Authors: Adam LeBor
The letter on the following pages was handed to Slobodan Milosevic shortly before he finally agreed to surrender in the early morning of 1 April 2001. The typewritten annexes on the reverse were added in response to Milosevic's demand for guarantees that he would not be extradited to the ICTY at The Hague. Cedomir Jovanovic, who signed Annexes I and II under the authorisation of Zoran Djindjic, later told the Belgrade press that the guarantee that Milosevic would not be extradited to the ICTY only applied to the date on the document, i.e. 31 March 2001. A copy of this document was given to the author by Mira Markovic. The translation was prepared by Vesna Peric-Zimjonic and the author.
We, the signatories of this document, as senior officials of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) and Serbia, being clearly determined to establish and apply the rule of law, with the aim of preventing further unnecessary victims, hereby state:
The criminal proceedings before the Belgrade District Court against Slobodan Milosevic, former President of the Republic of Serbia, FRY, and President of the Socialist Party of Serbia, were not undertaken in response to the demand of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, but because of reasonable suspicion that he has committed a criminal act as defined in Article 26 of the FRY penal code, and will therefore be heard before the judicial organs of the FRY. We guarantee to Mr Slobodan Milosevic that he will have unimpeded communication with his family during the court proceedings.
The members of Mr Slobodan Milosevic's family have also been granted guarantees for their personal safety, and that of their property, as well as the right to use the residential premises at 11â15 Uzicka Street in Belgrade.
Belgrade
31 March 2001.
PRESIDENT
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Signature
Dr Vojislav Kostunica
PRESIDENT
Republic of Serbia
signature
Milan Milutinovic
President
Government of the Republic of Serbia [i.e. Serbian prime minister] Dr Zoran Djindjic
Slobodan Milosevic will not be handed over to any judical or other institution outside the country
Slobodan Milosevic is guaranteed the right of daily visits by members of his family.
Under the authorisation of Dr Zoran Djindjic, the president of the Serbian government, Annexes I and II are signed by
Cedomir Jovanovic
Belgrade, 31 March 2001
My thanks, firstly, go to those who granted me interviews, especially individuals from the former Yugoslavia. They gave their time generously, often at some emotional cost, relating the details of their lives and their involvement with Slobodan Milosevic and his regime, whether chosen or not. Such encounters have deepened my understanding of the complexities of his rise and fall, and of the destruction of Yugoslavia. Bleak subject matter aside, I have also been fortunate to experience many stimulating and enjoyable discussions in the cafés of Belgrade, Zagreb and Sarajevo.
I have benefited greatly from the guidance and advice of my editors at Bloomsbury: Bill Swainson, a steady hand at the tiller through sometimes dark and choppy waters, and Pascal Cariss, whose eagle-eye has helped hone a manuscript into a book, Katharina Bielenberg for her meticulous proof-reading and Douglas Matthews for his excellent index. Thanks also to Ruth Logan and Katherine Greenwood for keeping the wheels rolling. As ever, I am very grateful to my agent Laura Longrigg, always a source of encouragement and inspiration. Many thanks must go to my present and former colleagues at the Budapest International Press Centre, who have freely shared with me their knowledge and experience of reporting on the former Yugoslavia: Neil Barnett, Christopher Condon, Simon Evans, Jim Lowney, Mark Milstein, John Nadler, Erwin Tuil and Robert Wright. Their advice, input, good humour and steady supply of coffee â and occasionally stronger Balkan libations â is much appreciated. I am also grateful to Celia Hawkesworth of the School of Slavonic and East European Studies in London for her advice and expert knowledge, and to the Society of Authors for a generous grant.
The genesis of this book was my experience as a reporter for the
Independent
and
The Times
during the early 1990s, covering the Yugoslav wars. As a young and then inexperienced foreign correspondent I was fortunate to meet a fine group of colleagues. In places such as Sarajevo and Split, Vitez and Travnik, Zagreb and Belgrade, their comradeship
eased the passage of sometimes unnerving days and nights. They know who they are.
