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The United States and Europe have expressed support for the territorial borders of Bosnia-Herzegovina, which have been called into question in a document that has circulated among EU officials.
U.S. Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the Security Council on May 4 that the U.S. position on the 1995 Dayton peace accords and Bosnia-Herzegovina’s future as “a single state destined for the Euro-Atlantic community” remains unchanged.
Ireland and Estonia, which are nonpermanent members of the Security Council, joined France in affirming their “unwavering support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Bosnia.
The statements follow reports that a document has circulated among EU officials proposing the redrawing of borders in the Western Balkans to merge Kosovo with Albania and to incorporate parts of Bosnia into Serbia and Croatia to help the region’s EU integration.
A Slovenian news website last month published the document, allegedly sent to the EU by Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa. Jansa denied handing the document to European Council President Charles Michel.
EU and U.S. officials rejected the idea of redrawing borders in the Western Balkans after reports about the document were published.
Thomas-Greenfield on May 4 also told the Security Council that the United States supports “the essential role” of UN envoy Valentin Inzko in monitoring and supporting the implementation of civilian aspects of the Dayton accords.
But Russia’s deputy ambassador to the UN renewed Moscow’s attacks on Inzko.
“He presents the situation as if the Bosnian Serbs and the Croats alone were to blame for all the difficulties,” said Anna Evstigneeva.
She also denounced his “interference” and “manipulation of historical events,” and demanded he not be involved with Bosnia’s relations with the European Union and NATO.
Inzko said he regretted the verbal attacks, including being labeled a monster by Milorad Dodik, Bosnia’s nationalist Serb leader.
Based on reporting by AFP
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PODGORICA — The European Union’s Neighborhood and Enlargement Commissioner Oliver Varhelyi is on a three-day visit to the Western Balkans to formally deliver EU-funded coronavirus vaccines.
Countries of the region aim to join the 27-nation bloc, but Serbia and other Balkan nations have been turning to China and Russia for much-needed shots as EU member states faced their own vaccination delays. Some politicians in the Balkans have criticized the EU for not coming to the rescue of their countries when help was needed the most.
“We care about Montenegro, we care about the Western Balkans and we care about our friends, the people of Montenegro,” Varhelyi said in a speech delivered during a brief stay in Montenegro’s capital, Podgorica, on May 4.
He started his regional trip in Serbia on May 3, followed by stops in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, and North Macedonia on May 4. He will travel to Albania and Kosovo the next day.
Last month, the European Commission announced that a total of 651,000 Pfizer-BioNTech doses would be delivered to these countries in weekly instalments until August.
The supplies are funded from a 70 million euro assistance package ($85 million) adopted by the commission in December 2020.
While most of the Western Balkan countries have struggled to get coronavirus vaccines, Serbia has launched a successful inoculation campaign mainly thanks to millions of doses of Russia-developed Sputnik V and China’s Sinopharm vaccines, which so far have not received the green light from the EU’s drug regulator.
Montenegro is to receive 42,000 Pfizer vaccines from the EU, following a delivery from China of 200,000 Sinopharm doses that enabled health authorities to launch their mass immunization program on May 4.
Bosnia-Herzegovina and other nations in the region heavily relied on the World Health Organization’s COVAX sharing scheme that distributes vaccine to less developed nations.
But deliveries were significantly delayed among shortages of the shots and some Balkan countries have been struggling to purchase COVID-19 vaccines directly from manufacturers.
The vaccines supplied by the EU to the region come on top of those provided by COVAX, of which the European bloc is one of the top contributors.
“Together with COVAX we are delivering almost a million doses to the Western Balkans, and this is the beginning,” Varhelyi said in Podgorica, according to a transcript of his speech posted on the European Commission’s website.
“We do hope that as more vaccines come into Europe we would be able to convince more and more Member States to share their available dosses with the Western Balkans.”
With reporting by AP
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Orthodox Christians are marking Easter in largely toned-down celebrations due to coronavirus restrictions, with prayers going out that the pandemic will soon be over.
In Jerusalem, on the eve of Easter believers flocked to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, packing the revered site where they believe Jesus was crucified and resurrected for the Holy Fire ceremony.
Entry to the church was restricted to those who were fully vaccinated.
Israel has lifted most restrictions, including mask-wearing in public, after a world-leading vaccination drive.
In normal years, Orthodox Easter draws tens of thousands of tourists and pilgrims to holy sites in Jerusalem and Bethlehem, but this year air travel from abroad is still restricted due to the pandemic.
In Russia, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and all Russia led an Easter divine service at the Christ the Savior Cathedral, attended by President Vladimir Putin.
“This Easter is special and its special nature lies in the hope that the bane of the pandemic will pass and, leaving us with a number of important lessons, will after all abandon us forever,” Kirill told the Russia-24 TV channel.
Many countries are restricting normal Orthodox Easter celebrations, after last year much of the world lived in lockdown.
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians based in Istanbul, has conducted various Easter celebrations over the weekend with limited attendance, as Turkey is under a strict lockdown.
In Greece, the government kept pandemic restrictions in place through the Easter holiday while preparing to restart services for tourists next week. Many church services were held outdoors and those indoors required social distancing and mask wearing.
In Lebanon, a curfew was in effect to curb the spread of coronavirus and churches were allowed to hold Easter Mass and prayers only at 30 percent capacity.
In Egypt, home to about 10 million of Coptic Christians, churches were told to limit attendance to 25 percent or less.
In the Egyptian coastal city of Alexandria, Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theodore of Alexandria and all Africa prayed for the joy of Christ’s resurrection to “drive away all the clouds of the pandemic and bring back the smile on your face, the love in your heart, the optimism in our eyes.”
In Serbia, which has a fairly high rate of 50 vaccine doses administered per 100 people, believers are expected to attend church services.
RFE/RL’s Balkan Service reported concerns that churches may continue a tradition of sharing communion from a common spoon.
Last year, 90-year-old Serbian Orthodox Church Patriarch Irinej died from COVID-19 a month after leading a service for Metropolitan Amfilohije, the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro, who also died from the virus.
With reporting by AP, RFE/RL’s Balkan Service, Orthodox Times, and TASS
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Kosovar Prime Minister Albin Kurti says he will not attend a meeting meant to relaunch a dialogue with Serbia that was proposed by EU chief diplomat Josep Borrell during talks in Brussels with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic.
The meeting was supposed to take place next week in Brussels.
“I will not be here in Brussels on May 11,” Kurti told reporters in Brussels on April 28 after talks with EU officials.
Vucic on April 26 held talks with Borrell and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Kurti said he will attend a meeting organized by Borrell with regional leaders in mid-May instead.
“The future dialogue with Serbia must be well-prepared in advance and based on clear principles,” Kurti said.
“Belgrade needs to face its past. We should not be obsessed with history, but we also cannot ignore history,” he said, mentioning the killing of ethnic Albanians by Serbian forces during the 1998-99 conflict.
“Belgrade should distance itself from [former Serbian leader Slobodan] Milosevic’s regime and not continue the old goals with new means,” he told reporters.
Serbia was forced to cede control over Kosovo in 1999 after a U.S.-led NATO campaign ended Belgrade’s crackdown against Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian separatists. More than 10,000 people died in the conflict.
Kosovo declared independence in 2008 but Belgrade does not recognize it.
