.contact us |.about us
News > International News ... ...
Search:
    Advertisement
Serbians fail again to elect a president
( 2003-11-17 09:18) (AP)

Serbians failed for the third time in a year Sunday to elect a president because of low voter turnout, triggering a political crisis in the Balkan republic.

An ultranationalist with close ties to Slobodan Milosevic led the ballot, underlining Serbians' discontent with the pro-Western government that ousted the dictator in 2000 and the republic's drift back to Milosevic's nationalism, which triggered the Balkan wars in the 1990s.

About 39 percent of registered voters cast ballots, exit polls showed, less than the 50 percent needed to validate the vote, said the independent Center for Free Elections and Democracy.

Electoral staff watch an elderly couple cast their ballots at the polling station, Nov. 16 2003 in Belgrade, during presidential elections in Serbia. Serbia holds the republic's third elections in a year, as the previous two attempts failed due to low turnout of voters.  [AP]
Tomislav Nikolic was ahead with 46.5 percent of vote, the unofficial results showed. Dragoljub Micunovic, a pro-democracy candidate who led pre-election polls, trailed with only 35 percent. Four other candidates shared the rest of the vote.

Official results were expected Monday, but the center's results have proved reliable in the past.

The failed election left Serbia in a power vacuum. Parliament was dissolved last week because the pro-Western government lost parliamentary support, leaving no one to call a presidential new vote. New general elections were set for Dec. 28.

Serbia's Vice Prime Minister Zarko Korac described the election results as a "tragedy for Serbia."

"We are entering a dangerous, dramatic, phase of our future," Korac said.

Stjepan Gredelj, an independent election analyst who monitored the vote, feared "an institutional chaos" without a president for the republic.

Voters stayed away from the polls because of disillusionment with the country's leadership, which has failed to bring economic progress to Serbia following a decade of war that led to Yugoslavia's breakup and and the ouster of Milosevic, he said.

Labor protests are on the rise, and people are generally dissatisfied with their living standards in Serbia, which with the much smaller republic of Montenegro formed Serbia-Montenegro, the country that replaced Yugoslavia.

"The politicians are getting what they deserve," Gredelj said.

The last two elections, at the end of last year, also foundered because low voter turnout. The post of president has been vacant since a Milosevic ally, Milan Milutinovic, stepped down in January to face war crimes charges at a U.N. court in The Hague, the Netherlands.

Nikolic, 51, of the pro-Milosevic Serbian Radical party, had been banking that disillusionment with democracy and the West would help his cause. He has pledged to have no more extraditions of Serbs to the U.N. tribunal to answer war-crimes charges committed during last decade's Balkan wars fomented by Milosevic.

Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj is in The Hague awaiting his war crimes trial together with Milosevic and several other former top Serbian leaders.

Aleksandar Vucic, an official of Nikolic's Radical Party, said the election results presented an "immense triumph" and predicted that the party would do well in the December parliamentary elections.

"The Serbian Radical Party has become the single strongest party," he said. "I am sure this heralds Serbia's political future."

There are no more armed conflicts in the region, but the threat of instability remains amid the social and political crises.

In March, Serbia's first post-Milosevic prime minister, Zoran Djindjic, the republic's first democratic leader since World War II, was assassinated, allegedly by crime bosses and Milosevic-era paramilitary commanders.

One violent incident related to the vote was reported in Kosovo, the province that is part of Serbia but has been under U.N. and NATO authority since the 1998-1999 war over the territory between Serbian government troops and ethnic Albanian separatists.

Shortly after midnight, attackers smashed windows at the only polling station in the province's capital, Pristina, said Dragan Stolic, an election supervisor. It was one of a few places where Kosovo's remaining Serbs could vote. The province's ethnic Albanians, who want independence for Kosovo, ignored the elections.

 
Close  
   
  Today's Top News   Top International News
   
+Roadway accidents become top killer
( 2003-11-17)
+Overhaul of tax, fiscal systems on the way
( 2003-11-17)
+Family: Match found for adopted Chinese girl
( 2003-11-16)
+'My other car is a helicopter'
( 2003-11-17)
+Regulation puts test-tube triplets under strict control
( 2003-11-16)
+Purported Saddam tape urges Iraqis to fight US
( 2003-11-17)
+Notes claim al-Qaeda behind Turkey bombs
( 2003-11-17)
+Serbians fail again to elect a president
( 2003-11-17)
+Two U.S. helicopters down in Iraq, at least 17 dead
( 2003-11-16)
+Suicide car bombers kill 23 in Turkey
( 2003-11-15)
   
  Go to Another Section  
     
 
 
     
  Article Tools  
     
 
 
     
  Related Articles  
     
 

+Kosovo Albanians, Serbs meet for first time since war
2003-10-14

 
     
   
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved