Professional Documents
Culture Documents
by
Florian Bieber (ed.)
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CONTENTS Page
Preface 7
Florian Bieber Montenegrin politics since the disintegration
of Yugoslavia 11
Bibliography 183
5
Florian Bieber
Preface
Montenegro has been a much-neglected part of the former Yugoslavia. Few books and ar-
ticles, and only occasional media coverage, have marked this probably least-known re-
public of the former Yugoslavia in the western perception. 1 Responsible for this has been
its small size (less than 700 000 people) and that Montenegro has been spared of war (the
only republic of former Yugoslavia to have avoided conflict). The current volume is not
written in anticipation of conflict, but is rather aimed at filling an important gap in under-
standing former Yugoslavia during the past decade.
It is exactly the absence of conflict in Montenegro which means that Montenegro merits
more, rather than less, attention. One of the underlying threads of this book is the attempt
to understand why Montenegro has been spared of the wars which devastated large parts
of the former Yugoslavia. The answer is not simple. In the early 1990s, Montenegro sup-
ported the Serbian government’s war aims in Croatia and Bosnia; it was thus an accom-
plice (albeit partly unwilling) to the crimes committed in its western neighbours. At the
same time, a strong anti-war movement, which rejected the extreme Serbian nationalism
of the early 1990s, also existed. Later, Montenegro broke with Serbia only shortly before
Serbia became immersed in the Kosovo war, engaging in the large-scale expulsion of Al-
banians and experiencing NATO bombing.
There is, however, more than a collection of ‘lucky’ circumstances to explain why
Montenegro has evaded war. Considerably better inter-ethnic relations have prevented an
escalation of majority-minority relations, which would have been conducive to conflict or
war, as František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová explain in their chapter on minorities.
In addition, national homogenisation – the process in which the different nations of
former Yugoslavia were mobilised by the political elites to put ‘national interests’ before
all other concerns – was only partially successful in Montenegro. Montenegro has seen
competition between two national identities during the past decade, reflecting an earlier
division among the inhabitants of Montenegro as exemplified in Šerbo Rastoder’s survey
of Montenegrin history. The dispute between Serbian and Montenegrin national identity
was, essentially, a conflict over who Montenegrins are, a question posed by Srđa Pav-
lović in his chapter on identity. This debate is far from being resolved and, as such, it has
confronted the majority population with each other during the 1990s, rather than against
the ‘other’, as happened elsewhere in former Yugoslavia.
The debates over identity were themselves deeply political in nature, shaping party
choices and informing the preference for the kind of state in which the citizens of Mon-
tenegro wanted to live. The issue of independence and secession from Yugoslavia was
certain in the other republics of former Yugoslavia, at least among the dominant popula-
tion group, but Montenegro was the exception. In the first half of the 1990s, a clear major-
ity of Montenegrins supported a joint state with Serbia. Only in the second half of the past
decade has public opinion begun to turn in favour of independence. Throughout this pe-
1 The Library of Congress and Amazon list only a handful of books published on Montenegro
since 1990. The same can be said for French or German language publications.
7
Florian Bieber
riod, however, there has been no clear majority for either choice. Montenegrins are deeply
divided over which state will best represent their interests. In addition to identity, the de-
bates over the Republic’s status have been considerably informed by economic considera-
tions, as Beáta Huszka explores in her chapter on the dispute over Montenegrin independ-
ence in recent times. In addition to the intra-Montenegrin debates over relations with
Serbia, the process of redefining ties with Serbia have shaped Yugoslav and Montenegrin
politics. The agreement reached in March 2002 through European Union mediation and
pressure has put an end to ‘Yugoslavia’ and has established ‘Serbia and Montenegro’ as a
(possibly) temporary solution. As Wim van Meurs explains, the Belgrade Agreement has
the potential to transform relations between the two republics; at the same time, it might
also be a mere stopgap before Montenegro achieves independence after the three-year
moratorium contained in the Agreement.
The debates over Montenegro’s status have been the primary political issue for years
while not being the most important concern for most Montenegrins. A number of opinion
polls over the past few years have repeatedly shown that the economy and jobs are by far
the most important issues. 2 In fact, the ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’ in 1988/9, which
brought to power a new pro-Serb leadership, was motivated not only by nationalism but
also as much by economic concerns. As one of the less-developed and poorer republics of
Yugoslavia, the precarious economic position of Montenegro has been a continuous issue.
Milo Đukanović sidelined the conservative forces within his ruling party in 1997 by en-
gaging in the rhetoric of reform. In the process, some steps towards the transformation of
the economy and society have been made. Nevertheless, as Dragan Đurić analyses in his
chapter on the economic and social situation facing Montenegro, the reforms have ex-
hausted themselves largely in rhetoric and have failed to bring about the desired improve-
ment in citizens’ quality of life. 3
The elections of October 2002 signalled continuity with the sustained success of the
Democratic Party of Socialists – in power without interruption since the end of commu-
nism – and the stable and nearly even division of Montenegrin society into the supporters
and the opponents of independence.
More than ten years since the disintegration of Yugoslavia, Montenegro is both lucky
and unfortunate. It is lucky because it has avoided war and has not seen inter-ethnic rela-
tions poisoned by ethno-nationalist mobilization as elsewhere in former Yugoslavia. It is
unfortunate because its economic and social situation leaves it in a precarious position,
with not much chance for improvement in the short or the medium term, irrespective of
whether Montenegro is independent or remains part of a union with Serbia. It is also un-
fortunate because the political divide over status vis-à-vis Serbia has papered over other,
more pragmatic, divisions in the political system, making reforms more difficult to ac-
2 See opinion polls by CEDEM, CfT and NDI. In March 2001, for example, during the elec-
tion campaign and in the midst of bitter discussions on independence, 49% of those surveyed
listed the economy as the most important issue while only one-third mentioned the status
question. When combining first and second priorities, the distance increases to 87% to 52%.
See NDI: Economy is Most Important Issue for Prospective Voters in Montenegro, Podgo-
rica, 28.3.2001.
3 In 2002, over 80% live on the edge of subsistence while 20% live in poverty. See Senko
Cabarkapa: ‘Đukanović Seeks Another Chance’, IWPR Balkan Crisis Report 17.10.2002.
8
Preface
complish. In fact, this deadlock might have been both Montenegro’s reason for avoiding
conflict and also its reason for the particularly difficult road towards democratisation and
economic transition.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the editors of the South-East Europe Review , Peter Scherrer and
Calvin Allen, for supporting this project and making possible this timely production.
Thanks are also due to Ivana Prazić for translating into English the historical review by
Šerbo Rastoder.
9
Florian Bieber
11
Florian Bieber
The response to the earthquake in 1979, which devastated parts of the Montenegrin coast,
including Kotor and Budva, is a case in point. Montenegro was excluded from the inter-re-
publican debates over compensation. The final aid package was considerably smaller than
hoped for: Slovenia and Croatia had argued for more aid, while Serbia kept support to a min-
imum. Given that Serbia was deemed responsible for the lower than expected quantity of
aid, it strengthened the more anti-Serb wing within the Montenegrin leadership. 6
1 On the issue of Montenegrin identity, see Srđa Pavlović: ‘Who are Montenegrins?’ this volume.
2 Sabrina Petra Ramet: Nationalism and Federalism in Yugoslavia. 1962-1991, 2nd Ed.
(Bloomington, In.: Indiana University Press, 1992), p. 116; Marko Andrijevich: ‘Politics in
Montenegro’, in Sabrina Petra Ramet and L.S. Adamovich (eds.): Beyond Yugoslavia: Politics,
Economics and Culture in a Shattered Community (Boulder, Co.: Westview, 1995), p. 210.
3 Source: Federal Statistical Office. The number of Roma is almost certainly higher than offi-
cial numbers indicate.
4 Ramet: Nationalism and Federalism, pp. 150-158.
5 John B. Allcock: ‘Montenegro’, in David Turnock and Francis W. Carter (eds.): The States
of Eastern Europe. South-Eastern Europe, Vol. 2 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000), p. 185.
6 Ramet: Nationalism and Federalism, p. 160.
12
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
The most pressing problem of the Montenegrin leadership in the 1980s, however, had
been the economic crisis of the Republic. The Republic, together with Kosovo and Mace-
donia, was forced to declare bankruptcy in 1987. At the time, it had only 40 000 workers,
with 6 000 having lost their job during the economic crisis of the late 1980s. 7 It was
against this backdrop that the mass protests took place which eventually led Montenegro
to join Serbia during the disintegration of Yugoslavia.
The Communist era came to an end as part of the so-called ‘anti-bureaucratic revolu-
tions’ which were instigated by the new strong man of Serbia, Slobodan Milo šević. After
taking power in Serbia in 1987/8 in an internal coup against his mentor, Ivan Stamboli ć,
he sought to extend his influence to the two autonomous provinces, Vojvodina and Kos-
ovo, as well as Bosnia and Montenegro. Breaking with the previous rules of not conduct-
ing intra-party conflicts in public, Milo šević used mass mobilisation in well-organised
protests to put pressure on his opponents. This tool was not so much invented by
Milošević as represented the instrumentalisation of extra-party grievances and dissatisfac-
tion which could have lead to protests, as occurred in the rest of central and eastern Eu-
rope in autumn 1989.
Mobilisation for the protests was facilitated by the regime’s control of the media, as
well as the whole apparatus of the Serbian party and authorities, including party members,
reserve offices and secret services. 8 Milovan Đilas assessed the protests accordingly:
Though there are aggressive groups in the Serbian movement, this is Communist nationalism
and it is highly disciplined… We call them spontaneous. But it is partly organised spontaneity. 9
After the protests – in conjunction with an internal party coup – had succeeded in repla-
cing the political leadership of Vojvodina in summer 1988 with new pro- Milošević authori-
ties, the demonstrations focused on Montenegro. Here, protests had taken place throughout
Summer 1988 with several tens of thousands of participants. A few days after the fall of the
Vojvodina leadership, the Montenegrin leadership drew on a massive police response to
suppress the protests. The use of the police led to harsh attacks not only by the Serbian lea-
dership,10 but also by Serbian intellectuals. The writer and leading nationalist intellectual
Dobrica Ćosić, for example, wrote a letter of protest to the Montenegrin leadership in the
name of the Committee for the Defence of the Freedom of Thought and Expression: 11
We appeal to your civic consciousness and political responsibility, to which you are bound by
law and your oath of office, to do everything in order to establish democratic relations and the
7 Branka Magaš: The Destruction of Yugoslavia, Tracking the Break-Up, 1980-92 (Verso:
London/New York, 1993), p. 170.
8 Vreme 10.2.1992; Laura Silber and Allan Little: The Death of Yugoslavia (London: Penguin/
BBC, 1995), p. 61.
9 Quoted from David Selbourne: Death of the Dark Hero, Eastern Europe 1987-1990 (Lon-
don, 1991), p. 109.
10 Veljko Vujačić: Communism and Nationalism in Russia and Serbia, unpublished Ph.D. dis-
sertation (Berkeley: University of California, 1995). p. 347.
11 The Committee originally protested against human rights violations in Yugoslavia but, in the cli-
mate of nationalist mobilisation, focused increasingly on the ‘mistreatment’ of Serbs. A number
of its members were leading nationalist intellectuals, including Ćosić and Kosta Čavoški.
13
Florian Bieber
rule of law in your republic, that you prevent any limitation on free democratic and patriotic
thought and aspirations, that you prevent violence against citizens who are not satisfied with
the existing state of society and who are concerned about the future. 12 (author’s emphasis)
The Montenegrin party leadership, however, rejected all criticism and won a vote of
confidence in October 1988, 13 although renewed protests on 11 and 12 January 1989
spelled the coming of the end; the leadership resigned and was replaced by a new elite
loyal to Milošević.14
The ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’ was driven by the nationalist mobilisation which
took place in the late 1980s among Serbs. 15 Without exploring in detail the reasons for the
ideology behind this mobilisation, it should be mentioned that the movement emerged as a
result of four factors:
a. broad societal groups dissatisfied with the economic, social and political status quo
b. nationalist intellectuals
c. ethnic entrepreneurs in the League of Communists of Serbia
d. an institutional system in late communist Yugoslavia which was conducive to the pri-
macy of ethnicity.16
The concepts in the new Serbian nationalism were developed by Serbian intellectuals in
the 1970s and 1980s, gaining prominence with the publication of an (incomplete) memo-
randum of the Serbian Academic of Arts and Sciences (Srpska akademija nauka i umet-
nosti, SANU). This memorandum, echoing existing concepts, suggested that Serbs were
disadvantaged in Communist Yugoslavia. Focusing specifically on the supposed discrimi-
nation against Serbs in Kosovo, leading to their mass-emigration, the memorandum as-
serted that Serbs were also suffering in the other republics (and especially in Croatia). 17
The memorandum introduced two ideas into the Yugoslav discourse which were to remain
an important aspect of Serbian nationalism during the 1990s. Firstly, Yugoslavia as it ex-
isted was considered to be disadvantaging Serbs. Secondly, Serbs were portrayed as the
victims of other Yugoslav nations. The ideas formulated in the memorandum and propa-
gated by a significant number of Serbian intellectuals, both in opposition and in pro-regime
circles and in key cultural institutions, fell on fertile ground as Kosovo had been on the
public agenda in Serbia since the suppressed protests of Kosovo Albanians in 1981 de-
14
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
manding that Kosovo be recognised as a republic within Yugoslavia. The media and Ser-
bian politics focused on Serbian emigration from the province and accused Albanians of
engaging in a deliberate and well-organised campaign against Kosovo Serbs. These unre-
solved grievances coincided with Serbian and Yugoslav party elites being unable to over-
come the deepening economic crisis and political vacuum after the death of Tito in 1980.
Against such a backdrop, Milošević rose to power on the promise to protect Kosovo
Serbs and to ‘correct’ the injustices of the Communist Yugoslav system. This national
movement, deliberately mobilised in the media, had only amorphous goals. The most im-
mediate goal was a re-centralisation of Yugoslavia and the overthrow of republican and
provincial elites which were portrayed as anti-Serb. 18 During the protests, the Montenegrin
elite was likened to Vuk Brankovi ć, the mythological Serbian traitor at the Kosovo battle in
1389, while a personality cult surrounding Milošević described him as a ‘saviour’. 19
The protests in Montenegro, as elsewhere in Yugoslavia, did not rest on Serbian nation-
alist demands alone, but also incorporated dissatisfaction with the economic and social de-
velopment of the country. 20 In 1987, Montenegro found itself in a severe economic crisis.
Massive job cuts threatened the employment of many workers in large enterprises in the
Republic.21 The protests of 8 October 1988 began as protests of workers demanding an
improvement in their job situation. During the course of the demonstrations, Kosovo
Serbs, who had been the backbone of the protests elsewhere in Yugoslavia that year,
joined them. Branka Maga š has described how, in a matter of days, the demonstrations
were transformed. In the beginning, the protestors demanded bread and work; by the end
of the same day, the message of the protests had already been transformed, praising
Milošević and branding the Montenegrin leadership as anti-Serb. 22 The social unrest
which was expressed here, as in the other Yugoslav republics and, a year later, elsewhere
in eastern Europe, had found a safety valve. Disappointment over the lack of reform,
bankrupt companies, inflation and job losses found their outlet through nationalism. The
absence of significant reform-oriented figures in the party leadership rendered more diffi-
cult the emergence of an alternative to nationalist mobilisation. The party leadership of
Montenegro, as had been the case in Vojvodina, Bosnia, Macedonia and Kosovo, could
offer no convincing programme of reform to counter the nationalist protests. Thus, as one
observer noted on a demonstration Belgrade – which could equally apply to Montenegro –
that the protesters ‘came as workers and went home as Serbs.’ 23
18 Nebojša Popov: ‘Le Populisme Serbe’, Les Temps Modernes Vol. 49 No. 573 (1994), pp. 22-
63; ‘Le Populisme Serbe (suite)’, Les Temps Modernes Vol. 49 No. 574 (1994), pp. 22-84.
19 Ivan Čolović: Bordell der Krieger. Folklore, Krieg und Politik (Osnabrück: Fibre, 1994),
pp. 11-26, 140.
20 Jens Reuter: ‘Inflation und sinkender Lebensstandard in Jugoslawien’, Südosteuropa Vol. 38
No. 10 (1989), pp. 565-572.
21 In Montenegro in 1988, the average spending on food amounted to 55.1% of salary, whereas
in Slovenia it was less than half this figure (26.9%). Wolfgang Oschlies: ‘Jugoslawien 1988 –
Eine kurze Bestandaufnahme’, Südosteuropa Vol. 38 No. 1 (1989), p. 21.
22 Magaš: The Destruction of Yugoslavia, pp. 170-171.
23 Jagoš Đuretić, quoted from Slavoljub Đukić: Između slave i anateme. Politička biografija
Slobodana Miloševića (Beograd: Filip Višnjić, 1994), p. 106. Ivan Čolović describes this
transformation on the basis of the slogans used by the demonstrators. Čolović: Bordell der
Krieger, pp. 138-142.
15
Florian Bieber
The overwhelming victory of the League had three reasons: Firstly, the ‘anti-bureau-
cratic revolution’ in the Republic had happened less than two years prior to the elections
24 Vladimir Goati: Izbori u SRJ od 1990 do 1998: volja građana ili izborna manipulacija
(Beograd: CeSID, 1999), p. 36.
25 For more on this, see František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová: ‘National Minorities in
Montenegro after the Break-up of Yugoslavia’, this volume.
26 Source: Vladimir Goati: Partije Srbije i Crne Gora u političkim borbama od 1990. do 2000.
(Bar: Conteco, 2000), p. 260.
16
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
and the Serbian nationalist movement in Montenegro, represented by the new leadership
of SK CG, Momir Bulatović and Milo Đukanović, continued to be genuinely popular
within the Republic, as was the case in Serbia in elections which took place at the same
time. Secondly, the Communist system, despite being discredited, was still more popular
than elsewhere.27 Thirdly, the conditions for the elections were hardly free and fair; infor-
mation about the political alternatives were limited and – where available – usually aimed
at discrediting the opposition. 28
In the presidential elections, which took place simultaneously, Momir Bulatović won in
the second round with 76.1% of the votes. In addition to the President, a four-member
presidency was elected, comprising one member of the SK CG, two members of the
United Reform Forces and one independent candidate. The presidency, which was later
abolished, was powerless; the President himself yielded even less power than the Serbian
President. The influence of Bulatović derived mostly from his leadership of the League of
Communists and support (and pressure) from Serbia. 29
Despite the resounding victory of the SK CG, the low turnout (76%) and the high num-
ber of abstentions (24.3%) point to some dissatisfaction and/or suspicion in the population
which did not translate into the electoral results. 30
The SK CG, which renamed itself the Democratic Party of Socialists 31 after the elec-
tions, pursued a double strategy. On the one side, it collaborated closely with the Socialist
Party of Serbia (Socijalistička Partija Srbije, SPS) and followed the general line of the
Serbian President; on the other, it sought to preserve some degree of Montenegrin sepa-
rateness, resisting the call for unification with Serbia which had been put forward force-
fully by some intellectuals and parties in the early 1990s. 32
Soon after the first elections, Montenegro found itself intrinsically involved in the war
in Croatia.33 After Croatia had declared its independence in June 1991, the country slowly
began sliding into war as a result of the escalating fighting between Serb paramilitaries,
the Yugoslav army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija, JNA) and the nascent Croatian army.
The aim of the JNA and the Serbian paramilitaries was to take control of parts of Croatia
where Serbs lived (as minority or majority) and attach these to Serbia. The fighting thus
first focused on Slavonia, Krajina, Lika and Kordun, far from the Montenegrin border. In
this first phase of the war, Montenegro was only indirectly involved, as its soldiers contin-
ued to be recruited to the army. 34
27 See Lenard J. Cohen: Broken Bonds. The Disintegration of Yugoslavia (Boulder, Co: West-
view, 1993), pp. 158-159.
28 Goati: Izbori u SRJ, pp. 34-40.
29 ibid., pp. 48.
30 ibid., pp. 29, 32.
31 For a self-presentation of the Party, see www.dps.cg.yu.
32 Ramet: Nationalism and Federalism, p. 212; Allcock: ‘Montenegro,’ p. 186.
33 On this, see the statements of Nikola Samardžić, Montenegrin Minister of Foreign Affairs in
1991/2 as a witness during the Milošević trial at the ICTY. See ICTY: ‘Transcripts Milošević,
Kosovo, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina (IT-02-54)’, The Hague, 8.10.2002, available at:
www.un.org/icty/ transe54/021008IT.htm.
34 Montenegrins were actually over-represented among army officers (6.2% compared to Mon-
tenegro’s 2.5% share of the Yugoslav population). Balkan War Report, January 1993, p. 6.
17
Florian Bieber
Montenegro, officially, did not support the war enthusiastically and withdrew its reser-
vists in October 1991 from Croatia. 35 At the same time, Montenegro also broke ranks with
Serbia during one of the international efforts to end the war. An EC-sponsored peace con-
ference for the former Yugoslavia in September-October 1991 in Geneva sought to secure
the support of the former Yugoslav republics for the Carrington Plan. The plan, named af-
ter the main European Community negotiator for Yugoslavia, foresaw an à la carte Yugo-
slavia from which the Republics could choose their degree of sovereignty and their partic-
ipation in joint Yugoslav institutions. Milošević opposed the plan as it would not reverse
the declaration of independence of Croatia and allowed only for very limited central con-
trol of the new state. Contrary to expectations, Momir Bulatović supported the plan after
receiving the backing of the Montenegrin parliament. 36 This policy shift came as a sur-
prise and shock to Serbia, which had expect to receive Montenegro’s support. The simul-
taneous demand of Bulatović to withdraw Montenegrin soldiers from the front in Croatia
led to Borisav Jovi ć, Serbian member of the Yugoslav presidency, exclaiming that ‘[t]his
is nothing short of treason.’ 37 The response of Milošević, reported by an EC diplomat dur-
ing a coincidental meeting with the Serbian President in the toilet, was that, ‘ Bulatović
will soon be dismissed of his functions…’ 38 Under pressure from nationalist politicians in
Montenegro (and Serbia) and under attack from the Serbian leadership as supported by the
media, Bulatović eventually went back on his support. 39 In the subsequent negotiations,
the Montenegrin and Serbian delegation insisted that old Yugoslavia would continue to
exist for those willing to partake of it, rather than endorse the creation of a new state, thus
undermining the plan for a new confederation. 40
The hesitation of the Montenegrin authorities stood in contrast to the enthusiastic par-
ticipation of Montenegrin soldiers and reservists in the JNA campaign to conquer the
Konavle region of Croatia. In October 1991, only a few Serbs lived in this area, which
stretched north from the Montenegrin border, but the Yugoslav army conquered most of
the Croatian coast between Neum, the Bosnian outlet to the Adriatic, and the Montenegrin
border, while it also laid siege to Dubrovnik. The army quickly managed to take most of
the smaller towns in the areas surrounding the old city, but the siege of Dubrovnik was a
major political defeat for the Yugoslav/Serb forces as the senseless shelling of the city
demonstrated the ruthlessness of the Serbian (and Montenegrin) leadership. In the area ad-
jacent to the Montenegrin border, extending to Cavtat, a resort in the proximity of Du-
brovnik, reservists who were largely Montenegrin engaged in a massive looting and pil-
laging campaign which left most villages in the area completely destroyed. 41 The
campaign was partly organised by the JNA in conjunction with officials in Montenegro
who sought to gain personally from it. 42
18
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
Despite the ferocious campaign of the JNA in Konavle, the only serious point of con-
tention for Montenegro with Croatia was the narrow Prevlaka peninsula. Prevlaka offi-
cially belonged to Croatia, but its strategic position, overlooking the entrance to the Boka
Kotorska – the Bay of Kotor – meant that control of the peninsula would allow for control
over entrance into the bay, including the only remaining naval base of the Yugoslav
army.43 In October 1992, a year after the beginning of the campaign, Yugoslav President
Dobrica Ćosić and Croat President Franjo Tu đman reached an agreement on the with-
drawal of JNA troops from the areas surrounding Dubrovnik and the demilitarisation of
Prevlaka under UN-supervision – until late 2002. 44
The advent of war also further polarised divisions within Montenegro over Montene-
grin identity and relations with Serbia. During the ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’, the old
authorities were branded as ‘anti-Serbian’ and ‘treacherous’. This discourse persisted
throughout the early 1990s, when the war in Croatia and Bosnia created a sharp contrast
between the supporters of Serb nationalism, who mostly supported the war in its early
stage, and the supporters of Montenegrin nationalism, who opposed it. In these confronta-
tions, the Serbian Orthodox Church played a particularly pronounced role due to the ex-
treme nationalism of Amfilohije Radovi ć, the Montenegrin archbishop of the Serbian Or-
thodox Church.45
Debates during autumn 1991 over the future of Montenegro exemplified the lines of
confrontation within the Republics politics. On the one side stood the Liberal Alliance of
Montenegro (Liberalni savez Crne Gore, LSCG), 46 which advocated Montenegrin inde-
pendence and which accused its opponents of being:
41 ibid., pp. 201-204; Nikola Samardžić remarked during the Milošević trial that the campaign
in Croatia, ‘…was an unjust war against Croatia, a war in which Montenegro disgraced itself
by putting itself in the service of the Yugoslav army and Slobodan Milošević, and this shame
will remain with us for perhaps another 100 years. Nothing more shameful has been done in
Montenegro in its history for many hundreds of years’, ICTY: ‘Transcripts Milošević, The
Hague, 8.10.2002, p. 1191, available at www.un.org/icty/transe54/021008IT.htm. Similarly
Đukanović apologised in 2000 for the role played by Montenegro: ‘I wish to request forgive-
ness from the citizens of the Republic of Croatia for all the suffering and material losses
inflicted during these tragic events by Montenegrins in the ranks of the Yugoslav Army.’
‘Montenegro Asking Forgiveness From Croatia,’ New York Times 25.6.2000.
42 Seki Radonjić: ‘Four Million Marks – for the ‘Liberator’’, AIM 31.5.1994.
43 Vreme 12.10.1992.
44 Velizar Brajović: ‘Peace in Prevlaka: So Why War in Dubrovnik?’ Balkan War Report
October 1992, p. 2. UN observers remain on the peninsula in 2002. Earlier attempts at a set-
tlement between Montenegro and Croatia have failed because of obstruction by the Yugo-
slav authorities. An agreement signed in December 2002 ended the UN presence and
foresaw the transformation of Prevlaka into a tourist resort. Beta, 11.12.2002.
45 Vreme 4.11.1991. See, for example: Jagnje božije i zvijer iz bezdana. Filosofija rata (Cetinje:
Svetigora, 1996). This volume contains contributions by Radovan Karadžić, scholars and a
number of clerics, especially from Montenegro. It seeks primarily to justify the Serbian war in
Bosnia and provide for a general ‘philosophical’ opposition to the anti-war literature published
in Yugoslavia. See Stjepan Gredelj: ‘Klerikalizam, etnofiletizam, antiekumenizam i (ne)tole-
rancija’, Sociologija Vol. 41 No. 2 (April-June 1999), pp. 157-158.
46 For a self-presentation of the Party, see www.lscg.crnagora.com/index.htm.
19
Florian Bieber
Against the separation of Montenegro from the Yugoslav chaos and madness. They are the ones
pushing us into the state whose very existence, framework and ethnic make-up are uncertain. 47
The Alliance, founded in Cetinje – the historical capital of Montenegro – which also be-
came the party’s stronghold, appealed to a separate Montenegrin identity and drew on the
historical legacy of independent Montenegro. Unlike most other independence/nationalist
movements, however, it neither advocated the use of force, nor did it express hostility to-
wards minorities. A strong theme in the rhetoric of the Alliance has been its critique of
Serbian nationalism, the participation of Montenegro in the war in Croatia and the Serbian
Orthodox Church. 48 In consequence, the party supported the re-establishment of the Mon-
tenegrin Orthodox Church in 1993 (see below) as a means of reaffirming the autonomy of
Montenegro. Otherwise, its programme emphasised liberal economic and social policies
which stood, however, in the background of the political debates during the 1990s. 49
The People’s Party stood at the other end of the political spectrum, advocating close ties
between Serbia and Montenegro, including at times even a merger of the two Republics.
The Party, founded by Novak Kilibarda, accused Bulatović over his acceptance of the
Carrington Plan and maintained close links with the Serbian Democratic Party (Srpska
demokratska Stranka, SDS) in Croatia and Bosnia; later on it also established close links
with the Democratic Party of Serbia (Demokratska stranka Srbije, DSS). The Party sup-
ported some of the policies of the Milošević regime originally, but its anti-communist
stance led it to keep a distance both from the DPS in Montenegro and from Milošević. Es-
pecially in conjunction with the Serbian opposition in 1992/3 in DEPOS, which criticised
the regime for its policies in Bosnia, the NS also managed to distance itself from its early
pledge of full support of the war. Throughout the 1990s, the People’s Party moved away
from the extreme Serbian nationalism which it had originally endorsed. It did, however,
remain a party which appealed to a constituency who considered themselves to be Serbs
and which continuously emphasised the Serbian identity of Montenegro. 50
The DPS sought to occupy a somewhat middle ground in Montenegrin politics. Mostly
aligning itself with Milošević (albeit with some hesitation), it nevertheless sought to safe-
guard the separateness of Montenegro while, at the same time, vehemently opposed the
Liberal Alliance’s claims for secession. 51
The internal debates over the future of Montenegrin relations with Serbia remained un-
resolved throughout the 1990s, a situation recalled at regular intervals in the light of the
conflicts with the regime in Belgrade.
20
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
creation of a third Yugoslavia throughout early 1992, but the creation of FRY was unex-
pected.52 During earlier debates, two options were most prominent: on the one side stood the
option of creating a looser union with Macedonia, Montenegro and Bosnia; at the other ex-
treme was the creation of a union of ‘Serbian states’, which would have included the Serbian
Republic in Krajina (Republika Srpske Krajine, RSK) and in Bosnia (Republika Srpska,
RS).53 Both options failed, for a variety of reasons, but Montenegro remained committed to
a joint state with Serbia, as Momir Bulatovi ć had declared in January 1992. 54 A referendum
in Montenegro, which took place on 1 March 1992, confirmed Montenegro’s commit-
ment;55 some 95.4 per cent of the electorate supported the question asked in the referendum:
‘Would you want a sovereign Montenegro to stay in the association with other Yugoslav re-
publics who wish the same?’ The success of the referendum was somewhat diminished by
the relatively low turnout of 66.04 per cent, partly resulting from the call for a boycott by
some opposition parties and by the Albanian and Muslim communities. 56
The new Yugoslav Constitution was passed by the ‘remnants of the remnants’ 57 of the Fed-
eral Chamber of the Assembly of Socialist Yugoslavia on 27 April 1992. The term of the dep-
uties had already expired one year earlier, not to mention that they were ‘elected’ in 1986,
well before the first free elections in 1990. Only the deputies from Montenegro and Serbia
participated – a mere 73 people were present (from a total of 100 deputies from Serbia and
Montenegro), out of, altogether, 220 deputies previously elected to the parliament. Legally,
the gathering did not reach the necessary quorum to constitute a session of the old Yugoslav
parliament.58 The decision to create the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia by deputies whose
term expired and who had not been freely elected was meant to suggest continuity to the So-
cialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRJ). These flaws at the birth were indicative, how-
ever, of the weak foundations on which the new Federal Republic of Yugoslavia rested. 59
52 On the debates and conflicts between Montenegro and Serbia surrounding the establishment of
FRY, see Esad Kočan: ‘Montenegro and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia’, AIM 28.3.1996.
53 Neue Züricher Zeitung 13.2.1992; Neue Züricher Zeitung 6.1.1992.
54 Politika 11.1.1992.
55 It should be noted, however, that, by that time, the term ‘Yugoslavia’ had already ceased to
be a meaningful concept. On the run up to the referendum, see Vreme 27.1.1992.
56 Slobodanka Kovačević and Putnik Dajić: Hronologija Jugoslovenske Krize, 1942-1993
(Beograd: Institut za Evropske Studije, 1994), p. 52. In communes with a strong minority pop-
ulation, such as Ulcinj and Rožaje, only 17.54% and 10.85% of eligible voters participated. See
the website of the electoral commission at: www.izbori.cg.yu/retropektiva/re92.htm.
57 Slobodan Antonić: ‘Yugoslav Federalism: Functioning of the Federal and Republican Parlia-
ments’, in Vladmir Goati (ed.): Elections to the Federal and Republican Parliaments of
Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) 1990-1996 (Berlin: Sigma, 1998), p. 53.
58 Monika Beckman-Petey: Der jugoslawische Föderalismus (Munich: Südost-Institut, Olden-
bourg, 1990), pp. 142-143.
59 For a detailed analysis of the structural and legal problems of FRY, see Dejan Guzina: ‘Nation-
alism in the Context of an Illiberal Multinational State: The Case of Serbia’, unpublished Ph.D.
dissertation (Ottawa: Carleton University, 2000), pp. 180-192; Florian Bieber: ‘Delayed Tran-
sition and the Multiple Legitimacy Crisis of Post-1992 Yugoslavia’, in Dimitris Keridis (ed.):
New Approaches to Balkan Studies (Dulles, VA: Brassey, 2002); see also, from a nationalist
perspective, Kosta Čavoški: Half a Century of Distorted Constitutionality in Yugoslavia
(Beograd: Centre for Serbian Studies, 1997), p. 36.
21
Florian Bieber
Subsequently, the first elections to the Chamber of Citizens 60 of the Federal Assembly
in May 1992 were boycotted by all the opposition parties in Serbia and Montenegro. The
only three major parties which participated and which won mandates were the governing
DPS, the Serbian Radical Party (Srpska radikalna stranka, SRS), which ran for the first
time in elections in Serbia and Montenegro with the implicit support of the governing par-
ties, and the League of Communists–Party for Yugoslavia ( Savez kommunista–pokret za
Jugoslaviju, SK-PJ), a neo-communist movement, closely associated with the army and
Miloševićs wife, Mirjana Markovi ć.61 The boycott lead to a similarly low turnout as in
Serbia, with only 56.7 per cent of eligible voters participating. 62 Protests by the opposition
and an overall weak position of the authorities in both republics, especially in Serbia,
forced new elections for the Federal Parliament in December 1992. These coincided in
both republics with early presidential and parliamentary elections.
Soon after the creation of the new federal state, relations between Serbia and Montenegro
were already deteriorating. 63 During the run-up to the December 1992 election, a serious fall-
out – the most serious next to the final break in 1997/8 – occurred between the Democratic
Party of Socialists and the Socialist Party of Serbia. As a response to Bulatovićs initial sup-
port for the Carrington Plan in October 1992, and due to his wavering support for the Serbian
war effort in Bosnia, the Socialist Party supported Brankov Kosti ć, his main contender during
the Montenegrin presidential elections. At the same time, the DPS had supported the refor-
mist Yugoslav government headed by Milan Pani ć,64 preventing its fall in the run-up to the
elections by not supporting a motion of no confidence. Subsequently, Bulatovi ć and his Party
even supported the candidacy of Panić against Milošević for the Serbian presidency.
The favourite of the Serbian Socialists, Branko Kosti ć, had been previously the Mon-
tenegrin member of the last Yugoslav Presidency and he was a member of the Democratic
Party of Socialists. At the same time, he ran as a candidate of the Association of Warriors
from the 1991/92 war (Udruženja ratnika 1991/2), advocating a considerably more radi-
cal pro-Serbian line and active support for the Serbian side in the Bosnian war. 65
In October 1992, the government passed a new constitution, reflecting the growing dis-
tance from the Serbian regime. Unlike the Serbian Constitution, it contains no nationalist
references, lists a number of minority rights (Art. 67-76) and institutes a president with
limited powers (Art. 86-90). 66 This switch towards moderation was criticised by the oppo-
60 In the bicameral parliament, the other chamber (the Chamber of Nations) is elected by the
respective republican parliaments.
61 In 1994, this Party merged with other similar splinter parties to form JUL. JUL gained con-
siderable influence with the Serbian and Yugoslav authorities by being part of a coalition
with SPS, although its public support remained low in Serbia and Montenegro. As it ran
mostly alone in Montenegro, its low level of support was visible: it gained 1 668 votes in the
1996 elections and 345 in 1998. See Goati: Izbori u SRJ, p. 187, 206.
62 ibid., pp. 59-64
63 Velizar Brajović: ‘Divorce Proceedings’, Yugofax, 29.6.1992, p. 7.
64 The support for Panić was surprising, as DPS had originally insisted that the Prime Minis-
ter’s position should be filled by a Montenegrin as the Presidency had been filled by Dobrica
Ćosić, a Serb. Vreme 22.6.1992.
65 Goati: Izbori u SRJ, pp. 180-181.
66 Constitution of Montenegro, 12.10.1992.
22
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
sition as insincere. The President of the Social Democratic Party ( Socijaldemokratska par-
tija, SDP),67 Žarko Rakčević, commenting on DPS policy, remarked that ‘the ruling party
is acting as if we were for the war option a year ago, not them.’ 68
In the first round of the presidential elections, Novak Kilibarda, candidate of the Peo-
ple’s Party, gathered 9.03 per cent of the vote, while Slavko Perović achieved the best re-
sult ever for the Liberal Alliance by obtaining 18.33 per cent. Both were clearly beaten by
the two DPS candidates, Momir Bulatović (42.83%) and Branko Kosti ć (23.74%), con-
firming not only the internal divisions of the party, but also its absolute dominance of
Montenegrin politics. In the second round of the elections, the Socialdemocrats and the
Liberal Alliance supported Bulatović in light of the nationalist rhetoric of Kosti ć. Hence,
Bulatović was able to win a resounding victory by gathering 63.29 percent of the vote in
the second round. The victory of Bulatović confirmed the limits of the influences of the
Serbian regime on Montenegrin politics. 69
Table 3 – Result of the Parliamentary elections, 20 December 199270
Party Number of votes Percentage Members in Percentage
Parliament
DPS 125 578 43.78 46 54.0
NS 37 532 13.08 14 16.5
LSCG 35 564 12.40 13 45.3
SRS 22 265 7.76 8 9.4
SP CG 12 994 4.53 4 4.7
Others 52 906 18.40 – –
In the parliamentary elections, taking place simultaneously, the DPS managed to defend
its dominance but failed to gain an absolute majority as it had in the 1990 elections. The
electoral victory was, nevertheless, considerable, considering that in no-other post-com-
munist country had the successor to the Communist Party managed to continue to govern
with such a strong majority. As Vladimir Goati points out, not even in Serbia did the SPS
manage to garner similar support. 71 In part, the success of the DPS was based on strong-
arm tactics against the opposition parties, especially the Liberal Alliance. 72 The Liberal
23
Florian Bieber
Alliance and the People’s Party were equal in strength to each other, compared to the
1990 elections, but the main new party was the Serbian Radical Party, which had already
gathered nearly eight per cent of the vote in the May federal elections. Its extreme Serbian
nationalist position towards minorities and support for the war in Bosnia (including
through its own paramilitary units) was, at the time, supported by the Serbian authorities
who relied on the Radicals for support in the Serbian and federal parliaments. 73
The disenchantment of the DPS with the Socialist Party in Serbia became visible when
the DPS decided to form a grand coalition with the Socialdemocrats, the People’s Party
and the Liberal Alliance. This represented an attempt to stabilise itself after the protracted
worsening of relations with the authorities in Belgrade, and given the threat posed by the
Serbian Radical Party and the paramilitaries who were active in Montenegro, especially in
the northern areas where lived both the Bosniak-Muslim minority and a large number of
supporters of Serb nationalism. 74 The moderation of the authorities was partly connected
to the dire economic situation in Montenegro after the imposition of sanctions, 75 which af-
fected Montenegro arguably more than they did Serbia, and the genuine unpopularity of
the war in Bosnia, which affected Montenegro strongly as a result of the influx of Serbian
(but also Bosniak) refugees from Herzegovina. 76 The rift between Montenegro and Serbia
lasted nearly two years – from late 1991, following the failed Montenegrin support for the
Carrington Plan and the refusal to send soldiers to fight in Croatia, until mid-1993. During
this period, some of the techniques employed by the Milošević regime following the com-
plete break in relations between the two republics in 1998 were tried for the first time. In
response to a rapprochement with Albania, for example, the Serbian authorities stopped
some trucks crossing the Montenegrin-Serbian border. The temporary embargo on Mon-
tenegro was justified by a ban on the export of goods from Serbia, which were deemed
‘strategic’ during times of crisis. In fact, the blockade created serious shortages in basic
products in Montenegro, with the aim of putting the leadership under pressure. 77
Similarly, the Serbian authorities accused minorities in Montenegro of supporting se-
cessionism, while the minorities themselves were under pressure from Serbian extreme
nationalist organisations, especially in the Sand žak region.78
The worsening of relations between the DPS and SPS was only temporary and was over-
come with a change in policy by the Socialist Party. For similar reasons as the DPS more
than one year earlier in Montenegro, the Milošević regime in Serbia distanced itself from its
former proxies in Bosnia and subsequently adopted a ‘peace policy’, advocating termination
73 Vreme 28.12.1992.
74 Vreme 28.6.1993.
75 The absence of tourists and the suspension of naval trade took especial toll. The decision of
the federal authorities to introduce visas for all countries who themselves required one wors-
ened Serb-Montenegrin relations as it prevented even the small trickle of visitors that visited
Montenegro. Vreme 26.4.1993; Vreme 29.11.1993.
76 A darker chapter in Montenegrin politics during this period was the extradition of Muslim refu-
gees from Bosnia to the authorities in Republika Srpska. A number of these refugees were sub-
sequently killed or used in exchange for imprisoned Serbs. See Vreme 11.4.1994.
77 Vreme 13.9.1993.
78 Velizar Brajović: ‘Belgrade Disciplines its Former Ally’, Balkan War Report August/Sep-
tember 1993, p. 25.
24
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
of the war in Bosnia. Under the slogan ‘Mir nema alternativu’ (Peace has no alternative),
SPS ended its alliance with the Radical Party and endorsed the Vance-Owen peace plan. The
Party emphasised the need for economic improvement and moderate reforms, 79 leading up
to the reforms of the head of the central bank, Dragoslav Avramovi ć, which put an end to
Yugoslav hyperinflation in early 1994. 80
In Montenegro, the sanctions, as well as the pyramid schemes which had been set up
with the implicit consent of the Yugoslav authorities during the period of hyperinflation,
led to the emergence of a new elite of nouveaux riches, closely tied to the ruling party and
to organised crime. 81 Prominent here was the ‘banker’ Jezdimir Vasiljevi ć, who operated
one of the banks which promised two-digit monthly earnings on foreign currency hold-
ings, who gained strong influence in Montenegro in 1992/93, allowing him to rent the lux-
ury hotel resort Sveti Stefan. 82 After the collapse of the schemes in March 1993, and the
flight of Vasiljević into exile, his influence ended.
Reminiscent of later confrontations within the ruling Party of Democratic Socialists, the
followers of President Momir Bulatovi ć (including the current head of the Socialist Peo-
ple’s Party Predrag Bulatovi ć) accused the Prime Minister of enriching himself. At the
time, unlike in 1997, the president defended Đukanović as:
… A man who I want to honour because he and his government, in a typical, almost magical,
way, did everything possible to ease the huge difficulties and prevent much greater poverty
which has been imposed by historic developments, the sanctions of the international commu-
nity and the evil times we live in. The support I gave him, not just as President, but first of all
as a man who thinks in a similar way and above all as a friend, was certainly not enough to
ease the huge burden he carried.83
The reasons for the policy shift in the case of Montenegro and Serbia were similar – the
effects of the sanctions and economic decline, as well as the declining popularity of the re-
gime – the only difference was the one-year time-lag between the two republics. Similar to
the SPS in Serbia, Bulatović actively supported the Vance-Owen plan, but shied away from
confronting nationalism in the country or the Party’s role in the conflict. The call for a
peaceful end to the war was thus not matched by change in the underlying assumptions
which had allowed it to take place. This development nevertheless facilitated a rapproche-
ment between the two ruling parties. Within Montenegro, the Liberal Alliance and the So-
25
Florian Bieber
cialdemocrats criticised the DPS for its inadequate transformation, marking the end of the
Montenegrin ‘grand coalition’. 84
The brief coalition episode illustrated the difference in the tools employed by the re-
gimes in Montenegro and Serbia. SPS also formed coalitions, especially after the 1993
elections with New Democracy, a moderate pro-western party, but it demonstrated less
willingness to co-operate with the larger opposition parties. 85
In addition to the rapprochement of the policies of the ruling parties of Montenegro and
Serbia, pressure from the dominant partner in the new Yugoslav federation played an im-
portant role in pushing President Bulatović and the Democratic Party of Socialists towards
closer alliance with Serbia. Serbia sought to obstruct any rapprochement between Mon-
tenegro and its neighbours, Croatia and Albania, or western countries (especially Italy).
The pressure was exemplified by the expansion of the Yugoslav army presence in the Re-
public and the abolition of the separate Montenegrin Ministry of Defence, as well as by
talk of merger between SPS and DPS, albeit that this was rejected by the DPS. 86
In between the end of the crisis between the two parties in 1993/4 and the conflict be-
tween Đukanović and Milošević in 1997, relations between the governments of the two
republics were generally cordial. At the same time, Montenegro maintained a distinct ap-
proach and continued to criticise varying aspects of Serbia’s dominance in the Federa-
tion,87 begging a journalist from the independent newspaper Naša Borba to ask: ‘Are the
regimes in Serbia and Montenegro identical twins or just “simple ones”, which differ also
in their character?’ 88
Juxtaposed to the ongoing variations in the relationship between the governments in
Belgrade and Podgorica, the intra-Montenegrin dispute over relations with Serbia and Ser-
bian identity remained potent. With the re-establishment of the Montenegrin Orthodox
Church (MOC) in 1993, the debate gained an additional dimension. The Montenegrin
church had been merged into the Serbian Orthodox Church in 1920 after Montenegro was
absorbed into Yugoslavia. In Communist Yugoslavia, the Macedonian Orthodox Church
split from the Serbian Orthodox Church (with the encouragement of the Communist lead-
ership), but this did not take place in Montenegro. In the early 1990s, however, the repre-
sentatives of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SOC) in Montenegro had become some of the
most virulent advocates of Serbian nationalism while, at the same time, a movement
emerged for the re-establishment of the Montenegrin Orthodox Church. In October 1993,
the Montenegrin Orthodox Church was re-established with Bishop Antonije Abramovi ć at
its helm.89 The church did not gain significant acceptance by the authorities, nor did it
gain a noteworthy share of followers, but it did pose a challenge to the Serbian Orthodox
26
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
Church.90 This arose mostly from the situation that two separate orthodox churches rarely
operate on the same territory. Thus, any recognition of the Montenegrin Orthodox Church
would simultaneously mean the end of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro. Fur-
thermore, as the Montenegrin Orthodox Church laid claim to the properties of the SOC,
which it had acquired in 1920 through the abolition of the Montenegrin church, the co-ex-
istence of the two churches was difficult, if not inconceivable. 91 As a result, relations be-
tween the churches and their followers have been tense, with clashes erupting frequently
at parallel celebrations of Christmas. 92
Of the political parties, the Liberal Alliance endorsed the re-establishment of the MOC
and the SDP called for the church’s recognition during the 1990s, whereas the People’s
Party and the pro-Serb wing of DPS (after 1998, the SNP) opposed recognition and sup-
ported the claims to exclusivity of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Even after adopting a
pro-independence course, the Democratic Party of Socialists kept its distance from the
Montenegrin Orthodox Church. 93 From 1999, the government began carefully to adopt
the middle ground. In January 2000, the authorities allowed for the recognition of the
church as one of the country’s religious communities. The position of the government re-
garding the takeover by the Montenegrin Orthodox Church of churches controlled by the
Serbian Orthodox Church has been more ambivalent. The Minister of Religion has con-
demned such incidents but these were often helped or, at least, not hindered by the Mon-
tenegrin police.94
During this period, the People’s Party moderated its position regarding Serbian nationa-
lism, as exemplified by the following statement of Novak Kilibarda, the Party’s President:
The People's Party is constantly accused of being a Party which supports the idea of a
Greater Serbia and wishes to incorporate Montenegro into Serbia. However, we have
proved that we are the most serious guardians of both the federal state and of Montenegro's
statehood. Montenegro has to be equal in every respect with Serbia. 95
90 Velizar Brajović: ‘Church Wars’, Balkan War Report, December 1993, p. 10.
91 Veseljko Koprivica: ‘Bloodshed Threatening’, AIM 23.12.2002.
92 Gordana Borović: ‘A Concert with the Patriarch and a General’, AIM 15.1.2001; Draško
Duranović: ‘Yule-Logs of Discord’, AIM 7.1.2002.
93 Beta 8.1.1998.
94 Free B92 25.12.2000.
95 Interview with Kilibarda, Vreme 22.2.1993. The NS did, however, maintain its approach of
seeking to rehabilitate the Ćetnik movement in Montenegro and calling for ‘reconciliation’
between Partizans and Četnici. Duško Vuković: ‘Widening of the Breach in the History of
the Victors’, AIM 7.7.1994.
27
Florian Bieber
tion with Serbia. This approach, to be pursued more vigorously in 1997, solicited consid-
erable criticism on behalf of the Serbian authorities and, especially, the more conservative
wing of the regime around the Yugoslav Left (Jugoslovenska Levica, JUL) and
Miloševićs wife, Mirjana Markovi ć.96
In Montenegrin domestic politics, the end of the war in Bosnia did not pass without
having an impact on the political scene. Mirroring the changes among the Serbian opposi-
tion parties, the People’s Party tuned down its Serbian nationalist rhetoric and welcomed
the peace agreement in Bosnia. The Party, however, remained staunchly opposed to Mon-
tenegrin independence as advocated by the other two major opposition parties, the Social
Democratic Party – which took a gradualist approach, giving greater importance to politi-
cal and economic reform – and the Liberal Alliance. 97 This moderation made way for the
establishment of the coalition Narodna sloga (People’s Unity) between the Liberal Alli-
ance and the People’s Party ahead of the parliamentary elections in November 1996. As
indicated by the coalition’s name, it sought to overcome (or postpone) the fundamental
dispute between ‘Greens’ and ‘Whites’, i.e. supporters of Montenegrin identity and propo-
nents of Montenegro’s Serbdom, in order to oust DPS from power. The coalition was
joined, however, neither by the Social Democratic Party nor by the parties of the national
minorities, preventing the establishment of one united opposition block. 98 The dominance
of the DPS, furthermore, allowed it to change the electoral rules in its own favour, as it
had done in previous elections, and to conduct a lavish election campaign, beating the op-
position in terms of money spent by a margin of 10:1. 99
28
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
The results of the elections were, therefore, a resounding defeat of the opposition, with
the DPS gaining votes compared to earlier elections and defending its majority in parlia-
ment. The NS-LSCG coalition actually gathered less support than the two parties had
gained individually in 1992, while the SDP failed to enter parliament altogether. 101 The
elections confirmed the overwhelming predominance of DPS, which continued to receive
relatively stable support. With the exception of the weakening of the Serbian nationalist
SRS, the results of the elections throughout the first half of the 1990s expressed relatively
stable support for all the different political parties.
The National Unity coalition alleged electoral fraud in Montenegro, but the lack of clear
evidence failed to create mass mobilisation, in contrast to Serbia where the opposition coa-
lition Zajedno succeeded in mobilising month-long street protests after the local elections,
also taking place in November 1996, were forged in favour of the ruling coalition. The Ser-
bian protests had a profound impact on the Montenegrin political scene and facilitated the
confrontation between Bulatović and Đukanović. During the early phases of the protests,
the Montenegrin authorities prevented any detailed reporting and sought to suppress pro-
tests in Montenegro itself by Narodna sloga, which was seeking to emulate the Serbian
demonstrations.102 With the continuation and the sheer size of the protests in Serbia, the
Democratic Party of Socialists changed its policy and allowed the state media to report
openly from the Serbian demonstrations, including re-broadcasts of CNN. 103 In an apparent
endorsement of the protesters claim, Svetozar Marovi ć, Speaker of the Parliament, stated:
It all costs us tremendously, it conflicts FRY with the world again, postpones the return of
our country into international institutions and prevents prospects of the revival of our econ-
omy and the creation of conditions for the normal life of our citizens. Nobody has the right
to do that. Not even the President of Serbia has the right to do that, but especially his wife
with the phantom organisation which has initiated so many problems in Serbia. 104
Bulatović and Đukanović both called for the recognition of the election results, but
the attacks on SPS and JUL, initiated by Marovi ć and Đukanović, marked a departure
from previous disputes in which the Montenegrin DPS elite had refrained from openly
attacking the Serbian regime. As one journalist reported in January 1997, the break be-
tween Đukanović and Bulatovi ć over the protests became increasingly apparent:
Marović's and Đukanović's criticism of the authorities in Serbia (read: Milošević) is radical. Bu-
latović's criticism sounds as if forced out and calculated to preserve the political mentor from
Tolstoy Street [the residence of Milošević in Belgrade].105
101 ibid., pp. 185-187; Željko Ivanović: ‘Cleaning House’, AIM 6.11.1996.
102 Arguably, only the failure of the Montenegrin protests permitted the regime to allow media to
report more openly about the demonstrations in Serbia. Esad Kočan: ‘Echo in the Valley of
Tears’, AIM 1.12.1996.
103 Draško Đuranović: ‘Washing Hands’, AIM 11.12.1996.
104 Darko Šuković: ‘Trio at the Turning-Point’, AIM 20.1.1997.
105 ibid.
29
Florian Bieber
This interview was the immediate cause of confrontation between Milošević and
Đukanović. During a meeting of the DPS main board in March 1997, Bulatović sided
with Milošević and demanded the dismissal of government members who had supported
a position similar to Đukanović. The Party’s board mostly supported Bulatović, leading to
Đukanovićs resignation as Vice-President of DPS. 108 The Prime Minister, however, re-
fused to dismiss the Minister of Culture, the Deputy Prime Minister and the head of state
security as had been demanded; the only gesture was the dismissal of the head of the Mon-
tenegrin trade representation in Washington and the publication of a conciliatory state-
ment. The confrontation in its early stages seemed to put Bulatović, as head of the Party
and President of the Republic, in a stronger position, but the outcome was far from a fore-
gone conclusion.109
The increasingly public nature of the dispute also involved non-party actors, with stu-
dent organisations and intellectuals taking sides in the protracted conflict. 110 By April, the
original support for Bulatović had shrunk, with all three Vice-Presidents of the Party op-
posing him. Following the failure to depose Đukanović from office, the Bulatović wing of
the party made conciliatory gestures towards the Prime Minister, supporting his position
as Vice-President of DPS in the attempt to prevent him or Marović from running against
Bulatović in the 1997 presidential election. 111
The conflict soon re-erupted as Đukanović and Marović opposed Milošević’s attempt
to increase the competences of the federal presidency ahead of his attempt to switch to this
post from the Serbian presidency, which he could no longer occupy after two terms of of-
fice. The Đukanović faction within DPS was able to block changes to the federal constitu-
tion, but it failed to prevent the election of Milošević to the Yugoslav presidency: at a
meeting of the DPS board, 51 voted in favour of Miloševićs candidacy with 41 against. In
a rushed process, Milošević was subsequently elected by the Yugoslav parliament, with
the votes of the DPS deputies, to succeed Zoran Lili ć.112
30
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
The decisive election campaign for the Montenegrin presidency began shortly thereaf-
ter, with Đukanović emerging as the DPS candidate. Bulatović called a separate party
congress in Kolašin with supporters mostly from northern Montenegro. 113 Subsequently,
the two rival wings of DPS separately nominated Bulatović and Đukanović for the elec-
tion. The outcome of the October 1997 elections, unlike the previous presidential (and
parliamentary) elections, was entirely open. The Đukanović wing of the DPS controlled
16 municipalities, while Bulatović controlled only five, although he could also rely on the
support of Serbia. Bulatović essentially advocated maintaining the status quo and warned
of any move towards secession. Đukanović, on the other hand, presented an electoral
platform of economic and political reforms, as well as closer ties with the west. He there-
fore received support both from Serbian opposition parties and from Montenegrin opposi-
tion and minority parties, who did not put forward their own candidates. Đukanović did
not advocate Montenegrin independence during the campaign but instead called for the
establishment of a functional institutional framework with Serbia and a higher degree of
autonomous decision-making in Montenegro. 114
In the first round, Bulatović gained slightly more votes than Đukanović, only to be
defeated by a margin of approximately 5 000 votes – 50.79 per cent to 49.2 per cent – in
the second round. 115 Bulatović accused Đukanović of electoral fraud, as he was able to
control the state media and the institutions carrying out the elections. 116 The interna-
tional observation mission of the OSCE, however, generally found that the ‘final results
reflect the will of the voters.’ 117 During the transition of the presidency from Bulatović
to Đukanović, demonstrations organised by the Bulatović faction of the DPS became
violent and a major confrontation was only narrowly avoided. Directly aimed at pre-
venting Đukanović from taking office, the incidents sought to destabilise the transition
and were the closest Montenegro has come to an armed clash in recent years. 118 The un-
willingness to recognise Đukanović as President and the readiness of the supporters of
Bulatović to start violent protests put an end to any possibility of reconciliation between
the two wings of the DPS.
As Vladimir Goati points out, for the second time in Montenegrin presidential elections
the candidate supported by the SPS and the Belgrade authorities was defeated in Montene-
gro. Whereas Bulatović was the candidate representing Montenegrin political autonomy
in 1992 against Branko Kosti ć, Đukanović took his place in 1997. 119
The split between Đukanović and Bulatović also put an end to the unprecedented dom-
inance DPS had enjoyed in Montenegro during the first half of the 1990s. In March 1998,
the Bulatović wing of the DPS renamed itself, thus abandoning its claim to the whole
Party, naming itself the Socialist People’s Party (Socijalistička narodna partija, SNP).120
31
Florian Bieber
In parliament, the DPS had lost 17 of its 45 seats, forcing it into a coalition with the Peo-
ple’s Party and the two Albanian parties. This coalition accelerated the pluralisation of the
political scene in Montenegro and resulted in new elections on the insistence of the former
opposition parties.
Prior to the elections, the DPS formed a coalition, Da živimo bolje (For a better life),
with the Social Democratic Party and the People’s Party. The five-point programme of the
coalition argued in favour of: (a) international links in the economy; (b) privatisation and
economic reform; (c) rule of law; (d) democratisation; and (e) social justice and security.
The Liberal Alliance supported a similar agenda but, as it placed greater emphasis on the
Republic’s independence and considered the DPS to be discredited, it did not join the pre-
election coalition. The campaign of the SNP was mostly directed against the DPS-led coa-
lition and emphasised the need to protect the union with Serbia. 121
Considering that the elections in May 1998 were, thematically, an extension of the 1997
presidential elections, the reformist spectrum of Montenegrin politics gained considerable
strength. Da živimo bolje gained nearly one-half of the votes whereas the SNP gained
only slightly more than one-third. One of the losers of the elections was the Liberal Alli-
ance, which saw its support drop as DPS took over elements of its programme and as the
harsh confrontation between SNP and DPS squeezed the smaller parties. Similarly, the
support for minority parties declined as minorities overwhelmingly supported Da živimo
bolje.122
32
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
month by the Socialist Party and JUL, as well as six DPS deputies who had joined the
SNP, ignoring that their mandates had been revoked by the Montenegrin parliament. 124
Between the inauguration of Đukanović as President and the fall of Milošević two and
a half years later, in October 2000, tensions between Serbia and Montenegro steadily in-
creased. In the light of the escalating conflict in Kosovo and the participation of the Ser-
bian Radical Party in the Serbian government in early 1998, the Serbian authorities
adopted an increasingly belligerent tone, using the considerable army presence in the Re-
public to put pressure on the Montenegrin authorities. Simultaneously, the Đukanović
government adopted an increasingly independence-minded policy, leading eventually to
the outright call for Montenegro’s secession from Serbia. Montenegro effectively ended
most economic ties with Serbia, including the adoption of the German Mark in 1999 as a
parallel currency – and, in 2000, as an exclusive one (before switching to the Euro from
2002). In 1999, Montenegro also unilaterally abolished visa requirements for foreign na-
tionals.125 All these steps were met by the Serbian and Yugoslav authorities with the
greater isolation of Montenegro from the Serbian market, including the establishment of
checkpoints at the border between the two republics – thus, in fact, re-affirming the sepa-
ration of Montenegro.
The escalation of the war in neighbouring Kosovo proved to be a serious challenge to
Montenegro. With the first threat of NATO air strikes against Serbia in October 1998, the
repression of the Milošević regime against the independent media and the political oppo-
sition increased, raising fears of a more forceful intervention in Montenegro. With the be-
ginning of the NATO air strikes on Yugoslavia and the mass expulsion of Albanians from
Kosovo, Montenegro became directly affected by the conflict. The NATO bombings
themselves affected Montenegro only marginally, being aimed at sites of the Yugoslav
army, but the fighting in Kosovo affected Montenegro directly through a considerable in-
flow of refugees, adding to the number of refugees which had moved to Montenegro dur-
ing the wars in Croatia and Bosnia. In the summer and autumn of 1998, some 50 000 Al-
banians fled to Montenegro, although some of these returned following the ‘ceasefire’
negotiated between Richard Holbrooke and Milošević in October 1998. By the end of the
Kosovo war in June 1999, some 80 000 Albanian refugees had fled to Montenegro,
amounting to over 10 per cent of the population of the Republic. Most refugees were ac-
commodated privately with Albanian families, but the sheer number involved placed an
economic burden on Montenegro and, similar to Macedonia, affected the balance between
the nations living in Montenegro. 126 Despite heightened tensions between the government
and the Liberal Alliance on one side, and the army and the Socialist People’s Party on the
other, no conflict erupted since the feared crackdown on Montenegro for its independent
policy did not take place. 127
At the end of the war and the effective ‘loss’ of Kosovo for the Yugoslav government, it
was evident that the effect of the conflict was three-fold. Firstly, the international isolation
of Milošević, coupled with the indictment against him by the ICTY tribunal at The Hague,
33
Florian Bieber
indicated – unlike five years earlier during the war in Bosnia – that there was no return to
international respectability for the Milošević regime. The split between Montenegro’s pro-
western policies and Serbia was thus not reparable as long as the Serbian regime remained
in place. The loss of the war for Serbia, and the relatively unscathed state in which Mon-
tenegro emerged from the conflict, seemed to confirm Đukanovićs policies. Secondly,
the Kosovo war increased support in Montenegro for independence and strengthened the
resolve of the Montenegrin government to pursue this option. For the first time, a narrow
majority supported Montenegrin independence in opinion polls, whereas the Federal Re-
public of Yugoslavia declined considerably in popularity. 128 Thirdly, Western countries,
for the first time since the disintegration of Yugoslavia, sought actively to support political
alternatives to Milošević within FRY, extending both financial and logistical aid to the re-
gime’s opponents in Serbia itself and helping the Đukanović government. The Montene-
grin authorities had already received western aid before the Kosovo war, but this increased
substantially at its end. In 2000 alone, the United States and the European Union gave
Montenegro direct aid amounting to over $90m. 129
Within Montenegro, the war further deepened the divide between the pro- Milošević
SNP and the governing coalition on account of the increasing threats by the Serbian au-
thorities against the Montenegrin government. In this climate, the Liberal Alliance with-
drew its support for the Da živimo bolje coalition in the local councils of Podgorica and
Herceg Novi in the attempt to benefit from the increased pro-independence sentiment in
early local elections. These, held in June 2000, turned into a national competition between
the opponents and the supporters of Montenegrin independence. The coalition Za Jugo-
slaviju, consisting of the SNP, JUL, the Serbian People’s Party, the Serbian Radical Party
and some other minor parties ran against the DPS-SDP coalition. The result of the election
was inconclusive, as the DPS-SDP increased their share of the vote in Podgorica, allowing
them to govern without the Liberal Alliance, whereas in Herceg Novi the SNP-led coali-
tion won two seats, allowing it to govern in the town. Local issues, such as the lack of
popularity of the DPS candidate in Herceg Novi, certainly shaped the outcome, but the re-
sults indicated a country-wide stalemate between the two groupings. In Herceg Novi, the
large number of Bosnian and Croatian Serbs who had acquired Yugoslav citizenship also
helped facilitate the victory of the SNP coalition. The main loser in the elections was the
Liberal Alliance, which was punished by the voters for having triggered them. 130
It was not until the fall of the Milošević regime following the electoral victory of the Ser-
bian opposition in the federal presidential and parliamentary elections on 24 September
2000 that the deadlock in Montenegro was broken and a political re-alignment occurred. In-
ternal conflicts over the future status of Montenegro in Yugoslavia were juxtaposed with
conflicting views on Milošević and the Serbian regime. This led, for example, to the partici-
pation of the People’s Party in a DPS government despite its support for the continuation of
Yugoslavia, which would have placed it closer to the SNP. Contrary to the expectations (and
the hopes) of many observers, the fall of Milošević thus resulted in the dispute on indepen-
34
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
dence gaining in importance. 131 At the same time, however, the supporters of Montenegrin
independence lost in Milo šević one key reason for pursuing separation from Yugoslavia.
The intra-Montenegrin re-alignment was matched by a change in alliances between Ser-
bia and Montenegro. After the break between DPS and SPS, the Serbian opposition de-
veloped increasing contacts with Đukanović and, in particular, the Democratic Party
(Demokratska Stranka, DS) of Zoran Đinđić sought closer co-operation with the DPS af-
ter the worsening of the repression in Serbia. 132 The DS did not support the DPS policy of
Montenegrin independence, but the links strengthened after Đinđić fled to Montenegro
during the Kosovo war in fear of repression by the Belgrade authorities. 133
Changes to the Yugoslav Constitution and the setting of Yugoslav presidential and par-
liamentary elections for July 2000 nevertheless led to a worsening in relations between the
Serbian opposition and the Montenegrin government. 134 The Serbian opposition saw the
elections as an opportunity to change the regime but Đukanović rejected participation on
the grounds that this would have legitimised the constitutional changes which drastically
reduced the powers of Montenegro. Earlier, Đukanović had been considered as a possible
candidate of a joint Yugoslav opposition. With his Party’s decision to boycott the elec-
tions, as well as the choice of the nationalist Vojislav Ko štunica as the presidential candi-
date for the Serbian opposition, Đukanović fell out of favour with the Serbian opposition.
Despite the electoral success of the Democratic Opposition of Serbia ( Demokratska
opozicija Srbije, DOS), the coalition did not gain enough seats in the federal Parliament to
govern alone. It was thus forced to enter a coalition with the SNP which, together with the
Serbian People’s Party (Srpska narodna stranka, SNS),135 took all the Montenegrin seats
in a record low turnout of 28.2 per cent. 136 Prior to the elections, there had been contacts
between DOS and SNP in the attempt to isolate SPS. 137 The coalition between SNP and
DOS ushered in partial reforms within the Socialist People’s Party. The ‘Belgrade wing’
of the Party surrounding Momir Bulatović138 was pushed out and a more moderate wing
under the leadership of Predrag Bulatović139 took over. The Party maintained its conser-
vative-nationalist profile and continued to support firm union with Serbia, but at the same
35
Florian Bieber
time ended (belatedly) its support for Milošević. In the course of the post-Milošević po-
litical re-alignment in Montenegro, the People’s Party 140 left the Đukanović coalition in
early 2001 after the coalition’s espousal of the independence cause. Alongside the SNS, it
sided instead with the SNP.
Subsequent to the fall of Milo šević, Montenegrin politics has thus seen the formation of
three main groupings. Firstly, there is the Democratic Party of Socialists and the Social
Democratic Party, both supporting independence, the former more hesitantly than the lat-
ter. Secondly, the alliance of SNP, NS and SNS represents the main supporters of Yugo-
slavia. This coalition has continuously accused the government of corruption and enrich-
ment. Thirdly, the Liberal Alliance stands alone as a party. It supports the pro-
independence policy of the government but remains deeply sceptical of the Democratic
Party of Socialists and the slow pace of reforms and of steps towards independence, on
which issue the Liberals have repeatedly called for the holding of a referendum.
The departure of the People’s Party from the governing coalition led to early elections
in April 2001, the third set since 1992. The electoral campaign centred on the future of re-
lations with Serbia after Milošević and on the accusations of corruption against the gov-
ernment.141
The election results indicate the extremely polarised political scene in Montenegro,
with the pro-independence parties gaining only a slight advantage over the pro-Yugoslav
bloc. Failing to win an outright majority, the DPS-SDP coalition formed a minority gov-
ernment with the support of the Liberal Alliance.
Table 6 – Results of the Parliamentary elections, 22 April 2001142
Party/Coalition Number of votes Percentage Members in Percentage
Parliament
Pobjeda je Crna 153 946 42.0 36 46.7
Gora (DPS, SDP)
Zajedno za Jugosla- 148 513 40.6 33 42.9
viju (SNP, NS, SNS)
LSCG 28 746 7.9 6 7.8
DUA 4 232 1.2 1 1.3
DS 3 570 1.0 1 1.3
The DPS-led government after the 2001 elections thus lacked the necessary decisive
stability in negotiations over the future status of Montenegro. Both the Social Democrats
and the Liberal Alliance argued for a referendum to be held in 2001. The DPS supported
140 The NS also dismissed its President, Novak Kilibarda, who had been close to Đukanović.
He had been the representative of the Montenegrin Trade Mission in Bosnia. His subsequent
National Unity Party (Narodna sloga) gathered only 0.1% of the vote in the 2001 elections.
141 International Crisis Group: Montenegro: Time to Decide. Pre-election Briefing, Podgorica/
Brussels, 18.4.2001.
142 OSCE/ODIHR: Republic of Montenegro. Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Parliamentary
Election, 22 April 2001, Warsaw, 12.6.2001, p. 17.
36
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
this in public but the narrow margin of support for independence in opinion polls, and the
protracted debates with the opposition over the technicalities of such a referendum, de-
layed the calling of one. During the debates on the future shape of relations between Ser-
bia and Montenegro, the coalition Zajedno za Jugoslaviju formulated a joint platform with
the governing parties in Serbia, making the negotiations effectively both internal and bi-
lateral at one and the same time.
By autumn 2001, the negotiations process appeared to be moving towards a referendum
in Montenegro as the result of several rounds of failed negotiations. With the forceful in-
tervention of the European Union during winter 2001/2, however, the fortunes changed in
favour of a joint state for which a variety of plans circulated throughout February and
March 2002. Finally, on 14 March 2002, the Montenegrin, Serbian and Yugoslav govern-
ments signed an Agreement on transforming Yugoslavia into a Union of Serbia and Mon-
tenegro. Montenegro obliged itself not to carry out a referendum for at least three years,
but the structure of the Union was largely left often to later negotiations. 143
Neither the Liberal Alliance nor the Social Democratic Party supported the Agreement
and both complained of not having been involved in the negotiations. Shortly after the
signing of the Agreement, the minority government of Filip Vujanovi ć lost the support of
the Liberal Alliance and, at the same time, the ministers of the Social Democratic Party,
including the minister of foreign affairs, Branko Lukovac, resigned. 144 The Agreement it-
self nevertheless managed to muster sufficient support as the DPS and the pro-Yugoslav
parties voted in favour. 145
The resulting governmental crisis was accentuated by the inability of the leading parties
to form a new coalition. After the local elections in Montenegro in May, the Liberal Alli-
ance formed coalitions at the local level with Zajedno za Jugoslaviju in the attempt to oust
the DPS from power in a number of communities. This local co-operation was then trans-
ferred to the caretaker Parliament, which was confronted with a narrow alliance between
LSCG and the pro-Yugoslav parties. This alliance, formed despite the large differences in
virtually every political aspect, was established with the sole aim of ousting the DPS from
power. During spring and summer 2002, the alliance was able to change a number of laws
on the media and elections, taking de facto control of the state media which had earlier
been influenced by the Democratic Party of Socialists. 146
The October 2002 elections brought a degree of clarification and certainty into the
Montenegrin political scene subsequent to the signing of the Belgrade Agreement. The
DPS managed to increase its share of the vote to a level approaching that of the 1998 elec-
tion results, when its partner included, in addition to the Social Democrats, the People’s
Party which had since joined the pro-Yugoslav bloc.
143 On this issue, see the chapter by Wim van Meurs on ‘The Belgrade Agreement: Robust
Mediation between Serbia and Montenegro’, this volume.
144 Darko Šuković: ‘New Round of Imbroglio’, AIM 21.4.2002.
145 MNToday 10.4.2002.
146 The new media regulations had to been amended after protests from the media (including a
news announcer who walked off air during the main news programme) and from interna-
tional organisations that these allowed excessive government control over the media. Bojica
Bošković: ‘Political Crisis Ended?’, Balkan Reconstruction Report 16.9.2002.
37
Florian Bieber
Conclusions
In examining the Montenegrin political scene in recent years, major differences with politi-
cal life in the other Yugoslav successor republics can be detected. Despite significant politi-
cal shifts and phases of considerable instability, political alignments have remained surpris-
ingly stable throughout the 1990s. The pro-Serbian bloc, represented by Branko Kostić in
1992, Momir Bulatović in 1997/8 and by the SNP-led coalition since 2000, has consistently
gathered between one-third and just less than one-half of the votes. The political parties and
38
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
candidates running for an autonomous, yet not necessarily independent, Montenegro usually
gather 40-50 per cent of the vote while outright independence parties and groupings succeed
in gathering around one-tenth of the vote. The radical Serb nationalist position of the Yugo-
slav bloc subsided throughout the 1990s while the parties in favour of greater Montenegrin
sovereignty inched towards outright independence, but the overall stability of the Mon-
tenegrin scene has been particularly noteworthy.
Within this political system, the dominance of the Democratic Party of Socialists has been
remarkable. The DPS is the only party in former Yugoslavia, and across all of the Balkans
for that matter, which has managed to maintain power throughout the transition period. The
Party has undergone several transformations, first during the ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’
and again after the break with Milošević, but it has remained structurally similar through-
out. Due to its uninterrupted rule, it furthermore remains closely intertwined with the admin-
istration. This particularity begs the question as to whether Montenegro can be considered to
be a fully-fledged democracy, considering that a change in government is one of its defining
criteria. We can consider Montenegro as a classic case of a hybrid regime in the post-Com-
munist era: not yet qualifying as a liberal democracy, it nevertheless does not constitute an
authoritarian system. Generally, we can distinguish the period between 1990 and 1997 from
the subsequent period. In 1990-1997, regular elections were held, which may have lacked
some criteria in judging them as free and fair but which, nevertheless, allowed for meaning-
ful competition. It was the control of resources and the media which maintained the domi-
nance of the DPS. According to Larry Diamond’s recent conceptualisation of hybrid re-
gimes, Montenegro during this period would have qualified as a competitive authoritarian
system, wherein elections took place but the dominance of one party was secured through
the manipulation of the electoral process and via other institutional and extra-institutional
means. The split of the DPS in 1997/8 marked a transformation to a system oscillating be-
tween an ‘ambiguous’ regime 151 and an electoral democracy. Here, the fairness of elections
is more respected and the instruments of control over the democratic process diminished. 152
In addition to these considerations on the political system, two explanations of the under-
lying divisions in the political spectrum on the issue of independence need to examined: the
historical and geographical divide of Montenegro; and the role of the tribe ( pleme).
Firstly, common discourse on the division between pro-Serb and pro-independence sup-
porters has identified a divide between the north and the south of the country, or between ‘old
Montenegro’ and the territories which became part of Montenegro only during the course of
the 20th century. This divide is further reinforced by the differences in economic development
and geographical location. The coastal regions have been economically better off, largely as a
result of tourism, than the northern areas which are relatively remote. Additionally, the prox-
imity to Serbia has, naturally, led to more intense contacts than elsewhere in Montenegro.
This explanation remains relevant, but the division over Montenegrin independence is
much less geographically concentrated than is usually perceived. As the results of the local
elections in 2002 highlight (see Table 8), pro-independence parties have generally been
151 The ambiguousness in the case of Montenegro derives from two features: (a) the system still
had not seen a change of government; and (b) the regime was in transition and, since 1997/8,
no stable or permanent regime has emerged.
152 Larry Diamond: ‘Thinking about Hybrid Regimes’, Journal of Democracy Vol. 13 No. 2
(April 2002), pp. 21-36.
39
Florian Bieber
strong on the coast and in the historical heartland of Montenegro (Cetinje), whereas pro-Yu-
goslav parties gained most local authorities in northern Montenegro, but the margin of vic-
tory is, in a number of cases, narrow.
The historical divide, although indicative, has been offset by two factors. Firstly, as most
minorities have generally supported the DPS and other pro-independence parties, this has re-
duced support for pro-Yugoslav forces in the Sandžak region where Bosniaks and Albanians
live. Secondly, the large number of Serbian refugees from Croatia and Bosnia (Herceg-
Novi), or Serbs from Serbia (Budva), living in some of the coastal cities has diminished the
support for pro-independence parties. Irrespective of these two trends, the results of the 2002
40
Montenegrin politics since the disintegration of Yugoslavia
local elections, along with other results, indicate that the division over the status of Montene-
gro runs across the country and across its cities and towns.
Similarly to the historical divide, the role of tribal affiliations has been often been con-
sidered worthy as an explanation for political divisions in Montenegro. Affiliation with
tribes, i.e. groups of extended relatives, has persisted longer in Montenegro than in other
parts of south-eastern Europe, largely due to its geographical specificities. By the 1950s,
however, the central government had marginalised the tribes as a threat to the authority of
the state, especially in such a semi-totalitarian system as was Communist Yugoslavia. 154
Karl Kaser has pointed out that the clan-structures in south-eastern Europe have been re-
placed in the post-communist era with clientelistic networks. These have some structural
similarities but they do not constitute continuity with the earlier tribal system. 155
In the 1990s, the tribal origins of political figures did not play a significant role in se-
curing political allegiances among the electoral constituencies. 156 In as far as tribal affilia-
tions still mattered in some parts of Montenegro, they had become largely de-politicised.
Since 1999, the Socialist People’s Party has attempted to mobilise traditional tribal affilia-
tions against the Montenegrin government. In a number of tribal meetings, organised by
the SNP and the Serbian Orthodox Church, the assembled participants have expressed
their support for union with Serbia and have threatened the use of force in case the gov-
ernment took steps to secede from Yugoslavia:
By seceding from Serbia, Montenegro would not just trample on its ancestral guiding
thoughts, deny its pledges, humiliate the dead and desecrate holy relicts, but it would also
threaten itself and its survival.157
Despite these people’s assemblies not being well attended, the threat of the use of force,
coupled with the high degree of private ownership of weapons, presented a threat in the
period of political uncertainty between the end of the Kosovo war and the fall of
153 The figures include DPS, SDP and LSCG on the side of the pro-independence parties and
SNP, SNS, NS, NSS & SRS as the pro-Yugoslav parties. Smaller parties and ethnic minority
parties, which made significant gains only in Ulcinj, Rožaje and Plav, have been excluded.
This essential division has not been reflected in the subsequent local governments, as the
extremist coalition of SRS and NSS has been excluded from local power, whereas the SNP,
NS and SNS have formed coalitions with LSCG in a number of areas. Note that the elections
results for Podgorica and Herceg-Novi are for the local elections held on 11.6.2000. Sources:
Centar za Slobodne Izbore i Demokratiju: Oko izbora 8: Izveštaj sa lokalnih izbora za
odbornika 19 skupština opština Crne Gore (15. maja 2000. godine), Belgrade, May 2002;
OSCE/ODIHR: Montenegro. Early Municipal Elections (Podgorica and Herceg Novi), 11
June 2000. Final Report, Warsaw, 18.8.2000.
154 Christopher Boehm: Montenegrin Social Organisation and Values: Political Ethnography of
a Refugee Area Tribal Adaptation (New York: AMS Press, 1983).
155 Karl Kaser: Freundschaft und Feindschaft auf dem Balkan (Klagenfurt: Wieser, 2001),
pp. 88-89.
156 Steven C. Calhoun, in an article on tribes in Montenegro today, examines tribal affiliations
in contemporary Montenegro (from the angle of US military policy), while over-stating the
importance of tribal membership in the political choices of their members. See Steven C.
Calhoun: ‘Montenegro’s Tribal Legacy,’ Military Review (July-August 2000), pp. 32-40.
157 SRNA 26.11.2001.
41
Florian Bieber
Altogether, the attempts to revitalise the tribes for political ends has been only partly
successful; the SNP has continued to draw participants to these folkloristic gatherings, but
they have failed to develop them into mass movements which would underline the Party’s
political agenda.160
Montenegrin politics has, throughout the past decade, differed in one more aspect from
the other post-Yugoslav states: despite the high number of minorities, amounting to at least
one-quarter of its population, political discourse along ethno-nationalist lines has been con-
siderably less significant than elsewhere. Furthermore, minority parties have been consider-
ably less successful in gathering the near-exclusive support enjoyed by their counterparts
elsewhere in former Yugoslavia. Instead, minorities have voted for, and have been repre-
sented in, a number of mainstream parties, especially the DPS, SDP and LSCG. 161 Among
the leading parties, nationalism has played a role in the political discourse, especially in the
early 1990s, but, after 1993, attacks on minorities have been rare and the main targets of Ser-
bian nationalist parties have been the pro-independence parties rather than minorities. 162 The
intra-Montenegrin dispute over identity and relations with Serbia have together overshad-
owed the ethnification of politics common to other post-Yugoslav states.
The different dynamics of minority-majority relations in Montenegro is indicative of the
curious role of national identity and nationalism in Montenegro. Excluding minorities, there
are in fact two nationalisms among the majority populations: Serbian and Montenegrin na-
tionalism. The former was particularly virulent in the early 1990s, but the latter grew stead-
ily throughout the decade. Montenegrin nationalism has been exceptional, as its proponents
(foremost the Liberal Alliance) have linked it explicitly with tolerance and inter-ethnic co-
existence. Even the traditional myth-making linked the pre-Yugoslav independent state with
a policy of tolerance towards minorities. At the same time, Montenegrin nationalism is still
not clearly delimited and has not become a broad mass movement, as have other national-
isms in former Yugoslavia. Possessing nevertheless a considerable history, it is still very
much a national identity in the making, the success of which will both determine and be de-
termined by the eventual status of Montenegro.
42
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
Beáta Huszka
1 United States Institute of Peace (USIP): Serbia and Montenegro. Reintegration, divorce or
something else? Special Report, Washington, 2.4.2001.
2 Applying a western currency and putting trade barriers on Serbian imports can be mentioned
among the measures that were applied.
3 USIP, op. cit.
4 Testimony of Janusz Bugajski, Center for Strategic and International Studies: Promoting and
Protecting Democracy in Montenegro, Commission on Security and Co-operation in Europe,
Washington, 1.2.2000.
43
Beáta Huszka
the federation. However, the debate on the constitutional situation is only one aspect of
the conflict, which involves many more other factors through which Montenegrin aspira-
tions for independence have been expressed and which have directly or indirectly contrib-
uted to the escalation of the crisis, such as competing elite interests, the interference of the
international community and also economic considerations. These different aspects are
closely linked with each other – reflected in that the key issue over which the political
elite has become divided is the question of status 5 – and, as a result of elite rivalries, pub-
lic opinion has started to transform. A change in public opinion in favour of independence
was an indirect outcome of the constitutional debate and a direct outcome of the elite’s
campaign; however, after these pro-independence dynamics started in Montenegrin soci-
ety, they could not be sidetracked, which is one explanation why the aspirations for inde-
pendence did not reduce after October 2000. Despite some increase in support for inde-
pendence, there has not been a dramatic shift in public opinion in recent years. The
international community also played a crucial role in the course of events; without its
help, Montenegro probably would not have been successful in its attempt to increase its
autonomy to the extent of de facto independence.
This chapter will investigate why Montenegro’s unique case does not fit into the ethno-
national paradigm. Unlike in other cases of former Yugoslavia, the recent and ongoing as-
pirations for independence have not been driven solely (or even primarily) by nationalistic
aspirations or identity considerations, but rather by various interests. The chapter will out-
line the debate over independence among the political elite of Montenegro and between
the political elite of the republics, with the aim of pinpointing the main arguments being
put forward on the pro- and anti-independence sides. By shedding light on the different
dynamics and processes of Montenegrin politics, the various interests behind a particular
political position on the status question can be detected. The second half of this chapter
concentrates on the economic aspects of the independence issue for two reasons. First of
all, economic considerations played a crucial role in placing Montenegrin independence
on the political agenda – and then keeping it there. Secondly, politicians have tended to
use economic arguments to support their particular position; it is, therefore, useful to ex-
amine these arguments and to try to assess their validity.
5 Since 1998, the Democratic Party of Socialists (Demokratska partija socijalista, DPS), the
Social Democratic Party (Socijaldemokratska partija, SDP) and the Liberal Alliance of
Montenegro (Liberalni savez Crne Gore, LSCG) have been the ones pushing for independ-
ence; in contrast, the People's Party (Narodna stranka, NS), the Socialist People’s Party
(Socijalistička narodna partija, SNP) and the Serbian People’s Party (Srpska narodna
stranka, SNS), which form the principal opposition to Đukanović's government, have been
urging the re-establishment of closer links with Serbia.
44
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
litical elite been fairly united regarding both Montenegro’s part in the federation and Ser-
bia, but also that the majority of the public supported the preservation of the Yugoslav
federation in its existing form up until the late 1990s. According to surveys, 7 until 1999 a
two-thirds majority of the Montenegrin public considered the federation to be the best so-
lution for both Serbia and Montenegro, and these included a majority of DPS members.
This attitude towards the federation was in line with public opinion on Milo šević, the
most popular politician in Montenegro until the mid-nineties and who enjoyed even
stronger support there than in Serbia. 8 It should be noted, however, that support in the
1990s for the federation rarely focused on the abstract political system but signified rather
an endorsement of close alignment with Serbia, including an endorsement of the politics
of Milošević.
The changing dynamics among the elite and the public of Montenegro have been a re-
sponse to outside circumstances – such as Serbian disregard of the federal constitution,
economic decline and the devastating international image of Yugoslavia – but these dy-
namics did contribute to the amplification of ambitions for independence in Montenegro.
The emergence of these dynamics will be explored to identify the specific interests which
might be held responsible for keeping the status issue on the agenda today. The elite, nat-
urally, played a crucial role in turning public opinion in favour of independence, thereby
starting certain dynamics that could not simply be deflected or shut down after the demo-
cratic changes which took place in Serbia. Interestingly, elite debates in Montenegro, and
also between Montenegro and Serbia, had arrived at a consensus in November 2001, ac-
cording to which the constitutional crisis should have been resolved by the holding of a
referendum in Montenegro, thereby allowing for the option of Montenegrin independ-
ence.9 It could be argued that, if the constitutional decision had been left to the elites of the
two republics, and had the EU not interfered, the likely outcome would have been a refer-
endum in Montenegro and the separation of the two republics. 10
45
Beáta Huszka
thus placing an enormous amount of pressure on the political elite. 12 These circumstances
created the room (and the necessity) for Milo Đukanović, Prime Minister of Montenegro
at the time, to break with the political regime in Belgrade. This was further facilitated by
the change in the Serbian political climate which took place in 1997: in the winter of
1996/97, mass demonstrations took place in Serbia to compel Milo šević to acknowledge
the result of the local elections, according to which the opposition came into power in
many cities throughout Serbia, including the biggest ones: Belgrade; Novi Sad; and Ni š.13
These two factors, the disastrous economic situation and the political events of 1997,
made Đukanović’s success possible; however, it seemed at first that he would lose politi-
cal power as had everyone else who had turned against Milo šević.
Đukanović expressed his break with the regime in Belgrade through an interview deliv-
ered to the independent Belgrade weekly Vreme in February 1997:
It would be completely wrong for Slobodan Milošević to remain in any place in the political life
of Yugoslavia. … Milošević is a man of obsolete political ideas, lacking the ability to form a
strategic vision of the problems this country is facing, surrounded by unsuitable individuals who
are following the time-tested method of many authoritarian regimes.14
Gradually, a majority emerged in his support in the party: firstly, the municipal DPS
party committees in Cetinje and Nik šić proposed his re-election as party vice-president;
and then, in July 1997, the DPS main board appointed him as the party’s candidate for the
presidential election. Of the whole government, only one minister stayed loyal to Presi-
dent Momir Bulatovi ć; as a result, Bulatovi ć was forced out of the DPS, subsequently to
create his own party, the Socialist People’s Party. 15
The presidential elections of 1997 confirmed that Đukanović had succeeded in winning
the favour not only of the majority of his own party but also of that of the public. He ran
for the presidency with a rhetoric emphasising a pro-western orientation, free market re-
form, the rule of law and minority rights, and managed to win – albeit very narrowly, with
50.8 per cent of the votes – in the second round. This reflected the very strong division of
the country and the split of the population into two opposing camps of almost equal size.
The northern municipalities of Andrijevica, Plu žine and Pljevlja were (and still are) the
strongest supporters of the SNP, while Đukanović enjoyed strongest support in the areas
inhabited by Muslims in Ro žaje (92 per cent) and Albanians in Ulcinj (85 per cent), as
well as in the historical heartland of Montenegro, such as Cetinje (84 per cent). 16 The ma-
jor issue along which the two camps were divided was the status of the republic: one camp
opting for an independent Montenegro; the other for sustaining the federation with Serbia.
Since 1997, Đukanović began increasingly to distance Montenegro from Belgrade, al-
though without expressing open aspirations for independence. Until 1999, those in favour
of independence within DPS did not surpass the number of those favouring a common
46
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
state while, among the public, the absolute majority would still have supported the federa-
tion. Until 1999, two-thirds of the population supported a common state and only after
1999 did this number fall to a simple majority. Interestingly, this balance radically tipped
in 2001, after the victory of democratic forces in Serbia, when those wanting independ-
ence outnumbered their opponents. By that time, three-quarters of DPS voters were al-
ready supporting separation. 17
Citizens of Montenegro are polarised on the question of independence according both
to nationality and their party preferences. Generally speaking, Serbs would not support in-
dependence or a confederal arrangement of the two republics, together with about one-
half of Montenegrins; 18 these two groups constitute the supporters of the ‘Together for
Yugoslavia’ coalition which consists of the SNP, the NS and the SNS. On the other side,
minorities – Albanians, Croats and Bosniaks-Muslims – and the other half of Mon-
tenegrins together make up the electoral basis of the ‘Victory for Montenegro’ 19 coalition
and the Liberal Alliance. 20
Based on an opinion poll conducted by the Centre for Political Studies of the Institute of
Social Science, if a referendum had been held in March 2001, 55 per cent of voters would
have opted for independence and 45 per cent for the preservation of the federation, 21 if
they had to choose between these two options. 22 The question arises as to why the major-
ity favours independence from Serbia; more precisely, what do people expect to gain from
separation? This is an especially crucial question, since public support for independence
increased after the democratic changes came about in Serbia. Furthermore, it is worth not-
ing that the more educated and wealthier strata have generally been more optimistic re-
garding the consequences of separation from Serbia, while the less educated and poorer
citizens have expressed greater pessimism. 23
Obviously, people have different expectations from a ‘divorce’ and, in order to shed
light on what considerations might stand behind the existing secessionist aspirations, it is
worth mentioning the findings of some surveys. According to the above-mentioned poll, a
relative majority of Montenegrins expect from independence from Serbia faster economic
development, an improvement in their overall political situation, a more advantageous in-
ternational position, the strengthening of their democratic development, greater interna-
tional assistance to Montenegro and faster accession to the EU. 24 Based upon the results
of another poll conducted by the National Democratic Institute (NDI) in April 2001, re-
47
Beáta Huszka
25 National Democratic Institute (NDI): Key Findings, Track One, Podgorica 11.4.2001, p. 17.
26 Interview of the author with Dragan Koprivica, Podgorica, 22.5.2002.
27 Interview of the author with Miodrag Vičković, Podgorica, 24.5.2002.
28 Interview with Koprivica.
48
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
Montenegro as a country equipped with all the necessary resources for functioning inde-
pendently; however, alongside politicians on the pro-Yugoslav side, he blames the current
government for the same crimes. In his opinion, Đukanović betrayed his own people
since he spoiled the chance of establishing independence with the creation of the ‘crimi-
nalised zone’. It is worth pointing out that the pro-independence camp is far from unified.
The Liberal Alliance generally distrusts the DPS and recently, after the municipal elec-
tions in May 2002, joined a coalition at the local level with the SNP and, at the republican
level, dropped its support for the minority government of the DPS and the SDP.
Altogether, with the help of the media, the political elite has managed to keep the status
issue in the focus of public attention. Thereby, political parties could avoid having to deal
with economic transition and reforms, and could also appear as important players on the
political scene by representing a strong position on independence. It can also be argued
that the reason why independence became more and more popular in Montenegro was
that, initially, the reformist, pro-western and democratic agenda was represented by those
parties who were pro-independence; moreover, Montenegro’s stepping out on the road of
democratic transition was, at the same time, stepping on a path which led to a higher level
of autonomy and, eventually, independence. The dynamics of change in public opinion
have also contributed to keeping the question on the political agenda, which is a good il-
lustration of how ‘the genie cannot be put back into the bottle’, no matter how realistic or
unrealistic these expectations are in terms of establishing an independent Montenegro.
It should be noted, however, that the constitutional issue is far from being the most im-
portant one for the people of Montenegro. According to an opinion poll conducted in No-
vember 2001,29 people ranked the status question behind the economic situation which in-
cluded, among others, unemployment and the revival of industry. Another survey, carried
out by NDI in April 2001, revealed similar results, with respondents naming the economic
situation as the most important issue (49%), above that of status (23%) 30 (see Graph 1):
Graph 1 – Most important issues among Montenegrin citizens, 200131
International Financial Aid
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Montenegrin citizens do not only consider the status issue as secondary but, based on an
opinion poll from January 2002, they also express generally strong distrust of all political
29 Centar za tranziciju: Governing the State, Montenegro’s citizens’ opinion and attitudes, Jan-
uary 2002, p. 11.
30 NDI: Key Findings, p. 9.
31 ibid.
49
Beáta Huszka
parties, institutions and authorities, among which the executive authority ranked the worst
(60.5% of respondents expressed distrust in the government while only 13.1 per cent ex-
pressed trust).32 This poll identified a considerable degree of discontent with the govern-
ment: the majority of respondents (66.8%) stated that they were discontented or highly dis-
contented with the way Montenegro was governed. 33 Less than 15 per cent of those asked
said they trusted the parliament of Montenegro, a figure which is part of a downward trend.
Among political institutions, the President enjoyed the highest level of trust, but the degree
of trust decreased from 39 to 13 per cent between April and October 2001. 34 Furthermore,
citizens regard the political leadership before 1989 as more professional and more compe-
tent than the present political elite in the fulfilment of its duties of governing the state and
serving the common interests of people. In the same poll – in line with this lack of trust to-
wards the political elite – respondents expressed their preference of having a government
formed by experts rather than politicians and favoured that most important government de-
cisions should be approved in referenda. According to these answers, citizens generally
prefer more direct involvement in political decision-making through referenda. 35
There is an additional problem in Montenegro: there has been no democratic, reform-
oriented alternative to the present regime. The SNP, which supported Milo šević until his
fall in October 2000, has not been a particularly promising alternative to the governing
DPS-led coalition. According to an opinion poll conducted in June 2001, 36 many citizens
are frustrated with this lack of a political alternative, which is well-expressed in the above-
mentioned high level of distrust in the existing political institutions, including both gov-
erning and opposition parties. Neboj ša Medojević, an independent Montenegrin econo-
mist, explains this general lack of trust in the entire political sphere by reference to the un-
fulfilled promises of the ‘For a Better Life (Da živimo Bolje) government, which was the
election slogan of the DPS/SDP/NS coalition in 1998, and by the general loss of faith in
the reform process. The amount of international financial aid flowing into Montenegro has
been widely reported, in the light of which the reform process appears to be very disillu-
sioning especially from the aspect of creating new jobs, improving the standard of living,
entering new foreign markets and managing an ‘honest’ privatisation process.
Not only did the promised reforms not bring about an improvement in the quality of life
but, while some gained enormous wealth through corruption and smuggling, the wider strata
of society lost out in the transformation process in decreased wages and the loss of jobs.
Moreover, as the government only unconvincingly attempted to curb the grey economy, ci-
tizens have demonstrated an indifferent or cynical attitude towards politicians and the rule of
law.37 There has been a widely-held perception among citizens that, instead of intensifying
reforms in Montenegro, the political elite monopolised its position in the sphere of economy
and politics, creating an intertwined web of connections between the business and the politi-
50
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
cal spheres.38 Through these, the political elite has been able to control all segments of soci-
ety;39 or, in the words of Medojevi ć: ‘Montenegrin society is captured by political parties.’ 40
The ‘social elite’ (universities, independent media, NGOs, unions), Medojevi ć argues, has
expressed little criticism of this process but, rather, has represented the interests of the ruling
political elite and thereby contributed to the delay in the transition in Montenegro. Me-
dojević identifies the causes of this phenomenon as the redistribution process under sanc-
tions between 1992 and 1995, when a new class of ‘capitalist oligarchs’ emerged in co-ope-
ration with the political elite. 41 Those in power have been in a privileged position for more
than a decade, which made the creation of political and economic monopolies relatively
easy. This intermingled nature of politics and economics stands as a barrier to the implemen-
tation of radical reforms and transition in the economic sphere and the administration. Fur-
thermore, it might be a reason why the elite, being in power since 1997 at least, supports
Montenegrin independence: obviously, this way it can more easily preserve its special posi-
tion. Montenegro gaining independence would mean a lack of fundamental changes in do-
mestic political and economic relations as a result of which the elite, which holds key politi-
cal and business positions, could stay easily in place.
38 ibid, p. 6.
39 Đukanović rewarded his allies generously with significant positions in the political and eco-
nomic sphere: Banjević was named director of the aluminium plant in Podgorica; Pejanović-
Đurišić the President of the Managing Board of Montenegrin Telecom; Vujanović was
appointed Prime Minister; and Maras the Minister of the Interior. It is a general characteris-
tic of Montenegro that politics and economics are, generally, strongly interlinked, which is
illustrated by several examples, such as Svetozar Marović being not only a DPS Vice-Presi-
dent, but also the President of the Managing Board of Budvanska Riviera, which controls
some twenty hotels in and around Budva; the Director of Budvanska Riviera used to be the
Minister of Tourism in Đukanović’s third government; a former Minister of Finance is now
President of the Monetary Council and director of the Montenegrobank; and the list could be
further continued.
40 ibid, p. 2.
41 ibid.
42 ESI (2000), op. cit., p. 18.
43 ‘Pre-term elections’, p. 5.
44 ibid.
51
Beáta Huszka
federal level and those based in Montenegro. Momir Bulatovi ć, based in Belgrade – as
federal Prime Minister until the fall of the Milo šević regime in October 2000 – and his
supporters sided with Milo šević, and were very unwilling to get involved in any construc-
tive dialogue with the Montenegrin government; while a wing within the SNP, participat-
ing in everyday political life in Montenegro, was more open to dialogue and showed more
respect to the political process taking place there. 45
In general, relations between the SNP and the governing parties, i.e. the DPS and its al-
lies, have been tense. This is reflected in the SNP’s co-operation with Milo šević in the ab-
rogation of Montenegro’s power within the federation, since SNP deputies have consti-
tuted the sole representation of Montenegro at the federal level since 1998, despite the
DPS-led coalition having the right, according to the election results of Montenegro, to ap-
point Montenegrin deputies to the federal assembly. 46 Moreover, the amendments to the
federal constitution in 2000, which secured the exclusion of Montenegro’s government
from the federal political process, were brought about with the assistance of the Mon-
tenegrin opposition parties. 47 In September 2000, with the federal elections being boy-
cotted by the Montenegrin governing coalition, because they did not accept the federal
constitution, the Montenegrin opposition did so participate, thereby continuing to be the
exclusive representative of Montenegro at the federal level. 48 In September 2001, when
Koštunica attempted to re-start dialogue on the constitutional crisis between the leaders of
the two republics, the Montenegrin Prime Minister and President refused to participate be-
cause the federal Prime Minister, Dragi ša Pešić, an SNP member, was also invited. 49
There was not much communication between the Milo šević regime and the Mon-
tenegrin government, but the contact of the new democratic government of Serbia with
Montenegro’s government was marked by bitterness and frustration, mainly because DOS
leaders had a hard time understanding why Montenegro was not willing to live together
with a democratic Serbia, when it was apparently able to do so with Milo šević, i.e. it had
not pursued independence for most of the Milo šević era. After the election in September
2000, the Montenegrin government did not recognise Ko štunica as federal President be-
cause it was unwilling to recognise the federal arrangement as legitimate; however, it did
welcome the victory of Serbian democratic forces. Also, after the elections, DOS had to
form an alliance with the SNP in order to secure a parliamentary majority at the federal
level, which increased the conflict-oriented climate between the federal authorities and the
Montenegrin government. Interestingly, before the elections, DOS and Đukanović’s gov-
45 ibid, p. 6.
46 The Federal Parliament consists of two chambers. The representatives of the Chamber of the
Republics are elected by the republican parliaments while the representatives of the Cham-
ber of Citizens are directly elected in each republic. After the split in DPS in 1998, the Fed-
eral Parliament ignored the Montenegrin Parliament’s decision to revoke the mandates of
SNP deputies to replace them with DPS deputies. Subsequently, the Montenegrin authorities
ceased to recognise and participate in the federal institutions.
47 ESI (2000), op. cit., p. 14.
48 ESI (2001a): Sovereignty, Europe and the Future of Serbia and Montenegro, A Proposal for
International Mediation, 12.2.2001, p. 3, available at www.esiweb.org/pages/rep/rep_mon4.html.
49 ESI (2001b): Politics, Interests and the Future of Yugoslavia: an Agenda for Dialogue,
26.11.2001, p. 3.
52
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
ernment had supported each other diplomatically and, moreover, G17 – the economic
think tank, which gave DOS its programme – even advised Montenegro in its economic
reforms.50
The political positions regarding the referendum seemed to be irreconcilable, but the
dynamics between the Montenegrin and the Serbian political leaderships surprisingly led
to the reaching of a wide consensus on the issue, which might have resulted in Montene-
gro eventually becoming independent. In October 2001, the Serbian and Montenegrin
leaders agreed during a meeting in Belgrade that, because they could not agree on the con-
53
Beáta Huszka
stitution of a joint state, the crisis should be dealt with through a referendum in Montene-
gro. After this ‘agreement’ – or, rather, the acknowledgement of an unbridgeable disa-
greement – negotiations in Montenegro yielded the arrival of a consensus according to
which the SNP would not boycott a referendum and would give up on insisting upon the
participation of Montenegrins living in Serbia, ‘If an independence decision were reached
honestly.’54 The debate continued about what the required majority should be, yet there
was a realistic perspective of settling on a common position. At this point, the EU inter-
vened, emphasising its preference for ‘A democratic Montenegro in a democratic FRY’ in
order to preserve the stability of the region. 55
54
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
Podgorica in 2001, reflecting the federal government’s virtual lack of influence on deci-
sions taken in Podgorica.
As a result, very few institutional connections between the two republics remained. Be-
sides the existing managerial and infrastructure links in the electricity sector, chief among
those that did remain were that Montenegrins still served in the Yugoslav army, used Yu-
goslav passports and participated in negotiations with the international organisations as
part of the Yugoslav delegation. 57 It should also be mentioned that Montenegrins could
still access Serbian higher education and health service, both of which are significant con-
sidering the weaknesses of the Montenegrin public sector.
The immediate effect of introducing the Mark was a drop in inflation from 23.3 to 4.6
per cent, a positive consequence of breaking with the irresponsible monetary policies of
Belgrade.58 However, inflation stayed in Montenegro even with the Mark and prices con-
tinued to rise further and remain higher than they were in Serbia. During 2000, prices kept
on rising in a worrying proportion: from 1999 to 2000 the consumer price index increased
by 24.7 per cent and the retail price index by 26 per cent; 59 in 2001 and 2002 the inflation
rate increased further. 60
The severing of economic ties between Montenegro and Serbia caused serious chal-
lenges to the Montenegrin economy. Montenegro had to look for new markets in the re-
gion which meant, for instance, the replacement of subsidised food imports from Serbia
with market-priced goods from Slovenia, Croatia, Italy and other western countries. 61 Fur-
thermore, due to the trade blockade, Montenegrin industrial products were no longer sold
in Serbia.62 The cessation of electronic payment transactions between the banks of the re-
publics also challenged the Montenegrin economy, causing companies either to turn to a
barter system or to make the effort to keep transfers going, the latter of which often in-
volved resorting to illegal means. 63
Altogether, the sanctions on FRY and the trade blockade from Serbia further pushed
Montenegro down the road of economic decline. 64 Subsequently, large amounts of west-
ern aid have been made available since 1998 to stabilise the economy and to help over-
come the hardships caused by the Serbian trade embargo. Aid from the EU and the US
was aimed at financing the social funds; helping the government pay for electricity im-
ports, medical supplies and food; and also supporting infrastructure projects. However,
the foreign aid only managed to subsidise a highly inefficient economy and did not put
sufficient pressure on the Montenegrin government to turn the rhetoric of reform into real-
ity; the aid was given to keep the west’s anti-Milo šević ally in power under the shadow of
the threat of war, and rational economic consideration could therefore not play a signifi-
cant role in the process of granting aid until autumn 2000. 65 The chronic dependency on
55
Beáta Huszka
foreign aid remains a major weakness of the Montenegrin economy; in 1999 and 2000, the
sums of committed aid by the EU and the US amounted to at least DM 485m. 66
It has been noted by international analysts that, even though the Montenegrin govern-
ment wears a reformist ‘label’, the transition process has barely begun and the reformist
rhetoric has brought scarce relief to the deep economic crises of the republic. 67 Daniel
Gros, of the Centre for European Policy Studies, has suggested that Montenegro seems to
be currently caught in a so-called ’self-made poverty trap’, in which the government does
not dare reform the existing dysfunctional economic structure because it fears the possi-
ble social consequences, as a result of which it could lose political power. In such a situa-
tion, the government tends to continue with bad policies and the country becomes even
poorer.68
However, according to the analysis of the European think tank, the European Stability
Initiative, unconditional western aid can be regarded as being mainly responsible for the
relatively ‘high’ wages, since foreign financial support allowed the Montenegrin govern-
ment to increase subsidies to struggling companies, pay social transfers, expand adminis-
tration and increase salaries in the public sector. At the same time, higher wages did not
mean a higher standard of living since prices were also considerably higher in Montene-
gro than in Serbia. For example, in 2001, despite a slight increase in nominal salaries (by
4%), real salaries decreased by 19 per cent due to a rise in consumer prices. 70 Moreover,
the impoverishment of society is an equally pressing issue in Montenegro as in Serbia, re-
flected as it is in the growth of the grey economy, which represents about 30 per cent of
the Montenegrin labour force, as well as by the high unemployment rate of 29 per cent
66 ESI (2001c): Rhetoric and Reform, A Case Study of Institution Building in Montenegro
1998-2001, Podgorica and Berlin, 1.7.2001, p. 21.
67 ibid.
68 Daniel Gros: ‘Montenegro 2010’, in Nicolas Wythe (ed.): The Future of Montenegro. Pro-
ceedings of an Expert Meeting, 26 February 2001 (Brussels: Centre for European Policy
Studies, 2001), pp. 65-79.
69 Source: IMF country information, state statistical offices and national banks of the countries,
Montenegro Economic Trends, March 2002, p. 79.
70 Medojević, op. cit., p. 9.
56
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
and the growth in the relative number of pensioners. 71 Furthermore, a huge economic gap
can be perceived between different regions, especially between the poorer north and the
richer coastal region, but also between different strata of society.
Altogether, the state of the Montenegrin economy does not present a very promising
picture, characterised as it is by politics dominating the economic sphere, a constantly
growing public sector, a huge and unsustainable budget deficit, growing arrears accumu-
lated by the social funds, a banking sector burdened by bad debts, state credits lent to
companies which will be never returned, a weak ability to attract foreign working capital,
un-enforced laws, an uncertain privatisation process and the generally unfavourable busi-
ness environment. 72
The absence of substantial reform can be viewed as a real obstacle for the proponents of
Montenegrin independence, but the low degree of economic integration in the region runs
against the arguments of those who argue for a federal arrangement with Serbia on eco-
nomic grounds. Montenegro is not intensively integrated economically in the region of
south-eastern Europe – a typical characteristic of all the countries in the region – and,
even though it fosters the strongest relations with Serbia, these are still relatively weak
compared to its relations with developed countries. Certainly, the low degree of economic
interconnectedness with Serbia is primarily the result of the political situation in the sec-
ond half of the 1990s. However, it would be quite difficult to assess what would be the
‘natural’ level of economic relations between the two republics without the complicated
and tense political situation. In the region, Montenegro’s most important trading partner is
Serbia, with about 5.4 per cent of all exports directed to Serbia and Kosovo, and 11.9 per
cent of all imports coming from there. Furthermore, Montenegro has recently made seri-
ous progress in trade relations with Serbia – especially after the political changes – ac-
cording to which imports from Serbia increased by 241 per cent in 2001 over the previous
year. Financial transactions with Serbia also improved in 2001 as a result of an increase in
trade transactions and in tourism. 73 The structure of the economy of both republics, as
well as the regional experience, does, however, suggest that there is a ceiling to the degree
of economic co-operation and integration which is possible. 74
57
Beáta Huszka
stability with reference to three major ‘external’ ‘shocks’ which can be held responsible
for Montenegro’s weak economic performance. 76 The first ‘shock’ has been the continu-
ous economic recession, as a result of which, in 2000, Montenegro’s GDP was only 50 per
cent of its 1989 level. Secondly, the ‘demographic chaos’ of former Yugoslavia has re-
sulted in a 13 per cent increase in the population over the last ten years due to the large in-
flux of refugees. And thirdly, the transition process in Montenegro has been delayed at
least seven years.
The first and the last argument are, however, rather problematic: the low level of GDP
in 2000 is not an ‘unfortunate’ external circumstance but a consequence of the delayed
transition, postponed even after 1997. Furthermore, one should consider who is responsi-
ble for the delay in the transition since the political elite in power has, more or less, been
the same from the beginning of the 1990s until today. Nevertheless, Vukoti ć acknowl-
edges that the implementation of a faster economic reform process and a radical establish-
ment of new institutions, and also integration into the regional markets of former Yugo-
slavia, are urgently needed. He also admits that, presently, Montenegro is incapable of
implementing economic reforms and reaching macroeconomic stability without foreign
assistance.77
Most supporters of independence acknowledge that, at present, Montenegro cannot func-
tion on its own – but that it could do so if it fulfilled some preconditions, as the republic
does have the potential to become viable independent of Serbia. Undeniably, Montenegro’s
economy cannot currently function without outside support; therefore, it cannot be consid-
ered to be viable in its present state. This is a matter of fact, but this circumstance has little
to do with independence or non-independence. Serbia is certainly not in a position to ‘res-
cue’ Montenegro since the economic situation in Serbia is even worse, regardless of the
economic indicator used, as indicated in the Table above. Montenegro’s current economic
difficulties have to be solved irrespective of the status question especially since, even if it
wanted to, it could not depend on Serbia, as Serbia has little to offer at the moment.