Most EU member states and the United States have recognized Kosovo’s independence, but not Serbia’s allies Russia and China.
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The European Union and the United States have rejected the idea of redrawing borders in the Western Balkans in response to an unofficial proposal to break up Bosnia-Herzegovina and merge Kosovo with Albania.
A document that has circulated among EU officials proposes incorporating parts of Bosnia into Serbia and Croatia to help the region’s EU integration, according to Reuters, which said it had seen the document but could not verify its authenticity.
“We are absolutely not in favor of any changes in borders,” European Commission spokesman Eric Mamer told a news conference.
The United States also rejected the proposal, warning that moving the borders risked exacerbating tensions in the region.
“Recent unwarranted speculation about changing borders in the Balkans along ethnic lines risks fostering instability in the region and evokes memories of past tensions,” U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement quoted by Reuters.
In an interview last week with a U.S. think tank, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic referred to a document proposing “the unification of Kosovo and Albania” and “joining a larger part of the [Bosnian] Republika Srpska territory with Serbia.”
Vucic dismissed the idea, saying his government was “not interested in creating any kind of Greater Serbia.”
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas last week also rejected the proposal, saying the idea had been “put back into a drawer.”
The discussion has alarmed Bosnia, which sees it as a threat to its territorial unity two decades after ethnic conflicts led to war in the region.
Two former Yugoslav republics, Croatia and Slovenia, have joined the EU. Montenegro, Serbia, North Macedonia, Bosnia, Albania, and Kosovo hope to accede. The EU says they must first settle conflicts and advance democratic reforms.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said separately on April 26 after talks with Vucic in Brussels that the EU wants to “continue to see positive developments in rule of law” in Serbia as part of accession talks.
The two discussed Belgrade’s talks with Kosovo, whose independence is not recognized by Serbia and several EU countries.
Von der Leyen said the bloc would support the construction of a railway between Belgrade and North Macedonia, which saw its hopes to formally start membership negotiations dashed last year after a veto from Bulgaria.
The leaders of North Macedonia and Kosovo are also due in Brussels this week.
With reporting by Reuters
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Germany has called on Serbia and Kosovo to step up efforts toward a normalization of their relationship, more than two decades after Belgrade lost control of its former southern province in 1999.
“The time is right for continuing the normalization process — and to achieve results,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said at a live-streamed news conference after meeting Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade on April 23.
“It is important not to hold this dialogue just for dialogue’s sake, there must be results. Germany stands ready to help in this respect,” Maas added.
For his part, Vucic said that Serbia wants to reach a compromise solution with Kosovo and was ready to continue the dialogue.
“Serbia is not looking for excuses to refuse to reach a compromise,” Vucic said, adding that Belgrade believes that a frozen conflict is always in danger of being reignited.
Serbia was forced to cede control over Kosovo in 1999 after a U.S.-led NATO campaign ended Belgrade’s crackdown against Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian separatists. More than 10,000 people died in the 1998-99 Kosovo conflict.
Kosovo declared independence in 2008 but Belgrade does not recognize this. Most EU members and the United States have recognized Kosovo’s independence, but not Serbia’s allies Russia and China.
Vucic, in an April 22 interview from Belgrade with the Washington-based Atlantic Council think tank, said he was also actively seeking stronger ties with the United States.
Vucic, who has met U.S. President Joe Biden five times, described the U.S. president as “politically the best prepared man I ever talked to.”
Vucic, however, admitted there are difficulties in the bilateral relationship, especially differing views on peace talks with Kosovo.
Biden has considerable Balkan experience and was engaged with the region while serving as vice president from 2009 to 2017.
With reporting by Reuters
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An ethnic Albanian group says work has begun to build a “memorial complex” in southern Serbia to honor a controversial guerrilla commander who fought Serb troops in three Balkan wars and an insurgency.
The planned venue to honor Ridvan Qazimi, whose nom de guerre was “Commander Lleshi,” would occupy property belonging to a mosque on a hillside above Veliki Trnovac, in the heavily ethnic Albanian Presevo Valley.
The project has been challenged by Serbia’s junior ruling Socialist Party.
Their leader in parliament, Djorjde Milicevic, demanded on April 13 that the Labor, Employment, Veteran, and Social Affairs Ministry report back to lawmakers on whether town or regional officials had given permits for the memorial.
Veliki Trnovac is in the Bujanovac municipality, which was part of a trio of southern strongholds for armed ethnic Albanian resistance to Belgrade’s rule after the 1998-99 war that ushered in a UN protectorate for Kosovo.
The area is on the border with Kosovo and was a flash point for ethno-nationalist tension and violence for decades.
The president of the Serbian-based Albanian National Council, Ragmi Mustafa, told RFE/RL’s Balkan Service that the planned Qazimi complex “will essentially be a place where the memory of Commander Lleshi will be nurtured so that we see a hero of our recent history and a man who sacrificed [himself] for the benefit of his people.”
He warned that “there are dangerous statements coming from Belgrade in which [ethnic] Albanians are always enemies of the state.”
But many Serbians see Qazimi as a brutal and opportunistic ethnic Albanian nationalist who fought Serbs at every opportunity, including in southwestern Serbia after the signing of the Kumanovo Treaty that ended the Kosovo War.
Ethnic Albanians counter that Qazimi and other fighters of the Liberation Army of Presevo, Medvedja, and Bujanovac (UCPMB) — who borrowed tactics from the Kosovo Liberation Army (UCK) — were forgiven along with other fighters in an amnesty.
Serbia’s 2002 Amnesty Law forgave “Yugoslav citizens” reasonably suspected of terrorism in Presevo, Medvedja, and Bujanovac between January 1999 and May 2001, when separatists were battling Yugoslav Army forces.
Rights groups say many egregious human rights violations on both sides remain unsolved, including guerrilla fighters’ abuses and disappearances and torture alleged against Serbian special forces and pro-Belgrade paramilitaries.
A veteran of the Croatian and Bosnian wars against Serb forces and a former UCK fighter, Qazimi died under still-unexplained circumstances on May 24, 2001.
The Humanitarian Law Center (HLC), an NGO created to document wartime atrocities that has offices in Belgrade and Pristina, says Qazimi was killed by sniper fire near the village of Lucane.
He was a key figure in peace negotiations with the Yugoslav government and was participating in preparations for a cease-fire in the weeks before his death, including an eventual demobilization, according to the HLC.
Veliki Trnovac
The Serbian head of the coordination body for the region at the time, Nebojsa Covic, called it an accident as Yugoslav forces were returning under a truce plan.
Many ethnic Albanians revere Qazimi as someone who made sacrifices for future generations and they point to the amnesty that pardoned him and other combatants before Serbian law, even posthumously.
Mustafa, of the Albanian National Council, said it’s “unacceptable to call [Qazimi] an Albanian terrorist.”
“If all these people are amnestied, that means the state has in some way acknowledged that their revolt was just and that it was the amnesty that gave them the opportunity for reconciliation,” Mustafa said.
There are already three other, smaller memorials to Qazimi in Veliki Trnovac. One is at his gravesite, another on a plaque at the entrance to the town, and one at a modest “museum” that displays the car he was in and the clothes he was purportedly wearing when he died.