It would be near impossible to write a book of this kind without considerable local assistance. Many have been generous with their expertise, contacts and good offices. In Belgrade: the staff of the Belgrade Media Center, Charles Crawford, Mihailo Crnobrnja, Braca Grubacic, Tahir Hasanovic, Ljubica Markovic, Nebojsa Radic, Aleksandar Nenadovic, Seska Stanojlovic, Milos Vasic, Buca Zimjonic and especially, Mark Tomlinson. Thanks to Dragan Milanovic for an illuminating walk around Pozarevac. Thanks also to three fine journalists who have helped in many ways: Vesna Peric-Zimjonic, Daniel Sunter and Vlastimira Stankovic. In Zagreb: David Austin, Sanja Markusic, and especially Laura Irena Lui. In Ljubljana: Natasha Gorse. In Budapest: Agnes Csonka for virtuoso French translations, Hugh Martin for politesse at its best; Vesna Kojic for many hours of interpreting, Janet Garvey, Pablo Gorondi, Lutz Kleveman, David Landsmann, Dr Robert Ligeti, Dr Jancis Long, Djordje Radic, Rob Scott, Julius Strauss, Vladimir Vlaskalic, and also Dusan Mitevic for granting me a series of lengthy interviews.
Thanks to Tony Lang at Bestsellers bookshop for his support over the years, the same holds true for Roger Boyes in Berlin and Justin Leighton. In London: Sir John Birch, Adrian Brown, Yigal Chazan, Leonard Doyle for a steady supply of accreditation letters, Tim English at the BBC press office, Tim Judah, Dessa Trevisan and Francis Wheen. I am especially grateful to Norma Percy, Paul Mitchell, Angus Macqueen and the staff of Brook Lapping Associates for their generous provision of video tapes and transcripts of the six-part series
The Death of Yugoslavia
, an invaluable resource for any student of this period. In the United States my thanks go to Charles Lane and Peter Maass, and in Moscow, Matthew Chance and Ian Traynor. Several others in various cities have also helped with their knowledge and expertise, but have asked not to be named.
De a legnagyobb köszönettel életem fénysugáranak
,
Ligeti Katalinnak tartozom
.
1937 | Marriage of Svetozar and Stanislava Milosevic in Montenegro |
20 August 1941 | Birth of Slobodan Milosevic |
October 1944 | Tito's Partisans and Soviet Red Army liberate Belgrade |
1947 | Svetozar Milosevic returns to Montenegro |
June 1948 | Tito splits with Stalin |
January 1959 | Milosevic joins the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (Communist Party) |
1962 | Svetozar Milosevic commits suicide in Montenegro |
1965 | Milosevic marries Mirjana (Mira) Markovic Birth of Marija Milosevic |
1966 | Tito sacks his secret police chief, Aleksandar Rankovic |
1968 | Kosovo Albanians demonstrate in Pristina |
1971 | Crushing of the âCroatian spring' |
1974 | Stanislava Milosevic commits suicide Adoption of the Yugoslav constitution that devolved power to the republics, and boosted the status of the Serbian provinces of Kosovo and Voivodina Marko Milosevic born |
Early 1970s | Milosevic works at Tehnogas |
1978 | Milosevic appointed President of Beogradska Banka |
4 May 1980 | Tito dies |
1981 | Kosovo Albanians demonstrate |
1982 | Milosevic appointed head of the Belgrade Stari Grad (Old Town) Communist Party |
1983-84 | Milosevic serves on the Kreigher (reform) Commission |
1984 | Milosevic leaves Beogradska Banka for a full-time position as head of Belgrade Communist Party |
1986 | Milosevic appointed head of Serbian Communist Party Publication of the Memorandum by disaffected Serbian nationalist academics |
April 1987 | Milosevic travels to Kosovo Polje. Announces: âNo one should dare to beat you.' |
September 1987 | Eighth Session of the Serbian Communist Party |
October 1988 | âYoghurt revolution' in Voivodina |
November 1988 | Milosevic addresses mass demonstration in Belgrade |
March 1989 | Autonomy of Kosovo revoked |
May 1989 | Milosevic appointed Serbian President |
28 June 1989 | Milosevic speaks at the six hundredth anniversary of the battle of Kosovo Polje. |
January 1990 | Last congress of the Yugoslav Communist Party |
April 1990 | Franjo Tudjman's Croatian Democratic Union wins first multiparty elections. |
December 1990 | Milosevic's Socialist Party (formerly Communist) wins the first multiparty election in Serbia, Milosevic elected as Serbian President |
