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Serbian president’s praise of Milosevic seen by neighboring states as a provocation

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic addresses supporters in the northern, Serb-dominated part of Mitrovica, Kosovo, on Sunday, as part of a two-day visit to the nation.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic addresses supporters in the northern, Serb-dominated part of Mitrovica, Kosovo, on Sunday, as part of a two-day visit to the nation.
(Djordje Savic / EPA/Shutterstock )
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The Serbian president’s praise of Slobodan Milosevic as a great leader was seen as a provocation Monday in neighboring states where Milosevic’s nationalist policies in the 1990s caused bloodshed and destruction.

In his keynote speech while visiting Kosovo’s Serbs on Sunday, Aleksandar Vucic called for peace and reconciliation with Kosovo Albanians, but also praised former Serbian leader Milosevic.

“Milosevic was a great Serbian leader whose intentions were certainly for the best, but our results were very poor,” Vucic said. “Not because he wanted that, but because our wishes were unrealistic, while we neglected and underestimated the interests and aspirations of other nations.”

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He also criticized the former Serbian pro-Western officials for handing over Milosevic and his generals to the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands.

Milosevic, who died in 2006 while on trial at the tribunal, is widely considered the most responsible politician in the former Yugoslavia for the bloody breakup of the federation and the death of at least 120,000 people in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo.

Vucic, an ultranationalist during the wars in the Balkans, was Milosevic’s information minister in 1999.

Kosovo President Hashim Thaci said Monday that praising Milosevic was “a provocation.”

“We heard words of peace, understanding and good neighborly relations,” Thaci said. “But we also heard praise for Milosevic and his generals. The two things don’t go together.”

Kosovo was a Serbian province when Milosevic’s crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists in 1998 to 1999 led to the deaths of more than 10,000 people.

The conflict ended with NATO intervention, which forced Serbia to pull out of the province. Kosovo declared independence in 2008, a move that Serbia doesn’t recognize. Serbia and Kosovo must mend ties to advance toward European Union membership.

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The two sides have been engaged in EU-mediated negotiations, with Vucic and Thaci leading the delegations.

The Croatian government said in a statement that Vucic’s comments were a “sterile provocation” which can’t change “historic facts” that the country was a victim of Milosevic’s expansionist policies.

“If the wars waged by Slobodan Milosevic’s regime represent his ‘good intentions,’ then the rebuilding of bridges between Serbia and the victims of its aggression will take lots of effort and time,” the government statement said.

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