The mostly ethnic Albanian inhabitants of the town of Bujanovac even mark “Commander Lleshi Days” every year.
Other monuments to figures from the war years have caused trouble in the past.
In 2013, around 200 police were called in to dismantle a marble monument in Presevo to 27 UCPMB fighters who died in the conflict, over fiery resistance from ethnic Albanian politicians.
In that case, the monument had reportedly been erected on public property without permission from the state Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments, based in the city of Nis.
Socialist leader and then-Prime Minister Ivica Dacic at the time called the Presevo monument “a provocation to which the state must react.”
Current Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic also called for the removal of the UCPMB monument.
It was eventually moved to the courtyard of a nearby mosque, where it still stands.
Other efforts at monuments to war dead have created similar disputes.
A Serbian law on war memorials gives jurisdiction over the decisions of public monuments to the Labor, Employment, Veteran, and Social Affairs Ministry. But the planned Veliki Trnovac “memorial complex” to Qazimi is unlikely to fall under its bailiwick, since it is slated to stand on ground that belongs to a local mosque.
The ministry is due to respond to Milicevic’s request for a stance by May 19.
Written by Andy Heil based on reporting by Branko Vuckovic
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European Union member Austria said on April 20 that it plans to send 651,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech coronavirus vaccine to six countries in the Western Balkans by August as part of an EU scheme to provide assistance to neighboring countries and Africa.
Vienna said that this first distribution of doses may be followed by others.
The European Commission in January announced plans for a vaccine-sharing mechanism, with Austria serving as the mechanism’s coordinator for the Western Balkans.
Among the six Western Balkans countries, Serbia has one of the highest vaccination rates in Europe.
But the other five — Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Kosovo have had less success. The shortage of vaccines has even led to street protests in Bosnia.
“With this initiative we are showing that we are not leaving the region behind,” Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg told a news conference.
Schallenberg, whose government faces growing public frustration with the slow pace of vaccinations in his own country, said the doses will not be taken away from Austria’s quota.
“There is absolutely no connection here to the provision of vaccines in Austria and in other (EU) member states,” he said.
“These doses are not from a national quota. These are vaccine doses that the EU explicitly secured from the beginning for the purpose of passing them on to partners.”
Schallenberg said the vaccines will be distributed from early next month based on which countries need them most.
Bosnia will get the biggest share with 214,000 doses, followed by Albania with 145,000, and North Macedonia with 119,000. Serbia is last with 36,000.
With reporting by Reuters
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NOVI SAD, Serbia — A Serbian broadcast journalist is in the hospital after being beaten by unidentified assailants in the northern city of Novi Sad, the latest in a string of attacks against media workers in the Balkan country.
Dasko Milinovic said in a tweet that he was tear-gassed and beaten with metal bars early on April 16 by two hooded men who then fled the scene.
The attack was condemned by Prime Ministe Ana Brnabic, who called it a “terrible and inadmissible” occurrence and vowed that the attackers will be “severely punished.”
Serbia, which is formally seeking European Union membership, is under growing pressure from the bloc to improve press freedoms and safety for reporters, especially for those investigating crime and corruption.
Local police told RFE/RL that they were investigating the incident in which Milinovic suffered “minor injuries,” according to a medical report quoted by the police.
Milinovic and his colleague, Mladen Urdarevic, host a daily satirical show called Alarm on their Internet radio station.
Following the attack, Milinovic wrote on Twitter that his state was good and blamed the attack on what he called “fascists.”
“I’m fine. Fascists are stupid as hell. I was tear-gassed and hit in the arm three times. Thanks for caring. Death to fascism!” Milinovic wrote.
The Independent Association of Journalists of Vojvodina (NDNV) called for the perpetrators of the attack to be brought to justice.
“This is another incident in a very short period of time in which journalists were directly attacked,” the NDVD said.
“Barbaric attacks show how seriously endangered the physical security of journalists and media workers in Serbia is today,” NDVD said, adding that such attacks were “a direct consequence of the inaction of state institutions, which do not solve attacks on journalists.”
Brnabic, speaking to journalists in Belgrade on April 16, said that the attack represented “a red line, which must not be crossed in a civilized society.”
In its latest report on Serbia, the EU said that “cases of threats, intimidation, and violence against journalists are still a source of serious concern.”
In February, a Serbian court sentenced Dragoljub Simonovic, the former mayor of a Belgrade suburb, to more than four years in prison for being behind a 2018 arson attack on the home of investigative reporter Milan Iovanovic.
President Aleksandar Vucic, who has been Serbia’s president since 2017, has faced accusations of curbing media freedoms and democracy.
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The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has published a survey that it says shows that illegal fishing and trade in wild sturgeon is happening in the lower Danube region on a “rather serious scale.”
Poaching and the illegal trade of meat and caviar are often cited as major threats to many sturgeon populations worldwide, but the conservation group said that its survey, made public on April 12, provides “first-time evidence of the actual scale” of the threats in the lower Danube, specifically in Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine.
The WWF said that nearly one-third of the samples of sturgeon products bought through the survey were illegal, while 214 cases of poaching-related incidents were recorded by authorities.
“This is the first assessment of the volume of sturgeon poaching and trade along the lower Danube and Black Sea — and even if we have to assume that we found just the tip of the iceberg, it shows how serious the impact on the last wild sturgeons still is and how crucial our fight is to save them,” WWF project manager Jutta Jahrl said in a statement.
The methodology of the survey, titled Evidence For Trafficking Of Critically Endangered Sturgeons In The Lower Danube Region, combined official data on poaching activities and the results of a “large-scale” market survey and forensic analysis of meat and caviar samples in Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine between October 2016 and July 2020, according to the WWF.
It said a total of 145 samples were collected at different locations from sturgeon populations that share the same migratory routes along the entire trade chain on the Lower Danube and in the northwestern Black Sea region.
Testing points included retailers such as shops, restaurants, local markets, and fishermen, and all samples underwent DNA and isotope analysis that the environmental nongovernmental organization said proved that wild sturgeon products were being sold in Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, and Ukraine.
Of the samples tested, 27 (19 percent) proved to be from wild sturgeon — 25 were meat and two were caviar.
Seventeen samples of caviar (29 percent of all caviar samples) were “sold without compliance” with mandatory regulations of the international Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
In one case, meat sold as farmed was proven to be wild. In several other cases products declared as wild sturgeon proved to be farmed, or to be meat from European catfish or Nile perch, which WWF said indicated “a worrying consumer demand for illegal, wild-caught sturgeon products.”
All fishing and trade of wild Danube sturgeon species was prohibited in Bulgaria, Romania, and Ukraine during the time period under study, and only the catch of sterlet measuring above 40 centimeters was allowed in Serbia until the end of 2018.
WWF said a total of 214 cases of illegal poaching-related incidents were recorded in the three other countries — 82 cases in Romania, 82 in Bulgaria, and 50 in Ukraine — between January 2016 and December 2020.
The WWF cited a number of recommendations to tackle poaching and the illegal trade of sturgeon, including control of CITES caviar labelling requirements, improved interagency cooperation and coordination, increased border controls, use of “state-of-the-art” forensic analysis, and conducting more and recurrent market surveys.
“The survival of these highly threatened wild sturgeon species in Central and Eastern Europe is dependent on continuous and increased efforts to reduce the threat of wild sturgeon trafficking,” it said.