Several theories have been advanced about the means for Montenegrin economic via-
bility. According to Vukoti ć:
Montenegro possesses the necessary resources, human capital and government organisation
to finance itself independently, and to finance itself in the long term from its own reve-
nues.”78
75 In what follows I refer primarily to the argumentations of Veselin Vukotić and Nebojša
Medojević.
76 Veselin Vukotić: ‘The Economic Situation and Economic Reforms in Montenegro’, in: The
Future of Montenegro. Proceedings of an Expert Meeting, 26 February 2001 (Brussels:
Centre for European Policy Studies, 2001), p. 47.
77 ibid. Even Daniel Gros concurs, suggesting that the support of the international financial
institutions is crucial in the short term, despite the dangers of the emergence of a poverty trap
in Montenegro. Gros, op. cit.
78 Vukotić, op. cit., p. 48.
58
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
the small-scale service of exclusive products, such as health and medical tourism, the pro-
duction of hi-tech goods and software engineering. 79
In addition, Vukotić draws attention to a list of the resources that provide Montenegro
with the necessary potential for development, such as its agriculture; coastline; the capacity
to produce aluminium, iron, bauxite, salt and coal; its maritime industry; a highly-educated
population; and, last but not least, a special opportunity for tourism. 80 Both experts empha-
sise that, without a radical reform of institutions and the setting of new rules, these remain,
however, only potential resources. Gros concurs and insists that the implementation of a
‘big bang reform’ would be a necessary precondition. 81 He views Montenegro’s future in
the creation of an open economy, a natural consequence of the small size of the republic. In
order to achieve a high degree of openness, meaning a high level of exports relative to
GDP, a stable currency and a very liberal and transparent trade policy are required. 82 These
are definitely on the way in Montenegro, if one considers the introduction of the DM and
the Euro, and the steps which have been taken to create a liberal trade regime.
However, the most frequent and almost commonplace development plan for Montene-
gro is based on the republic’s potential for tourism. Undeniably, Montenegro has great po-
tential in the tourism sector, taking into account its unspoiled nature, unique landscape,
culture, a small town milieu and its beaches. Despite this opportunity, little has been done
in the last decade to exploit this potential, reflected in that, of a range of 24 activities, tour-
ism took 18th place in terms of the share in GDP of its turnover in the 1985-1999 period. 83
Furthermore, this is primarily not due to a lack of interest by tourists since, in the summer
of 2001, the number of visitors exceeded the number predicted, for which the Mon-
tenegrin tourist industry was completely unprepared. The frequent problems appearing in
the tourist sector are, among others, the shortage of drinkable water, dirty beaches, com-
plicated and long customs administration procedures, the lack of a developed infrastruc-
ture and insufficient accommodation capacities. Until now, Montenegrin tourism has been
based on domestic guests, whereby 84 per cent of all guests come from Serbia and Mon-
tenegro. A key problem in attracting foreign visitors has been the absence of substantial
foreign investment. However, that would require more favourable conditions such as im-
proving the infrastructure, establishing a clear legal framework and setting some addi-
tional incentives for foreign investors. 84
There are many ideas for turning Montenegro into a prosperous and viable country, but
all these scenarios require the fulfilment of the several preconditions mentioned earlier.
However, recent years do not testify to a strong commitment on the part of the govern-
ment to implement radical reforms in the sphere of economics and administration that
would bring about a real transition. Furthermore, if in the area of tourism, with its obvious
chance to make profits, almost nothing has been done, how great can be the expectation
that all the steps proposed by the economic experts quoted above will be taken? Certainly,
Montenegro needs economic development and a real transition, regardless of the outcome
59
Beáta Huszka
of the status issue. If the reform process fails and the country stays caught in a poverty
trap, Montenegro will be poor with or without Serbia. Therefore, the question is not
whether Montenegro could become viable as an independent country. The question is how
the necessary reforms could be conducted in the best way to create the preconditions for
development. To put it in another way, in which case could the transition and reform proc-
esses be carried out in a more efficient way, if Montenegro becomes independent or if it
remains part of some kind of common state with Serbia?
The promoters of independence hold the position that Montenegro could be reformed
more quickly independently from Serbia. To support this position, Vukoti ć argues that,
due to the relatively small size of Montenegro in a common state with Serbia (about 5%),
Montenegro’s influence on monetary policy, foreign trade policy and tax policy would be
irrelevant. Besides, he further points to the different structure of the two economies, ac-
cording to which Montenegro is oriented towards tourism and services, and Serbia to agri-
culture and industry; to the different stage of the reforms reached so far by the two repub-
lics; and to the argument that sustaining federal institutions in addition to republican ones
is expensive and superfluous. He argues that reforms have to be conducted at the republi-
can level anyway; therefore, having a federal administration would be pointless. 85
The economic analysts of Monet86 have been cautious about taking a clear position on
independence; rather, they emphasise the disadvantages to the present form of arrange-
ment from an economic point of view. They also draw attention to the differences be-
tween Serbia and Montenegro in terms of size and in development strategies, but point in
addition to further points of departure, such as the achieved stage of privatisation, the
level of customs tariffs, and trade and monetary policy. Monet experts argue that sustain-
ing a federation with Serbia, even from the aspect of gaining access to a larger market,
would not provide a significant advantage for Montenegro since it has already managed to
find new markets in the region and does not need Serbia. Furthermore, they point out that
Montenegro cannot afford a federal system which would be not only expensive but also
threatening to business due to the growing nature of bureaucracy and the overlap in the
authorities.87
Nebojša Medojević emphasises similar arguments in favour of independence. He points
to the need for a clear legal framework in order to engage in successful development. In
his view, such a framework can only be achieved through independence. He argues that,
in a federation, innumerable problems will emerge from the creation of spheres of respon-
sibilities. Therefore, the constitutional question has to be solved first – preferably in the
form of Montenegrin independence – before the real problems of transition and reforms
can be tackled.88
At the same time, the promoters of independence generally agree that Montenegro
needs to establish serious functional relations with Serbia and that, instead of fighting
over the constitutional settlement, talks between the two republics should focus on how
the exact form of these functional ties should be defined. According to the supporters of
Montenegrin independence, Montenegro and Serbia should ensure the free flow of people,
60
The dispute over Montenegrin independence
services, goods and capital; harmonise their tax and tariff regimes; and remove obstacles
in payment procedures. Actually, these goals have anyway been set by the new agreement
on the constitution of the joint state of Serbia and Montenegro, with the essential differ-
ence that the new constitutional agreement envisages the creation of federal institutions
despite economic policy remaining within the purview of the republics. 89
On the other side, few pro-federation economic arguments are heard, except for those
mentioned earlier concerning corruption and the advantages of a larger market. Economic
arguments against independence have been emphasised particularly by EU representa-
tives, according to whom:
…the benefits of the bigger market will be lost, foreign investments will be discouraged and
the lack of a common trade policy would be an obstacle to EU and WTO integration. Early
adoption of the Euro might involve substantial economic risks and costs. 90
In response to these arguments, the Montenegrin authorities point out that their eco-
nomic policies and reforms are compatible with EU integration. The government further
argues that the introduction of the DM and the Euro has been a success and that it does not
wish to return to the Dinar. It also notes that convergence with Serbia’s higher tariff rates
is unacceptable for Montenegro, which wants to build an open economy fitting its small
size. Acknowledging that closer integration with Serbia would be desirable for Montene-
gro, the authorities note at the same time that the biggest obstacle to creating a joint mar-
ket is Serbia’s delay in giving up price controls.
According to Medojevi ć, the status question as far as Serbia is concerned does not in-
volve economic considerations at all; it is only about identity, power and politics. It can be
concluded that determining the status question based purely on economic arguments does
present a challenge; however, it is also true that settling the constitutional issue is a prereq-
uisite for solving the difficult economic situation of Montenegro. Ending the constitutional
debate by declaring independence would be simpler than trying to arrange a functioning
federation; however, if half the country opposes such an outcome, it is questionable
whether, in the absence of a general consensus, separation would indeed bring about politi-
cal peace and stability. Nevertheless, as the figures analysed here indicate, the economy of
Montenegro is in a tough situation and the economic policies conducted thus far do not tes-
tify to a commitment to a far-reaching reform process. In addition, no matter how capable
Montenegro could be of functioning as a separate economy, the present arguments for inde-
pendence are, in an economic sense, more vision than reality.
Conclusion
Relations between Serbia and Montenegro have arrived at a turning point after many years
of conflict. Yet, it is difficult to predict what kind of process has been initiated by the sign-
ing of the Agreement on the common state in March 2002; it could equally be the begin-
ning of the integration or the disintegration of the two republics, depending on their par-
ticular interests and the position of the European Union. Even though the republics have
89 Proceeding Points for the Restructuring of Relations Between Serbia and Montenegro, Bel-
grade, 14.3.2002, p. 3, available at: www.gov.yu.
90 Statement issued by Javier Solana’s office in February 2002, contained in ICG, op. cit., p. 8.
61
Beáta Huszka
the right to leave the joint state after three years, it is the concrete steps that will be taken
in the interim which will determine the final outcome of the status question. If both move
towards establishing closer links and institutionalising these at the federal level, then leav-
ing the new union would obviously be more difficult and expensive than staying in it.
However, the dispute over Montenegrin independence will continue even if the defini-
tion of status has been postponed. Political dynamics and the various political and eco-
nomic interests which have been fuelling the debate over the republic’s independence will
also be seeking to influence the course of events in the future. Elite interests will also act
on the status issue, with some parties being highly dissatisfied with the provisions of the
Agreement. These parties, such as the Liberal Alliance, have further emphasised their
commitment to independence, but Đukanović has also tried to convince the public that he
and his party remain a faithful advocate of independence. It thus remains to be seen
whether the dispute can be transformed from the dilemma between independence and
maintaining a joint state with Serbia into a discussion on what practical ties the two repub-
lics wish to create.
It does, however, remain a question as regards how public opinion will develop con-
cerning the issue of Montenegrin independence; whether Montenegrin citizens will be
willing to accept staying within a joint state with Serbia. This development will depend on
the success of the new state, especially on how the standard of living changes in the next
three years, but political rhetoric will also exert a big influence on public opinion. A new
aspect to the status issue, which might even be decisive in the future, is the transformation
of Serbian public opinion. When the Serbian government begins to take over some of the
federal competencies, the trend of public opinion in both republics may generate a mo-
mentum towards disintegration which might carry both to an eventual formal separation.
At the end of the day, according to the Agreement, the opinion of the public will decide
whether the common state should be retained or not. The involvement of the EU, how-
ever, can again determine the exact outcome of the status question. The EU’s role in
pressing the Agreement means that it cannot now disengage, especially considering the
Stabilisation and Association Process in which Serbia and Montenegro have become in-
volved.
After all – if Neboj ša Medojević is correct that the only importance of the status ques-
tion lies in the creation of a clear legal situation – the issue of whether to retain such a
loose federation or to create an independent Montenegro may not make a significant dif-
ference in practical areas, including in the implementation of reforms in the economy and
the administration. Economic and functional relations between Serbia and Montenegro
will not be determined by defining the status of the country, because these relations can
stay at their present under-developed level either within the joint state envisaged by the
agreement or between two independent states. Therefore, it is both the concrete economic
interests and the extent of the willingness to co-operate that will determine the level and
quality of functional relations between the two republics. This will probably serve as a hot
topic for debate in Montenegro and within the whole state, not only at present but also for
the foreseeable future.
62
Wim van Meurs
* An earlier version of this paper was written in the framework of the joint south-east Europe
activities of the Bertelsmann Foundation and the Centre for Applied Policy Research.
1 ‘Balkan Media Divided on Historic Deal’, BBC News 15.3.2002.
2 For want of a better term, the new entity under international law is referred to here as ‘state’,
‘union’ and ‘federation’ interchangeably.
63
Wim van Meurs
epochal elections in the autumn of 2000, Milošević eliminated the legal principle of equality
between the two constituent republics to restore Serb hegemony. 3
The deadlock became an acute political dilemma after the ousting of Milošević. Milo
Đukanović had made his political fortune on the independence ticket but, under the new
circumstances, he was driven by his supporters and political allies to go for a referendum,
knowing well that the population was equally divided on the issue and that the west was
prepared to go to great lengths to prevent such a referendum. 4 Actually, in 1997, expect-
ing Milošević to lose power as a consequence of the civic protests in Serbia over electoral
fraud in the local elections in November 1996, Đukanović miscalculated and opted for in-
dependence. In 2000, expecting Milo šević to win the elections, he again miscalculated
and boycotted the federal elections. As a consequence, his natural allies, the reform-ori-
ented and pro-western coalition, the Democratic Opposition of Serbia ( Demokratska opo-
zicija Srbije, DOS), took power in Serbia but had, at the federal level, to form a coalition
with the reactionary Montenegrin opposition.
The March 2002 breakthrough, after many rounds of fruitless negotiations, is not to be
blamed solely on ‘diplomatic arm-twisting’ by Javier Solana. All the players came to real-
ise that they had outmanoeuvred themselves (and others) into a ‘lose-lose’ situation, so
the conditionality of the EU perspective provided economic incentives as well as a wel-
come excuse. Zoran Đinđić must have realised that the stand-off and bickering over com-
petencies between the federation and the republic was to the detriment of the drive for re-
form and international credibility of his political programme. His political competitor,
Vojislav Koštunica, saw his lead in popularity diminish in comparison with Đinđić, Mi-
roljub Labus and other reformers – a development partly due to the powerlessness of his
presidential position. Last, but not least, the nationalist opposition of former Milo šević
parties witnessed the once-proud Yugoslavia become defunct, with a quasi-independent
state in Montenegro and a quasi-protectorate in Kosovo.
In Podgorica, a narrow victory in the parliamentary elections of 22 April 2001 and the
rising popularity in recent polls of the Socialist People's Party ( Socijalistička narodna
partija, SNP) determined Đukanovićs reluctance to implement his promise for a referen-
dum on independence. Torn between his coalition partners who wanted the referendum
now and the pro-Yugoslav opposition with the polls showing a waning majority in favour
of independence (to the extent that the votes of the ethnic minorities (in favour) would ac-
tually decide the independence question), 5 Đukanovićs political survival depended on
finding an elegant way of backtracking on the ‘path of independence’, and he knew that
all along.
3 Mark Thompson: ‘Yugoslavia’s Death is Balkans’ Gain’, BBC News Online 15.3.2002.
4 ICG: ‘Montenegro: Resolving the Independence Deadlock’, Podgorica, Brussels, 1.8.2001.
5 ICG: ‘Montenegro – Time to Decide: Pre-Election Briefing’, Brussels, 18.4.2001.
64
The Belgrade Agreement
(ICG) in Brussels published an open letter to Solana concerning Montenegro. One part of
their critique concerned the EU’s methods of ‘applying extreme pressure to just one side’
in order to ‘bulldozer’ Podgorica towards the EU’s preferred solution. 6
Solana did indeed, as several participants in the negotiations have indicated, make am-
ple use of a prospective Stabilisation and Association Agreement between ‘Yugoslavia’
and the EU, with its immediate economic advantages and its alluring promise of future
EU membership, as something which had a high symbolic value domestically. Thus, the
EU used its hegemony as a regional economic power to force a state union on ‘unwilling
partners.’ After the initial euphoria of finally having democratic negotiation partners, and
two constructive and apparently compatible platforms, the actual talks between Belgrade
and Podgorica had soon stalled in a ‘consent not to consent’ and had to be revitalised by
EU intervention and mediation in December 2001. 7 No doubt, Solana’s role went far be-
yond ‘good offices,’ but eventually the principle of ‘regional ownership’ will require a
democratic verification by parliament of the political solution. 8 In a democratic and con-
stitutional quagmire like the Yugoslav case, with contradictory constitutional provisions
as well as executive and legislative institutions of varying democratic quality, output legit-
imacy and political responsibility have an importance beyond the arithmetic of the ballot
box and the sophistry of constitutional lawyers.
The other half of the critique concerns the actual ‘dictated’ outcome of the negotiations –
‘a democratic Montenegro in a democratic Yugoslavia.’ This solution is considered ‘eco-
nomically and politically unwise.’ 9 Solana’s attempts to keep Serbia and Montenegro to-
gether were, more often than not, understood as a blunt attempt to save the status quo of the
‘good old’ Yugoslav Federation with some minor, cosmetic modifications. Consequently,
the EU would end up polarising the parties and providing quasi support to the line of the re-
actionary SNP nationalists in Montenegro and the parties of the former Milošević coalition
in Serbia. Pro-independence Montenegrin parties, western think tanks and even some Ser-
bian intellectuals carried this argument. 10 Proponents of Montenegro’s independence con-
sistently painted a black-and-white picture of FRY as the state associated with the reaction-
ary and repressive Milo šević regime and of Montenegro as a paradise of pro-European
reforms.
There certainly is reason to doubt the original optimism of the Đinđić team, while there
is ample evidence of ‘lagging reforms’ in Serbia, due at least partly to the power struggle
between Koštunica and Đinđić. The Milošević past, however, makes a Yugoslavia nei-
65
Wim van Meurs
ther illegitimate as a state nor reform-resistant per se. Nor is Montenegro an unqualified
success story in terms of political and economic reform.
The argument that Yugoslavia in its three forms – the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes (1918-1945); the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1945-1992); and the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992-2002) – was ‘a historic error’ 11 or that ‘the FRY is
an anti-European and anti-democratic state’ 12 reintroduces the ideal of nation-state and the
primacy of national self-determination through the backdoor. Qualifying for ‘Europe’ de-
pends on functional states and their capability of reform towards a pluralist democracy
and the market economy. In this respect, Serbia and Montenegro each have their own spe-
cific problems and deficits, but both still have a long way to go. Neither a nation-state nor
a federation constitutes a panacea for these reform challenges.
Milo Đukanović – by now the longest-ruling president in the region – was not born a
dissident to Milošević and conservative nationalism. Nevertheless, once the break be-
tween Belgrade and Podgorica had become irreversible, a pro-western reform orientation
was the only option for the quasi-independent mini-state. Despite a series of political, ad-
ministrative and economic reforms, Montenegro is still among the world’s leaders in
terms of international assistance per capita: the accusation of ‘simulated reforms’ to
please western donors seems plausible. 13 A significant part of economic activity – accord-
ing to some estimates, 40 to 60 per cent – is related to the shadow economy, mainly car
rackets and cigarettes smuggling. The involvement of political parties and parts of the
state administration is a foregone conclusion. The state needs foreign aid for social peace
in a poverty-ridden country of rising unemployment, frequent electric power cuts and high
inflation. The successful early introduction of the Euro (replacing the German Mark as the
national currency) may as such have been an administrative and logistic achievement. It
is, however, by no means an indication of economic strength or aptitude: Podgorica is not
bound by any criteria of economic convergence and the Euro is more convenient for legal
and not-so-legal international dealings than for an ailing local economy. Montenegro’s
economic openness (3 per cent tariff average; 10 per cent for Serbia) may be an asset, but
tourism certainly is not its main industry at the moment. 14 To what extent Montenegro re-
ally will be able to consolidate its head start in economic reforms into a national economy
that is healthy, sustainable and socially equitable remains to be seen. For the time being,
Montenegro’s reform economy has all the characteristics of a political myth. 15
11 Matthias Rüb: ‘Etwas ganz Neues im Südosten’, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 15.3.2002,
p. 1.
12 Monitor 21.12.2001.
13 European Stability Initiative: ‘Rhetoric and Reform. A Case Study of Institution Building in
Montenegro 1998-2001’, Podgorica, Berlin 1.7.2001; Nebojša Medojević: ‘Montenegro –
Land of Frozen Reforms’, in Wim van Meurs (ed.): Prospects and Risks Beyond EU
Enlargement, Vol. 2, South Eastern Europe: Weak States and Strong International Support,
(Leverkusen: Leske + Budrich, 2002), pp. 173-191.
14 ICG/CEPS media release: ‘EU Pressure’.
15 Zoran Radulović: ‘Montenegro: Economic Collapse Threatens Independence’, IWPR Balkan
Crisis Report 9.11.2001; Martin Woker: ‘Montenegro als Test für die EU-Außenpolitik’,
Neue Züricher Zeitung 21.2.2002, p. 7.
66
The Belgrade Agreement
Once both Koštunica and Đinđić had expressed their willingness to consider a new
form of federation with Montenegro (albeit not at all costs), Solana indeed ended up sid-
ing with the reactionary forces on the federal level and in Montenegro, cajoling the re-
form-oriented, pro-independence parties into making major concessions to their pro-
gramme. Notably, however, the concessions involved their objective of national
independence, not their reform agenda. Surely, a strong two-thirds majority in Montene-
gro in favour of independence would have had an impact on the EU approach, but a ‘50
per cent plus one’ approach to such a fundamental issue of state sovereignty is neither par-
ticularly stabilising nor democratic. 16 Therefore, the Agreement insists on laws on a refer-
endum ‘taking full account of internationally recognised standards,’ although this basi-
cally implies a negative criterion, as no such international norms for referenda exist. 17
At least in its public policy, the EU has failed to distance its objective of regional stabi-
lisation from the die-hard conservatism of the local pro-Yugoslav forces. 18 Miraculously,
the eventual agreement favours the reformers rather than the reactionaries: a temporary
freezing of the status issue in the form of ‘Serbia and Montenegro’ allows pro-western
politicians to pursue their reform agendas with both more drive and more concord – as the
reform process towards regional and, primarily, European integration offers a broad basis
of consensus.
In sum, after the peaceful settlement of the conflict in Southern Serbia and the Ohrid
Agreement of 13 August 2001 defining the road to a new inter-ethnic arrangement in Mace-
donia, the creation of ‘Serbia and Montenegro’ marks a third feat for Javier Solana, the Eu-
ropean Union’s High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy (EUHR).
In all three cases, however, due to the fragility of the arrangements and the volatility of polit-
ical aspirations, today’s triumph can easily become tomorrow’s Pyrrhic victory.
16 Dušan Reljić: ‘Montenegros Zukunft nach wie vor ungewiß’, SWP-Aktuell No. 3, 2002.
Compare Morton Abramowitz: ‘Let the Montenegrins Have Their Say’.
17 Compare Monitor, 11.1.2002.
18 Florian Bieber: ‘The instrumentalisation of minorities in the Montenegrin dispute over inde-
pendence’, ECMI Brief 8 (March 2002), pp. 7-8.
19 For the full texts of the two documents, see CEPS: Europa South-East Monitor, No. 19 (Jan-
uary 2001).
67
Wim van Meurs
historic rights of the two member states.’ In Đukanovićs vision, the sovereignty and equal-
ity of the republics was key, while Belgrade argued on the basis of the ‘equality and opera-
bility’ of the new federation.
In the foremost set of issues, concerning international status and representation, the cur-
rent agreement predominantly follows the Belgrade position with a veto on unilateral seces-
sion by referendum and one international-law subject. Montenegro will not have interna-
tional legal personality but, in return, the west, for the first time, has accepted the option of a
referendum on independence after three years. To protect Montenegro from being swamped
by Serbs in the joint institutions and representative positions, some (rather specific) safe-
guards have been built in for proportional international representation by rotation. Elections
at both levels and the constitutional amendments both set the new state apart from the cur-
rent deficient FRY, without giving up implicit succession under international law.
Typically, as far as the more tangible issues are concerned of the relations between state
and member states, and the division of competencies, the Agreement is largely uninforma-
tive. Implicitly, it dissociates itself from Đukanovićs vision of sovereign states delegating
part of their competencies to a subsidiary federal level. The Belgrade position contained
two potentially conflicting definitions of the federal competencies:
68
The Belgrade Agreement
69
Wim van Meurs
In the five fields of common policy, the new Agreement clearly combines elements
from both positions. As Đukanović demanded, conscripts will not be forced to serve out-
side their own republic against their will, but there will be only one federal army (a lesson
from Bosnia). In line with the choice on international legal personality, foreign and de-
fence policy are within the realm of the Union. In internal and international economic re-
lations, the actual competencies of the federation are less clear, as the republics are al-
lowed to keep their separate economies, currencies and customs services. At this point, the
Agreement is almost as blank as the Belgrade platform. The domain of human and minor-
ity rights is an open question; neither platform foresaw such a ministry that might either
become a figurehead or a welcome excuse for the federal authorities to interfere in almost
any republican legislation and political decision-making.
70
The Belgrade Agreement
In terms of state institutions and decision-making, the Agreement tends to follow the
more pragmatic Belgrade approach, based on operability rather than an interpretation of
equality. The impracticable mode of the two republican Ministers of Defence and Foreign
Affairs taking turns at the respective nominal position at the federal level has been re-
placed by an ‘exchange of roles’ of these two federal Ministers and their respective Depu-
ties (i.e. from the other republic). Having a ‘real’ federal Foreign and Defence Minister
strengthens the federal level and so does the abolition of strict parity between the repub-
lics in each federal position: President and Vice-President; each Minister and Deputy.
Taking into account the limited competencies of the federal government, the Agreement
does not foresee a Prime Minister (unlike the Belgrade model) and the supervision of the
Ministerial Council will be in the hands of the President (unlike the Podgorica model,
there is no mention of a Vice-President). The unicameral parliament, elected by all citi-
zens of Serbia and Montenegro, points in the same direction, ignoring demands for a par-
allel system of republican parity next to individual democratic rights. The ‘certain positive
discrimination’ for Montenegro, however, requires specification.
Table 4 – State institutions and decision-making
Assembly President, Court Council of Ministers
Đukanović Unicameral – deputies Elected and dismissed President, Vice-Presi-
Platform (28.12.2000) elected on parity basis by the Assembly with dent, Ministers of For-
and within the legisla- prior agreement of the eign Affairs, Defence,
tive competence of the Assemblies of the mem- Finance and Economic
member states. Rotation ber states. President of Relations. President/
of president and vice- Union and President of Vice-President, Minis-
president of the assem- the Council of Ministers ters/Deputy-Ministers
bly from different member from different member
states and represent po- states
litical majority
Federal court
Koštunica- Bicameral – absolute Elected by the Federal Prime Minister elected
Đinđić Platform majority in both cham- Assembly, alternately alternately from the two
(10.01.2001) bers needed for funda- from the two republics, republics. The Ministers
mental federal dismissed only by rul- are accountable to the
decisions. General juris- ing of Federal Court, Prime Minister, who is
diction for both cham- nominates senior state accountable to the Fed-
bers. Chamber of officials eral Assembly
Republics with equal Federal court as consti-
number of deputies tutional and regular
from federal units, court
elected in republican
legislatures. Citizens of
the federation elect
Chamber of Citizens,
mandatory minimum
for Montenegro
71
Wim van Meurs
Serbia and Montene- Unicameral – election Elected by parliament, Foreign affairs, de-
gro Agreement laws of member states, proposes and directs fence, international eco-
(14.03.2002) certain positive discrim- Council of Ministers nomic relations, internal
ination for Montenegro. Court as constitutional economic relations as
Mechanism against the and administrative court well as the protection of
outvoting of member human and minority
states rights. Ministers pro-
posed and directed by
the President, rotation
of Ministers/Deputy
Ministers in Foreign Af-
fairs and Defence
72
The Belgrade Agreement
Serbia and Montenegro.’ 22 The state envisaged in the Agreement would have an improved
presidential authority: election by the parliament rather than the populace will diminish its
popular legitimacy but the competencies of the post would be more concretely defined.
Early elections were bound to become a test for the DOS coalition, for Đinđićs ability to
keep the 18-party coalition united and for Ko štunica to reap the fruits of his declining, but
still high, popularity. 23 Others, such as Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Miroljub Labus,
or Yugoslav National Bank Governor, Mlađan Dinkić, criticised that a multitude of ques-
tions were left unanswered in the Agreement, particularly in the economic field. (Labus
referred to the Agreement as an ‘economic Frankenstein.’) 24 Serb nationalists decrying
the loss of Yugoslavia and Koštunica’s ‘betrayal’ must realise that the Agreement may
have secured the best possible deal for nationally-minded Serbs, much better than a Yugo-
slavia which existing only on paper. Conversely, many Serb leaders had been more than
willing to let Montenegro go its own way, but most certainly did not want to incur a na-
tionalist backlash at home by actually letting it go.
Thus, apart from the clear decision about the name of the new state ‘Serbia and Mon-
tenegro,’ most of the contentious issues have been left open, awaiting a constructive nego-
tiation process to fill in the gaps. Thus, the Agreement of 14 March is essentially a decla-
ration of intent rather than a constitutional blueprint. The Agreement contains some bitter
pills for each negotiating party and some partial victories. For a real negotiation process in
regional ownership, this may be just the right mixture.
The obligatory verification of the agreement by the Montenegrin and Serbian parlia-
ments after early elections (and the eventual ‘submission’ to the federal parliament) indi-
cated that the outcome was not a foregone conclusion: 25 a mixed commission from the
two republican parliaments and the federal parliament (which is not recognised by the
Montenegrin government!) were tasked with drafting a Constitutional Charter on the basis
of parliamentary conclusions. Thereafter, the newly-elected republican parliaments and,
eventually, a federal parliament elected by the entire constituency of ‘Serbia and Mon-
tenegro’ would pass democratic judgement on the state of a new type, dubbed ‘Solarium’
by some sceptics.
Subsequent to the signing of the Agreement, negotiations have been conducted for
months with frequent deadlocks, and it seems quite likely that the Agreement may never
be implemented in full. A velvet divorce by mutual agreement within the next three years
may even be part of Đukanovićs and Đinđićs hidden agendas. Meanwhile, state forma-
tion as work in progress may, on the one hand, produce a substantial restructuring of the
political landscape and, on the other, create a window of opportunity for real co-operation
based on shared interests.
73
Wim van Meurs
74
The Belgrade Agreement
The federal Deputy Prime Minister, Miroljub Labus, criticised the lack of clarity in
terms of timetables and economic matters, noting that one year would be a reasonable
timeframe for the re-integration of markets. His one-year deadline refers to the expected
duration of the negotiations for a Stabilisation and Association Agreement between the
new state and the European Union, the first step towards full EU membership in 10-15
years.27 EU mediators and the negotiating parties both gave priority to breaking the spell
of the (political) status question, hoping that new synergies and the economic momentum
released by the integrative Stabilisation and Association Process towards full EU mem-
bership will make up for the evident disadvantages of economic separation. 28 The EU’s
promise to support and monitor intermediate bilateral harmonisation in the economic
field, and eventual harmonisation under the aegis of the European common market, both
indicate that the expectation is that economic policies will be more rational and controlla-
ble than the emotional and intractable status question. Economic re-integration could take
place gradually as Serbia catches up and as EU integration becomes a closer prospect.
75
Wim van Meurs
ent than had been predicted by many observers. In Belgrade, the Agreement generally
failed to stir public and political emotions: the ongoing conflict between Ko štunica and
Đinđić outshining the whole issue of statehood. Both competitors, moreover, were fully
aware that neither could afford to take on the EU in an issue directly linked to the per-
spective of EU membership, EU assistance and admission to the Council of Europe. A
tough position on ICTY co-operation might enhance a politician’s popularity; a trade-off
between the details of the Union with Montenegro and tangible EU assistance certainly
would not. Nevertheless, Đinđić may be more under pressure to wrap up the Constitu-
tional Charter, thus gaining international standing, to compensate for his lack of domes-
tic popularity. Thus, he made additional concessions to Nebojsa Ćović and other propo-
nents of a more unified state, even after Belgrade and Podgorica had agreed on a draft
charter on 26 August 2002. 31 Ćović insisted, for instance, on having ‘Kosovo and Meto-
hija’ mentioned in the text – a populist gesture without relevance to the Montenegrins –
whereas Foreign Minister Goran Svilanovi ć argued that Kosovo was not an issue for the
federation, only for Serbia. Yet, Kosovo and Vojvodina did have the status of constitu-
tive elements in the old Yugoslavia. Politicians from Vojvodina and, in particular,
Sandžak suggested that minority protection legislation should be made a federal preroga-
tive, but this was, however, rejected by Podgorica. 32 The unresolved relations between
federal, national and regional authorities also caused interference as Đinđić had a bilat-
eral Serbian-Montenegrin commission hammer out the draft, whereas Ko štunica pro-
tested against the exclusion of the federal authorities and Justice Minister Vladan Bati ć
suggested a startling new option – a Serbian referendum on independence prior to the
creation of the new union with Montenegro. 33
Predictably, in Podgorica the pro-independence government of Filip Vujanovi ć fell
in April, as the Liberal Alliance and the SDP withdrew their support. More surprisingly,
Đukanovićs DPS fared reasonably well in the local elections in May 2002: apparently,
the electorate preferred a well-managed, gradual divorce without the radical breaks and
political confrontation that might be detrimental to economic and social relations be-
tween the two states. 34 Thus, Parliament accepted the Belgrade Agreement in combina-
tion with a possible referendum on independence in March 2005. 35 Even more surpris-
ingly, no polarisation or even escalation occurred over the independence issue. On the
contrary, after months of squabbling, the pro-independence Liberal Alliance joined
forces at the local level with the pro-Yugoslav bloc against Đukanović and enforced
early parliamentary elections in October 2002 at the republican level. 36 The electorate
had consistently given unemployment and other socio-economic issues a much higher
priority in opinion polls than the independence issue, but politicians were now also
76
The Belgrade Agreement
demonstrating that there were other stakes involved in Montenegrin politicking than in-
dependence. That Đukanović had to present the Belgrade Agreement as a kind of com-
monwealth of independent states, whereas the pro-Yugoslav opposition had to demon-
strate that, essentially, Yugoslavia continued to exist, made the debate in Podgorica
extremely difficult. And, to top it all, those who were in the opposition in Podgorica
held only a minute majority in the national parliament and were the only representatives
of the country in the federal parliament.
Conversely, in Brussels the Agreement triggered controversy between the High Repre-
sentative responsible for crisis management and the Commissioner responsible for signing
the Stabilisation and Association Agreement with the new state. The Belgrade Agreement
focused on the political issues, essentially leaving economic questions unanswered and
banking on the leverage of the Stabilisation and Association Agreement:
Harmonisation of the economic systems of the member states with the EU economic system
shall overcome the existing differences, primarily in the spheres of trade and customs poli-
cies. In both regards, economic reforms that have already been carried out in the member
states shall be taken into full account, while solutions that would provide for the quickest in-
tegration into the European Union shall be accepted. Transitional solutions in harmonising
trade and customs policies should take into account the interests of the member states. The
European Union shall assist in the accomplishment of these objectives and monitor the
process on a regular basis. The modalities for the achievement of these objectives shall be
elaborated in parallel with the Constitutional Charter. If one of the member states believes
that the other does not live up to the commitments under this Agreement concerning the op-
eration of a common market and the harmonisation of trade and customs policies, it shall re-
serve the right to raise the matter with the EU in the context of the Stabilisation and Associ-
ation Process with the view to the adoption of appropriate measures.
Thus, Patten’s negotiators made it clear to the quarrelling politicians in Belgrade and
Podgorica that too loose a federation would not do in seeking qualification for the first
step towards EU membership, i.e. a feasibility study on a Stabilisation and Association
Agreement. Otherwise, it would be impossible to apply EU conditionality and assistance
to two completely different states in an empty shell of a union without political and eco-
nomic authority. It would have been paradoxical indeed to have a loose federation join
with regional and, later, European integration without achieving the same level of integra-
tion bilaterally. Joint customs systems, a single market and unified tariffs are absolute pre-
requisites. Thus, the draft Constitutional Charter of August envisioned the creation of a
Serbian-Montenegrin single market and the harmonisation of the economies and customs
regimes within two years. The admission criteria for a Stabilisation and Association
Agreement define minimum levels of economic union and harmonisation. 37
Solana’s ‘robust mediation’, moreover, treads a thin line between too little intervention,
thus allowing politicking local leaders to deadlock the negotiations, and too much inter-
vention, provoking truculence on the part of the national authorities. Thus, some Belgrade
politicians have vociferously reiterated that no such advice was needed. Nevertheless, the
suggestions of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission shaped the draft charter sub-
37 Ines Sabalić: ‘Montenegro: Brussels’ U-Turn on New State’, IWPR Balkan Crisis Report,
12.7.2002.
77
Wim van Meurs
stantially.38 Thinly-veiled threats that delays caused by elections in Serbia and Montene-
gro might affect the Stabilisation and Association Process or admission to the Council of
Europe have been to no avail in accelerating the process. 39
38 Gergana Noutcheva: ‘Negotiating a Viable State Union of Serbia and Montenegro,’ CEPS
Commentary, August 2002. See also www.venice.coe.int.
39 Glas Javnosti, 19 & 25.9.2002.
40 Tim Judah: ‘Montenegro’s Quest for Independence’, BBC News, 28.12.2000; Bieber, op.
cit. See also the chapter by František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová on National minori-
ties in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia, this volume.
41 Rüb, op. cit.
42 Ljiljana Renke: ‘Ein steiniger Weg’, Deutsche Welle Monitor, 27.8.2002.
43 UNSC Resolution 1244 (1999), adopted by the Security Council at its 4011th meeting on 10
June 1999.
