenegro has a complex
national structure, comprising 41 per cent Montenegrins,
30 per cent Serbs, 14.7 per cent Bosniaks, seven per
cent Albanians and one per cent Croats.
In the Nineties, with the ascendance of Slobodan
Milosevic in Serbia, the movement for independence
grew stronger in Montenegro. For several years now
it has been led by the Democratic Party of Socialists,
under the current prime minister, Milo Djukanovic.
However, citizens remain sharply divided on the
issue and when it comes to the ballot, every vote
will count.
Djukanovic's party rules Montenegro together with
a smaller coalition partner, the Social Democratic
Party, which has also always advocated independence.
Since 1998, when Djukanovic distanced himself from
Milosevic, these two parties have received the votes
of 90 per cent of local Bosniaks and more than half
the votes of the Albanians. The remaining Albanians
have typically voted for their own national parties,
which are also against the union with Serbia.
According to a survey by the Centre for Democratic
Transition, CDT, taken last December and published
on March 10, only 2.2 per cent of Bosniak voters plan
to vote against independence. The same poll said that
70 per cent of Bosniaks planned to vote for independence.
In other words, it appears that a pool of around 30
per cent of Bosniak voters remain undecided.
Some are swayed towards continuing union with Serbia
by family and business connections to its mainly Bosniak
Sandzak region, or because they feel disappointed
by the broken promises of the Montenegrin leadership.
According to the CDT poll, only 2.4 per cent of
Albanian voters were against Montenegrin independence,
while those who are undecided account for around ten
per cent.
By comparison, about 120,000 Montenegrins say they
plan to vote for independence, and 29,000 against,
while 104,000 ethnic Serbs living in Montenegro will
vote for union with Serbia, and less then 7,000 for
independence.
According to these figures, a narrow overall majority
of about 56 per cent of voters would vote for independence
- one per cent above the threshold.
The 55,000 Bosniaks and around 25,000 Albanians
who are expected to turn up at the polls, if turnout
remains at an average of 80 per cent, may tip the
balance. The sum of their votes is double 40,000 -
the difference that the pro-independence parties have
to achieve in order to secure success in the referendum,
in case of a record turn-out of 85 percent. The difference
needed could be even less if the turnout is smaller.
A key factor could be abstention on the part of
minority voters. Although the Bosniak and Albanian
minority would in general prefer an independent Montenegro,
there is also no doubting their dissatisfaction with
the current government.
Political analyst Mustafa Canka says Albanians and
Bosniaks who live and work abroad are especially unlikely
to try and vote. Though their number is not large,
even a few thousand missing votes might decide the
outcome of the referendum.
"If they fail to secure a majority of 55 per
cent, the authorities will blame the Bosniaks and
Albanians," he said. "They will say that
they could have tried harder".
Over the last 15 years, the cause of Montenegrin
independence has been increasingly linked to the republic's
minorities. This has enabled their parties to seek
concessions and trade-offs from government, although
they have often been let down.
Some minority leaders are now trying to capitalise
on their position and nail down what had been promised
- and then promptly forgotten - in the past.
On 26 February, a new Bosniak party was formed as
a union of all the major Bosniak parties. After talks
with Predrag Bulatovic, the leader of the main pro-union
party, the Socialist People's Party, and with Milo
Djukanovic, the leader of the independence movement,
this new bloc decided to join the latter.
Their requests include passage of a proposed new
Law on Minorities before the referendum takes place,
and proportional representation for minorities in
all levels of public life.
Mehmed Bardhi, president of the Democratic Union
in Montenegro, the more hard-line of the two Albanian
national parties (the other is the Democratic Union
of Albanians, DUA), also said Albanians should support
a sovereign state of Montenegro.
The Albanians, who make up seven per cent of the
republic's total population, also have clear objectives
that will be presented to the pro-independence government,
starting with proportional representation of Albanians
in government posts. Bardhi also wants to see a new
municipality centred on the mainly Albanian area of
Tuzi, which currently forms part of the city of Podgorica.
Improvements in the position of minorities in Montenegro
have been regularly mooted in the past.