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UEFA, the governing body of soccer in Europe, has asked the Serbian Football Association (FSS) to investigate alleged match-fixing.
FSS spokesman Milan Vukovic said in an April 11 statement that “we have received certain information from UEFA suggesting possible irregularities pointing to breach of integrity in some games.”
He added: “The FSS has opened proceedings but at this time we cannot reveal more details. We will inform the public about our findings in due course.”
Serbia’s Sport Klub television reported that UEFA had tracked “enormous” bets that were placed on two matches played in March.
Sport Klub added that UEFA tracked betting patterns in both Europe and Asia that included large sums placed on final scores during live betting.
“Players on two teams gave advantage to their opponents, thus securing huge profits to people who made bets,” Sport Klub said.
Based on reporting by Reuters and AFP
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Several thousand people protested in Belgrade on April 10th in front of the Serbian Parliament to demand a more vigorous government response to environmental damage caused by industries and pollution due to aging power plants and water systems.
The protest was organized by more than 60 environmental organizations and movements, RFE/RL’s Balkan Service reported. Ahead of the protest, the organizations signed a proclamation addressed to the authorities with 13 demands.
Among them are the preservation of rivers and the suspension of small hydroelectric power plant projects. The organizations are also demanding that the government find solutions to the problem of air pollution and measures to protect forests and green areas.
Speakers at the event, which organizers called an “eco uprising,” said Serbia needs development, but not the kind that causes pollution and leads to deforestation.
“This is our country!” said Aleksandar Jovanovic, one of the protest leaders. “You are all welcome — the Russians and Chinese, Americans. But under one condition: there must be no poisoning of our children.”
The protest also opposed new mining projects, including a plan to mine lithium in western Serbia, which environmentalists fear will destroy natural habitats.
After the speeches, protesters marched through central Belgrade. People from several towns in Serbia carried banners with messages such as, “Young people are leaving Serbia because they cannot breathe,” “Cut corruption and crime, not forests!,” and “Stop killing our rivers and nature.”
The protest, which took place despite restrictions to control the spread of the coronavirus, was also attended by green activists from Bosnia-Herzegovina and Montenegro, who emphasized the importance of unity across the Balkans and called on people not to allow governments to divide them.
The pan-Balkan association of various environmental movements began four years ago, as part of the fight against the construction of small hydroelectric power plants in protected areas.
According to the Serbian Ministry of Environmental Protection, by the end of 2019 more than 100 small hydroelectric power plants had been built, including 18 in protected areas.
The problem of excessive air pollution in 14 cities and municipalities in Serbia has also been raised by the groups that protested in Belgrade.
In most of these cities the limits on values of suspended particles have been exceeded, according to the European Environmental Protection Agency’s 2019 report.
Much of the air pollution comes from outdated coal power plants, but activists also accused Serbian authorities of turning a blind eye to pollution generated by foreign-funded projects.
Organizers of the protest also expressed concerns about drinking water. The Institute for Public Health noted in 2019 that 50 water supply systems in urban areas have faulty drinking water.
Hours before the demonstration the Ministry of Environmental Protection insisted that the government has launched projects aimed at finding long-term solutions to pollution.
Environment Minister Irena Vujovic described the protest as political, saying organizers wanted to make “quick political gains” rather than work to solve problems.
With reporting by Gordana Cosic of RFE/RL’s Balkan Service, Reuters, AP, and dpa
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Several thousand people blocked traffic in front of the Serbian parliament on April 10 in a protest against the lack of government action to prevent pollution by heavy industry. Serbia is ranked among Europe’s most polluted countries and its reliance on coal for heating and electricity has had a devastating effect on its air quality. Protesters, who came to Belgrade from all over Serbia, held banners reading “Cut corruption and crime, not forests,” and “Young people are leaving because they cannot breathe.” The protest called “Eco Uprising” was also attended by green activists from Bosnia-Herzegovina and Montenegro who emphasized the importance of unity across the Balkans.
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Amnesty International says some measures to tackle the coronavirus pandemic have aggravated existing patterns of abuses and inequalities in Europe and Central Asia, where a number of governments used the crisis “as a smokescreen for power grabs, clampdowns on freedoms, and a pretext to ignore human rights obligations.”
Government responses to COVID-19 “exposed the human cost of social exclusion, inequality, and state overreach,” the London-based watchdog said in its annual report released on April 7.
According to the report, The State of the World’s Human Rights, close to half of all countries in the region have imposed states of emergency related to COVID-19, with governments restricting rights such as freedom of movement, expression, and peaceful assembly.
The enforcement of lockdowns and other public health measures “disproportionately” hit marginalized individuals and groups who were targeted with violence, identity checks, quarantines, and fines.
Roma and people on the move, including refugees and asylum seekers, were placed under discriminatory “forced quarantines” in Bulgaria, Cyprus, France, Greece, Hungary, Russia, Serbia, and Slovakia.
Law enforcement officials unlawfully used force along with other violations in Belgium, France, Georgia, Greece, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Poland, Romania, and Spain.
In Azerbaijan, arrests on politically motivated charges intensified “under the pretext” of containing the pandemic.
In countries where freedoms were already severely circumscribed, last year saw further restrictions.
Russian authorities “moved beyond organizations, stigmatizing individuals also as ‘foreign agents’ and clamped down further on single person pickets.”
Meanwhile, authorities in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan adopted or proposed new restrictive laws on assembly.
Belarusian police responded to mass protests triggered by allegations of election fraud with “massive and unprecedented violence, torture and other ill-treatment.”
“Independent voices were brutally suppressed as arbitrary arrests, politically motivated prosecutions and other reprisals escalated against opposition candidates and their supporters, political and civil society activists and independent media,” the report said.
Across the region, governments in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, France, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan “misused existing and new legislation to curtail freedom of expression.”
Governments also took insufficient measures to protect journalists and whistle-blowers, including health workers, and sometimes targeted those who criticized government responses to the pandemic. This was the case in Albania, Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.
In Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, medical workers “did not dare speak out against already egregious freedom of expression restrictions.”
Erosion Of Judicial Independence
Amnesty International said that governments in Poland, Hungary, Turkey, and elsewhere continued to take steps in 2020 that eroded the independence of the judiciary. This included disciplining judges or interfering with their appointment for demonstrating independence, criticizing the authorities, or passing judgments that went against the wishes of the government.
In Russia and in “much” of Eastern Europe and Central Asia, violations of the right to a fair trial remained “widespread” and the authorities cited the pandemic to deny detainees meetings with lawyers and prohibit public observation of trials.
In Belarus, “all semblance of adherence to the right to a fair trial and accountability was eroded.”
“Not only were killings and torture of peaceful protesters not investigated, but authorities made every effort to halt or obstruct attempts by victims of violations to file complaints against perpetrators,” the report said.
Human Rights In Conflict Zones
According to Amnesty International, conflicts in countries that made up the former Soviet Union continued to “hold back” human development and regional cooperation.
In Georgia, Russia and the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia continued to restrict freedom of movement with the rest of the county, including through the further installation of physical barriers.
The de facto authorities in Moldova’s breakaway Transdniester region introduced restrictions on travel from government-controlled territory, which affected medical provisions to the local population.
