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Slobodan Milosevic
1941 - 2006

Slobodan Milosevic became president of Serbia in 1989. He won
two subsequent presidential elections (1990, 1992) and retained
his post.
Slobodan
Milosevic was born on August 20, 1941, in Pozarevac, a small
town on the outskirts of Belgrade, capital city of the former
Yugoslavia. His ancestors belonged to the Vasojevici clan from
Montenegro. His father finished Orthodox seminary in Cetinje
(Montenegro) and studied at the School of Theology in Belgrade.
His mother was a teacher in Pozarevac. People remember her as a
strict, diligent woman and a fervent communist.
Milosevic finished his primary and secondary education in
Pozarevac. According to his teachers and classmates, young
Slobodan was an outstanding high school student always sitting
in the first row neatly dressed. Although rather quiet and
solitary, he was politically active and published several pieces
in the local high school journal. While still in high school,
Milosevic met his future wife, Mirjana (Mira) Markovic, whose
family ranked among the most prominent communists in Serbia. Her
father was a hero from World War II; her uncle later became one
of the leading politicians in postwar Serbia; and her aunt was a
personal secretary of Josip Broz Tito. The young couple's
contemporaries did not doubt that the love between Mirjana and
Slobodan was sincere and genuine - a covenant of two similar
souls rather than a marriage of interest. They raised two
children.
In 1960 Milosevic became a law student at the University of
Belgrade. He was an excellent student and active in the
university section of the League of Communists (official name
for the Communist Party) where he met Ivan Stambolic, a nephew
of one of the most powerful Serbian communist leaders. Many
people think that it was Stambolic who elevated the political
career of Milosevic. In 1964, after graduating from the
university, Milosevic was appointed as an economic counsellor
and a coordinator of the informational service in the
administration of the City of Belgrade. In 1968 he became a
deputy director of a state-owned gas conglomerate, Tehnogas.
After Stambolic left Tehnogas in 1973 and became the prime
minister of Serbia, Milosevic rose to the post of director. Five
years later he became president of the powerful Belgrade bank
Beobanka. In 1982 he became a member of the collective
presidency of the League of Communists of Serbia, and two years
later a chief of the City of Belgrade Party Organization. The
collective presidency of the League of Communists of Serbia
elected Milosevic as its president in 1986.
On a personal level many people described Milosevic as a very
pleasant and witty person, well organized, and a sophisticated
politician. While his political speeches were plain and simple,
he dressed well, smoked expensive cigars, and did not hesitate
to use his fluent English.
On April 24, 1987, Milosevic visited Kosovo Polje, a suburb of
the capital of the autonomous province of Kosovo, attempting to
appease the mass of Serbs and Montenegrins protesting a
continuous mistreatment by the Albanian majority. When an
excited crowd tried to enter the building and talk directly to
Milosevic, they were beaten back by the local police. Milosevic
strode out and shouted to the crowd: "No one has the right to
beat you!" These simple words changed the milieu of Serbian
politics. Shortly after, in a series of steamy sessions of the
League of Communists of Serbia, Milosevic succeeded in removing
Stambolic and his associates from the Serbian political arena.
In 1989 Milosevic became president of Serbia.
The internal disagreement among Serbia's communists over Kosovo
province shook the already crumbling Yugoslav federation. After
Serbia reinstated its authority over the autonomous provinces of
Kosovo and Vojvodina, the prospect of Serbian domination fueled
a nationalist frenzy in Slovenia and Croatia and bolstered
secessionist movements in these republics. Following the
collapse of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia in 1990,
multiparty elections were held in each of six Yugoslav
republics. While Milosevic and his Socialist Party retained
power in Serbia, forces that openly advocated secession from
Yugoslavia came into power in almost all other republics (with
the exception of Montenegro). The nationalist hysteria that
spread all over Yugoslavia invoked gruesome memories among Serbs
who were subjected to genocide by the Croatian Nazi regime
during World War II. Milosevic, who had already established
himself as the foremost champion of Serbian rights, was the
natural ally to more than two million Serbs living outside the
borders of Serbia. When the negotiations among the various
republics were called off in 1991, the violent breakup of
Yugoslavia became imminent.