78
The Belgrade Agreement
ing debate between specialists in international and constitutional law has only academic
relevancy. ‘Serbia and Montenegro’ becomes the successor state of the defunct FRY and
the 14 March Agreement includes an explicit safeguard against possible disintegration af-
ter three years:
If Montenegro withdraws from the state union, international documents related to FRY,
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244 in particular, shall relate to and fully apply on Ser-
bia as its successor.
Thus, this weaving fault in Resolution 1244 has been repaired and, strictly speaking,
only the unlikely case of Serbia’s secession would unhinge it. The suggestion that the
Resolution is violated and that Serb sovereignty over Kosovo has been thereby re-intro-
duced seems far-fetched: The UN Resolution could not deny Kosovo being a province of
the Serbian republic under the Yugoslav Constitution and, albeit theoretically, Serbia
might uphold the defunct ‘shell’ of the FRY even after Montenegro’s secession if only be-
cause of Kosovo. 44
Nevertheless, in three years (at the latest), the triangular dilemma of Belgrade-Podgor-
ica-Priština will come to a head again: in quick succession, the term of office of the Koso-
var government, the Constitutional Framework for Provisional Self-Government in Kos-
ovo and the Serbian-Montenegrin moratorium on referenda will end. Three years,
however, is a long time. What the Agreement brokered by Solana may achieve is gaining
time rather than playing for time. The new ‘union of states’ erases the delusion of the de-
funct FRY that had become a danger in itself and offers a basic framework for new trilat-
eral and regional arrangements. Even if the new state would be only a transitional solu-
tion, ending the constitutional confusion and political deadlock, it would still be a historic
achievement in the Balkan region – on a long and arduous road full of protracted negotia-
tions and political detours.
44 Matthias Rüb: ‘Folgen der Einigung von Belgrad’, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
16.3.2002, p. 6.
79
Appendix 1
80
The Belgrade Agreement
81
Wim
Appendix
van Meurs
1
82
Srđa Pavlović
1 For more detailed discussions on the nature of the concept of ‘Central Europe’ from the Balkan
perspective see Maria Todorova: Imagining the Balkans (New York: Oxford University Press,
1997), pp. 140-160; Tomislav Z. Longinović: Borderline Culture: The Politics of Identity in
Four Twentieth Century Slavic Novels (Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1993); K.E.
Fleming: ‘Orientalism, the Balkans and Balkan Historiography,’ American Historical Review
Vol. 105 No. 4 (October 2000), pp. 1218-1233. Also see Perry Anderson: ‘A Ripple of the Polo-
naise’, London Review of Books, November 1999. For some of my own thoughts on the subject,
see Srđa Pavlović: ‘Kako Sačuvati Staru Damu Evropu’, Matica No. 7-8 (Autumn/Winter
2001), pp. 29-48, and Srđa Pavlović: Iza Ogledala (Podgorica: CID, 2001), pp. 53-80.
2 Christopher Boehm: Montenegrin Social Organisation and Values: Political Ethnography of
a Refugee Area Tribal Adaptation (New York: AMS Press, 1983), p. 9.
83
Srđa Pavlović
All of the available historical sources do not provide a clear answer to these questions.
The initial contact and, later, the mixing and intermarrying of Slavs with the indigenous
population of the Balkans has blurred the lines and prevented a clear-cut ethnic distinc-
tion. From the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century onwards, it is possible to make
a distinction between Montenegrins and Serbs in terms of their independent political his-
tories, as well as their tradition, customs, moral codes and the elements that best define the
social cultures of their respective societies. The issue of the contested identity of Mon-
tenegrins represents the starting point in every debate that evolves around the question of
political relations between Montenegro and Serbia. From the Serbian perspective, Mon-
tenegrins were and still are ethnic Serbs living in Montenegro and their state is regarded as
proof of the continuity of Serb presence in the region from the medieval times to present.
3 On the development of Montenegrin statehood, see Šerbo Rastoder’s Short review of the
history of Montenegro, this volume.
4 ‘From the tenth to the twentieth century, the Zeta area preserved a nucleus of Serbian culture
and nationalism at a time when Serbia was overrun by Bulgars or Ottomans.’ Boehm: Mon-
tenegrin Social Organisation, p. 9. Barbara Jelavich wrote about Montenegro as ‘the second
Serbian state’, in Jelavich: History of the Balkans: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries,
Vol. 1. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983), p. 247. Also see R. W. Seton
Watson: The Rise of Nationality in the Balkans, (New York: Howard Fertig, 1966), p. 31 and
Adrian Hastings: The Construction of Nationhood: Ethnicity, Religion and Nationalism
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), p. 128, 142.
5 The argument about shared religious beliefs represents a contested territory because ‘Ortho-
doxy alone can not for any length of time paper over other factors of division … Mon-
tenegrin Orthodoxy has resisted, and still resists, incorporation within a Serb church.’
Hastings: op. cit., p. 142.
84
Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
have a different political history and because one could make a strong case for the long-
standing existence of an apparent horizontal identification among Montenegrins. 6
It appears that both approaches are coloured by opposing political views which support
projecting the concept of national consciousness back in time in order to establish histori-
cal continuity for the presence of a particular nation in the region. Such methodology ra-
tionalises the concept of a lost ‘ancestral land’ that has to be reclaimed. In modern times,
the urge to repossess the ‘cradle’ of one’s civilisation from an unwanted ‘other’ has often
resulted in significant demographic changes and forced population movements. Further-
more, projecting a modern concept back in time does not seem entirely appropriate be-
cause it is difficult to apply the logic of national belonging/awareness to periods before
such concepts existed. 7 However, with the advent of an ideology of national awakening in
Montenegro during the last decades of the 19 th century, the character, intensity and mo-
tives for the region's conflicts acquired a specific and new framework. 8 Only with the
emergence of a political project that called for nation-building and national homogenisa-
tion did the peoples in the region begin confronting each other in relation to their respec-
tive ethnic and religious prerogatives (Christians against the ‘Turks’ (Muslims); Serbs
against Croats, or Serbs against Albanians, and vice versa). Prior to that, the various in-
habitants of the Balkans fought each other for many reasons and on behalf of many em-
pires, but the elements of ethnic/national animosity did not play a significant role (if any
at all) in those confrontations. 9
Montenegrin society at the time (17 th and 18th century) was characterised by occasional
and voluntary co-operation at the inter-tribal level. However, these temporary alliances
had little to do with the modern concept of national identity but, rather, limited themselves
to military aims, primarily fencing off Ottoman forces. There can be no question about the
primacy of tribal autonomy in Old Montenegro and Brda over the powers of the central
authority in Cetinje. 10 Furthermore, almost all the Montenegrin tribes (with the exception
of those from Katunska Nahija) assisted at one time or another the neighbouring Ottoman
6 Jozo Tomašević: Peasants, Politics and Economic Change in Yugoslavia (Palo Alto: Stan-
ford University Press, 1955), p. 126 (footnote).
7 With regard to the timeframe of the emergence of nation-states and the concept of national-
ism, I am more inclined to follow the so-called ‘modernist view’, advocated by scholars such
as Eric Hobsbawm, John Breuilly, Ernest Gellner and Benedict Anderson than the views
expressed by Adrian Hastings.
8 Ivo J. Lederer: ‘Nationalism and the Yugoslavs’, in Peter F. Sugar and Ivo J. Lederer (eds.):
Nationalism in Eastern Europe (Seattle & London: University of Washington Press, 1969),
pp. 399-403.
9 Noel Malcolm: Kosovo: A Short History (London: Macmillan, 1998), Introduction, pp.
xxviii-xxx. For an interesting analysis of the position of Catholic Albanians in Montenegro
at the end of the nineteenth century, see: Šerbo Rastoder; Janusovo lice istorije: odabrani
članci i rasprave, (Podgorica: Vijesti, 2000), pp. 105-125.
10 ‘Montenegro was divided into two parts – Montenegro and the Brda. The first was old Mon-
tenegro with some additions on the Herzegovinian side; the second, the mountain mass that
borders on Albania.’ Mary Edith Durham: Some Tribal Origins, Laws and Customs of the
Balkans (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1928), p. 34. Brda is the name of the tribal land to
the north and north-east of so-called Old Montenegro. The region of Brda encompassed
tribes such as Bjelopavlići, Piperi, Kuči, Vasojevići and others.
85
Srđa Pavlović
forces against other tribes from the area. 11 In the Montenegro of the 17 th and 18th century,
it was the tribe and not the state/central authority that nearly exclusively provided the
mechanisms of horizontal identification for individuals. The central authority played a
very limited role in this process since it was the tribe that always acted as safe harbour for
the individual and constructed, and maintained the social poetics of the time. 12 With this
in mind, it would be safe to conclude that the Montenegrin tribesmen of the 17 th and 18th
centuries valued their tribal allegiance highly and were much more aware of their belong-
ing to a particular tribe than they were of thinking of themselves in terms of a national
identity. New national demarcation lines within Montenegro and in respect to its neigh-
bours came into existence only with the advent of the idea of national awakening and na-
tional homogenisation on a more general level.
11 Mary Edith Durham, op. cit., p. 82. Nahija (Nahiya) was the smallest administrative unit in
the Ottoman state. Katunska Nahija was the core of Old Montenegro. See Jelavich, op. cit.,
Vol. 1 p. 57.
12 Svetlana Boym views social poetics as the basis for cultural identity and as ‘cultural inti-
macy that provides a glue in everyday life… Such identity involves everyday games of hide-
and-seek that only ‘natives’ play, unwritten rules of behavior, jokes understood from half a
word, a sense of complicity. State propaganda and official national memory build on this
cultural intimacy, but there is also a discrepancy and tension between the two.’ Svetlana
Boym: The Future of Nostalgia (New York: Basic Books, 2001), pp. 42-43. Also see
Michael Herzfeld, Cultural Intimacy: Social Poetics in the Nation-State (New York:
Routledge, 1997), pp. 13-14.
13 Ivo Banac: The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1984), p. 276.
14 The first Montenegrin Constitution was drafted jointly by Prince Nikola and his legal adviser
and journalist from Belgrade, Stevan Ćurčić. It greatly resembled the Serbian Constitution
of 1869. Jagoš Jovanović: Istorija Crne Gore, 2nd ed. (Cetinje: Izdavački Centar Cetinje &
CID, 1995), pp. 337-38.
86
Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
ances, a succession of more or less inefficient governments and the development of seri-
ous political rivalry in Montenegro. 15
After fifty years of rule, Nikola decided in 1910 to proclaim Montenegro a Kingdom.
The coronation represented an effort to strengthen Nikola’s political position at home in
addition to being an effort to internationalise the question of Montenegro’s desired territo-
rial expansion at the expense of the Ottoman state. For supporters of his decision, the cor-
onation was a continuation of the tradition of Montenegrin independence and an important
step forward in the process of the complete ‘renewal’ of the ancient Kingdom of Zeta
from 1077. In emphasising his attachment to the Serbian nation, King Nikola I pointed out
the importance of Montenegrin independence and sovereignty, effectively dividing Mon-
tenegro into two hostile political camps. Those opposing his policies argued that the coro-
nation was nothing more than the act of a power-hungry despot. The new kingdom never-
theless proved to be a brief accomplishment because, at the end of World War I,
Montenegro lost its independence and sovereignty, and found itself first as part of Serbia
and then, later, of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. 16
During this period, the contested nature of Montenegrin identity came to the political
forefront and constituted a stumbling block in relations between Serbia and Montenegro.
The issue of identities and loyalties gained prominence due to a number of factors, geog-
raphy and politics being among the most important. The process of constructing the new
geographical boundaries of Montenegro had a profound impact on how interchanges took
place between local populations and the state authority concerned, and how the locals
adapted to these new frontiers. 17 The significant change in the country’s size, which, in
turn, was closely related to the economic state of affairs at the local level, affected the
mechanisms of political and national identification (at the individual level and at that of
the group). Different groups and individuals living in Montenegro at the time had very
specific regional and local interests which could not easily be reduced to a universalised
‘national’ character or political unit, while the frontiers delineated by the European pow-
ers and by the educational and economic reforms, which had been thought to have solidi-
fied post-Ottoman identities, proved to be confusing at best. 18 Moreover, the different
groups within a given tribe (family, clan/familija, bratstvo) in Montenegro had very spe-
cific interests which did not always correspond with the interests of the tribe as a whole.
These conflicting needs and aspirations at the micro level had rendered the process of na-
tional homogenisation in Montenegro even more difficult and had, furthermore, under-
mined the cohesiveness of the entire undertaking. The general perception of this process
15 See Jovan Đonović: Ustavne i političke borbe u Crnoj Gori 1905-1910 (Beograd: K.J.
Mihailović, 1939).
16 Jovan R. Bojović: Podgorička skupština 1918: dokumenta (Gornji Milanovac: Dečje
novine, 1989).
17 During the reign of Prince (later king) Nikola I Petrović, Montenegro quadrupled its terri-
tory. As Ivo Banac points out, after the Balkan wars and for the first time ‘Montenegrins
ruled not only over a large body of hostile Muslims, many of them Albanians, but also over
highland tribes with a tradition of strong ties to Serbia.’ Banac, op. cit., p. 275.
18 This adaptation was particularly difficult for non-Christians and non-Slavs living in
areas bordering Old Montenegro, some of which were later incorporated into the Mon-
tenegrin state.
87
Srđa Pavlović
in Montenegro goes along the lines of monocausal explanations of the phenomena of eth-
nic/national identity which are undergoing continuous modification but, in spite of the ro-
manticism of national histories and the persistence of many nationalists, the process of
forging a new Montenegrin identity was anything but a smooth ride. Indeed, remnants of
that old tribal loyalty can still be detected today among the citizens of Montenegro. Many
of them display a significantly high level of attachment and loyalty to their regional, local
and tribal identities. In most cases, the first level of identification is either the region/na-
hiya (Katunjanin, Crmni čanin, Lješnjanin, Bjelopavli ć, Cuca, Bjelica, Malisor, Bokelj),
or the tribe whose geographic boundaries and name usually correspond with the region
(Vasojevići tribe, Drobnjak tribe, etc.).19 Only then, and only in terms of a more general
level of identification, which is, at present, heavily coloured by the ideologies of the day,
does one come across national categories such as Montenegrin, Serb, Serb from Montene-
gro, Albanian, Muslim or Croat.
Political conflict during the first decades of the twentieth century also contributed to the
formation of national identity. A growing parliamentary opposition characterised the
Montenegrin political landscape of the period. The parliament became the arena for a bit-
ter confrontation between the representatives of the so-called 'people’s movement' and
those representing the government and Prince/King Nikola I. The main political parties
were the People’s Party (Narodna Stranka), better known as Kluba ši (their leader was
Šako Petrović), and the True People’s Party (Prava Narodna Stranka), known as Prava ši
(led by Lazar Miju šković). Supporters of the People’s Party not only opposed the policies
of Prince (later King) Nikola I, but were also passionate advocates of the unification of
Montenegro with Serbia. Most of them regarded Montenegro as a Serb state and Mon-
tenegrins as ethnic Serbs. Consequently, the majority of party members and supporters
identified themselves as ethnic Serbs. The opposing political group consisted of members
of the True People’s Party who supported Nikola’s policies and the concept of Mon-
tenegrin independence and sovereignty. However, no political group in the Montenegro of
the time represented a uniform entity, particularly when it came to the issue of identity.
The demand of the Pravaši for independence was heavily influenced by the politics of the
time and most of its members did not dispute the perceived ethnic/national identity be-
tween Montenegrins and Serbs; they considered themselves to be Serbs from Montenegro.
Prince Nikola was one of the principle advocates of such identity politics. 20 However,
there were also those among the Pravaši who not only advocated Montenegrin independ-
ence but thought of themselves as distinctively Montenegrin.
From the turn of the twentieth century onwards, relations between Montenegro and Ser-
bia were conditioned by the intensity of the dynastic struggle for prestige among the South
Slavs, i.e. between the Montenegrin dynasty of Petrovi ć-Njegoš and the Serbian dynasties
88
Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
of Obrenović and Karađorđević. All three dynasties presented themselves as the rightful
claimants of the ancient crown of Stefan Du šan, the medieval Serbian ruler. From as early
as the 1870s, developments clearly indicate the main line of confrontation between Cet-
inje and Belgrade: namely, the struggle for power between these dynasties and the ten-
dency of the Serbian dynasties (especially the Kara đorđević) to dominate the region and
to project Serbia as the South Slav version of Piedmont. 21 This conflict was multi-faceted
and incorporated the struggle for various contested territories, issues of dynastic prestige,
and different nationalist visions of the future of the region, as well as the efforts of the
elites to exercise absolute control over political life in the Balkans. 22 Identity politics in
Montenegro played a significant role in this process, which began in earnest in the early
decades of the twentieth century and which has continued with varying intensity and in
many forms until the present day.
Following the creation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1918, the strug-
gle in Montenegro between those in favour of the union and those opposed became
stronger. Many politicians and military leaders in Montenegro, as well as the exiled king
and his government, were of the opinion that the decision of unconditional unification with
Serbia should have been made by the legally-elected Montenegrin Parliament and in adher-
ence to the Montenegrin Constitution of 1905. They argued that any union with neighbour-
ing South Slav states should be based on the principles of equality and respect for Mon-
tenegrin sovereignty. In the event of union, they maintained, Montenegro could and should
play a constitutive role, rather than a secondary one. The exiled king and his government
argued that, in the future Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Montenegro should be one of its consti-
tuent elements and not just a province of Serbia. The advocates of such political views were
21 ‘The comparison between Serbia and Piedmont regularly pressed in these years was funda-
mentally flawed because Piedmont was far too provincial a part of Italy to dominate and
alienate the rest of a once united country. Serbia, on the other hand, was a country already
gripped by an obsessive nationalism, basically of a Germanic sort, bent on the ‘ethnic cleans-
ing’ of a ‘Greater Serbia’ long before the 1990s. Ethnic cleansing had been written into Serb
nationalism from the early nineteenth century.’ Hastings, op. cit., p. 143. Domination of the
unwanted ‘other’ and the eventual ‘cleansing’ of desired territory have been common fea-
tures in every case of expansionist nationalism throughout the world, and the case of Serbia
should be seen as the rule rather than the exception. Even though my own views on this mat-
ter differ somewhat from those of Hastings, I trust that his assessment of the nature of Ser-
bian nationalism carries certain validity to it. Also see Mirko Grmek, Marc Gjidana and
Neven Šimac: Le Nettoyage Ethnique: Documents Historiques sur une Ideologie Serbe
(Paris: Fayard, 1993); in spite of its one-sided approach to the issue of nationalisms in Yugo-
slavia, this volume provides essential documentation covering both the nineteenth and the
twentieth century.
22 ‘Serbia wants to liberate and unite the Yugoslavs and does not want to drown in the sea of
some kind of Yugoslavia. Serbia does not want to drown in Yugoslavia, but to have Yugo-
slavia drown in her.’ Letter by the Serbian Prime Minister, Nikola Pa šić, to Jovan M.
Jovanović-Pižon in London, 15 October 1918. Quoted from Dragovan Šepić: Italija,
saveznici i Jugoslavensko pitanje, 1914 -1918 (Zagreb, 1970), p. 358. Also see Đorđe Đ.
Stanković: Nikola Pašić i Jugoslovensko pitanje, Vols. 1-2 (Beograd: BIGZ, 1985), and
Charles Jelavich: ‘Nikola Pašić: Greater Serbia or Yugoslavia?’ Journal of Central Euro-
pean Affairs, Vol. 11 (July 1951).
89
Srđa Pavlović
referred to at the time as ‘Greens’ (zelenaši). The other group of politicians and scholars
advocated the unionist approach, interpreting the act of unification as the natural progres-
sion of a process that had acquired popular support through the years. Hence, the ‘Whites’
(bjelaši) based their argument on the assumption that Montenegrins and Serbs were but one
people. The result of this political shift was that those Montenegrins who supported the
Greens were seen as advocates of a separate Montenegrin identity, while the supporters of
the Whites ascribed to the theory that Montenegrins had a Serb ethnic origin. These con-
flicting points of view and the assumption of ethnic and national 'oneness' between Mon-
tenegrins and Serbs proved to be the crucial point of conflict between the opposing ideolo-
gies in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, as well as in the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY), created at the end of World War II. 23
The confrontation between Greens and Whites reached a new level during the Second
World War. After the capitulation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941, the Italians oc-
cupied Montenegro and were initially supported by the Greens, whose power base was in
the southern and central parts of Old Montenegro. After the initial stage of collaboration
with the occupying force, the Greens, together with partisan/communist forces, managed
to defeat the Italians and liberate (for a short period of time) almost the entire territory of
Montenegro. The Whites, on the other hand, predominated in the region of Brda and
northern Montenegro (bordering Serbia) and their political and military allegiance was to
the Serbian nationalist forces (Četnici or Chetniks) which were led by Nikola Bojovi ć,
Pavle Djurišić and Dragoslav-Dra ža Mihailović.24 As Christopher Boehm has pointed
out, this geo-political differentiation portrays Old Montenegro as ‘separatist,’ while the
other two regions favoured merger with a Serb-dominated state. 25
Socialist Yugoslavia inherited the unresolved issues of an incomplete process of na-
tional definition and unification among its constituent elements. The appearance of unity
and tolerance in the former SFRY had primarily a representational character and was lack-
ing in substance, it also had strong overtones of the communist ideological umbrella. 26
The communist authorities claimed that South Slavs and other nations living in the region
23 Referring to the process of state and nation-building among the South Slavs and the viability
of the Yugoslav state created in 1918, Adrian Hastings concludes that: ‘It is a case study of
how not to construct a nation from a mix of closely-related ethnicities and proto-nations.
Inter-war Yugoslavia was constructed as a Greater Serbia just as the heirs of Karadžić and
Garašanin were determined it should be. Serbia was the only part which entered it as already
politically independent.’ Hastings, op. cit., pp. 142-143. Also see Ljubodrag Dimić: Kulturna
politika Kraljevine Jugoslavije, 1918-1941, 3 Vols. (Beograd: Stubovi kulture, 1996-1997).
24 Valuable documents related to this period of Montenegrin history are available in Vlado
Marković and Radoje Pajović: Saradnja Ćetnika sa okupatorom u Crnoj Gori: dokumenti
1941-1945 (Podgorica & Cetinje: Republički Odbor SUBNOR-a Crne Gore, 1996).
25 It would seem that the Greens sided with Italy in hope that the post-war settlement might
result in the renewal of an independent and sovereign Montenegro. Robert Lee Wolf rightly
noted that the Greens rebelled against the Italian occupation when it became clear that Italy’s
intentions were to turn Montenegro into a puppet state. See Robert Lee Wolf: The Balkans in
Our Time (Cambridge, Ma: Harvard University Press, 1956), pp. 214-215.
26 For an interesting analysis of the relations between the communist authorities and peasants,
see Melisa Bokovoy: Peasants and Communists: Politics and Ideology in the Yugoslav
Countryside 1941-1953 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998).
90
Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
had united on a solid foundation only because of their political guidance and had done so
under the communist ideological premises of brotherhood and unity. The rhetoric of such
claims consisted of a curious mix of negative references to the past and a rather enthusias-
tic and positive prognosis for the future. National aspirations as a mode of cognition and
perception of reality were characterised as negative and backwards, as aspirations that
would jeopardise the further progress of society.
During the early 1950s, however, the communist rhetoric of a necessary change in soci-
ety was intended to convey a message of hope and to have a soothing effect on the collec-
tive psyche. Above all, it was intended to grant more credibility to the efforts of the com-
munist authorities in their alleged pursuit of a more just and humane society. Communist
leaders attempted to create Yugoslav supranationality (Yugoslavism/ Jugoslovenstvo). The
new elite hoped such an achievement would make obsolete the nationalist claims of local
oligarchies.27 In the process of creating Yugoslav supranationality in the 1950s through to
the mid-1960s, the communist authorities attempted to structure society so that it func-
tioned according to the principle of unity in diversity. The six Yugoslav republics had
been perceived as somewhat distinct but they remained constitutive elements of a larger
and politically unified structure. Such unity in diversity served the purpose of sidelining,
at least temporarily, the issue of nationalism in the former Yugoslavia. 28 The unsuccessful
attempts of the communist elite to achieve supranational harmony in SFRY included sup-
pressing the regional voices which were calling for the recognition of the national specifi-
cities of Serbs, Croats, Montenegrins, Macedonians and the other nations living in the re-
gion. It also meant using the ideological paradigm to marginalise the elements of national
distinctiveness, culture and tradition of all of the constitutive nations. This suppression
and marginalisation was accomplished by positioning local and regional representations
of national and cultural distinctiveness at the level of harmless folklore, popular festivities
with strong ideological overtones and exotic museum exhibits. Parallel to that, the com-
munists managed to silence, at least temporarily, local and regional hegemonic and chau-
vinistic nationalist claims.
27 In the sixties, Hugh Seton-Watson wrote: ‘In Yugoslavia the official doctrine was Yugoslav
nationalism. This was supposed to comprise, and to transform into a higher quality, the
nationalism of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. But in practice it was interpreted as Serbian
nationalism writ large.’ Hugh Seton-Watson: Nationalism – Old and New (Sydney: Sydney
University Press, 1965), p. 16. For a detailed account of a famous 1961 debate on the nature
of Yugoslavism between the Slovenian philosopher Dušan Pirjevec and the Serbian writer
and communist dignitary Dobrica Ćosić, see Andrey Helfant: Serb Intellectuals and the
National Question, 1961-1991, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation (Cambridge, Ma: Harvard
University, 1998).
28 For a more comprehensive account, see Denison Russinow: ‘Nationalities Policy and the
National Question’, in Pedro Ramet (ed.): Yugoslavia in the 1980s (Boulder, Co: Westview,
1985). Miron Rezun has also pointed out that Tito believed the final result of the party’s
efforts to be the establishment of one true nation (Miron Razun: Europe and the War in the
Balkans: Toward a New Yugoslav Identity (Westport, Co: Praeger, 1995), p. 106. Also see
Milovan Đilas: Tito: The Story from Inside (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1980),
p. 134; Paul Shop: Communism and the Yugoslav National Question (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1968), pp. 119-198.
91
Srđa Pavlović
Identity issues in Montenegro were covered with the blanket of ideological uniform-
ity while their manifestations were diverted into various cultural and social stereo-
types.29 It should be noted, however, that the expressions of Montenegrin identity per se
were viewed as the manifestation of a retrograde ideology and that, in spite of the rhet-
oric of brotherhood and unity, it was generally assumed that Montenegrins and Serbs
were but one nation. 30 The absence of voices arguing in favour of Montenegrin national
and cultural distinctiveness on the public scene could be taken as proof of the above-
mentioned general consensus on this issue. There was indeed some room for manoeuvre
regarding the expression of identities other than Montenegrin, but such room was very
limited. Ideological pressure along the lines of the adoption of the communist-promoted
concept of Yugoslav supranationality was not eagerly embraced by everyone in Mon-
tenegro.This idyllic image of a country where everyone was equal was somewhat tar-
nished by the decision of many Albanians living in Montenegro to change their last
names in order to fit into the prescribed mould. From the late 1960s through to the late
1980s, many Catholic Albanians from Montenegro added the Slav suffix ić to their last
names and some even Slavicised their first names. This Slavicisation trend turned Alba-
nian last names of Arapaj into Arapović, Djokaj into Djokić, Ujkaj into Ujkić, Siništaj
into Siništović, Nikaj into Nikić and/or Nikočević, Perkaj into Perković, and so forth.
Even though one could not easily point out a clear pattern of the state-sponsored modi-
fication of identity manifestations in Montenegro, examples of the aforementioned ad-
justments among Catholic Albanians could very well indicate the existence of consider-
able pressure. It is interesting to note that such a trend could be detected only among
Catholic Albanians living in Montenegro; their fellow Albanians of the Islamic faith did
not engage in the same process. 31
Nationalist sentiments were on the rise in many regions of Yugoslavia in the late 1960s
and the early 1970s. During this period, an intense campaign was conducted by many Al-
banian politicians, university professors and intellectuals living in Kosovo regarding
greater autonomy and the establishment of a bilingual education system in the province.
In Montenegro, Serb nationalist forces gained prominence for a short period of time
(1970-1973) by publicly denouncing communist ideology and advocating the ideas of the
29 On the public scene in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Montenegrins have
inhabited the realm of epic stereotypes. They have been thought of as intelligent, educated,
brave, honest, trustworthy and proud, but also as lazy and power-loving individuals. Public
perception rarely questioned their assumed ethnic, national and cultural closeness/oneness
with Serbs. Such a perception was an integral part of a vocabulary of popular culture, while
the lack of scholarly works on the subject might indicate that this stereotypical view of Mon-
tenegrins was taken for granted.
30 This assumption is visible in the works of Dimitrije Dimo Vujović: Ujedinjenje Crne Gore i
Srbije (Titograd: Istorijski Institut NRCG, 1962) and Crnogorski federalisti 1919-1929
(Titograd: CANU, 1981), as well as in Dimitrije Vujović: ‘O etnogenezi Crnogoraca i
marksističkom odredjenju Nacije’, Praksa (1981).
31 From 1990 onwards, some Catholic Albanians in Montenegro switched back to their original
last names. The author confirmed this trend of reversal to the original last names during his
most recent stay in Montenegro in 2002; the particular cases mentioned in this text appear as
the result of the author’s personal communications with the individuals involved.
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
Ćetnik movement.32 In Croatia, the movement known as the Croatian Spring ( Hrvatsko
Proljeće or Maspok, 1972) represented the first serious test for the central government in
Belgrade and the Yugoslav Communist Party. 33 In Serbia, the early 1970s were a time of
the ideological and political cleansing of the communist elite and of intellectuals at the
universities in Belgrade and Novi Sad, a process soon to be followed in the other repub-
lics.34 The ideological aspect aside, what many activists in these movements had in com-
mon were their strong expressions of nationalist sentiment (Serbian, Croatian and Alba-
nian), paired with demands for more power for the republics and a more open system of
governance. With regard to the issue of national identification, the specificity of the post-
World War II Yugoslav case lies partly in its proclaimed separate road to socialism and in
the creation of sophisticated mechanisms of adoption and adaptation in dealing with the
national question. The system allowed and controlled dissent along these lines in order to
project the false impression of its strength and flexibility, as well as its democratic charac-
ter. Adopting and adapting nationalist policies became the means of preserving commu-
nist power and, ultimately, resulted in the destruction of the country in the last decade of
the twentieth century.
32 Among the most vocal advocates of this ideology in Montenegro were several journalists
from the Montenegrin daily Pobjeda, such as Jovan Dujović, Janko Vujisić, Luka Gojnić
and Vitomir Nikolić, and the newspaper’s Editor-in-Chief, Milo Kralj. Judging by the out-
come of the whole affair, and that none of the above-mentioned individuals faced any
charges (some were transferred to new posts in media organisations in Belgrade), it is rea-
sonable to conclude that these nationalist-minded journalists enjoyed at least the limited sup-
port of the Montenegrin and Serbian political elites. On the other hand, those who argued
against the revival of the Ćetnik ideology in Montenegro suffered serious professional and
personal consequences, ranging from lost employment to having to serve prison terms. Jour-
nalists such as Milika Pavlović, Marko Đonović, Velimir Tasić, Đuro Đukić and Zaga
Vujović lost their jobs or were forced to resign their posts, while Momčilo Jokić served a
lengthy prison sentence. For a more detailed account of these events, see: ‘Izvještaj Statut-
arne Komisije OK na Opštinskoj Konferenciji SK Titograd’, Titogradska Tribina,
4.10.1972; ‘Informacija Sekretarijata CK i OKSK Titograd’, Pobjeda, 24.1.1973. Also see:
Husein Bašić and Milika Pavlović: Smrt duše/Podrum (Podgorica: Montenegrin P.E.N. Cen-
tre & Damad, 1992), pp. 289-309.
33 Its leaders, Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Mika Tripalo were high-ranking communist party
functionaries.
34 University professors Zagorka Pešić-Golubović, Ljubomir Tadić, Miladin Životić, Nebojša
Popov, Svetozar Stojanović, Mihailo Marković and many other intellectuals (Mihailo Mji-
hailov, Miroslav Mandić, Slavko Bogdanović) lost their posts at universities and were
banned from all public engagements. For a more comprehensive account of the political
cleansing in the Serbia of the period, see: Aleksandar Nenadović and Mirko Tepavac:
Sjećanja i Komentari (Beograd: Radio B92, 1998). See also Nebojša Popov: ‘Disidentska
Skrivalica’, Republika (August 2000), and Contra fatum: slučaj grupe profesora filozofskog
fakulteta 1968-1988 (Beograd: Mladost, 1989).
93
Srđa Pavlović
publics of FRY subsequently proved to be a matter of growing concern for many Mon-
tenegrins. Occasional exchanges of opposing political arguments and accusations between
Belgrade and Podgorica over the nature of the common state and its future came close to
breaking point in the late 1990s. In 1997, the Montenegrin leadership publicly distanced
itself from the policies of Slobodan Milo šević. The debate between Podgorica and Bel-
grade greatly resembled that of 1918, when the issue of the unification of Montenegro
with Serbia was a hot political topic. 35
Until the early 1990s, conversations about Montenegrin sovereignty, independence and
identity outside the Serb national and cultural paradigm were rare; people usually spoke
about it sotto voce. Those who oppose Montenegrin independence and deny Montene-
gro’s right to its own political expression (unitarists) are many and their political credos
differ on more than one level. However, they all share a common thread: the perception of
Montenegrins as an integral part of a larger Serbian ethnic and national framework. 36
Such a perception is based on a historical narrative that elevates the role of Montenegro in
holding together and preserving the construction of the Serbian national mythos. This nar-
rative consists of many elements that are interdependent and which display certain proto-
scientific characteristics. The traditional culture and history, and the general cultural ma-
trix ascribed to Montenegrins, have been analysed almost exclusively within the Serb na-
tional paradigm and have been seen as part of a larger, and presumably uniform, Serbian
historical and cultural corpus. This methodological approach has characterised not only
the works of many Serbian historians but can also be detected in the works of a number of
western analysts of the South Slavic past. 37 More often than not, Montenegrins have been
perceived as a rather exotic, albeit useful, element within the Serbian ethnic and historic
matrix. Furthermore, this constructed historical narrative has been rationalised and repre-
sented through the Serbian national mythology. In this approach, the historical reality of
relations between Montenegro and Serbia is reduced to a figure of memory. This collaps-
ing of historical reality manifests itself in the form of a Grand Narrative: the myth of Mon-
tenegro as the pinnacle of Eastern Orthodoxy; Montenegrins as the best of all Serbs; and
35 On these discussions, see Beáta Huszka’s chapter on ‘The Dispute over Montenegrin Inde-
pendence’, this volume.
36 Petar Vlahović, ‘The Serbian Origins of the Montenegrins’, available at: www.njegos.org/
vlahovic.html. For an interesting analysis of the duality of Montenegrin character, see
Banac, op. cit., pp. 270-291, and Andrei Simić: ‘Montenegro: Beyond the Myth’, in Con-
stantine P. Danopoulos and Kostas Messas (eds.): Crises in the Balkans (London & Colo-
rado: Westview Press, 1997), p. 122.
37 See Ferdo Čulinović: Jugoslavija Između dva rata (Zagreb: Izdavački Zavod JANU, 1961);
Vladimir Dedijer et al: History of Yugoslavia (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1974); Milovan
Đilas: Njegoš: Poet, Prince, Bishop (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1966); Novica
Rakočević: Politički odnosi Crne Gore i Srbije 1903-1918 (Cetinje: Obod, 1981); John
Treadway: The Falcon and the Eagle: Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908-1914 (West
Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1983); Jelavich, op. cit; Charles and Barbara Jela-
vich: The Establishment of the Balkan National States, 1804-1920 (Seattle & London: Uni-
versity of Washington Press, 1977); Andrew B. Wachtel: Making a Nation, Breaking a
Nation: Literature and Cultural Policies in Yugoslavia (Stanford: Stanford University
Press, 1998).
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
the capital Cetinje as Little Zion.38 The history of Montenegro is often presented as the
history of a remote army camp, whose swordsmen were guarding for posterity the spirit of
the Eastern Orthodox faith and protecting it from falling under the cold shadow of the
Crescent. This insistence upon the religious aspect in such interpretations, as well as the
validity of the entire argument, is contestable, since Montenegrins have always displayed
an unusual attitude towards religion and the Church institutions:
No matter how much a Montenegrin may love his church, he does not like to attend the serv-
ice, and lately the church and state authorities are making an effort to ensure that church serv-
ices are attended regularly. In earlier times there were those who never entered a church as
long as they lived. … In his absentmindedness, a Montenegrin enters the church with his cap
on his head. I had an opportunity to see older priests do the same thing. … This is why the re-
ligious beliefs of Montenegrins, regardless of how deep they may be, are either not expressed
openly through rituals or are displayed in a very simple and sometimes even crude manner. 39
The Montenegrin state was often perceived not to have been a real state but only a his-
torical sentiment (heavily coloured by the oral tradition); it was seen as a historical aberra-
tion that survived within the specific conditions of the permanent armed struggle against
the Ottoman invader. 40 Those who ascribe to such a view argue that, once the Ottoman
state had dissolved, there was no reason for a Montenegrin state to exist outside the all-in-
clusive Serbian national and political frameworks. Following the same argument, some
contemporary Serbian nationalists argue that:
Montenegro had its own state before Serbia did, but Montenegro has always been a Serbian
state – even under Njegoš and the Petrović dynasty. Bavaria, for example, was once the
Kingdom and is now called the Free Bavarian State, but no one dreams of turning it into an
independent state, let alone of denying it its German national identity. 41
Within such a political and ideological equation, the independent Montenegrin state
made sense only as long as it carried forward the torch of an undying spirit of Serbhood.