And in eastern Ukraine, both Ukrainian government forces and Russia-backed separatists also imposed restrictions on travel across the contact line, with scores of people suffering lack of access to health care, pensions, and workplaces.
Last fall’s armed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan resulted in more than 5,000 deaths and saw all sides using cluster munitions banned under international humanitarian law, as well as heavy explosive weapons with wide-area effects in densely populated civilian areas.
Both Azerbaijani and Armenian forces also “committed war crimes including extrajudicial execution, torture of captives and desecration of corpses of opposing forces.”
Shrinking of Human Rights Defenders’ Space
Amnesty International’s report said some governments in Europe and Central Asia further limited the space for human rights defenders and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) through “restrictive laws and policies, and stigmatizing rhetoric.”
This “thinned the ranks of civil society through financial attrition, as funding streams from individuals, foundations, businesses and governments dried up as a consequence of COVID-19-related economic hardship.”
The Kazakh and Russian governments continued moves to silence NGOs through smear campaigns.
Authorities in Kazakhstan threatened over a dozen human rights NGOs with suspension based on alleged reporting violations around foreign income.
Peaceful protesters, human rights defenders, and civic and political activists in Russia faced arrests and prosecution.
In Kyrgyzstan, proposed amendments to NGO legislation created “onerous” financial reporting requirements, while “restrictive new NGO legislation was mooted” in Bulgaria, Greece, Poland, and Serbia.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic has been vaccinated with the Chinese-developed Sinopharm vaccine in a televised event aimed at encouraging skeptical Serbians to get an injection against COVID-19.
While Belgrade’s procurement of vaccines has been widely lauded abroad, anti-vaccine sentiment in the country has so far left millions of doses arriving in that Balkan state unspoken for, despite a fresh wave of coronavirus infections.
“I received the vaccine, and I feel great,” Vucic, 51, said via Instagram. “Thank you our great health workers. Thank you our Chinese brothers.”
Vucic has publicly chided the European Union over its approach to the pandemic, despite tens of millions of dollars in emergency health-care assistance to non-member Serbia.
He has also aggressively touted cooperation with Beijing and Moscow as his administration was arranging major shipments of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine and two Chinese vaccines, Sinopharm and Sinovac.
Serbia has also acquired supplies of the Pfizer/BioNTech and AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccines.
With more than 1.5 million Serbians already having gotten at least one injection, it is among Europe’s leaders among national vaccine rollouts. But dogged resistance and mistrust have left the sign-up for vaccines stalled despite Serbia’s population of nearly 7 million people continuing to suffer heavily, along with other Balkan states.
Last month, Serbian officials opened their vaccination effort to foreigners who wanted to come and get vaccinated there.
With reporting by AP and The Washington Post
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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Then and now photographs of the April 1941 “terror bombing” that forever changed the face of the Serbian capital.
Click or tap on the images to reveal the same place in 2021.
The Old Palace in central Belgrade, which once featured cupolas and an elaborate entrance gate. After the 1941 bombing, the palace was rebuilt without the decorative flourishes.
Belgrade’s Old Palace was one of several buildings shattered by Nazi bombs on April 6, 1941. The air raid destroyed much of the center of the capital, killed thousands of people, and wiped out much of the published cultural heritage of Serbia when the National Library burned to the ground.
Republic Square lies largely in ruins after the bombing.
The attack that targeted central Belgrade, which had no apparent military objective, was ordered by Nazi leader Adolf Hitler after a coup overthrew Yugoslavia’s royal regent, Prince Peter, in late March 1941.
Obliterated buildings near the Belgrade Fortress
Before the coup, Yugoslavia had come under intense pressure to align itself with fascist Germany, as Yugoslavia’s neighbors Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania had done.
An apartment block in a Belgrade suburb lies in ruins. Only the building on the far right remains the same.
Shortly after Yugoslavia signed a pact with Nazi Germany and her allies — seen as the “lesser of two evils” compared to the inevitable invasion if Yugoslavia had refused — senior Yugoslav Air Force officials overthrew Prince Peter.
The iconic Hotel Moscow (right) barely escaped destruction during the bombing.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill responded to news of the coup by saying: “Early this morning, the Yugoslav nation found its soul.
A revolution has taken place in Belgrade, and the ministers who but yesterday signed away the honor and freedom of the country are reported to be under arrest.
This patriotic movement arises from the wrath of a valiant and warlike race at the betrayal of their country by the weakness of their rulers and the foul intrigues of the Axis powers.”People walk along a street near the Danube River on which several buildings were wiped out.
Some believe British intelligence was involved in the coup, but England had no concrete way to help Yugoslavia.
The coup was reportedly popular with many Belgrade locals who chanted “better graves than to be slaves.”Hitler condemned thousands of Belgraders to exactly that fate when he ordered a Nazi response to the coup of “merciless severity.”
A destroyed building stands in downtown Belgrade after the bombing.
The building housing Yugoslavia’s Defense Ministry replaced the ruined structure in 1965 and was itself blasted by NATO bombs in 1999. It is itself now mostly unused.
Italian war correspondent and novelist Curzio Malaparte said the waves of bombings on April 6 caused the ground to shake “as if it were an earthquake.” The correspondent recalled that “houses hit each other, there was a terrible crash of collapsing walls and [broken windows] falling on the sidewalks.”
A destroyed tram sits on a road alongside the Belgrade Fortress.
In the pauses between the German bombing runs, Malaparte described “devastating, terrified screams, lamentations, moans, curses, and the roar of a distraught people…”
The main entrance to Belgrade’s train station, which was gutted by explosions and fire caused by incendiary bombs.
After Belgrade’s zoo was hit, Churchill wrote that “out of the nightmare of smoke and fire came the maddened animals released from their shattered cages…”
Damaged buildings opposite Belgrade’s main train station
The photo above and several others in this gallery were made by an Italian soldier who was part of the fascist invasion of Yugoslavia and arrived in Belgrade shortly after the bombing.
The gap left by a large building that was wiped out during the bombing was filled with a new structure.
After Belgrade was occupied on April 12, some 375,000 Yugoslav soldiers became Nazi prisoners of war.
Jewish men were rounded up by the Nazis and forced to clear the rubble left in their city.
A man accused of being an anti-Nazi “partisan” hangs from a lamppost in central Belgrade.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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It’s a census year, virtually, like no other.
Nearly all of the world’s national statistical snapshots this year will be skewed by distance working and learning, travel bans, and other household anomalies brought on by lockdowns in one of the most transformative global health crises in human history.
With COVID-19 still a serious threat, governments and census organizers face stark challenges that arise with the decennial tallies.
Data collection that began last week in England, Wales, and the Czech Republic is, for the first time, mostly electronic and online. Internet servers in the Czech Republic were briefly overwhelmed.
Russia is due to gather all of its data in April for the third national census under President Vladimir Putin, who will have overseen each of his country’s post-Soviet censuses — highlighting population decline fed partly by cronyism and denied opportunity.
The United States is still readying its 2020 census following a Supreme Court challenge over the counting of noncitizens and other delays, as well as concerns about deliberate disruption.
Meanwhile, in the Balkans, a handful of census efforts have been postponed indefinitely or placed on last-minute hold because questions of ethnicity and nationality remain especially sensitive since the violent breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
After decades of steady emigration for aspiring EU states in the Western Balkans, statistical overviews that will shape public and private life for a generation are pivotal for populations with newly won sovereignty or recognition and sizable minorities that identify with a neighboring state.