The collapse of Yugoslavia and the ensuing civil war among the
break-away nations focused new attention on Milosevic. In the
fighting that began in April 1992 Milosevic seemed to stay
removed from personal involvement, leaving Serbian militias to
carry out attacks against the newly established nations of
Croatia and Bosnia Herzegovina. Nevertheless, many critics,
particularly in the West, portrayed him as a ruthless despot
intent upon overseeing the creation of a Greater Serbia. At the
same time, Milosevic and his Socialist Party seemed secure in
their Belgrade headquarters.
By late 1995, U.N.-imposed sanctions had demolished the Serbian
economy and Milosevic agreed to a Balkan peace plan forged
during negotiations at an air base in Dayton, Ohio. He attempted
to rebuild his image, since he was once thought to be the reason
behind military crimes, war crimes, and millions of deaths.
Milosevic began making strides at winning a more favorable
public opinion, calling for tolerance among ethnic groups and
portraying himself as a heroic and peace-promoting defender of
Serbs against annihilation. Despite the near-40 percent
unemployment and the overall decline in lifestyle among the
Serbs, he did retain supporters.
In 1997 Milosevic's second and final term as president was to
run out, but he hoped to prolong his tenure with a technicality.
On July 23, 1997, he changed his title from president of Serbia
to president of the Yugoslav federation in an attempt to
circumvent the term limit.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
Yugoslav and Serbian political leader, president of Serbia
(1989–97) and of Yugoslavia (1997–2000), b. Požarevac, Serbia.
He joined the Communist party in 1959, beginning his political
career in the 1960s as an economic adviser to the mayor of
Belgrade and holding various posts in the party and state
enterprises. He became the leader of the Belgrade Communist
party in 1984 and Serbian party leader in 1986.
Initially opposed to liberalization, he was elected president of
Serbia in 1989 and proceeded to transform its Communist party
into the nationalistic Socialist party. Milošević called for the
inclusion of Serb areas in other republics in a “greater Serbia”
as the price for Yugoslavia's dissolution. He supported Serb
forces in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina after the two
became independent and was widely blamed for the Serbs' military
aggression and brutal “ethnic cleansing” policies, but he
ultimately abandoned the Serbs outside Serbia, signing (1995) a
peace accord.
Barred from a third term as Serbia's president, he became
president of Yugoslavia in 1997. In 1999 his government's
refusal to restore autonomy to Kosovo and its harsh tactics
there led to NATO air attacks (Mar.–June) on Yugoslavia as
Serbian forces deported hundreds of thousands of Albanian
Kosovars; Serbia was forced to withdraw from Kosovo. As a result
of Serbian actions, Milošević was charged with crimes against
humanity by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia.
In 2000 the Yugoslav constitution was amended to permit the
president to hold office for two terms; direct presidential
elections also were instituted. The changes were designed to
permit Milošević to remain in power, but when elections were
held he was defeated by Vojislav Koštunica. Milošević only
conceded after being forced to by strikes and demonstrations and
international pressure, and remained head of the Socialist party
of Serbia.
In 2001 he was arrested on charges of abuse of power and
corruption and later turned over to the UN war crimes tribunal
in the Hague, which tried him (2002) on charges of war crimes in
Kosovo, Croatia, and Bosnia. He died, however, before his
lengthy trial concluded. His family blamed his death on foul
play, but a Dutch investigation found no evidence of this. Some
tribunal officials believed he manipulated the treatment of his
high blood pressure in an attempt to delay his trial or win
release on medical grounds; earlier in 2006 an unprescribed
antibiotic that interferes with blood pressure medication was
found in his blood.
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This web page was last updated on:
13 December, 2008
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