The reference to Montenegrins as the best of all Serbs (still forcefully advocated by expo-
38 Analysing the process of the reduction of historical reality to a figure of memory is one of
the primary tasks of the historical sub-discipline called Mnemohistory. ‘Unlike history
proper, mnemohistory is concerned not with the past as such, but only with the past as it is
remembered. It surveys the story lines of tradition, the webs of intertextuality, the diachronic
continuities and discontinuities of reading the past… It concentrates exclusively on those
aspects of significance and relevance which are the product of memory – that is, of a
recourse to a past.’ Jan Assmann: Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western
Monotheism (Cambridge, Ma: Harvard University Press, 1997), pp. 7-9.
39 Pavel Apolonovich Rovinsky: Etnografija Crne Gore, Vol. 1 (Podgorica: CID, 1998), pp.
282-283. Original publication: St. Petersburg, 1897.
40 See Janko Spasojević, Crna Gora i Srbija, (Paris: Informativna Služba Ministarstva Inos-
tranih Dela, 1919). Jovan Ćetković, Ujedinjenje Crne Gore i Srbije (Dubrovnik 1940) and
Omladinski pokret u Crnoj Gori (Podgorica 1922); Novica Šaulić: Crna Gora (Beograd
1924); Pantelija Jovović: Crnogorski političari (Beograd, 1924); Svetozar Tomić: Desetogo-
disnjica ujedinjenja Srbije i Crne Gore (Beograd, 1929).
41 Ljubomir Tadić, Member of the Serbian Academy of Arts and Sciences (SANU) in Glas
Javnosti, 10-11.2.2001. See also Vlahović, op. cit; and Simić, op. cit., pp. 122-124.
95
Srđa Pavlović
nents of Serbian expansionist nationalism) is an example of how the ethnic factor is sim-
plified and isolated, as well as hypertrophied, in the attempt to prove the ethnic purity of
Montenegrin identity. This might be the deepest epistemological, ideological and political
meaning of the thesis that Montenegrins are racially pure or even the purest of Serbs. The
problem of the multi-layered character of Montenegrin identity has been, in most cases,
interpreted as the relationship between the subordinate concept of ‘Montenegrin’, repre-
senting the notion of territoriality, and the superordinate concept of ‘Serb’, representing
ethnic/national belonging. Thus, Montenegrins have been perceived as ethnic Serbs living
in the geographical region known as Montenegro. It could be argued that such a view rep-
resents a simplification of the issue of a Montenegrin Serbhood.
Montenegrins preserved the notion of their distinctiveness with regard to other South
Slavic groups and continuously reaffirmed it through history. The Montenegrin version of
Serbhood differs from its manifestations in other areas of Yugoslavia which are populated
by peoples of the Eastern Orthodox faith. A heroic attitude towards life, the notion of a
messianic role in the historical process of the revival of the medieval Serbian empire and
the prolonged armed struggle against the Ottoman invader, as well as the historical conti-
nuity of the Montenegrin state, are elements that distinguish the concept of Montenegrin
Serbhood from similar concepts in Bosnia, Croatia or Serbia proper. Ultimately, the idea
of Serbhood was understood to be an attribute of belonging to the Eastern Orthodox faith,
and to Christianity in general, as well as to the larger South Slavic context. Based on such
an understanding, many Montenegrins incorporated this idea in the building blocks of
their national individuality. The result of such incorporation is the historical precedent of
the notion of Montenegrin Serbhood which, because it was understood as the ideology of
‘constant struggle’, did not stand in opposition to a distinct character of Montenegrin na-
tional identity. It was used as a tool of pragmatic politics in order to achieve the final goal.
Montenegrins used the terms Serbs and Serbhood whenever they referred to the South
Slavic elements which were rallied in an anti-Ottoman coalition and around the Christian
Cross. Moreover, it is true that identity construction is a long process of historical/cultural
sedimentation and that the final product is perceived as a relatively long-lasting and stable
phenomenon. However, it would be a mistake to regard it as static or unchangeable. Iden-
tity is a dynamic phenomenon whose manifestations can vary over time – even more so if
such an identity is positioned on the periphery of a dominant cultural/political force.
If ‘we are what we remember,’ the truth of memory lies in the identity that it shapes. This
truth is subject to time so that it changes with every new identity and every new present. It
lies in the story, not as it happened but as it lives on and unfolds in collective memory. 42
With this in mind, it does not seem entirely appropriate either to contest or to deny con-
temporary expressions of the national identity of Montenegrins and their distinctiveness in
regard to Serbs by invoking that, a century or so ago, many of their ancestors (some rulers
from the Petrović dynasty included) declared themselves to be Serbs. 43 A more productive
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
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Srđa Pavlović
vision of Montenegro. By the end of the 19 th century, the debate about Njego š’s sense of
national identity had already developed into a debate about the national and cultural iden-
tity of Montenegrins. 47
The most famous of his poems, The Mountain Wreath (Gorski Vijenac) is set in 18 th
century Montenegro and describes the attempts of Njego š's ancestor, Metropolitan Danilo,
to regulate relations between the region's warring tribes. Njego š constructed his poem
around a single event that allegedly took place on a particular Christmas Day in the early
1700s, during the rule of Metropolitan Danilo: the mass execution of Montenegrins who
had converted to Islam. 48 This work of literature is praised and criticised at the same time,
and it has been used to support diametrically opposing political views. Many Serbian na-
tionalists use it as historical justification of their attempt to keep alive a dream of Greater
Serbia and as the ultimate proof of the Serb identity of Montenegrins:
The Mountain Wreath represents a synthesis in another sense as well. It is based on histori-
cal facts, thus it can be called a historical play. It epitomises the spirit of the Serbian people
kept alive for centuries; indeed, there is no other literary work with which the Serbs identify
more.49
Some Croatian nationalists recognise in Njego š’s poetry the ultimate statement of the
oriental nature of South Slavs living east of the Drina River, thus reinforcing the popular
47 On Njegoš and the appropriation of his work, see: Milan Bogdanović: ‘Vratimo Njegoš a
literaturi’, Srpski Književni Glasnik Vol. 2. No. 16.7 (1925), pp. 577-79. See also Jaša M.
Prodanović: ‘Gorski Vijenac kao Vaspitno Delo’, Srpski Književni Glasnik Vol. 2 No. 16.7
(1925), pp. 558-62; Nikola Škerović: ‘Njegoš i jugoslovenstvo’, Nova Evropa, Vol. 2.1
(1925), pp. 1-8; Ljubomir Durković-Jakšić: Njegoš i Lovćen (Beograd: n.a., 1971); Savić
Marković Štedimlija: ‘Sto Godina Narodne Poezije’, Nova Evropa, Vol. 28 Nos. 4-5 (1935),
pp. 120-29; Srđa Pavlović: ‘Poetry or the Blueprint for Genocide’, Spaces of Identity
OnLine Vol. 1 No. 1 (January 2001) available at: www.spacesofidentity.net.
48 The dating of the alleged event is a matter of some controversy. The sub-title of The Moun-
tain Wreath tells us that the poem deals with a ‘Historical Event from the End of the 17th
Century’ (Historičesko Sobitie pri Svršetky XVII vieka) (P.P. Njegoš: The Mountain Wreath
(Vienna 1847), title page). The same dating of the event described in The Mountain Wreath
appeared in a number of histories of Montenegro published during the nineteenth century,
such as those by Sima Milutinović Sarajlija (Belgrade, 1835) and Dimitrije Milaković
(Zadar, 1856). Later studies by Ilarion Ruvarac: Montenegrina 2nd ed. (1899) and Ljubomir
Stojanović: Zapisi II (1903) based their dating of the event on a note allegedly written by
Metropolitan Danilo Petrović himself. The note and its commentary by N. Musulin were
published in Glasnik, XVII (1836). It is worth pointing out that Ruvarac expressed serious
concerns regarding the genuine character of the note, but his concerns were quickly brushed
aside by a number of local historians. The aforementioned authors offered three different
dates for the ‘Christmas Day Massacre’ (1702, 1704 and 1707), while The Mountain Wreath
positioned the event in the late seventeenth century. It is interesting to note that, in his earlier
works, Njegoš dated the event as 1702. In his poem Ogledalo Srpsko, Njegoš wrote about
the event and positioned it ‘around the year 1702’. See: P.P. Njegoš: Ogledalo Srpsko
(1845). A notable exception is Konstantin Jiriček, who, in his Naučni Slovnik, stated that the
event described in The Mountain Wreath never took place.
49 Njegoš’s translator Vasa D. Mihailović, in his Introduction to the 1997 edition of The Moun-
tain Wreath. See footnote 51.
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
notion of a stereotypical other.50 Islamic radicals view The Mountain Wreath as a manual
for ethnic cleansing and fratricidal murder, as a text whose ideas were brought back to life
during the most recent nationalistic dance macabre in the former Yugoslavia. 51 Mon-
tenegrin independentists largely shy away from any interpretation of Njego š’s poetry and
only on occasion discuss its literary and linguistic merits. 52 The myth of the slaying of in-
fidels in early eighteenth-century Montenegro is a recurring theme in almost all analyses
of the region’s history and the mentality of its people. Its usage as the ultimate explanation
for the recent historical developments in the region is apparent and particularly troubling.
Apart from being a material mistake, the employment of this theme serves the purpose of
further restraining Montenegro within the confines of the notions of the so-called ‘ancient
hatred’, ‘irrationalism’ and ‘barbarism’.
In spite of the openness of this work to various interpretations (or precisely because of
it), one should not forget that what one is reading is a work of literature. Naturally, litera-
ture should be approached as a source and a litmus test for evaluating a particular histori-
cal period. But its exclusive usage as the primary and sole determining element in the
process of historical evaluation across time is a questionable methodological approach. 53
More than anything else, The Mountain Wreath is the tale of a long-gone heroic tribal so-
ciety that was poeticised in order to depict the state of affairs in Njego š’s Montenegro.
From such a point of analytical departure, this work of literature can be approached as an
additional source for assessing the conditions within a particular time frame in Mon-
tenegrin history, i.e. Njego š’s time: the first half of the 19 th century. The long-gone Mon-
tenegro that Njego š wrote about had little in common with the Montenegro of his time and
has nothing in common with contemporary Montenegro. However, The Mountain Wreath
does speak volumes about the political, social, cultural and economic conditions in Mon-
tenegro during the early 19 th century and about Njego š’s efforts to advocate the ideas of
pan-Slavism and unification. 54
Available sources point out that Njego š did not base his poem on a historical event.
However, he realised the potential significance of a reshaped myth and through licencia
poetica actualised its meanings. The myth of the slaying of converts, as an act of cleansing
and the indication of a fresh start, meshed nicely with Njego š’s efforts to turn Montenegro
into a modern state. 55 The Mountain Wreath represents an important literary achievement,
50 Branimir Anžulović: Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide (New York: New York Uni-
versity Press, 1999), pp. 61-67.
51 ibid., pp. 61-76. See also Ivo Žanić: Prevarena povijest: guslarska estrada, kult hajduka i rat
u Hrvatskoj i Bosni i Hercegovini 1990-1995. godine (Zagreb: Duriex, 1998), pp. 271-303.
52 See Božena Jelušić: ‘Otvoreni za Njegoša’, Matica Vol. 2 No. 6 (Summer 2001).
53 ibid., pp. 97-106.
54 See Njegoš’s letter written on 2 May 1848 to the Serbian Minister of the Interior, Ilija
Garašanin, the author of Načertanije. P.P. Njegoš: Izabrana pisma (Beograd: Prosveta,
1967), p. 166. See also Njegoš to Josip Jelačić, letter written in Cetinje on December 20,
1848, ibid. pp. 173-174.
55 See Istorija Crne Gore, Vol. 3 No. 1 (Titograd, 1975). See also Slobodan Tomović: Komen-
tar Gorskog Vijenca (Ljubljana, Beograd & Nikšić: Partizanska knjiga Univerzitetska rijeć
& Izdavačko publicistička djelatnost, 1986), pp.146-147; Vojislav P. Nikčević: ‘Istrage
Poturica Nije ni Bilo’, Ovđe No. 189 (1985), pp. 8-10; and Cetinjski Ljetopis (Cetinje:
Fototipsko Izdanje Centralne Biblioteke NR Crne Gore, 1962).
99
Srđa Pavlović
and it should be analysed as a drama that confronts and challenges the concepts of thought
and action, morality and righteousness, religion and human nature, and not as the poeti-
cised version of a historical event and an ultimate expression of Serb identity. It is a poetic
tale written by a man who continuously deconstructs and questions the very world he lives
in. Moreover, the character of Njegoš’s work is far from one-dimensional and cannot, in
good conscience, be viewed exclusively as national literature because it deals with issues
much broader than the narrow margins of Montenegrin political and cultural space. Fur-
thermore, The Mountain Wreath should not be read outside the context of the time of its
inception, nor from the perspective of one book. As Danilo Kiš has pointed out: ‘Many
books are not dangerous, but one book is.’ 56
Bearing in mind the distinct character of Montenegro's traditional culture, and the specifi-
cities of its historical, political and economic, as well as its cultural, development, one is in-
trigued by the persistent appropriation of Montenegrins by the Serbs and wonders about the
reasons for this claim to ownership. New interpretations of these issues, which came to light
in recent scholarly literature in Montenegro, and in support of the claim of Montenegrin cul-
tural, linguistic and national distinctiveness, indicate the primacy of politics as a discourse in
decoding the history of the region and in assessing the nature of relations between Mon-
tenegrins and Serbs.57 The inclusion of Montenegrins in the Serbian national mythos can be
identified as a way to establish and preserve the imagined historical/temporal and cultural
continuity of the Serbian nation throughout the centuries of Ottoman rule in the region.
For some 400 years, Serbia proper was ruled by the Ottoman Empire. All aspects of life
in the region were subject to regulations and laws imposed by the invader. On the other
hand, Montenegro existed during this same period as a relatively independent entity that
displayed a measurable temporal continuity of its own political and historical being. With
the advent of the ideology of national homogenisation among Serbs, it became necessary
to establish Serbian historical and cultural continuity in the area that was, within the na-
tional paradigm, perceived as an integral part of the Serbian medieval state. One of the
ways to accomplish this task was the appropriation of Montenegro. This appropriation
happened on many levels and included the positioning of Montenegrins within the Serbian
mythos as a symbol of the undying spirit of Serbhood. Only then was the Serbian histori-
cal narrative able to bridge the gap of some four centuries during Ottoman rule and estab-
lish the temporal continuity needed for the process of national awakening.
56 Danilo Kiš: Grobnica za Borisa Davidoviča (Sarajevo: Veselin Masleša, 1990), p. 117.
57 See Senka Babović: ‘Kulturna Politika u Zetskoj Banovini’, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation
(Podgorica: University of Montenegro, 1997). See also Vojislav Nikčević: O Postanku
Etnonima Dukljani, Zećani, Crnogorci (Podgorica, 1987); V. Nikčević: Crnogorski jezik
(Cetinje, 1993); V. Nikčević: Pravopis Crnogorskog jezika (Podgorica: Montenegrin PEN
Centre, 1997); Dragoje Živković: Istorija Crnogorskog naroda, (Cetinje, 1989); Šerbo Ras-
toder: Skrivana strana istorije: Crnogorska buna i odmetnički pokret 1918 – 1929. Doku-
menti, Vols. 1-4 (Bar: Nidamentym Montenegro, 1997).
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
58 See Srđa Pavlović: ‘The Podgorica Assembly in 1918: Notes on the Yugoslav Historiogra-
phy (1919-1970) about the Unification of Montenegro and Serbia’, Canadian Slavonic
Papers Vol. 41 No. 2 (June 1999), pp. 157-176.
59 Timothy Garton Ash: ‘The Last Revolution’, The New York Review of Books 16.11.2000.
See also Slavenko Terzić: ‘Ideološki Koreni Crnogorske Nacije i Crnogorskog Separa-
tizma’, available at www.njegos.org/idkor.html.
60 Rotković, op. cit.
61 At the traditional tribal gathering in Vasojevici (northern Montenegro) on St. Peter’s Day (12
July) 1994, prominent individuals from Vasojevici decided that their region would join Serbia
if Montenegro was to secede from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. See Zoran Marković:
‘Zapad će Platiti Odštetu Srbiji’, Duga 17.9.1994. For results and analysis of numerous opin-
ion polls regarding the future of the Montenegrin state, its referendum on independence and
the political affiliation of its citizens, see: Centre for Democracy and Human Rights
(CEDEM): Parliamentary Elections in Montenegro. Opinion Poll, 27 March – 3 April 2001,
Podgorica, 2001; Vladimir Goati: Izbori u SRJ od 1990 do 1998: volja gradjana ili izborna
manipulacija (Beograd: CeSID, 1999); International Crisis Group: Montenegro: In the
Shadow of the Volcano, Podgorica/Brussels/Washington, 21.3.2000, p. 11; Zoran Radulović:
‘Crnogorsko Javno Mnjenje na Prekretnici’, AIM, 26.9.1999; European Stability Initiative:
‘Politics, Interests and the Future of Yugoslavia: An Agenda for Dialogue’, 26.11.2001;
National Democratic Institute: 22 April Parlamentarni Izbori. Ključni Zaključi, Podgorica,
March 2001. NDI conducted this opinion poll between 15 and 19 March 2001. It is interesting
to note that the majority of those in favour of independence were between the ages of 18 and
30, and were mostly students. Also, almost all of the interviewees preferring independence
defined themselves as either Montenegrins or Albanians, or Muslims, not Serbs.
62 That some members of the SNP advocate a strong federal state instead of a unitary national
state should not be taken as a sign of their insecurity in the prerogatives of their Serbian iden-
tity but rather as a manifestation of their political pragmatism.
101
Srđa Pavlović
63 Milo Đukanović stated in 2001 that: ‘Neither can we have anyone closer to us than Serbia is,
nor can Serbia have anyone closer to her than Montenegro is.’ Milo Đukanović: ‘Referen-
dum je Neminovan. Dogovaraćemo se o Datumu i Uslovima’, Pobjeda 23.7.2001, p. 1.
64 For more on this issue, see the chapter ‘The Dispute over Montenegrin Independence’ by
Beáta Huszka, this volume.
65 Even though Art. 3 of the Belgrade Agreement allows for the possibility of a referendum
(defining it as a ‘right’ and not as an ‘obligation’), it seems unlikely that such an act will take
place in Montenegro. However, the leaders of the DPS and signatories of the Agreement
(President Đukanović and Prime Minister Vujanović) were quick to reassure the general
public that the referendum had not been forgotten but that it would take place under less hos-
tile political conditions and if ‘we come to the conclusion that such a move would best serve
the interests of Montenegro’s citizens.’ PCNEN, 16.3.2002. See also Milka Tadić-Mijović
and Draško Đuranović: ‘Srećna Nova 1992?’ [especially the section ‘Predsjednikova
Rijeć’], Monitor 22.3.2002, pp. 10-15.
66 Aleš Debeljak: ‘Varieties of National Experience: Resistance and Accommodation in Con-
temporary Slovenian Identity’, Spaces of Identity Vol. 1 No. 1 (January 2001), available at
www.spacesofidentity.net.
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
67 The aforementioned journals, publishing houses and magazines are slowly reintroducing
previously marginalised aspects of the Montenegrin cultural scene and emphasise its inter-
cultural character. Conteco and CID have embarked upon significant publishing undertak-
ings in order to present previously unavailable documents, historical and literary analyses
and other material relevant to Montenegrin history, culture, and society. Magazines such as
Gest and Montenegrin Mobil Art are venues for the presentation of contemporary theatrical,
literary and artistic trends in Montenegro. The editorial policy of the journal Matica is
clearly tailored towards a reaffirmation of Montenegrin identity, but also pays close attention
to various other aspects of identity construction in the region and devotes significant space to
various discussions on many aspects of civic society. These efforts are aimed at informing
the reading public in Montenegro and abroad about various aspects of life, scholarship and
art in Montenegro, and serve as vehicles for internationalising its cultural space. However, it
should be noted that these efforts in introducing concepts such as civic society and the inter-
culturality of the Montenegrin space, and the departure from the traditional and mytholo-
gised perception of reality, are in their initial stages and are, to a certain extent, driven by the
fear of marginalisation by Serbs as a dominant neighbouring group.
68 See: Ivan Čolović: ‘Est Natio in Nobis’, Matica Vol. 1 No. 3 (Autumn 2000), pp. 43-53;
Srđa Pavlović: ‘Gđe je kuća’, Matica Vol. 1 No. 3 (Autumn 2000), pp. 73-78; Dragan K.
Vukčević: ‘Crnogorska raskrsnica’, Matica Vol. 2 No. 7-8 (Autumn/Winter 2001), pp. 7-19;
Mato Jelušić: ‘U traganju za civilnim društvom’, Matica Vol. 3 No. 9-10 (Spring/Summer
2002), pp. 79-99; Šerbo Rastoder: ‘Crna Gora multietnička država: sadržaj, stvarnost, iluz-
ija, parola?’ Almanah No. 13-14 (2000), pp. 11-21; Esad Kočan: ‘Bošnjaci u Crnoj Gori:
identitet i integracija’, Almanah No. 13-14 (2000), pp. 29-37.
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Srđa Pavlović
which its tradition and history grew and developed, as well as the existence of space pro-
vided for the expression of difference.
However, problems arise when seeking practical ways to revitalise the values of Mon-
tenegrin national and cultural identity. At that point, some independentists often resort to
canonising the constitutive elements (real or imagined) of such an identity which, in turn,
might manifest itself as representations of a somewhat distorted and totalising collective
memory. Such distortion might be the result of a traumatic experience, but the memory of
defeats from the past (either political or ideological) should not be used as justification for
contemporary canonisations. The harshness and one-dimensional character of their approach
are similar to the 19th century movement of national awakening, albeit from a different per-
spective: the position as victim. Despite efforts to gloss over this identity via a post-modern-
ist discourse (as is the case in present-day Montenegro), it still mirrors the same old model.
Insisting on the rhetoric of Montenegrin identity, Montenegrin culture and a Montenegrin
ethnic framework could be misunderstood by many as an attempt to distance ‘Mon-
tenegrins’ from a stereotypical non-Montenegrin other, or as an initial phase in the political
process of creating and marginalising new second class citizens in Montenegro. 69
In the case of Montenegro, one could follow a gradual separation between content (cul-
tural identities and cultural politics) and form (the political rhetoric of cohabitation, multi-
culturalism and co-operation in the region) and the marginalisation of the former by the
latter. The lack of attention to cultural content and the failure to acknowledge the relation-
ship between the cultural identity of a nation and its state-institutional forms usually re-
sults in a questioning of both the identity and the viability of the state formation. Regard-
less of what might really be the case in Montenegro, the negative effects of the so-called
‘active waiting’ on the part of those in power promote a sense of confusion and insecurity,
as well as frailty and the lack of a clear vision of Montenegro's future. An independent,
sovereign and internationally recognised Montenegro can neither be achieved nor can it
survive as an acceptable modus vivendi for all its citizens without prior redefinition and
qualitative assessment, and a strengthening of its cultural cornerstones. Bearing this in
mind, it seems necessary to redefine cultural politics in Montenegro.
The transparency of cultural politics can only be attained by means of a clearly deline-
ated notion of identity: a notion whose elements cannot be easily deconstructed in the
process of cultural exchange. Even though one can easily recognise the specificity of the
national and cultural identity of Montenegrins, emphasising this specificity seems neces-
sary. Naturally, the crucial aspect of the whole process is finding a good measure of things
and establishing a necessary balance. Otherwise, one enters the realm of provincial xeno-
phobia and ethnic exclusivism. One has to be conscious that the Montenegrin cultural her-
itage and its contemporary manifestations are also the product of a creative effort of indi-
vidual intellectuals and groups that could not be positioned within the Montenegrin ethnic
framework. Cultural borrowings are a common occurrence in many cultures and there is
nothing wrong with them as long as their purpose is to interact with and learn about oth-
ers, rather than simply to adopt or create a carbon copy of the outside model. The ability to
69 Examples of such attempts could be found on the pages of the Crnogorski Književni List
(Montenegrin Literary Journal) published in Podgorica. Particularly striking examples of a
one-dimensional approach to Montenegrin identity (from a radical independentist point of
view) are articles written by the journal’s Editor-in-Chief, Jevrem Brković.
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Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity, and civic society
accept outside influences and filter them through the mechanisms of one's own artistic and
creative sensibility is a sign of a well-rounded sense of identity and represents a qualita-
tive departure from the rigid boundaries of one's ethnic mental landscape. An insistence
on prioritising and canonising ethnic criteria inevitably produces a backlash since it con-
structs others (outsiders). These others are seen as foreign, unwanted and de-humanised.
Finally, when representatives of a particular national group feel insecure about their own
identity, others are viewed as enemies. As Robert Musil pointed out, ethnic biases are usu-
ally nothing more than manifestations of one's self-hatred and the products of an inner
conflict that is projected on a convenient victim. 70
The political arena in Montenegro today is characterised by emotional outbursts which
obscure the real issue at stake: the modern condition (political, social, economic and cul-
tural). This calls for the introduction of a new discourse to assess and present the idea of
Montenegrin independence and sovereignty: the discourse of civic society. Creative inter-
action between two or more different segments of broader/different cultural frameworks
could best be achieved if the concept of ethnic identity is separated from that of civic iden-
tity. This separation should occur on the semantic level as well as on that of political and
cultural activity. Such differentiation has to be initiated and maintained in public dis-
course in the Montenegrin state and should carry in itself the possibility and the right of an
individual or a group to choose their own civic identity while not severing all ties with the
original ethnic group. 71
Despite the ‘multi-cultural’ rhetoric, it seems that a suitable climate for accepting and
implementing this differentiation in Montenegro is still in the making and that the notion
of the Montenegrin state is conditioned more by the ethnic principle rather than by that of
the civic identity of its population. This regression to the absolutism of the pure usually
produces various forms of cultural isolation which, in turn, feeds on the remnants of eth-
nic mimicry and rejects everything that does not come from within one's own ethnic cir-
cle. Instead of representing itself as a living and mobile experience, it is reduced to static
self-representation. In the absence of a political agency able and ready to establish the
mechanisms of a democratic civic society which is detached from the restrictive concept
of a mythologised past, cultural identities and self-representations become imposed and
internalised.72 Imposed processes and representations – the construction of stereotypes –
could turn into mechanisms for controlling numerically smaller ethno-cultural groups (or
could be perceived as such). This is the point at which the problem changes its character
and becomes political. Many people in Montenegro perceive the long-promised referen-
dum on independence as an imposition and as an attempt to force each individual to de-
clare his or her own ethnic identity, instead of a way to create an optimal legal framework
for the process of defining civic identity in Montenegro. Explaining to the electorate that
the modus vivendi called an independent and sovereign Montenegro is needed in order ‘to
help us be, and not to simply have’ might reduce some tension within society. 73
70 Robert Musil: The Man Without Qualities, Vol. 1 (New York: First Vintage International
Edition, 1996), p. 461.
71 Debeljak, op. cit.
72 William Anselmi and Kosta Gouliamos: Elusive Margins: Consuming Media, Ethnicity and
Culture (Toronto, Buffalo, Lancaster: Guernica, 1998), p. 15.
73 Debeljak, op. cit.
105
Srđa Pavlović
The prioritisation of culture and cultural politics in the process of creating the condi-
tions that will nourish elements of civic identity in Montenegro and establishing the mech-
anisms through which a civic society could function are also important in view of the rel-
atively recent political/personnel changes in Serbia. Even though these changes are
mainly of a representational character, they should be seen as an improvement. Namely,
getting rid of Milo šević lessened the likelihood of Montenegro being ‘pacified’ through
military action, but it did not entirely remove the threat of the marginalisation and redefi-
nition of the Montenegrin political and cultural space by Serbia. Recent political events
and the ongoing debate over the structure of the future union between Serbia and Mon-
tenegro indicate that, once again, the issue of the modalities for achieving political goals
(independent Montenegro versus unitary state) is the main stumbling block. It could be
said that the political model that is being imposed upon Montenegro by Brussels (political
and economic union with Serbia), paired with the persistent imposition of Serbian cultural
patterns by Belgrade, constitutes a new version of an aggressive Serbian expansionism,
which, time and again, is gaining international support. But this cosmetic improvement
does not modify the aggressive nature of such expansionism. In the context of a post-mod-
ern model of domination, the pen has become more effective and dangerous than the
sword. Overcoming such challenges presupposes a restructuring of Montenegro's econ-
omy and its political system. But such a process must include the revitalisation of the con-
temporary and multi-layered corpus of cultural activities in Montenegro, as well as the
preservation of its traditional cultural values.
106
Šerbo Rastoder
1 Translated from the original by Ivana Prazić. Vojislav D. Nikčević (ed.): Miscellanea Slavo-
rum, Dokumenti o Slovenima, Pars prima (Cetinje: Državni arhiv Crne Gore, 2002), p. 46.
2 See ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, Vol. 2 & 3, 2nd Edition Enciklopedije Jugoslavije (Podgorica:
DOB, 1999), p. 1.
3 In recent years, a voluminous publication on the historical origins and the early period of Mon-
tenegro was published, see Vojislav D. Nikčević: Monumenta Montegrina, I-X (Podgorica:
Istorijski institut Crne Gore, 2001-2002).
107
Šerbo Rastoder
Vladimir was canonised. 4 Duke Vladimir’s state stretched from Dra č in Albania to the
Neretva River, and comprised within its borders the areas of Duklja, Zahumlje and Travu-
nija. His court was in Bar.
The founder of the first Montenegrin dynasty, the Vojislavljevi ć Dynasty – which is
claimed to have had as many as 28 kings by Pop Dukljanin in his work The Kingdom of
Slavs in the second half of the twelfth century – was Stefan Vojislav (1016-1043), whose
military superiority over the Byzantine Empire, which he defeated, gained Duklja its state
independence, acknowledged by Byzantium itself. His supremacy was recognised by
neighbouring Raška, Hum and Bosnia. Vojislav was succeeded by his son Mihailo, to
whom the Byzantine Empire acknowledged sovereignty in internal matters of the state as
long as he, in turn, symbolically recognised the supremacy of the Byzantine Emperor.
Duke Mihailo’s state – referred to more frequently in Byzantine sources as Zeta – in-
cluded in its territorial extension the region stretching from Ston and the hinterland of Du-
brovnik to the area surrounding around Dra č to the south. Duke Mihailo located his courts
in Kotor and Prapratna (a site between Bar and Ulcinj), and it is suspected that his state
contained a number of other coastal cities as well. It was during the period of his rule that
the schism between the Pope and the Patriarchate in Constantinople took place in 1054,
whereupon Mihailo, after fighting Byzantium and sending help to the rebels in Macedonia
in 1072, succeeded in raising his state to the status of kingdom. In a letter dated at the be-
ginning of 1077, Pope Gregory VII addresses him as rex Sclavorum (the king of the
Slavs), although it remains unknown whether his royal title was bestowed upon him that
same year or somewhat earlier. Be that as it may, the state of King Mihailo Vojislavljevi ć
gained international recognition, just as it expanded territorially and became an imposing
military force in the region.
In the spiritual sense, the population of his country was under the jurisdiction of the
Episcopate of Dubrovnik which, in turn, was subordinated to Split and, eventually, to
Rome. Mihailo’s request to gain spiritual, as well as secular, independence was accom-
plished in the period of reign of his heir Bodin (1082-1101), who was married to Jakvinta,
a Norman.
The Macedonians proclaimed Bodin to be emperor in Prizren, as a gesture of gratitude
for the help he had provided them in the uprising of Đorđe Vojteh against the Byzantine
Empire. During the conquest of Dra č by the Normans, Macedonia, Epirus and Thessaly,
Bodin conquered Ra ška, turning it into a Zetan province, after which he took over Bosnia
as well. In January 1089, he managed to ensure that the Episcopate of Bar was promoted
to the rank of arch-episcopate (archbishopric) by the Pope, thus acquiring the favours of
the religious chiefs in his state. 5
After King Bodin’s death, the country started to weaken and shrink. Ra ška, Bosnia and
Hum separated from Duklja (Zeta), while disputes over the throne kept weakening the in-
ner unity of the country. Bodin’s successor was his brother Dobroslav, who was dethroned
by Vukan, the Great Župan (head of a tribal state) of Ra ška, who first enthroned Ko čopar
only to replace him with Vladimir (1102-1114). Bodin’s wife Jakvinta managed to en-
4 Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 29-30; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 142-146.
5 The bishoprics of Duklja, Bar, Kotor, Ulcinj, Svač, Skadar, Drivast, Pilot, Serbia, Bosnia
and Travunia were subordinated to the Bar Archbishopric.
108
A short review of the history of Montenegro
throne her son Đorđije (1114-1118) in order to suppress temporarily the supporters of
Raška and to provoke the intervention of Byzantium, as a result of which Grube ša was en-
throned for a short time (1118-1125) before being replaced once again by Đorđije (1125-
1131) and then by Gradihna (1131-1142), who succeeded in reclaiming Travunia and
placing it under his control. These long-lasting inner clashes ruined and desolated the
country. Gradihna’s son and heir became a vassal to Byzantium, thus bringing Zeta and
Travunia under his rule. The political anarchy that had ensued in Zeta after Bodin’s death
had as its final consequence the loss of independence, these territories being conquered by
Nemanja, Raška’s Great Župan, in 1189 and annexed to Ra ška.
Thus ended the 173-year-long period of existence of the independent state of Duklja
(Zeta) during which a state, a church and a culture dominated by western influence had
been created.6 From 1189 to 1360, Zeta became a part of the Nemanji ć state, within which
it would retain certain autonomy. After the conquest of Duklja with its coastal area (‘The
Kingdom of Dioclitia and Dalmatia’), Stefan Nemanja did not alter its independent organi-
sation. Vukan, his eldest son, was appointed regent and he also enjoyed the title of the King
of ‘Duklja and Dalmatia’, the title taken on from his predecessors, the kings of Duklja. Sig-
nificant religious changes in this area began in 1219 when Sava (St. Sava), Stefan Ne-
manja’s son, established the orthodox Zeta Episcopate in Prevlaka (near Tivat). Subse-
quently, the orthodox Episcopates of Prevlaka and Ston would spread Orthodoxy as far as
the coastal areas of Zeta, where the Catholic religion had previously been predominant, al-
though the Serbian feudal landowners would support the Archbishopric of Bar during its
long dispute with the Archbishopric of Dubrovnik on the issue of precedence. 7 The coastal
towns not only kept the autonomy won from the previous rulers under the Nemanji ć Dy-
nasty, but also succeeded in broadening it widely. Internal autonomy was arranged by mu-
nicipal statutes (Kotor acquired one in 1301, Bar in 1330 and Budva somewhat later) and
thus the coastal towns developed into commercial centres and mediators in the exchange of
goods with the hinterland, where certain towns (e.g. Kotor) had their colonies. 8
At that time, apart from feudal landowners, tenants and sharecroppers, there were also
cattle breeders, Vlachs and Albanians, allowed to move freely throughout Zeta on condi-
tion of paying the usual taxes. During that period, Orthodox monasteries from the inner
parts of Serbia and from Zeta and its coastal areas also started obtaining properties, while
the system of pronias, i.e. giving land properties to warriors or officials without the right
of transfer to third persons, spread relatively early. The pronias were cultivated by land-
less peasants and a pronia could be inherited by a son on condition that he assumed his
father’s duties.9
6 On this period of Montenegrin history, see Istorija Crne Gore, Vol. 1 (Titograd, 1970);
Nikčević: Monumenta Montenegrina; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 28-38;
‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 143-149; Dragoslav Srejović et al: Istorija srpskog naroda, Vol. I
(Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga, 1981), pp. 109-124, 141-155, 174-175 and 180-196.
7 See Istorija Crne Gore No. 2, Vol. 1 (Titograd, 1970), pp. 15-28.
8 ibid. pp. 28-46; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 149-154; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne
Gore, pp. 45-57.
9 Istorija Crne Gore, No. 2, Vol. 1 (Titograd, 1970), pp. 83-93; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija
Crne Gore, p. 57.
109
Šerbo Rastoder
10 On Balša see Istorija Crne Gore, No. 2 Vol. 1 (Titograd, 1970), pp. 3-121; ‘Crna Gora i
Crnogorci’, pp. 152-155; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 58-80.
110
A short review of the history of Montenegro
His son and heir Đurađ (1490-1496) acquired a printing press in 1493 in Venice, only
a few years after it had been invented by Johan Gutenberg. The press constituted the first
printing shop in the South Slav region and was where the first books in Cyrillic on the en-
tire Balkan peninsula were printed. Starting from 1494, the Oktoih, the Book of Psalms
and the Prayer Book, among others, were printed – an issue that represented the ultimate
aspect of religious defence and Montenegrin freedom. In this state printing shop, five reli-
gious books were printed in the Cyrillic alphabet, displaying an unusual degree of techni-
cal perfection and possessing high artistic beauty. Makarije, a monk, worked on their
printing with seven assistants.