Bosnia-Herzegovina, which is still governed under a structure set out by the international Dayton accords 25 years ago, is the exception because it managed to conduct a census in 2013.
Kosovo has already postponed its nationwide headcount until at least 2022 in the face of political paralysis and logistical obstacles at least partly stemming from COVID-19.
But from Belgrade to Podgorica to Skopje, three other former Yugoslav republics in a region synonymous with cultural and historical fragmentation are offering fresh reminders of how fraught a census can be.
North Macedonia in March began an initial phase of its census-taking for Macedonians abroad before abruptly postponing its scheduled April launch of data gathering until September.
Serbia and Montenegro outwardly hope to hold their censuses after postponements of their own, with the stakes high for political and ethnic reasons.
Each has treaded carefully amid potentially divisive cross-border political pronouncements with ethnic components that threaten to undermine confidence in representative government and infrastructure planning.
North Macedonia
Registering abroad had already begun in March for the census of North Macedonia, which comes just two years since the country was renamed to assuage the cultural and territorial concerns of neighboring Greece.
Counting within North Macedonia was scheduled to begin on April 1 and continue for three weeks.
But Prime Minister Zoran Zaev announced on March 29 after a meeting with the main opposition leader that they had agreed to delay the enumeration until September, citing a surge of coronavirus infections and a vaccine shortage.
It was an abrupt reversal for Zaev, who had recently demanded the census go ahead despite opposition complaints that the pandemic threatened its accuracy.
“Probably some countries can afford to postpone, but they have a census from 10 years ago and we haven’t had a census for almost 20 years,” Zaev said.
The lack of reliable census data, he said, puts institutions “in the position of working in a fog, in the unknown.”
One of the major questions Skopje’s census should answer is the ethnic makeup of the country, including its sizable ethnic Albanian population.
Ethnic Albanians are generally estimated to make up around one-quarter of North Macedonia’s 2.1 million people.
Some minority rights in North Macedonia, including the inclusion of official languages, are dependent on a group composing at least 20 percent of the local population.
There have already been notable calls from ethnic Albanians within North Macedonia’s opposition and in neighboring Kosovo for ethnic Albanians to make their mark on the tally.
Arber Ademi is a leading member of the junior coalition party in North Macedonia that represents ethnic Albanians, the Democratic Union for Integration (DUI). Ademi has already threatened to discount the results of the census if Albanians don’t reach the 20 percent mark.
In neighboring Kosovo, one of the first actions that Albin Kurti took after being elected prime minister this month was to appeal to ethnic Albanians in North Macedonia to participate in the census.
An Albanian nationalist, Kurti has led the upstart Self-Determination (Vetevendosje) party to successive electoral upsets — in 2019 and again in February. Tens of thousands of diaspora ballots, in a country of under 2 million people that allows noncitizens of Kosovar descent to vote, were crucial to those victories.
“Since even with the current constitution, the political rights of the citizens in Northern Macedonia are dictated and derived from the numbers, the registration of every citizen is extremely important,” Kurti said in a Facebook post.
Aiming a statement at a neighboring country’s census might have seemed like a curious opening gambit for a prime minister.
But Kosovar President Vjosa Osmani did the same.
And the very next day, North Macedonia’s First Deputy Prime Minister Artan Grubi — an ethnic Albanian — went to Kosovo to seemingly urge further public participation.
Kurti’s main domestic opponent, Democratic Party of Kosovo acting Chairman Enver Hoxhaj, responded that North Macedonia’s census was more than “technical” but rather “a very important political process.”
We are not interfering in the [Montenegrin] census…but it’s important for us that the Serbian people don’t disappear and disappear.”
It was a clear riposte to Prime Minister Zaev’s attempt to assure minorities that “no one can challenge…acquired rights of minority peoples,” regardless of census results that he has downplayed as “a statistical operation for administrative needs and planning.”
Ethnic Albanians in North Macedonia must “prove through statistics that they are to the Balkans what the Germans are to Europe,” Hoxhaj said.
Sefer Selimi, founding head of the Democracy Lab, a nonprofit organization aimed at “strengthening democratic values” in North Macedonia and the Balkans, warned that opposition attacks on the census could undermine a crucial process that should lead to more sound government policies.
“These obstructions are influenced by nationalism and set us back at least 10 years,” Selimi told RFE/RL’s Balkan Service.
It is partly a result of making “the rights of one group of citizens dependent on their population,” he said.
Selimi cited a political narrative that has emerged portraying the opposition — and ethnic Albanians — as beholden to “extreme national movements” seeking to unfairly eclipse the “famous 20 percent” in an effort to get overrepresented.
Montenegro
In Montenegro, which declared independence from Serbia in 2006, a recently elected administration has already delayed a census scheduled for April to later this year.
But organizational obstacles, a lack of political consensus, and implied risks to Podgorica’s authority could imperil even that time frame.
Montenegro’s government was elected in August on a razor-thin margin and includes disparate groups with a Serbian nationalist grouping at its head for the first time in three decades.
The senior coalition alliance of Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapic, For The Future Of Montenegro, a pro-Serb and pro-Serbian Orthodox alliance, faces increasing pressure from junior allies to commit to a full four-year cabinet to replace the current government of technocrats.
Such a transition could expose political fissures, including with ethnic Albanian Deputy Prime Minister Dritan Abazovic and his Black On White bloc.
Meanwhile, because of their shared culture, religion, and history, many Montenegrins remain reluctant to shed the Serb identity. The resulting morass of national identity and politics is sure to affect any census campaign.
And the pressure, even from abroad, to assert minority presence is strong.
Belgrade has long sought to leverage Serb identity in Montenegro’s populace to reinforce its national presence in a splintered neighborhood and boost regional influence.
Even without the census, 2021 would be dynamic. With the census, we should expect heightened tensions and an aggressive campaign of both blocs.”
A billboard campaign during the last Montenegrin census, in 2011, showed Serbian tennis superstar Novak Djokovic encouraging respondents to “be what you are.” In the end, nearly 29 percent of those in Montenegro declared themselves Serbs in that count.
At least twice in the past 18 months, Serbian President Aleskandar Vucic has publicly stressed the importance of Serb participation in Montenegro’s census.
“We are not interfering in the census…but it’s important for us that the Serbian people don’t disappear and disappear,” Vucic said last May.
Months later, in August, he said it was essential “to keep Serb numbers up in Montenegro because then we can say that we succeeded in helping our people.”
Respondents to Montenegro’s census can skip questions about nationality, language, and religion. But doing so risks legislatively determined rights for minorities with significant representation.
“Even without the census, 2021 would be dynamic,” Daliborka Uljarevic, who heads the NGO Center for Civic Education in Podgorica, said recently. “With the census, we should expect heightened tensions and an aggressive campaign of both blocs.”
In February, Krivokapic further stirred the ethno-nationalist pot by backing a path to citizenship for people who have lived there for decades but hold foreign citizenship.
Krivokapic’s government is unlikely to muster the votes for such a change — if it is even permissible. But it struck a nerve in a country still scarred by the breakup of Yugoslavia and animated by its own declaration of sovereignty just 14 years ago.