March 1991 | Anti-Milosevic demonstrations in Belgrade broken up by force Milosevic meets with Franjo Tudjman at Karadjordjevo to discuss partition of Bosnia |
May 1991 | Croatian police massacred at Borovo Selo |
25 June 1991 | Slovenia declares independence, triggers the first Yugoslav war Croatia declares independence |
Summer 1991 | War spread through Croatia |
19 October 1991 | Kosovo Albanians declare independence (unrecognised) |
November 1991 | Fall of Vukovar. Croatian POWs massacred by Serb victors |
March 1992 | Bosnian president Alija Izetbegovic declares the country independent War breaks out in Bosnia. Serb and Yugoslav forces begin ethnic cleansing |
June 1992 | Federal Yugoslavia formed, consisting only of Serbia and Montenegro |
Summer 1992 | Serb concentration camps set up in northern Bosnia |
December 1992 | Milosevic and Socialists win Serbian presidential and parliamentary election |
April 1993 | Bosnian Croats launch offensive against their (intermittent) former Muslim allies |
May 1993 | Bosnian Serbs reject Vance-Owen peace plan |
December 1993 | Serbian parliamentary elections, Socialists largest party |
March 1995 | Mira Markovic launches the Yugoslav United Left party |
July 1995 | Fall of Srebrenica. Bosnian Serbs massacre over 7,000 Muslim men |
August 1995 | Croat army recaptures Krajina. NATO bombs Bosnian Serbs |
November 1995 | US brokers the Dayton Peace Accords to end the war in Bosnia |
November 1996 | Socialist-led coalition wins Yugoslav federal elections |
Winter 1996-1997 | Daily anti-Milosevic demonstrations in Belgrade after local election results are annulled. |
July 1997 | Milosevic appointed President of Yugoslavia |
September 1997 | Serbian parliamentary and presidential elections, leading to eventual âRed-Brown' coalition between Socialists and ultranationalists |
Autumn 1997 | First public appearances of the Kosovo Liberation Army |
February 1998 | Serbs destroy home of Adem Jashari, senior KLA leader |
Summer-autumn 1998 | Serb ethnic cleansing of Kosovo Albanians |
January 1999 | Serbs carry out Racak massacre of Kosovo Albanians |
March 1999 | NATO bombs Serbia, Serb forces launch massive ethnic cleansing of Kosovo Albanians |
27 May 1999 | Hague tribunal announces that Milosevic is indicted for war crimes |
June 1999 | Milosevic backs down, NATO forces enter Kosovo. Kosovo |
Albanians ethnically cleanse Serbs | |
January 2000 | Murder of paramilitary leader Zeljko Raznjatovic âArkan' |
August 2000 | Disappearance of Ivan Stambolic Opening of US Office of Yugoslav Affairs in Budapest |
September 2000 | Milosevic loses elections to Vojislav Kostunica, candidate of the Democratic Opposition |
5 October 2000 | Popular uprising topples Milosevic. Marko flees Serbia |
March 31 | Milosevic arrested at home in Belgrade |
28 June 2001 | Milosevic extradited to the ICTY at The Hague |
July 2001 | Milosevic appears in court, refuses to recognise jurisdiction |
February 2002 to time of writing (April 2003) | Trial of Milosevic at the ICTY |
January 2003 | Milan Milutinovic, former president of Serbia, surrenders to ICTY, pleads not guilty to crimes against humanity in Kosovo Rade Markovic is sentenced to seven years in prison for conspiracy to murder opposition leader Vuk Draskovic in 1999 |
February 2003 | New constitution for Union of Serbia and Montenegro adopted by Yugoslav parliament Biljana Plavsic, former Bosnian Serb leader, sentenced to eleven years in prison for crimes against humanity Former paramilitary leader Vojislav Seselj surrenders to ICTY Mira Markovic flees to Russia Assassination attempt on Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic |
March 2003 | Zoran Djindjic murdered by sniper in Belgrade Serb authorities arrest thousands in nationwide crackdown on organised crime including Svetlana Raznatovic (aka Ceca), widow of Arkan, Jovica Stanisic and Franko Simatovic. JSO is disbanded Vojislav Seselj pleads not guilty to war crimes and crimes against humanity |
April 2003 | Serbia-Montenegro admitted to Council of Europe State funeral of Ivan Stambolic, after his body is discovered in Serbia Serbian police issue arrest warrant for Mira Markovic in connection with the murder of Ivan Stambolic, also for Marko Milosevic on charges of assault Nasir Oric, leader of Muslim defenders of Srebrenica is arrested and extradited to the ICTY |