The Crnojević Dynasty was making constant attempts to persuade Catholic countries to
fight against the Ottoman Empire and, when High Porte found out about one such attempt
by Đurđe Crnojević, who had established connections with the French King Charles VII
who, in turn, seized the Kingdom of Naples in 1495 and started planning an uprising
against the Ottoman Empire with the help of the Albanian rulers from southern Italy, he
was ordered to come to the court in Constantinople immediately or face leaving Montene-
gro within the next three days. Đurađ decided to escape the country with his family and
left for Venice. Thus, the year of his departure (1496) is considered as the year of the final
fall of Montenegro under the reign of the Ottomans.
The duration of the rule of the Crnojevi ć dynasty is restricted to a few decades but the
memory of it persisted throughout centuries. It became a legend, with its members being
seen as the free rulers of Montenegro – an understandable phenomenon which character-
ises all national dynasties prior to the loss of their respective states and independence. 11
During the Balšić and the Crnojevi ć dynasties, cultural life was under the mixed sway
of influences from both east and south. The Byzantine tradition of creating, copying and
translating literary works was interwoven with the strong influence of Italy, especially af-
ter the Fall of Constantinople (1453), when Zeta was experiencing a special kind of Ren-
aissance. This relates particularly to the towns in the coastal area, where the Italian Ren-
aissance left visible traces. For instance, Andrija Palta šić, originating from Kotor, printed
religious books and some Latin classical authors, such as Cicero, Ovid and Virgil, in Ven-
ice between 1477 and 1493.
11 A broad range of literature exists on Montenegro at the time of Crnojević. Just a few are as
follows: Istorija Crne Gore, No. 2 Vol. 2 (Titograd, 1970), pp. 277-348; ‘Crna Gora i
Crnogorci’, pp. 156-160; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 90-107; ‘Pet vjekova
Oktoiha’, Prve štampane ćirilične knjige na Slovenskom jugu, Radovi sa međunarodnog
naučnog skupa, Cetinje 24-2.juna 1994 (Podgorica, 1994); Zbornik povodom pola mileni-
juma crnogorskog štamparstva (Cetinje: Matica Crnogorska, 1995).
111
Šerbo Rastoder
kadija12 was Podgorica, while that of the subaša was Žabljak (Lake Skadar) from 1499-
1511. Later on, this would also be the seat of Crnojević, the Montenegrin Sandžak Bey
and the converted Muslim son of Đurđe Crnojević, who had died in Anatolia. This was
where the sultan provided him with an estate after he had secretly returned to Montenegro,
before his departure for Constantinople.
From the very beginning of Ottoman rule, 13 there was a resistance to introducing harač
and other taxes, and especially to serving the Ottoman army outside the borders of Mon-
tenegro. During those periods, when the surrounding regions would be turned into a war-
zone, such as during the war between Venice and the Ottoman Empire (1499-1502), the
impending resistance would turn into an open riot. This was exactly what happened in
1502, during the above-mentioned war, although it was brutally crushed. The resistance of
the people (in 1505, 1517 and 1519) forced the court in Constantinople to separate Mon-
tenegro into a special Sandžak, governed by the already-mentioned son of Ivan Crnojevi ć,
Skender Bey. It was during this period that Montenegro’s usual financial obligations were
abolished. Furthermore, the filurija, corresponding to 55 akčas, was imposed on the entire
population and was supposed to be paid by each house, although the abuse of the authori-
ties continued to cause constant riots.
After Skender Bey’s death (in 1530), Montenegro was adjoined to the Sandžakat of
Skadar and gained the status of vilajet – that is, a province of the sultan where his rule did
not rely on Muslims. The land was still exempt from the spahi-timar14 system. The proc-
ess of forming cifliks15 began in the mid-16 th century, when the local landowners (agas)
started seizing certain monastery estates and hunting grounds in the lower parts of Mon-
tenegro. All of this, coupled with the conversion of the population to Islam, resulted in the
retreat of considerable parts of the population to the mountain areas. Hence, the number of
inhabitants in these areas increased. The territory of Montenegro at this time consisted of
four nahijas16: the Katun; the Rije čka; the Lješanska and Crmnička; and the Pobori, the
Maine and Brajići. For a period of time, it also included the Grbalj nahija as well. The
1523 census reveals that Montenegro had 3 151 households and properties. 17
Starting from 1566, Montenegro was governed by Duka đinski Bey, who was followed
by Sandžak Bey of Herzegovina, who ruled for a short time (1576). Towards the end of
the 16th century, there were signs of certain attempts once more to separate Montenegro
into a special Sandžak. During this period, in some parts of Montenegro administrative
districts, known as knežine, had already been formed and had taken the form of tribal or-
ganisations. A similar process had spread over all the regions of the so-called Mon-
tenegrin Hills and parts of Herzegovina Sandžak and, thus, in the coming period, tribally-
organised society was the most significant organisational structure in this area, both in the
social and the political life of its population. Over time, the organisation of a tribal society
was formed, led by the Opštecrnogorski (All-Montenegrin) and the Montenegrin Assem-
112
A short review of the history of Montenegro
bly of tribal chiefs (a form of folk assembly) with a Metropolitan – the vladika (bishop) –
presiding over them. The vladikas were religious chiefs picked directly at the Assembly
sessions from various tribes. In the period between 1499 and 1697, their position was not
a hereditary one.
On the other hand, rebellious and belligerent Montenegrins demonstrated their resistance
to Ottoman rule through constant confrontation. After the Ottoman Empire attempted to col-
lect payment for harač by force, and following its defeat at Lje škopolje in 1603, the sultan
practically acknowledged the autonomy of Montenegro, naming a resident duke as the spa-
hija and chief of Montenegro. The filurija, up to then collected by the imperial haračars18
with the help of the dukes and under the surveillance of the Sandžak Bey, was now replaced
with danak,19 collected by the dukes themselves led by the spahija. An imperial edict con-
firmed the privileges and authorised Montenegrins to prevent any Ottoman representative
from entering Montenegro without their approval, with the exception of those sent by the
sultan himself. Moreover, Montenegrins were exempted from the obligation of going to war
outside the borders of Montenegro – except where the sultan had sent for them – although
the compulsion remained both to work in the sultan’s salterns in Grbalj and to organise their
defence. Under the custody of the Sandžak Bey and the Montenegrin kadija, who lived out-
side the territory of Montenegro, only a broad supervision of Montenegro was implemented.
The de facto acknowledgement of autonomy strengthened the role of the Montenegrin Met-
ropolitans in Cetinje and the native spahijas, who represented Montenegro before the Otto-
man and the Venetian authorities. Traditional law continued to be the basis for resolving in-
ternal disputes, while no decisions of importance for the entire country could be made
without the agreement of the Opštecrnogorski Assembly.
Tribes in Montenegro
During Ottoman rule, tribal organisation spread all over the territory of today’s Monte-
negro with the exception of Boka Kotorska, where organisation was limited to the Pa štro-
vići and Krivošija tribes. The tribes were mainly formed during the late 15 th and first half
of the 16th century, taking the form of territorial organisations of self-governed and local
social communities within a geographical and economic framework. A tribe is a commu-
nity consisting of several clans, possessing territory, institutions, common property and an
identical economic foundation of social life, as well as tradition and awareness of the
community. A patriarchal organisation of life would be formed within tribes, differing
much from one which characterises non-tribal organisations. Within the historical nucleus
of Old Montenegro (the area around Mount Lov ćen), 21 tribes were created and, in the
area of the so-called Montenegrin Hills, another seven, although the number of tribes va-
ries as some have since disappeared and others dispersed.
The Montenegrin Assembly was an organ shared by all tribes and, as such, it was in
charge of solving inter-tribal disputes and establishing peace with neighbouring tribes and
with regions belonging to the Ottoman Empire. The decisions of the Montenegrin Assembly
had a moral obligation only since it did not possess any kind of executive organs of compul-
sion. The Assembly was open just to adult Montenegrin men. Most often, only one member
18 Tax collectors.
19 Tribute.
113
Šerbo Rastoder
of a household – usually the chief – was sent to the Assembly sessions, but there were cases
when several houses would send one representative on behalf of them all. There are records
that some sessions of the Assembly managed to gather as many as 2 000 participants, which
turned them into real national parliaments. It was at the Assembly sessions that Monte-
negro’s Metropolitans were elected, the territorial court established and various issues con-
cerning foreign affairs and relations with the surrounding countries and, later on, Russia, re-
solved. It is thought that these Assemblies were the continuance of medieval gatherings,
although the records show that they appeared as a permanent all-tribal institution only at the
beginning of the 17th century. The Opštecrnogorski Assembly had to ratify all the other as-
semblies and the agreements made by the chiefs; there were few cases of disobedience of
Assembly decisions. An Assembly session was usually convened by the Metropolitan, most
often in one of the monasteries around Cetinje. Over time, the Metropolitan became the most
important figure in both the religious and the political life of Montenegrins. 20
The Metropolitan’s residence in Cetinje became the spiritual centre for Orthodox Monte-
negrins and, as a religious institution and a spiritual location, it gathered round itself the
Montenegrin tribes and directed their feelings regarding Ottoman rule. Between 1496 and
1697, there were 18 vladikas originating from various Montenegrin tribes.
20 On Montenegro during Ottoman rule see Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 11-43;
Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 109-122; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, p. 160-162; Brani-
slav Đurđev: Turska vlast u Crnoj Gori u XVI i XVII veku (Sarajevo, 1953); Branislav Đurđev:
Dva deftera Crne Gore iz vremena Skendred bega Crnojevića, Vol. I (Sarajevo, 1968).
21 For more on Montenegro’s role in the war over Crete, see Gligor Stanojević: Jugoslovenske zem-
lje u mletačko turskim ratovima XVI – XVIII veka (Beograd: Prosveta, 1970); Andrijašević:
Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 46-49; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 126-130.
22 On Montenegro and the battle of Morea, see J. Tomić: Crna Gora za vrijeme Morejskog rata
(1684-1699) (Beograd, 1907); Gligor Stanojević: Borba crnogorskih, brdskih i hercegovačkih
plemena protiv turske vlasti (XVI-XVIII) (Beograd, 1976), pp. 176-217; Andrijašević: Kratka
istorija Crne Gore, pp. 45-46; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 126-130.
114
A short review of the history of Montenegro
man Pasha Bušatlija, led a military campaign against Montenegro and, at the battle at
Vrtijeljca, in the close vicinity of Cetinje (1685), defeated the Montenegrin forces and con-
quered Cetinje. Venetian influence was suppressed for a while, until 1687, when Monte-
negrins actively participated in an attack on Herceg-Novi and, once again, the consequence
was a new Ottoman campaign against Montenegro. Earlier, Sulejman Pasha unsuccessfully
attacked the Kuči Tribe, at which point Montenegrins, at a session of the Assembly (1688),
came to an agreement to organise a general uprising. Until 1692, the Montenegrins enjoyed
military successes in the war against the Ottoman Empire, only to be defeated by Sulejman
Pasha once again in the Autumn of the same year, when he managed to conquer Cetinje.
However, in the Treaty of Karlowitz (1699), the Ottoman Empire lost vast parts of its terri-
tory. This affected the situation in Montenegro in a positive way. The degree of independ-
ence of certain tribes from Ottoman rule increased and, in some parts of Montenegro, Otto-
man rule was almost unnoticeable.
At that time, Danilo (1696-1735) became the new vladika.23 He is considered to be the
founder of the fourth Montenegrin dynasty, the Petrovi ć Dynasty, which governed Montene-
gro until the loss of independence in 1918. Vladika Danilo Šćepčević Petrović became Met-
ropolitan in the period after the Cetinje Monastery had been destroyed and ravaged by the
Skadar Pasha Sulejman (1692). During his reign, some significant changes took place in
Montenegro which had long-term consequences for the fortune of the state. Namely, until
the beginning of the 18 th century, Montenegrins had mainly relied on the help of the Vene-
tians in wars against the Ottoman Empire. However, staring from 1711, vladika Danilo es-
tablished connections with Russia, the country that would become Montenegro’s protector
and which would provide Montenegro with support in the following centuries. Over time, a
characteristic cult of Russia would evolve in Montenegro, 24 while the establishment of Mon-
tenegro-Russian political ties would result in a considerable increase in Montenegro’s self-
confidence and a bolder attitude regarding the Ottoman authorities.
Attacks on the surrounding Ottoman fortifications resulted in massive punitive military
campaigns against Montenegro. In one such campaign in 1712, the Ottoman army, led by
Ahmed Pasha, managed to recapture Cetinje, although it had been previously defeated in a
battle at Carev Laz, which the people of Montenegro traditionally cherish as their great
victory. The Cetinje Monastery was once again demolished and many houses were burnt
down, while some of the Montenegrin tribes were forced to declare their loyalty to the
Ottoman Empire. However, Montenegro was not appeased and, in a new attack in the
summer of 1714, the forces of the Bosnian vizier Numan Pasha Ćuprilić, counting some
30 000 soldiers, performed gruesome repressions in which thousands of people were
killed, houses burned to ashes and the country devastated. Vladika Danilo first took refuge
in Boka and, shortly afterwards, went to Russia to seek help. 25 He requested that the Rus-
23 See Gligor Stanojević: Crna Gora u vrijeme vladike Danila (Beograd, 1955); Andrijašević:
Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 55-65; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, p. 164; Šćepanović: Kratka
istorija Crne Gore, pp. 135-139.
24 Istorija Crne Gore, No. 3 Vol. I (Titograd, 1975), pp. 325-373; Živko Andrijašević: ‘Stva-
ranje kulta Rusije u Crnoj Gori u XVIII vijeku’, Slovenski glasnik No. 1 (1996), pp. 19-37.
25 See J. Tomić: ‘Pohod Numan-paše Ćuprilića na Crnu Goru 1714. godine’, Glas SA, No. 147
(1932); J. Tomić: Pitanje Careva Laza (Beograd, 1933); Andrija šević: Kratka istorija Crne
Gore, pp. 55-65; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 135-139.
115
Šerbo Rastoder
sian government take Montenegro under its protection and financially help the Monte-
negrin victims.
The Russian czar Peter the Great bestowed financial help for the victims on vladika
Danilo and secured a constant amount of money for the Cetinje Monastery. From that mo-
ment until the beginning of the 20 th century, the Russian subventions played an important
role in the Montenegrin economy. Even so, this pro-Russian orientation of vladika Danilo
encountered strong opposition in Venice and amongst the majority of Montenegrin chiefs
who were in favour of the idea of collaboration with the Venetian Republic. A group of
such chiefs went to Venice in 1717, with a proposal to put Montenegro under the protec-
tion of the Republic of Venice on the condition that it kept its internal autonomy and the
independence of its Church. The proposal was accepted by the Venetians, who established
the post of governor, which mostly pertained to the Radonji ć family from Njegu še, in
1717. The post was abolished in 1830. 26 Nevertheless, vladika Danilo still played the
leading role in the country and, since he accepted the aforementioned contract, was recog-
nised as having the right of supreme religious jurisdiction over the Orthodox population.
The general status of Montenegro did not change significantly. The Ottoman Empire
still saw it as its territory although its reign in Montenegro was fictional. Co-operation be-
tween Montenegro and Venice came to an end, with Montenegro starting to seek help and
support from both Russia and Austria. As the originator of the idea of Montenegrin inde-
pendence, vladika Danilo managed to unite the surrounding tribes in their common fight
against the Ottoman Empire, while the Cetinje residence of the metropolitans became a
powerful spiritual and political centre of the state. Vladika Danilo also established the first
organs of authority beyond tribal ones by forming the Twelve Member Court in 1713, a
body which was in charge of resolving inter-tribal disputes and other important issues.
Vladika Danilo’s heir was vladika Sava Petrović (1735-1781), who actively participated
in the Russian and Austrian wars against the Ottoman Empire. On a journey to Russia, he
received the acknowledgement of the autocephaly of the Montenegrin-Coastal Metropoli-
tan Diocese by the Saint Russian Synod, while the Russian Empress Elisabeth gave him a
considerable amount of financial aid for the Cetinje Monastery and the Montenegrin peo-
ple.27 Vladika Vasilije Petrović Njegoš (1735-1781) ruled as koadjutor (assistant) together
with his uncle Sava, managing to impose himself as the leading and inviolable figure in the
political life of Montenegro. However, the principle of primogeniture in the inheritance of
power was not valid in Montenegro since vladikas did not have posterity, and their title was
inherited by a member of a side branch of the Petrovi ć family tree.
Vasilije dreamed of organising a Balkan Uprising in which Montenegro would play a
leading role. He was the first figure to come up with a plan recognising the territories that
would go to Montenegro. Interestingly enough, the territory he marked as Montenegro’s
in the mid-18th century is almost identical with the territory of today’s Montenegro. Bea-
ring this goal in mind, he went to Russia in 1752 and remained there for the following two
years, raising various issues concerning Montenegro-Russian ties and effectuating the
idea of the migration of Montenegrins to Russia. He published The History of Montenegro
116
A short review of the history of Montenegro
(1754) in Russia and, thus, is considered to be the originator of the modern Montenegrin
historiography.
Vladika Vasilije passed away in St. Petersburg (1766) and Montenegro was left without
a dominant figure on its political scene 28 and internal crisis resulted from the associated
increase in tribal anarchy and disunity. Under such circumstances, a foreigner by the name
of Šćepan Mali (Stephen the Small) appeared in Montenegro in September 1766, intro-
ducing himself as a herbalist. He then started to present himself as the Russian czar Peter
III who had been dethroned and who was believed to have escaped from Russia. Partly out
of its special respect for Russia and, partly, because of a certain physical likeness with the
dethroned Russian emperor, the Montenegrins took his story for granted and, at a session
of the Assembly in 1767, he was proclaimed ruler of Montenegro.
The news of the arrival of the ‘Russian Emperor’ in Montenegro awakened suspicions
in neighbouring countries and in Russia. Venice decided to poison Šćepan Mali while
Russia sent the Counsellor of the Russian Embassy in Vienna to remove the usurper from
Montenegro. The court in Istanbul, on the other hand, believed that Šćepan Mali had been
brought to Montenegro by the Russians. Towards the end of 1768, Montenegro was at-
tacked by 50 000 soldiers moving in from three directions. Due to the war between Russia
and the Ottoman Empire, the operations were stopped and, in 1769, Duke Dolgorukov
came to Montenegro bringing a proclamation from Empress Catherine inviting the Slavic
people to overthrow Ottoman rule. Dolgorukov attested that Šćepan Mali was a fraud and
that he should be arrested. Nevertheless, since Šćepan Mali enjoyed undivided support in
the country, Dolgorukov’s attempt was a failure. Thereafter, he was allowed to stay and
govern the country on the condition that he vowed loyalty to Russia and to the Russian
Court. Eventually, Šćepan Mali was murdered in 1773 by his own servant, of Greek ori-
gin, who had been talked into it by the pasha of Skadar.
28 On the rule of Vasilije, see Gligor Stanojević: Mitropolit Vasilije Petrović i njegovo doba
(1740-1766) (Beograd: Istorijski institut/Narodna knjiga, 1978); Istorija Crne Gore, No. 3,
Vol. I , pp. 298-365; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 164-165; Andrijašević: Kratka istorija
Crne Gore, pp. 69-71; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 139-145.
29 On Montenegro during the era of Šćepan Mali, see Istorija Crne Gore, No. 3, Vol. I,
pp. 373-390; Gligor Stanojević: Šćepan Mali (Beograd, 1957); ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’,
pp. 165-166; Šćepanović: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 147-153; Andrijašević: Kratka
istorija Crne Gore, pp. 77-79.
117
Šerbo Rastoder
In the same sense, the reign of Petar I Petrovi ć Njegoš (1784-1830) was of particular
importance. He was proclaimed vladika shortly after the interim rule of Arsenije Pla-
menac (1781-1784), the nephew of Sava, the previous vladika. Petar I is regarded as the
greatest historical figure in Montenegro. At the very beginning of his rule, he came into
conflict with the governor, who was especially provoked by his intention to subdue the
Cetinje Metropolitan and to place Montenegro under Austrian protection. The opening of
his reign was also marked by the last Ottoman invasion and the burning down of Cetinje
(1785) by Mahmut Pasha Bu šatlija of Skadar, a renegade Ottoman lord who frequently
endangered Montenegro.
In organising the country’s defence against such attacks, Petar I convened a meeting
between the tribal chiefs and the all-Montenegrin Assembly in July 1796, where an impor-
tant decision (later on known as the Stega (fastening)) was made. This obliged all chiefs to
vow to lead their tribes and nahijas in the fight against aggressors and to maintain peace
between their tribes. Creating inner unity in this way, the Montenegrins achieved two
great victories over the Ottoman Empire, the first being the battle at Martini ći in July 1796
and the second the battle at Krusi in September of the same year. These were the first
great Montenegrin victories in the 18 th century, achieved by means of their own powers,
all of which helped them restore self-confidence and enthusiasm and which gained them
the reputation throughout Europe of being bold warriors.
After these victories, Montenegro’s territory extended and encompassed the neighbour-
ing tribes of Piperi and Bjelopavli ći, and Montenegro, de facto, became an independent
country. Two years later (1798), at an assembly in Stanjevi ći Monastery, the General
Montenegrin and Hill Code was issued. This comprised 16 articles which were supple-
mented by another 17 signed at the Assembly of 1803 in Cetinje. This Code provided a le-
gal basis that strengthened the state of Montenegro since it regulated all issues in various
domains, such as criminal and private law, as well as the law concerning domestic rela-
tions. Court procedure was also standardised. At the 1798 Assembly session of tribal
chiefs in Stanjevići, the Montenegrin and Hill Governmental Court was also issued, the
so-called Kuluk, which had both administrative and legal authority. The National Chan-
cellery was also founded in Cetinje, over which the Governmental Court executed its role.
This formation of the central authority organs did not pass without the resistance of Mon-
tenegrins and some of the tribes. In breaking this resistance and the internal autarchy,
vladika Petar I used his moral authority and reputation. 30
Towards the end of the 18 th century, some significant changes were taking place in the
region surrounding Montenegro. Napoleon Bonaparte destroyed the Venetian Republic in
1797, after it had controlled the coastal area of today’s Montenegro for several centuries.
30 On Montenegro during the rule of Petar I, see Dušan Vuksan: Petar I i njegovo doba (Cetinje,
1951); Gligor Stanojević: Crna Gora pred stvaranje države (Beograd, 1962); Đoko Pejović:
Crna Gora u doba Petra I i Petra II (Beograd: Narodna knjiga, 1981); Branko Pavićević:
Petar I Petrović Njegoš (Podgorica: Perganmena, 1997); Branko Pavićević and Radoslav Ras-
popović (eds.): ‘Crnogorski zakonici’, Pravni izvori i politički akti od značaja za istoriju
državnosti Crne Gore I – V (Podgorica: Istorijski institut Crne Gore, 1998); Branko Pavićević
and Radoslav Raspopović (eds.): Stega, Jubilarno izdanje (Podgorica, 1996); Istorija Crne
Gore, No. 3 Vol. I, pp. 419-465; ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 166-169; Šćepanović: Kratka
istorija Crne Gore, pp. 153-160; Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 83-91.
118
A short review of the history of Montenegro
Soon after the fall of the Republic of Venice, Petar I attempted to conquer its territories in
the coastal area. He led a successful war against Napoleon’s army in Boka (1806-1813)
and, At the assembly session in 1813, at which representatives from both Montenegro and
Boka participated, it was decided that these territories would unify. An interim govern-
ment was also formed in order to implement this decision. However, at the Congress of
Vienna in 1814, the Great Powers decided – with Russia’s support – that Boka should go
to Austria. In this manner, Montenegro gained another mighty neighbour on its southern
borders – Austria – and turned a fresh page in Montenegro-Austrian relations. 31
Petar I, a rarely talented ruler, cleric, military leader, lawmaker, thinker, diplomat, vi-
sionary and writer, elaborated in his plans the idea of a Slav-Serbian Empire within the
framework of the medieval Kingdom of Slavs. During his reign, Montenegro’s territory
doubled from some 1 500 square km to approx. 3 000 square km. He was highly esteemed
by his people and one of the most educated Montenegrin vladikas, being fluent in several
languages. He was also the author of the Brief History of Montenegro and of a number of
epic poems motivated by various events from the history of Montenegro. He was espe-
cially remembered by several hundreds of epistles written to various Montenegrin tribes
and which, apart from the historical, also have great literary value. Four years after his
death, Petar I was canonised.
Petar I was succeeded by Rade Tomov Petrovi ć. At the assembly of Montenegrin tribal
chiefs in October 1830, the will of Petar I was confirmed and Rade Tomov Petrovi ć, after he
had entered a monastic order, was given the monastic name Petar II. As the vladika of Mon-
tenegro, Petar II Petrovi ć Njegoš (1830-1851) continued to build the organs of the central
administrative authority. The Montenegrin and Hill Governmental Court established by his
predecessor and uncle, Petar I, was modified into the Montenegrin and Hill Governing Se-
nate and it played the role of the supreme legal and administrative organ of authority. He es-
tablished the Gvardija, as the executive organ of authority, as well as the institution of per-
janik, which functioned as the personal security of the vladika and which formed an
incipient police authority in the country. In 1837, he divided the country into kapetanije,
which were governed by captains elected by the vladika. The posts of senators, captains,
members of the Gvardija and perjaniks were paid from the state budget. By means of creat-
ing the executive organs of authority, the premises for the introduction of a system of taxa-
tion were also established. This was introduced for the first time in 1833, with payments be-
ginning in 1834, not without resistance, although this was energetically crushed.
Even at that time, Montenegro was surrounded by the Ottoman Empire on three sides,
so relations with this neighbour were the prior concern of all its rulers – all the more so
since Montenegro behaved as a free country, displaying a permanent ambition to adjoin
surrounding conquered areas to its own territory. Thus, frequent disputes and clashes en-
sued, with the majority being resolved on battlefields. The first diplomatic efforts at re-
solving disputes were recorded in 1842, when an agreement was signed in Dubrovnik be-
tween Montenegro and the Pa šaluk of Herzegovina, followed by another, signed in Kotor
in 1843. The importance of these agreements lay, primarily, in that they evidenced Mon-
tenegro being treated by the Ottoman authorities as an independent country. On the other
31 See Ujedinjenje Crne Gore i Boke 1813-1814, Vol. I-II (Podgorica: Istorijski institut Crne
Gore/Državni arhiv Crne Gore/Istorijski arhiv Kotor, 1998).
119
Šerbo Rastoder
hand, the pashas of Skadar managed to deprive Montenegro of two important localities
and fortifications on Lake Skadar (Vranjina and Lesendro), which caused great damage to
the country since, as a result, fishery and trade were constantly disturbed. In 1841, during
the reign of Petar II, the problems of the borders with Austria were resolved as well, since
it was then that the last protocol was signed, after two Montenegrin monasteries on Aus-
trian territory (Maine and Stanjevi ći) had been sold to Austria. In a few journeys he made
to Russia, Petar II managed to obtain considerable Russian financial assistance for Mon-
tenegro, while he also maintained permanent relations with Serbia under the rule of the
Obrenović Dynasty, as well as with Serbs from Vojvodina, the Croatian Ban Jela čić and a
number of other political figures from the surrounding areas.
In 1834, Petar II established the first primary school in Montenegro. The same year, a
printing shop started work in Cetinje and, in 1835, the almanac Grlica, the first Mon-
tenegrin magazine, was printed. In this period, the first buildings for the needs of govern-
mental institutions were built in Cetinje (the Biljarda in 1838). Additionally, Petar II
Petrović Njegoš is regarded as the greatest name in Montenegrin literature. According to
many, he is the most magnificent of the South Slavic poets and is considered to be among
the best at the European level. His works – The Mountain Wreath, The Ray of the Micro-
cosm and The False Tsar Stephen the Small – are regarded as classical works in Monte-
negrin and South Slavic literature. 32
Petar II was inherited by Knjaz (Prince) Danilo (1851-1860), the first secular ruler of
Montenegro after Đurđe Stanojević (1490-1496). Prince Danilo was bestowed with that
title in 1852 with the agreement of Russia, whereupon Montenegro was declared
knjaževina, or principality.33 By separating the secular from the religious authority, the
premises for constructing the modern state of Montenegro were created.
32 The bibliography of Petar II has some thousand entries. Only the sources used here are
mentioned: Enciklopedija Njegoš, Vol. I (Podgorica: Fondacija Njegoš/CID, 1999); Božina
M. Ivanović: ‘Njegoševa genealogija’, Matica No. 7/8 (2001); Božina M. Ivanović: Antrpo-
morfološke osobine Petra II Petrovića Njegoša (Podgorica: CANU, 1995); Pejović: Crna
Gora u doba Petra I i Petra II; Miomir Dašić: ‘Petar II Petrović Njegoš u revoluciji 1848. i
1849. godine’, Historijski zapisi No. 1-2 (1998); ‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 170-174;
Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 99-107.
33 Branko Pavićević: ‘Danilo I Petrović Njegoš, Knjaz crnogorski i brdski (1851-1860)’,
(Beograd: Književene novine, 1990), pp. 35-73.
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A short review of the history of Montenegro
in foreign affairs, in contrast to its close ties with Russia, which was considered to be
Montenegro’s traditional protector. Prince Danilo refused the demand of the French Em-
pire and thus Montenegro, together with Greece, was the only country in the Balkans that
did not recognise Ottoman rule. 34
At the very beginning of his rule, Prince Danilo was faced with the violent attacks of
Omer Pasha Latas on Montenegro (1852/1853), which he managed to ward off successfully.
Prince Danilo constantly urged the surrounding tribes in Herzegovina to rise against Otto-
man rule and, as a result, the Ottoman organised another military campaign against Monte-
negro.35 In the famous battle at Grahovac (1858), the Montenegrins achieved one of the
most resounding victories against the Ottoman Empire. After this victory, the Great Powers
(Russia, France and Great Britain) insisted on settling the situation between Montenegro and
the Ottoman Empire. At the conference held in Constantinople in 1858, participants from
Russia, Austria, Great Britain, France and Prussia formed a commission with the task of set-
ting the borders between Montenegro and the Ottoman Empire regarding the territories to-
wards Herzegovina and Skadar Pa šaluk. The border was drawn in 1859 while the Protocol
on the division of the territories was signed in 1860. In this manner, the state independence
of Montenegro was, effectively, recognised and, after the battle at Grahovac, Montenegro’s
territory increased to reach some 4 400 square km. The military victories of Montenegro re-
sulted in its great popularity throughout the Slav world. 36
During the reign of Prince Danilo, the development of Montenegro’s governmental insti-
tutions continued. In 1853, the registration of all militarily capable men was carried out and
the so-called Krstonosna vojska – the Cross-bearers Army – was formed, together with a
Garda of 400 men. The Montenegrin officers were provided with caps embellished with a
coat-of-arms (until then, they were indistinguishable from common soldiers), taxes on im-
ported goods were introduced and the obligation of general tax payment was enforced.
Book-keeping commenced concerning the state’s revenues and expenses, while roads con-
necting certain towns were built. Special importance is to be attributed to the issuing of the
Montenegrin and Hill Legal Code in 1855, consisting of 95 articles and also known as
Danilo’s Legal Code.37 The fight against tribal separatism and the collection of taxes were,
sometimes, accompanied by the brutal intervention of the central authority. Prince Danilo
also abolished the All-Montenegrin Assembly, re-organised the court and modernised the
entire administrative system. The nine years of his reign were ended in 1860 in Kotor, where
he was killed by an assassin who was a Montenegrin political immigrant. 38
34 See Željko Andrijašević: Crnogorske teme (Podgorica: Istorijski institut Crne Gore, 1998),
pp. 41-53.
35 Pavićević: Danilo I Petrović Njegoš, pp. 75-159.
36 ibid, pp. 305-372.
37 Jovan Bojović: Zakonik knjza Danila (Titograd: Istorijski institut Crne Gore, 1982);
Vladimir Jovićević: Danilov zakonik: snaga države (Podgorica: Oktoih, 1994).
38 See Pavićević: Danilo I Petrović Njegoš, pp. 444-448.
121
Šerbo Rastoder
cultural blossoming and transformation, just as it doubled its territory. The first period of
his reign (1860-1878) was marked by intensive activities in the field of foreign affairs,
constant clashes with the surrounding Ottoman pashas, and efforts directed towards the
economic strengthening of the country and the further development of culture and educa-
tion. From the times of Prince Danilo, Montenegro maintained its representatives in Con-
stantinople and in Kotor and, starting from 1863, in Skadar as well.
Military training and armaments were the particular focus of attention during this pe-
riod. According to the registration of 1870, there were some 17 000 listed soldiers. The
following year, military reform was undertaken, although the tribal division of the soldiers
was retained, while the army was restructured into 25 battalions of the people’s army, six
battalions of the guard and one battery. Army ranks were also introduced. In 1875, some
23 000 rifles were purchased and army warehouses were established, while the artillery
was formed as a separate branch of the army. 39
The governmental structure of the country remained unchanged until 1879. The country
was still ruled by the prince, whose powers were unlimited. The Governing Senate still
functioned as the central organ of authority – the Government and the High Court. The ba-
sic administrative unit was the kapetanije and, until 1868, governmental and legal proper-
ties were not divided. The same year, financial reforms were undertaken and the state’s
funds separated from those of the court. In 1874, the Senate, as the central governmental
organ, was itself reformed; the number of senators was decreased and administrations for
internal affairs, army affairs, finances and the Princely Chancellery for foreign affairs in-
troduced. The role of the High Court was performed by the Senate.
Nevertheless, a weak economic basis did not leave much room for a more dynamic eco-
nomic development. In the few workshops engaged in sewing national clothing, or in the
repair of arms and furniture, it was mostly outside workers who were employed. Trade
was under-developed and the internal market was not united, partly as a result of limited
infrastructure development and partly due to geographical conditions. The result of this
was that domestic markets were under the strong influence of the Austrian and the Otto-
man markets. Governmental authorities had a monopoly on salt purchase and wheat tra-
ding. Export sites for such goods as meat, fish and lumber (Kotor and Skadar) lay outside
Montenegro’s state territory. There were four points for the collection of customs (two of
them were near the border with Austria and the other two near the frontiers with the Otto-
man Empire). Montenegro was still receiving constant Russian subventions for state and
church purposes, while the first two secondary schools in Montenegro were also finan-
cially supported by Russia. Cattle breeding was the dominant branch of the economy.
It was during this period that the first secondary school in Montenegro was opened
(1863); only in 1869 did the Cetinje Seminary start working regularly, training teachers
and members of the clergy. The ‘Girls’ Institute’ was opened the same year as the second
secondary school and, in 1875, an agricultural school was opened in Danilovgrad. The
first library was founded in Cetinje in 1869. The almanac Orlić was printed in Cetinje
from 1865-1870 and the first newspaper Crnogorac (The Montenegrin) was introduced in
1871. In the same year, the first literary paper Crnogorka (The Montenegrin 40), was estab-
39 Pedeset godina na prestolu Crne Gore (Cetinje, 1910), (Photocopy, Podgorica, 1998 ), pp. 73-90.
40 Crnogorka is the term for a female Montenegrin.
122
A short review of the history of Montenegro
lished, as well as the Army Orchestra and a Choral group. In 1873, Glas Crnogorca
(Voice of the Montenegrins) also began to appear. The telegraph was launched in 1869
and regular postal traffic in 1873. The same year, the first hospital was built in Cetinje,
while the first hotel had already been opened since 1864. 41
The internal economic strength of the country was objectively incongruent with the im-
portance of Montenegro and the role the country was playing in the field of foreign affairs
and the liberation wars in the Balkans. Western European travellers visiting Montenegro
in this period saw Montenegrins as a sort of Spartan, a people of unusual courageousness,
military qualities and of the highest moral standards; the Montenegrins inspired many po-
ets, such as Pushkin 42 and Tennyson43, for instance. All this prompted an infiltration of a
consciousness of the internal freedom of a never-conquered Montenegro into the mind of
the Montenegrin people.
Similar to his predecessor, Prince Nikola was, at the very beginning of his reign, faced
with Ottoman revenge attacks because of his active support for the 1862 Uprising in
Herzegovina. Ottoman forces attacked Montenegro from various directions and, during
the so-called Second Attack of Omer Pasha in 1862, they ravaged the country completely.