Serbia
Back in Vucic’s own country, meanwhile, officials have already postponed census work from April to October, citing the obstacles to recruiting and training enumerators in a pandemic.
Serbia has lost hundreds of thousands of people to emigration since its last official count in 2011, with many complaining of political stagnation, corruption and state capture by Vucic and his allies, and a lack of economic opportunity.
The most serious challenges to its upcoming census might lie in convincing all sides of its credibility.
An opposition boycott of the rescheduled national elections in June 2020, during a reopening amid the pandemic, left Vucic’s Progressive Party with a supermajority that mostly excludes serious political oversight of the census process.
But officials will also have to overcome an ethnically fueled credibility problem.
Around 6 million of Serbia’s roughly 7 million people declared themselves Serbs in the last census.
Minority groups included more than a quarter of a million ethnic Hungarians, followed by 150,000 or so Roma, nearly as many Bosniaks, and other much smaller contingents.
But many Bosniaks and ethnic Albanians boycotted the enumeration a decade ago, complaining that language and distribution of census takers were contributing to an undercount.
It is unclear whether this time will be any different.
Shaip Kamberi, a lawmaker for the Albanian Democratic Alternative-United Valley grouping, told RFE/RL that ethnic Albanian political representatives were still unsure and would wait to see how local elections were conducted in Presevo, in southern Serbia, on March 28.
“Our path to the boycott in 2011 was a consequence of the state not wanting to listen to our demands,” Kamberi said. “At this initial stage, we left it to the National Council of the Albanian national minority to establish contact with the [Serbian national] Bureau of Statistics and agree on terms.”
In addition to technical hurdles, Kamberi cited the de facto disenfranchisement of many ethnic Albanians forced out by violence in the late 1990s between Serbian forces and Kosovar independence fighters.
Decades later, he said, many are still in legal limbo despite being among the demands in a “Seven-Point Plan” lodged with the Serbian government in 2013.
Serbia’s Statistical Office told RFE/RL’s Balkan Service that they are cooperating with the official coordination body of national councils of minorities to identify key problems.
Meetings are scheduled with representatives of local self-government and with such national councils, the office said.
“We will certainly talk to everyone in order to remove any doubts about the census,” the office said. “It is in everyone’s interest to collect quality census data.”
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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He scrabbled in the vacuum of Czechoslovakia’s postcommunist, early 1990s with photocopiers and office supplies. He rose to the moneyed heights of the Czech business world, becoming the country’s wealthiest businessman, a media magnate, publicity-shy philanthropist, and government whisperer.
Petr Kellner, who died over the weekend in a helicopter crash on a ski trip in Alaska, was both admired and feared, as his company PPF Group morphed in a financial behemoth with holdings ranging from insurance to real estate to telecommunications, from Central Europe to China and beyond.
Bloomberg put his wealth at $15.7 billion, Forbes at $17.5 billion.
U.S. authorities say, for the moment, that there is nothing to suggest anything other than an accident — possibly human error, possibly mechanical problems. Federal aviation officials and state police are still investigating. Four other people including the pilot also died in the incident.
https://dailydispatch.dps.alaska.gov/Home/DisplayIncident?incidentNumber=AK21031918Kellner’s death reverberated in the Czech Republic, where the reports led newscasts and the top of newspaper websites all day on March 29, and throughout much of Central Europe.
Here’s a quick look at who Kellner was.
Privatization
Trained in economics, Kellner, 56, cut his capitalist teeth after the 1989 Velvet Revolution that brought an end to communism in the country. His official biography says that, for several years, he worked as an office supply salesman, including in the import and servicing of photocopiers.
He also garnered sufficient financial capital, and business connections, to start an investment fund to invest in the state assets being privatized by the postcommunist government through a “voucher-for-shares” scheme.
The Prvni Privatizacni Fond (PPF) became his main investment vehicle, buying stock and shares in more than 200 enterprises, and later acquiring a 20 percent stake in the country’s largest insurer, Ceska Pojistovna.
PPF propelled Kellner on a yearslong buying spree of assets not only in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, after the Czechoslovak breakup, but in other Central and Eastern European countries. PPF Group’s holdings grew to include biotechnology, media broadcasting, real estate, banking, and consumer finance. The group is a major player in Russia’s home lending industry, and has also invested in Russia’s booming agriculture and farming industry.
A 2007 deal between Ceska Pojistovna and Italy’s Generali created an insurance giant for Central and Eastern Europe, adding further to Kellner’s fortune when he exited the partnership in 2012 for 2.5 billion euros.
Media Magnate
PPF Group’s telecom holdings include majority ownership of the O2 cell phone and Internet operations in the Czech Republic in 2014. In 2018, the company closed on a 2.8 billion-euro purchase of the telecom assets of Norwegian-owned Telenor located in Hungary, Bulgaria, Montenegro, and Serbia.
https://www.ppf.eu/en/press-releases/ppf-group-completes-its-acquisition-of-telenors-telecommunications-assets-in-cee-countriesBut it was his holdings of media and TV companies that garnered not only profits but also scrutiny. In 2004, PPF Group restructured the largest domestic Czech television channel, TV Nova, and then sold it to Central European Media Enterprises, a U.S.-based holding company known as CME. Kellner later joined the company’s board.
Over the next decade, CME bought — and sold — media and distribution companies in Romania. And in 2019, PPF Group said it would buy out the other shareholders in CME — including U.S. media giant Time Warner — to become CME’s sole owner, a deal estimated to be valued at $2.1 billion.
https://www.ppf.eu/en/press-releases/ppf-signs-agreement-to-acquire-cmeThe company’s media operations now over cover five European countries, with more than 30 TV channels, which PPF says reach over 45 million viewers. The company also has four radio stations in Bulgaria.
The CME purchase by Kellner’s group, and the larger trend of independent news media groups being bought or controlled by powerful business interests, prompted a Czech media watchdog group to issue a public warning.
“Recent years have shown that the situation where the largest entrepreneurs and their groups buy the most influential media in the country fundamentally undermines confidence in their independence and puts pressure on the journalists themselves,” the Endowment Fund for Independent Journalism said in 2019. “Petr Kellner’s latest transaction continues on this path.”
https://www.nfnz.cz/aktuality/vyjadreni-nfnz-ke-koupi-cme-skupinou-ppf/A Czech In China
One of PPF Group’s biggest profit-making engines has been one of its earliest investments: the consumer lending division, Home Credit.
In the late 1990s, Kellner used Home Credit to buy up banks in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, and then later expanded into Russia, where it quickly gained a dominant position, focusing on quick, uncomplicated consumer lending.
Two years after first testing the water in China, Home Credit in 2010 became that country’s first fully-licensed foreign consumer lender, harnessing the country’s economic growth and Chinese consumers’ appetite for everything from mortgages and easy retail loans on things like cell phones, cars, or home computers. The strategy has paid off, making Home Credit a major source of value for PPF Group overall.
https://www.ft.com/content/49095500-fcac-11df-bfdd-00144feab49aAccording to a 2019 report by the Czech online news site Aktualne.cz, Home Credit has lent about 300 billion Czech crowns (US$13 billion) in China since first entering the market.