In an agreement signed in March 2001 in mainly Albanian
Ulcinj, all the republic's parliamentary parties committed
themselves to supporting a range of measures to boost
the position of the Albanian minority. They pledged
a new maternity ward for Ulcinj, an Albanian language
faculty in the town, easier validation of diplomas
acquired in Albania and Kosovo, and assistance in
the establishment of a new municipality in Tuzi.
But it turned out that while the authorities were
willing to make these promises, they were not keen
to realise them.
Instead of a new faculty in Ulcinj, the authorities
opened an Albanian-language department in distant
Niksic. It received no students, as Albanians did
not wish to study there. Two years later the department
was relocated to Podgorica but most Albanians still
insist it should go to Ulcinj. As for the maternity
ward, the authorities claimed that there was not enough
money for it.
Rather than gaining full municipality status, Tuzi
instead became a city municipality within Podgorica.
Bosniaks in the north of Montenegro were similarly
let down after being promised a new municipality called
Petnjica, to be established out of the territory of
the municipality of Berane. The Montenegrin parliament
eventually rejected the plan a year ago.
The minority parties are now seeking a way to capitalise
on their role in the coming referendum to secure these
forgotten concessions.
However, Miodrag Perovic, director of Monitor, a
pro-independence weekly, says this kind of blackmail
may be a mistake. He says the rows over concessions
are damaging the pro-independence bloc, and that such
requests should wait until Montenegro is independent
and can properly deal with minority rights.
Ferhat Dinosa, leader of the DUA, agrees. He says
it would be easier to introduce European standards
on minorities once Montenegro becomes a sovereign
state. Dinosa told the daily Vijesti on March 23 that
it was not in the interest of Albanians to blackmail
the leadership if it put at risk the goal of an independent
Montenegro.
During the Nineties, minorities found themselves
trapped between two sides in Montenegro. One was the
Serbian block, supported by Slobodan Milosevic's military
might, and the other was Djukanovic's block, which
opposed Milosevic and so won the hearts of all minorities.
Fear of possible revenge by Milosevic escalated
in 1999, during NATO's air war over Kosovo, when more
than 20,000 Bosniaks and Albanians left Montenegro
for Bosnia and western Europe.
At the same time, many Bosniaks and Albanians joined
the Montenegrin police, which was loyal to Djukanovic,
while ethnic Serbs in Montenegro flocked to the military
reserve, then loyal to the Serbian regime and to Milosevic.
Smajo Cikic, president of Gairet, a Bosniak cultural
non-governmental organisation, says minorities are
fearful of again being caught in a pincer between
pro- and anti-Serb forces. "Those who are 'heroes'
for one side automatically become 'traitors' for the
other," he said.
Some believe the minorities could suffer as the
tension mounts before the referendum day. The fact
that both sides expect to win and also to count on
the votes of the minorities indicates there is a risk
of their being dragged into a conflict that is not
of their own making.
Ranko Kadic, leader of the Democratic Serbian Party,
which advocates union with Serbia, says he expects
Albanians and Bosniaks to help defeat the independence
option.
"The independent-ists remain in power thanks
to divisions, but the time of divisions is now in
the past and this is the beginning of the end for
Djukanovic's regime," he said.
"More and more people in Montenegro come to
realise this," he added, including members of
ethnic minorities.
But whatever their fears, it seems highly unlikely
that the minorities are at this stage going to switch
to the pro-union camp.
Rifat Veskovic, former leader of the Party of Democratic
Action, now president of the Democratic Union of Muslims-Bosniaks,
said most Bosniaks and other minorities feel it will
be much easier to achieve their goals in a sovereign
Montenegro.
This, he said, was partly down to mathematics. "In
an independent Montenegro we [Bosniaks] will account
for 15 per cent, but in the union of Serbia and Montenegro
[without Kosovo] not more than 2 per cent."
Sead Sadikovic is a freelance reporter, a correspondent
for Radio Free Europe and a journalist with the independent
Montenegrin weekly Monitor. Balkan Insight is BIRN's
online publication.
This article was published with the support
of the British embassy in Belgrade, as part of BIRN's
Minority Media Training and Reporting Project.
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