Serbia and the West
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  Serbia and the West
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Poll
Question: Which direction do you think Serbia will take in the May 11th election, especially in the wake of Kosovo'
#1
Turn towards Russia, its traditional ally
 
#2
Remain set on working to eventually join the EU
 
#3
Other -please elaborate
 
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Partisan results

Total Voters: 10

Author Topic: Serbia and the West  (Read 936 times)
Frodo
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« on: March 15, 2008, 08:20:55 PM »

Serbia calls crucial May 11 election

By Ellie Tzortzi
Thu Mar 13, 2008 12:14pm EDT


BELGRADE, March 13 (Reuters) - Serbian President Boris Tadic disbanded parliament on Thursday and called a May 11 general election which could decide whether Serbia pursues a place in the European Union or cuts itself off from the bloc.

The 10-month old coalition collapsed at the weekend, with nationalist Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica blaming deep differences with pro-Western liberals over EU membership and Kosovo, whose secession from Serbia has been backed by the EU.

"The election is a democratic way for citizens to say how Serbia should develop in the years to come," said pro-Western Tadic, announcing what is widely seen as Serbia's most important vote since the fall of Slobodan Milosevic in 2000.

Tadic, also head of the pro-Western Democratic Party, appealed for "a fair campaign" in a peaceful atmosphere so that Serbia gets stable and efficient institutions.

The election will be a close race between Tadic's Democrats and the nationalist Radicals, Serbia's strongest party, who are seen to have gained further on Serb bitterness over Western backing for Kosovo's secession last month.

"May 11 will be when we determine the path that Serbia takes," said deputy PM Bozidar Djelic of the Democrats. "We need new enthusiasm and a clearly determined path towards the EU."

The Radicals are expected to focus their campaign on Kosovo, the benefits of close ties to non-Western powers, such as Russia, and the failure of eight years-worth of pro-Western governments to deliver on their promises of a better life.

The forecast is that neither grouping will get more than 45 percent, producing a hung parliament. Kostunica, who appears to have lost voters to both rival blocs and has just 10 percent support, could emerge as kingmaker.

Analysts say lengthy coalition talks would delay reforms and erode investor confidence, already shaken by Belgrade's recall of ambassadors from states that recognised Serbia's former province and by protests against embassies and foreign firms.

Standard & Poor's revised its outlook on the country to negative earlier this week, noting the impact that an anti-EU government would have on macroeconomic policy and reforms.

"We are concerned that Serbia is slipping away," Bulgarian Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev said in Brussels in a comment to Reuters ahead of an EU summit.

"The political situation in Serbia is creating an atmosphere of national rhetoric...which means possibly in the end Serbia would voluntarily isolate itself from the EU."
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Kaine for Senate '18
benconstine
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« Reply #1 on: March 15, 2008, 08:28:28 PM »

It will probably turn towards Russia.
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GMantis
Dessie Potter
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« Reply #2 on: March 16, 2008, 04:22:06 AM »

They will likely turn against the West: every action has its reaction.
 
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