Home Credit’s push into China hit major road bumps in late 2019 and 2020 when the country, and consumers, went into lockdown, amid the government’s efforts to curtail the COVID-19 pandemic.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-31/how-a-bet-on-china-s-consumers-is-backfiring-for-richest-czech?sref=Uk5xAhoOBack home, PPF Group’s Chinese investments are reflected in Kellner’s support for closer Czech ties with China. He has accompanied President Milos Zeman on business junkets to China, something that has drawn controversy in some Czech political circles.
In 2019, Aktualne.cz reported that Home Credit had secretly hired a public relations company to burnish China’s image within the Czech Republic.
https://zpravy.aktualne.cz/domaci/home-credit-ppf-petr-kellner-campaign-china/r~265579361bf511ea926e0cc47ab5f122/The company, and Kellner, were battered by criticism from liberal Czech lawmakers, who are sympathetic to Taiwan’s fights with Beijing and opposed to China’s heavy-handed Communism. Home Credit officials later said the goal of the campaign was merely to “weaken extreme positions in the public sphere” about business and life in China.
PPF’s Future
The Czech Republic’s most prominent political figures, including Zeman and Prime Minister Andrej Babis, publicly mourned the news of Kellner’s death.
https://twitter.com/AndrejBabis/status/1376420780850970627?s=20Investors and analysts meanwhile turned to the question of what Kellner’s death would mean for the future of PPF Group, of which he held 99 percent ownership.
Home Credit had been planning to go public through an initial public offering in Hong Kong, plans that were already shelved due to the pandemic. PPF Group earlier this year indicated it was looking to consolidate some of its European banking operations and its digital start-up bank Air Bank.
Among those who analysts say are contenders to take the leadership of PPF Group are Jean-Pascal Duvieusart, who is CEO of Home Credit, and, along with Ladislav Bartonicek, is the other holder of outstanding shares not held by Kellner.
In a statement, PPF Group, which is now formally headquartered in the Netherlands, expressed “deepest grief” at the death of its founder.
“His professional life was known for his incredible work ethic and creativity, but his private life belonged to his family,” the company said.
Kellner was well known for shunning publicity and gave few media interviews over the years. He and his family had a well-known philanthropic foundation that donated millions for Czech educational causes.
In the company’s most recent annual report, Kellner offered his own musings about his company, and the previous year, when the Czech Republic, and the rest of the world, was battered by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We know that every crisis is also an opportunity, and that problems are there to be confronted and resolved. Life is what we make of it. What our work brings to others. The real and tangible outcomes we can see behind us indicate what lies ahead,” he said in the 2019 report.
https://www.ppf.eu/files/ppf-vz2019-eng-web.pdfThis post was originally published on Radio Free.
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The Czech Republic’s richest man, Petr Kellner, whose financial group has deep roots across Eastern Europe and Central Asia, has died in a helicopter crash in Alaska.
“With great sadness, PPF announces that on March 27, 2021, majority shareholder of PPF Mr. Petr Kellner tragically passed away in a helicopter accident in the Alaskan mountains,” the group said in a short statement on March 29.
It said that the crash, which claimed five lives, was under investigation. Alaska State Troopers said one survivor was listed in serious but stable condition.
U.S. media has reported that the accident occurred when the helicopter, which was taking the group on a heli-skiing excursion, crashed near the Knik Glacier in Alaska.
The 56-year-old Kellner, the world’s 68th-wealthiest person according to Forbes, died along with another guest of the Tordrillo Mountain Lodge, Benjamin Larochaix, also of the Czech Republic, two of the lodge’s guides, and the pilot of the helicopter, the reports said, citing officials.
Kellner, whose wealth was estimated by Forbes magazine at $17.5 billion, started his business selling copy machines and founded the PPF Group investment company with partners in 1991, two years after the fall of communism in the former Czechoslovakia, to take part in the country’s scheme to privatize state-owned firms.
PPF Group went on to grow in finance, telecommunications, manufacturing, media, and engineering in businesses spanning mainly Europe, Asia, and the United States. Its assets amounted to nearly $52 billion by mid-2020.
The group includes Home Credit International, the world’s largest nonbanking consumer lender with extensive activities on the Russian and Chinese markets.
PPF last year acquired the CME media group operating TV companies in Central and Eastern Europe. In 2018, it became the sole owner of Telenor’s telecommunications assets in Hungary, Bulgaria, Montenegro, and Serbia.
The group has donated millions of respirators and masks and thousands of coronavirus testing kits to help countries in the coronavirus pandemic, according to Czech media reports.
Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis offered his condolences to Kellner’s family, saying on Twitter: “Unbelievable tragedy. I am very sorry.”
Kellner’s daughter Anna Kellnerova, a two-time Czech junior equestrian show-jumping champion, said his funeral will be held “with only close family members.”
With reporting by The New York Times, AP, Reuters, and AFP
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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Almost 8,000 business owners and their employees from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, and North Macedonia traveled to Belgrade and Nis in Serbia on March 27 to receive vaccinations against COVID-19. Some 10,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine were secured by the Western Balkans Regional Investment Forum in cooperation with the Serbian government. Although Kosovo is also part of the forum, its Chamber of Commerce refused to participate.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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Migrants and refugees at the Krnjaca Asylum Center in Belgrade received their first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine against the coronavirus on March 26. Sixty-seven out of the 336 people at the center near the Serbian capital applied for the vaccination. Immunization is taking place at 18 reception centers across Serbia, with a total of 500 adults registered for vaccination out of 4,883 refugees and migrants.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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A few hundred people, mostly without protective face masks, demonstrated in central Belgrade on March 20 against the latest restrictive measures aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus. Placards reading “Stop COVID Terror” could be seen alongside banners displaying anti-migrant messages and opposing Kosovo’s independence from Serbia. Speakers introduced as environmental activists also spoke against a lithium mining project that is reportedly planned by the international metals firm Rio Tinto. The rally took place despite a ban against gatherings of more than five people.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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The European Union’s special envoy has warned Serbia and Kosovo that they must resume talks on normalizing ties if they want to make progress toward membership in the bloc.
Miroslav Lajcak arrived in Serbia’s capital, Belgrade, on March 3 after previously visiting Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, at the start of his tour in the region.
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008 but Belgrade does not recognize this. The EU has brokered negotiations to normalize ties but after a White House summit and talks in Brussels in September, the dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo has stalled.
After a meeting with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, Lajcak said that EU member states expect the two sides to move on.
“Dialogue is key for both sides to advance on their European path,” Lajcak told a news conference. “We have no interest to preserve a status quo and we are ready to bring the process to a successful end as fast as the two sides are ready to go.”
Lajcak added that the EU is working closely with the United States with a common goal for Serbia and Kosovo in sight, which is membership in the EU.
Most EU nations and the U.S. have recognized Kosovo’s independence, but not by Serbia’s allies Russia and China.
Serbia was forced to cede control over Kosovo in 1999 after a U.S.-led NATO campaign ended Belgrade’s crackdown against Kosovo’s ethnic Albanian separatists. More than 10,000 people died in the 1998-99 Kosovo conflict.
Vucic said after his meeting with Lajcak that Serbia is ready to return to the talks and insists on reaching a compromise solution.
“We believe that a compromise agreement means no one gets everything and everyone gets enough,” Vucic said.
With reporting by AP
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
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This post was originally published on Radio Free.