Only on Russian and Austro-Hungarian intervention did the fighting stop. In these
clashes, Ottoman forces lost over 20 000 soldiers while the Montenegrins lost some 2 000
men and were left with 4 600 wounded. 44
Montenegro continued preparations for organising a broader liberation movement in the
Balkans. An alliance with Serbia was formed in 1866 and this was to become the founda-
tion of the First Balkan Alliance. Montenegro’s reputation constantly increased amongst
the Christian population in the Balkans, especially after 1868 when Serbia turned towards
the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
It was in the 1876-1878 war against the Ottoman Empire, which followed the 1875 upris-
ing in Herzegovina, that the Montenegrin alliance with Serbia was formed. However, Mon-
tenegro’s military success in this war was independent of Serbia’s and Russia’s on-and-off
participation in it and, after the end of the conflict, its territory was more than doubled. The
Treaty of San Stefano (March 1878) guaranteed independence and considerable territorial
extension to Montenegro. However, the intervention of western forces led to the revision of
the San Stefano Peace Agreement. At the Congress of Berlin held in the same year, the inde-
pendence of Montenegro was acknowledged by those countries which had been hitherto un-
willing to do so formally, i.e. the Ottoman Empire, and the following cities were given to
Montenegro: Nikšić, Spuž, Podgorica, Kolašin, Andrijevica, Žabljak, Bar, Plav and Gu-
sinje. The Ottoman Empire showed reluctance in conceding Plav and Gusinje to Montene-
gro, so it agreed instead to give up Ulcinj under the pressure of the Great Powers. Ulcinj had
been previously conquered by the Ottoman Empire in the 1878 War. 45
41 Andrijašević: Crnogorske teme, pp. 41-43; Pedeset godina na prestolu Crne Gore (Cetinje,
1910).
42 Aleksandar Puškin: ‘Crnogorci i Bonaparta’, Državni Kalendar Crne Gore za 1920 (Paris,
1920), p. 51.
43 ibid., p. 35; Alfred Tennyson: ‘Montenegro’, in Ballads and Other Poems (London: C.
Kegan Paul, 1880).
44 Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 147-148.
45 See Stogodišnjica crnogorsko-turskog rata 1876-1878, Radovi sa naučnog skupa, 27-
28.5.1977 Cetinje (Titograd: CANU, 1978).
123
Šerbo Rastoder
46 See Pedeset godina na prestolu Crne Gore, Cetinje 1910; Branislav Marović: ‘Nikola I i
ekonomski razvoj države – planovi i ostvarenja ‘, CANU No. 21 (1998), pp. 557-575.
47 Milisav Čizmović: ‘Značaj OIZ –a u velikom djelu kralja Nikole’, CANU No. 21 (1998),
pp. 687-698.
48 Šerbo Rastoder: ‘Vjerska politika kralja Nikole 1878-1912 (odnos prema Muslimanima)’,
CANU No. 21 (1998), pp. 575-597; Šerbo Rastoder: Istorijsko – metodološki okvir
istraživanja novije istorije crkve (vjerskih zajednica) u Crnoj Gori (1878-1945), Istorijska
nauka i nastava istorije u savremenim uslovima 14 (Podgorica: CANU, 1994), pp. 199-243.
49 Konkordat Između Crne Gore i Vatikana 1886. godine s posebnim osvrtom na položaj Alba-
naca katolika, Krishterimi nder shqiptare (Shkoder, 2000), pp. 250-268; Šerbo Rastoder:
Janusovo lice istorije (Podgorica: Vijesti, 2000), pp. 105-126.
50 Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 171-172.
124
A short review of the history of Montenegro
The first gymnasium was opened in 1880 in Cetinje, followed in 1907 in Podgorica and
in 1913 in Nikšić, Pljevlje, Peć and Berane; while another agricultural school was opened
in 1893 in Podgorica. The number of primary schools increased steadily and, in 1904,
their number was estimated to be some 104. During this period, a number of papers and
magazines were being published. 51
International recognition gave the right to Montenegro to have diplomatic representa-
tives. Not long after 1878, diplomatic relations (including diplomatic representatives)
were established with Russia and France and, in 1879, with Great Britain, the Austro-
Hungarian Empire, Italy and the Ottoman Empire, and in 1881 with Greece, 1897 with
Serbia and Bulgaria, 1905 with the USA and 1906 with Germany. All these countries had
their diplomatic envoys in Cetinje.
Until 1905, Montenegro was the only European country, apart from Russia and the Ot-
toman Empire, which did not have a constitution. This was proclaimed in October 1905,
and the first parliamentary elections for the National Parliament were held in 1906. Within
the elected parliament, the first political parties were founded, the first in 1907 under the
name of Klubaška stranka (the Club Party) followed by Prava narodna stranka (the Real
National Party), which was faithful to the Montenegrin court. Of these two parties, only
Klubaška stranka had a political programme, arguing for stronger ties with Serbia and
Serbs living under foreign rule, as well as good relations with Russia. Incidentally, the
first decade of the 20 th century was characterised by the radicalisation of internal political
clashes in Montenegro and, in 1907 and 1909, a number of political trials, coupled with
conspiracies and assassination attempts against Montenegro’s king Nikola (following Ser-
bian examples), took place. 52
In 1910, Montenegro became a kingdom and King Nikola was proclaimed king. At that
time, Montenegro had some 300 000 inhabitants, 80 per cent of whom lived in villages.
The country was divided into ten counties but not one Montenegrin town had more than
10 000 inhabitants.
51 Djoko Pejović: Razvitak prosvjete i kulture u Crnoj Gori 1852-1916 (Cetinje: Istorijski insti-
tut, 1971), pp. 115-138.
52 J. Jovanović: Istorija Crne Gore (Podgorica: CID, 1998), pp. 336-370; ‘Crna Gora i
Crnogorci’, pp. 178-179; Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 173-176.
53 Mitar Đurišić: ‘Kralj Nikola u Prvom balkanskom ratu’, CANU No. 21 (1998), pp. 157-169;
Borislav Ratković, Mitar Đurišić and Savo Skoko: Srbija i Crna Gora u balkanskim ratovima
1912-1913 (Beograd: BIGZ, 1972), pp. 171-228; Jovanović: Istorija Crne Gore, pp. 390-399.
125
Šerbo Rastoder
After these wars, Montenegro’s territory expanded significantly. The region surround-
ing Lake Skadar, Podgorica, part of Metohija (reaching Bijeli Drim) and parts of Novo-
pazarski Sandžak were adjoined to its territory. It also gained the following towns: Bijelo
Polje, Mojkovac, Berane, Pljevlje, Ro žaje, Gusinje, Plav, Djakovica and Pe ć. Montenegro
stretched over 14 443 square km and had some 450 000 inhabitants.
However, Montenegro was completely unprepared for the outbreak of World War I. In
the crisis of July 1914, provoked by the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo
and the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum to Serbia, Montenegro offered Serbia its uncondi-
tional support. The very same day the Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Serbia
(July 28 1914), King Nikola issued a decree of mobilisation and, by August 6 th, Monte-
negro had delivered an official declaration of war on the Austro-Hungarian Empire, igno-
ring the Austro-Hungarian initiative and the promises of territorial concessions (i.e. Ska-
dar) which had been made in the attempt to persuade Montenegro to remain neutral in the
conflict. Montenegro managed to mobilise some 47 000 soldiers, armed with old-
fashioned weapons. Back-up reserves were to be found only among Montenegrins work-
ing abroad who, hearing of the war, had headed for their homeland and, thus, the number
of soldiers increased to 50 000.
The army of Montenegro occupied a wide front. The most numerable military grouping
was disposed towards the Herzegovina front and Lov ćen, and then in the region of Pljev-
lje in order to co-operate with the Serbian army, while, for the purpose of guarding the
frontiers with Albania, the Starosrbljanski squadron was formed. Despite being unpre-
pared for war, the army of Montenegro resisted on a front almost 500 km long for 18
months, demonstrating in that way impressive persistence and bravery. Montenegro’s mi-
litary aims, justified on the basis of ethnicity and history, were directed towards expansion
to the region around Lake Skadar, Boka Kotorska, Herzegovina and a part of Bosnia.
Military operations began on 7 August 1914 and they were focused on the protection of
the frontiers with the Austro-Hungarian Empire. By mid-August, the Montenegrin defences
had been breached at Pljevlje, which was taken by the Austro-Hungarian army, while the
Montenegrin army captured Budva. The victory of the Serbian army at Cer relaxed the
defence of Montenegro’s frontiers since the Austro-Hungarian army then retreated from
Sandžak and Pljevlje was liberated. According to an earlier plan, units gathered from other
fronts were concentrated in the Pljevlje and Gorane region in order to make a breakthrough,
with Sarajevo as the final goal. Almost half of the total number of Montenegrin soldiers was
engaged in these operations and they had the support of the newly-formed army of Sandžak,
commanded by general Janko Vukoti ć. After the Montenegrin army had crossed the Drina
River in the middle of September 1914 and had entered the regions of Romanija and Kalino-
vik, it suffered a defeat at Glasinac in the second half of October and, thereafter, withdrew to
the right bank of the Drina. During the months of October, November and December, battles
were fought on the Herzegovina front and around Vi šegrad and, thus, from the beginning of
1915 until the great offensive of the Austro-Hungarian army in the October, the front in this
region was stable and calm.
At that time, Montenegro then organised a military operation against the will of its Al-
lies and without their knowledge. Namely, given that the Albanians, enticed by the Aus-
tro-Hungarian Empire and by Bulgaria, were jeopardising the Montenegrin border and
disturbing traffic on the Bojana River, King Nikola order a squadron to capture Skadar,
126
A short review of the history of Montenegro
which was achieved in June 1915. This was the second time in the previous three years
that the town had been captured, against the will of the Great Forces. In order to express
his disagreement with this action, the Serbian general Bo ža Janković, chief of headquar-
ters, left Montenegro and was succeeded by Colonel Petar Pe šić. The intervention of Rus-
sia put an end to this affair and the Allies issued a collective note stating that they did not
recognise the conquest of Skadar. Later, the Montenegrin action was proved right since it
was exactly through Skadar, controlled by the Montenegrins, that the Serbian army would
make its retreat on its way to the Adriatic coast.
The great Austro-Hungarian offensive against Serbia began in October 1915 and was
successful in pushing the Serbian army towards the south, thus carrying the battles to
Montenegro. The attacks of the Austro-Hungarian army started around Vi šegrad and, as
the Serbian army retreated, the Montenegrin army was forced to expand its front in order
to provide cover.
The main attack of the Austro-Hungarian army was directed towards Lov ćen, which
was defended by sparse units, given that the major part of the Montenegrin army was con-
centrated in the north in the area between the mouth of the Piva River and Čakor. On 8
January, the Austro-Hungarian army initiated a powerful artillery attack on positions at
Lovćen and on 13 January they entered an undefended Cetinje. The Court, the Govern-
ment and the Supreme Command moved to Podgorica. Berane had already been captured
(on 10 January) and the front at Grahovo breached, thus leaving the army of Montenegro
in a hopeless situation. The southern part, from Lake Skadar to the coast, remained com-
pletely unprotected and was thus under constant threat of siege.
Under such circumstances, the Government of Montenegro decided to sue for peace on 10
January, while the Austro-Hungarian army demanded unconditional surrender. Following
the orders of the Serbian Government, Serbian soldiers withdrew from Montenegro while the
headquarters commander of the Supreme Command, Petar Pe šić, left Montenegro on 17 Jan-
uary. Two days later, King Nikola also left the country having appointed General Janko Vu-
kotić as chief of the Supreme Command. In the situation of general chaos and confusion that
engulfed Montenegro, those ministers who remained in the country, in agreement with Vu-
kotić and Marko, the son of the King, decided to disband the army. In this way, the Monte-
negrin army was not able to withdraw, as the Serbian one did, except for a small number of
volunteers from Boka and Herzegovina. On 25 January, the Regulation of Capitulation was,
finally, signed. Montenegro’s surrender was due to the poor strategic disposition of its
troops, for which the greatest responsibility is borne by the chief of the headquarters of
Montenegro’s Supreme Command, the Serbian colonel Petar Pe šić, together with King
Nikola, who had entrusted him with this task in the first place.
From mid-1916, a spontaneous and organised komitski movement of self-organised
guerrilla fighters emerged against the occupational forces. The beginnings of these events
are also linked to General Radomir Ve šović who, in conspiracy with other Montenegrin
officers, was preparing an uprising. In order to prevent this, the occupying forces decided
to intern those officers as well as other distinguished figures who were considered to rep-
resent a potential threat to Austro-Hungarian rule. One such attempt at the arrest of Gen-
eral Vešović ended in him taking refuge in woods, after he had killed one officer. This in-
cident was followed by even greater repression and the mass imprisonment in camps of
some 9 500 intellectuals and officers.
127
Šerbo Rastoder
The end of the war was closing in, but the number of komitski groups was steadily in-
creasing. This additionally tied down a large number of occupation forces in Montenegro.
In 1918, for instance, some 800 active komits operated in Montenegro while, by the end of
the war, their number had multiplied several times over. In the August of the same year,
there were some 40 000 to 45 000 members of the occupying forces out of whom some
27 000 were active fighters. Such a concentration of occupying forces was maintained no-
where else during World War One.
Leaving Montenegro in January 1916, together with other members of the royal family,
the government and the majority of ministers and deputies, King Nikola found himself in
exile, without an army or financial means and his reputation in the eyes of his allies
greatly ruined. Through Skadar and Italy they reached France where, in Neuilly, near
Paris, a court, government and governmental administration were established on the basis
of subventions provided by Great Britain and France. By then, the issue of Montenegro’s
future and its possible unification with Serbia had broadly been discussed. Russia was
supporting the idea of uniting Montenegro with Serbia under the Kara đorđević Dynasty,
implying the creation of a Greater Serbian state in the Balkans, as a means of backing its
policies in the region. Consequently, in 1916 it abolished its subventions to Montenegro
and rejected the possibility of King Nikola’s asylum in Russia. Such an attitude encour-
aged the Serbian Prime Minister, Nikola Pa šić; moreover, King Nikola and the circles
around him were not enjoying the unconditional support of the other Allies, i.e. France,
Great Britain and Italy.
The developments on the Thessaloniki front impelled the Montenegrin komits to inten-
sify their activities. In some regions, armed uprisings broke out and these efforts led to the
rapid liberation of Montenegro. It was only during the battle for the liberation of Podgo-
rica that a few units of the Second Yugoslav Regiment joined the komits. The armed
clashes in Montenegro ended on November 11 1918. More than 5 000 enemy soldiers
were captured by the komits and the rebels in the struggle for liberation; these were extra-
dited to the Serbian army upon their arrival in Montenegro.
Montenegro lost about 20 000 soldiers in this war, amounting to some 10 per cent of its
population (bearing in mind its borders before the Balkan Wars), or 40 per cent of the total
number of its regular soldiers. Approximately 15 000 people went through the camps in
Austria, Hungary and Albania. Montenegro also suffered enormous material damage and
losses estimated to be around the sum of 723 million Francs, which was demanded in the
war reparation request submitted to the Paris Peace Conference. 54
54 On Montenegro during World War One, see Novica Rakočević: Crna Gora u prvom svjet-
skom ratu 1914-1918 (Podgorica: Unireks, 1997); ‘Crna Gora u prvom svjetskom ratu’,
Zbornik radova sa okruglog stola, No. 2 (Podgorica: Istorijskog instituta Crne Gore, 1998);
‘Crna Gora i Crnogorci’, pp. 180-183; Andrijašević: Kratka istorija Crne Gore, pp. 201-
207; Jovanović: Istorija Crne Gore, pp. 400-431; Dimitrije Vujović: Ujedinjenje Crne Gore
i Srbije (Titograd: Istorijski Institut NRCG, 1962); Dimitrije Vujović: Ratna saradnja Crne
Gore i Francuske 1914-1916 (Podgorica: CANU, 1994); Aleksandar Drašović: Mojkovačka
bitka (Beograd: Stručna knjiga, 1991).
128
A short review of the history of Montenegro
55 Šerbo Rastoder: ‘Politika svršenog čina’, in Uloga Francuske u nasilnoj aneksiji Crne Gore
(Bar: Conteco, 2000), pp. 199-235.
56 Ivo Banac: The National Question in Yugoslavia. Origins, History, Politics (Ithaca/London:
Cornell University Press, 1994), pp. 284-285.
129
Šerbo Rastoder
also under occupation, the holder of international legitimacy was the Montenegrin King and
the government-in-exile. Laws could only be passed by the National Parliament of Montene-
gro. Nevertheless, a parallel parliament was organised, in contradiction to all the regulations
of legal procedure, and a decision made determining the future of Montenegro. The session
of the Grand National Assembly in Podgorica lasted until 29 November (according to the
new calendar). On 26 November, this ‘Assembly of Podgorica’, decided:
1. ‘that King Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš and his dynasty be dethroned
2. that Montenegro and brotherly Serbia be united in one unified state under the
Karađorđević dynasty then, thus united, join the shared Homeland of our three-named
people, the Serbs, the Croats and the Slovenes…’57
In spite of the decisions of the Parliament in Podgorica not being acknowledged by any
of the Great Powers, Montenegro ceased to exist as an independent state. 58
Opponents of the unconditional unification of Montenegro with Serbia, dissatisfied
with the decisions of the Podgorica Parliament, the actions of the organs of authority and
the bjelaške bands (paramilitary units of the supporters of unconditional unification), as
well as with the difficult socio-economic situation, started preparations for an armed up-
rising. The preparations intensified after the return of some Montenegrin leaders from
POW camps who, on their way to Montenegro, had been held up by the Serbian army in
various places (mostly in Sarajevo) until the Podgorica Parliament had concluded its ses-
sions. The uprising – planned for 21 December 1918 – was aimed at internationalising the
issue of Montenegro in the light of the opening of the Paris Peace Conference.
The uprising’s slogan was ‘For justice, honour and the freedom of Montenegro’. Some
4,000 ill-armed rebels took part in it, equipped mostly with their own private light weap-
ons. The plan was uncovered and the Command of the Adriatic Troops in Cetinje, to-
gether with the National Executive Council, the interim government, started arresting the
prominent leaders and initiators in order to prevent the uprising from taking place. Never-
theless, on 21 December rebels occupied Cetinje, Rijeka Crnojevi ća and Virpazar, while
troops gathered in the area surrounding Nikšić. After the resistance had been crushed
around Virpazar, the organiser, Jovan Plamenac, on the request of King Nikola, left
57 Odruka, Veliki Narodne Skupštine Srpskog Naroda u Crnoj Gori, donjeta na sjednici od 13.
novembra 1918. g. u Podgorici. Podgorica, 26.11.1918.
58 On the Podgorica Assembly, see Dimitrije Vujović: Podgorička skupština (Zagreb: Škol-
ska knjiga/Stvarnost, 1989); Jovan R. Bojović: Podgorička skupština 1918: dokumenta
(Gornji Milanovac: Dečje novine, 1989); Mijat Šuković: Podgorička skupština 1918
(Podgorica, 1999); Radoslav Rotković: Velika zavjera protiv Crne Gore, Od Prizrena do
Versaja (Podgorica: Nevladina organizacija Crnogorska izdanja/Montenegro Editions,
2001); Whitney Warren: Montenegro. The Crime of the Peace Conference (New York:
Brentano's, 1922); Miomir Dašić: ‘O dilemi da li je velika narodna skupština u Podgorici
bila legalna i legitimna’, in: Ogledi iz istorije Crne Gore (Podgorica: Istorijski institut Crne
Gore, 2000), pp. 323-337; Šerbo Rastoder: ‘Petrovići – suton jedne dinastije’, Vijesti,
19.12.2001, 1-3.1.2002; Dragoljub Živojinović: Crna Gora u borbi za opstanak 1914-1922
(Beograd: Vojska, 1996); Dragoljub Živojinović: Italija i Crna Gora 1914-1925, Studija o
iznevjerenom savezništvu (Beograd: Službeni list SRJ, 1998); Dragoljub Živojinović:
Nevoljni saveznici 1914-1918 (Beograd: Službeni list SRJ, 2000); Dimitrije Vujović: Fran-
cuski masoni i jugoslovensko pitanje 1914-1918 (Beograd: Književne novine, 1994).
130
A short review of the history of Montenegro
Montenegro. In the meantime, the rebels were repelled at Nikšić and prevented from en-
tering the city after a day’s fighting, while some of their leaders ( Đuro and Marko Petro-
vić, Marko Đukanović) were arrested.
The decisive events, however, occurred in the area surrounding Cetinje. The rebels con-
veyed their demands from their headquarters in Bajice, signed by Captain Krsto Popovi ć
on behalf of the committee of the uprising, to the commander of the Allied occupation
forces, the French general Venel, and the Executive Committee on 22 December 1918.
The demands insisted that the Podgorica Assembly had broken the country’s Constitution
and acted against the will of the majority of the Montenegrin people. They also suggested
that there was a general consensus that Montenegro should enter the Yugoslav state on an
equal basis with the other provinces and that the final form of that state’s internal structure
should be decided by a constitutional assembly. The abolition of the Podgorica Parlia-
ment’s decisions were demanded, along with fresh, free elections for Montenegro, in an
early section of the statement.
Clashes occurred on Christmas Eve, on 14 December 1918. 59 The troops that were de-
fending Cetinje – composed of Serbian units and supporters of unconditional union – pre-
vented the rioters from entering the town. After the battle, General Venel travelled to Cetinje
and conveyed demands to both sides. The rebels were requested to return to their homes and
to lay down their weapons. Some did so, but others refused and escaped to Boka Kotorska
and to Bar, from where they were transferred by the Italians to Medova in Albania, where a
collective camp for Montenegrins was located. Other rebels fled to the woods and became
outlaws. In this manner, this poorly-organised uprising was temporarily crushed.
In January 1919, under the influence of the American President, Woodrow Wilson, King
Nikola directed a call from exile to his supporters to stay calm, as the Allies had promised
him that Montenegrins would soon be able to decide on their future in free elections. How-
ever, the Allies failed to fulfil the promise and so the rebels continued to lead a guerrilla war
against the newly-established authorities until 1924. The largest organised military action in-
tended to wipe out the rebels took place in winter 1919/20, in which the army, the gendarme-
rie and groups of volunteers joined action with some 900 rebels hiding in woods. Of the
rebels, 22 were killed while 757 were forced to surrender. Nevertheless, smaller groups of
opponents of unification with Serbia, occasionally joined by rebels from Italy, kept the re-
sistance going. Trials were held of a large number of rebels, accomplices and supporters al-
though a decree issued by King Alexander pardoned the majority of those convicted, except
for 59 outlaws who were sentenced to prison terms of a duration between 10 and 20 years.
The clashes between ‘Whites’ (Bjelaši) – the supporters of unconditional unification
with Serbia – and ‘Greens’ (Zelenaši) – the opponents – resulted in disastrous conse-
quences for Montenegro. 60 It is estimated that the number of fugitive, imprisoned, con-
victed and killed people reached approximately 5 000. A large number of houses was
burned down and considerable material damage ensued. 61
131
Šerbo Rastoder
132
A short review of the history of Montenegro
Italy’ was formed. The army was formally under the command of the Minister of the
Army within the Montenegrin government-in-exile, Brigadier-General Milutin Vu činić,
although it was, in effect, controlled by Italy. Towards the end of April 1919, a convention
was signed between the government-in-exile and Italy regarding the financial mainte-
nance of the Montenegrin forces, whose maximum number was not to surpass 1 500 men.
By early 1921, the Montenegrin army had grown to four battalions and a maximum
1 559 soldiers. With the help of Italy, small military formations were transferred to Monte-
negro in the attempt to instigate a national uprising. Such attempts failed since, on the one
hand, they were met with organised resistance in Montenegro and, on the other, the support
of the Allies, especially Italy, was not comprehensive. Namely, Italy had instrumentalised
the army in order to put pressure on the newly-formed Yugoslav state as a means of pro-
moting its own territorial claims in the northern and central Adriatic. Thus, immediately af-
ter the Rapalski Treaty was signed between Italy and the South Slav Kingdom in Novem-
ber 1920, resolving controversial matters between the two countries, Italy obliged itself to
dismiss the Montenegrin Army from Italy. In March 1921, Italy disarmed the Montenegrin
Army and ceased to provide any kind of help from August 1922. The majority of exiled
soldiers returned to Montenegro, but others went to Argentina, the USA or other European
countries. The last remains of the Montenegrin Army were dispersed by Mussolini on his
arrival in power.
The biggest blow to Montenegrin émigrés, however, was the death of King Nikola on 1
March 1921 in Antibes on the Côte d’Azur in France. After his death and the abdication of
his successor, Danilo, in favour of the boy king Prince Mihailo, the army was hit by a riot
and emigrant circles divided. The power of the crown rested in the hands of Queen
Milena, on behalf of Mihailo, and, after she had entered into conflict with Jovan Plamenac
in June 1921, she decided to form a new government and appointed the Brigadier-General
to preside over it. On the death of Queen Milena in March 1923, the remaining Monte-
negrin émigrés had already dispersed. At the beginning of 1925, and by agreement with
Nikola Pašić, Plamenac, the former premier of Montenegro and the leader of the Christ-
mas Uprising, returned to the country, at which point the influence of Montenegrin émi-
grés on events within Yugoslavia itself came to an end.
Within the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes – renamed the Kingdom of Yugo-
slavia in 1929 – Montenegro’s political, economic, cultural and national role was mar-
ginal, considering that the Kingdom was centralised and that Montenegro comprised only
two per cent of its population. In administrative terms, a part of Montenegro remained
within the Zeta Region, which was renamed Zeta Banovina in 1929. 62
62 Šerbo Rastoder: Životna pitanja Crne Gore 1918-1929 (Bar: Kulturni centar Bar, 1996).
133
Šerbo Rastoder
which were introduced a military administration and the post of Military Governor. Mon-
tenegro’s territory was partitioned into the region of Boka Kotorska, which was directly
annexed by Fascist Italy as a separate province within the Dalmatian Governorate,
whereas the area of Ulcinj, Tuze, Plav, Gusinj and Ro žaje was adjoined to so-called
Greater Albania, which was created with the Italian fascist support. 63 The Fascists, with
the support of a part of Montenegro’s Federalist Party, tried to re-establish an independent
state of Montenegro on the territory that remained. The Petrovda Parliament was formed
and convened on 12 July 1941, when it acclaimed a Declaration of Independence prepared
beforehand in Rome. 64 Despite the backing of a part of the domestic political elite, this at-
tempt by the occupying forces would, nevertheless, fail since it was marked the following
day with the beginning of the previously planned uprising.
The uprising, organised by the Communists in collaboration with other anti-fascist forces,
began on 13 July 1941, based on the decisions of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party of Yugoslavia (CPY) on 4 July and the Regional Committee of the CPY on 8 July. The
uprising was to centre on guerrilla warfare waged against the occupation forces. However,
the resistance developed into a national uprising soon after the first guerrilla actions had
taken place and, on 13 July 1941, many towns had already been liberated, including Virpa-
zar, Ćevo, Mišići, Petrovac and Rijeka Crnojevi ća, with these being followed in the next
few days by Andrijevica, Berane, Kolašin, Danilovgrad, Bijelo Polje, Žabljak, Šavnik and
Grahovo. In other words, almost the entire territory of Montenegro was freed with the ex-
ception of Cetinje, Podgorica, Nikšić and Pljevlje. This uprising is viewed as an exceptional
event in the historiography of World War Two, considering that it was the first mass upris-
ing in occupied Europe. On the other hand, it resulted in a high concentration in Montenegro
of fascist troops (100 000) brought in to crush the rebellion. Instead of the one Italian divi-
sion that was active during the first part of the occupation, towards the end of 1941 and in
1942 the number of divisions of the occupying forces had increased to eight. 65
After defeat in a battle at Pljevlje on 1 December 1941, one part of the Montenegrin parti-
sans retreated to eastern Bosnia where they joined the elite partisan brigades, while the other
withdrew to their domestic regions and continued to organise minor military actions. 66
The first Četnici groups were formed in Montenegro towards the end of November and
the beginning of December 1941, their leader, Dra ža Mihailović, having already named a
Četnik leadership for Montenegro in mid-October. In collaboration with the Italian fas-
cists, who supplied them with arms and food, the Četnici organised actions at the end of
1941 and at the start of 1942 against the partisans headed by the Communists, terrorising
the followers of the National Liberation Movement (Narodni oslobodila čki pokret, NOP)
and their families, a large number of whom ended up in concentration camps in various
63 See Đuro Vujović: Crna Gora u narodnooslobodilačkom ratu 1941-1945 (Podgorica: Isto-
rijski institut Crne Gore, 1997), pp. 23-29.
64 Radoje Pajović: Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori, četnički i federalistički pokret 1941-1945
(Cetinje/Titograd : Obod/Istorijski institut SRCG, 1977), pp. 44-75.
65 On the uprising of 13 July 1941, see ‘Trinaestojulski ustanak predmet nauke i umetnosti,
Radovi sa naučnog skupa, Titograd 11. i 12. jul 1991’, CANU 12 (1992); Vujović: Crna Gora
u narodnooslobodilačkom ratu, pp. 34-67; Radoje Pajović, Kontrarevolucija, pp. 75-98.
66 Špiro Lagator, Djuro Batričević, Pljevaljska bitka (Beograd: Književne novine, 1990),
pp. 99-242; Vujović, Crna Gora u narodnooslobodilačkom ratu, pp. 74-79.
134
A short review of the history of Montenegro
135
Šerbo Rastoder
sembly (Crnogorska antifa šistička skupština, CASNO), which was the formal recognition
of the re-establishment of Montenegro’s sovereignty within the Yugoslav Federation.
Hence, authority organs were formed at the level of the Republic of Montenegro. 73
Operations for the liberation of Montenegro formed part of the larger operations of the
Anti-Fascist Coalition of Yugoslav partisans. During November and December 1944, all the
towns in the coastal and central regions of Montenegro were freed. By January 1945, with
the liberation of Bijelo Polje on 4 January, the entire territory of Montenegro was liberated.
Alongside the war against the occupation armies, a civil war was fought between Čet-
nici and partisans over the future state and its social structure. The partisans belonged to a
unified movement led by the Communists and headed by Josip Broz Tito, while the Čet-
nik movement considered itself to be the legal army of the royal government-in-exile and
consisted mostly of Serbian nationalists acting according to the Serbian national pro-
gramme. From 1943 onwards, they lost the support of the western Allies, who recognised
Tito’s partisans as the only legitimate allies in the fight against the Axis Powers. 74
The victory of the partisan movement, won on the platform of social and national equa-
lity, guaranteed that the attributes of sovereignty would be given back to Montenegro
within Communist Yugoslavia.
During the 1941-1945 War, 37 000 Montenegrin citizens were killed. Out of that
number, some 14 500 soldiers were killed fighting for the partisans, which was more than
twice the Yugoslav average. Others were killed fighting on the side of the Ćetnici and
other anti-communist groups. The strength of the partisan movement can be seen from the
participation of Montenegrins in it: 36 per cent of partisan generals were from Montene-
gro even though the population of Montenegro constituted only two per cent of the popu-
lation of Yugoslavia. According to official figures, 40 446 Montenegrins were killed or
died in camps; 95 346 people were imprisoned, displaced or taken to camps and another
26 144 were permanently disabled. Approximately one-quarter of the population was
made homeless and a large part of the communications and economic infrastructure was
demolished. The total demographic loss of Montenegro in this period amounted to some
103,800 people, whereas the financial damage of the war was estimated to stand at 43.8
billion dinars.75
73 See Zoran Lakić: Narodna vlast u Crnoj Gori 191-1945 (Beograd/Cetinje: Obod/Narodna
knjiga, 1981); Zoran Lakić (ed.): ZAVNO Crne Gore i Boke, zbirka dokumenata (Titograd,
1963); Zoran Lakić (ed.): CASNO – Crnogorska antifašistička skupština narodnog
oslobođenja, Zbirka dokumenata (Titograd, 1975).
74 See Branko Petranović: Revolucija i kontrarevolucija u Jugoslaviji (1941-1945), Vol. II
(Beograd: RAD, 1983), pp. 123-224.
75 See Branislav Marović: Društveno-ekonomski razvoj Crne Gore 1945-1953 (Titograd,
1987), pp. 28-30; Branislav Marović: ‘Narodna vlast u Crnoj Gori i rješavanje prvrednih
pitanja i njen doprinos pobjedi nad fašizmom 1941-1945’, Drugi svjetski rat-50 godina kas-
nije, Radovi sa međunarodnog naučnog skupa, održanog u Podgorici 20-22. septembra
1995, Vol. I-II, CANU 18 (1997), pp. 323-337.
136
A short review of the history of Montenegro
new social and administrative restructuring of the new Yugoslav state. This Constitution
confirmed the national and administrative particularity of Montenegro within Yugoslavia.
During the period of reconstruction and state-building, there was great enthusiasm and
self-sacrifice among the inhabitants of Montenegro for substantially repairing the disas-
trous consequences of the war. Nevertheless, the conflict between Yugoslavia and the So-
viet Union and its satellites in 1948 threatened to plunge the country into a new crisis. The
traditional inclination towards Russia and unchanging dogmatism caused many Mon-
tenegrins to come out in favour of Stalin. Between 1948 and 1954, some 2 600 persons
were arrested and imprisoned within Montenegro. 76
Within Socialist Yugoslavia, Montenegro experienced the greatest economic regenera-
tion in its entire history. The largest increase in economic efficiency was recorded in the
period between 1961 and 1970. The share of the industrial sector in the economy in-
creased from six to 35 per cent between 1945 and 1990. During this period, the Republic’s
communications infrastructure was built, with the construction of the Belgrade-Bar rail-
way (completed in 1976) being the most significant project, while a maritime fleet was
built as well as a number of shipyards. The number of tourists steadily increased – from
some 5 000 people in 1946 to over one million in 1979. Significant changes in the struc-
ture of the population were also recorded at this time. Urbanisation was a particularly im-
portant development: the share of city dwellers in the total population increased dramati-
cally from 14.2 per cent in 1953 to 58.2 per cent in 1991. The percentage of the population
who were illiterate decreased constantly, from 56.1 per cent before 1941 to 5.9 per cent in
1991. The first college was opened in 1947 and the first university faculty, a faculty of
economics, was set up in 1960, while a University with six faculties was founded in 1974.
Some other important institutions relating to the cultural life of the Republic were estab-
lished in this period: the Historical Institute in 1948; the State Archive in 1951; and the
Montenegrin Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1973; as well as agricultural and biomedi-
cal institutes, the National Theatre, radio and television stations and numerous newspa-
pers and magazines.
Conclusion
During its millennium-long history (from Duklja to Zeta to Crna Gora), the main feature
in Montenegrin historical development was, on the one side, the characteristic influence
of various civilisations and cultures, and, on the other, the quest for its place within the
boundaries of those civilisations. Located on the crossroads between east and west, in the
central part of the Balkan Peninsula, Montenegro has been exposed to the influence of
global historical processes. It was within these processes, and depending on the interests
of the Great Powers, that Montenegro has built its particular historical identity, displaying
a strong survivalist impulse in its desire for self-preservation.
Within such a historical disparity, developments characteristic of the whole region of
south-east Europe which, in the evolution of European history, have played the roles both
of centre and of periphery, have necessarily conditioned the historical formation of the
state of Montenegro.
76 On this, see Ivo Banac: With Stalin against Tito. Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Commu-
nism (Ithaca/London: Cornell University Press, 1988).
137
Dragan Đurić
1 The name ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’ was given to this movement by its participants who,
in this way, wanted to show how the people, i.e. the nation, fought against the ‘bureaucra-
tised regime alienated from the people’.
2 Veseljko Koprivica and Branko Vojičić: Prevrat '89 (Podgorica: LSCG,1994).
3 After Slobodan Milošević took over the rule of Serbia and assumed control of the Belgrade
media, a campaign of accusations was launched against Montenegrin officials and the policy they
were pursuing. The reason lay in Milošević’s need to secure another sure vote in the Federation
for his project on solving the problem of Kosovo. The campaign from Serbia was organised via the
secret services, media and official authorities. The communist regime in Montenegro could not
resist. Voices of dissent were too scarce and low-key. See Vladimir Keković: Vrijeme meteža ‘88/
89 (Podgorica: Kulturno prosvjetna zajednica Podgorice, 2002).
4 This was the time of the demolition of the Berlin Wall and the beginning of the transition proc-
ess in ex-socialist countries, but the toppling of the then regime in Montenegro was unrelated to
these trends. On the contrary, it was a movement of a nationalist and socialist orientation. For
example, only one of the 37 speakers at the so-called January Rally (which was a prelude to the
resignation of all state and party officials in Montenegro, as well as Montenegro’s representa-
tives in the federal bodies) mentioned that a multi-party system should be introduced. He was
booed. Veseljko Koprivica and Branko Vojičić, op. cit.
139
Dragan Đurić
cratic’ revolution had to be paid. It was paid by inflation and isolation from the world
community. The policy of the economic boycott, which started with the boycott of Slove-
nian products in Serbia, boomeranged on its initiators. The sanctions of the United Na-
tions Security Council against Yugoslavia, established in 1992, lasted exactly 1 253 days. 5
In this regard, one of the most important factors in the difficult economic, social and poli-
tical situation in which Montenegro found itself during the 1990s was the massive participa-
tion of workers in the nationalist and populist ‘anti-bureaucratic revolution’. This hampered
and, for a long time, postponed inevitable economic and political reforms, reinforced the
command control of the economy and made possible the insane policy of the regime epito-
mised by Slobodan Milošević which, ultimately, hit the population of Serbia and Montene-
gro the hardest.
5 UN Security Council Resolution 757 imposed sanctions on FRY on 30 May 1992. They
were suspended 1 253 days later by Resolution 1022 on 22 November 1995. According to
the data of the then official institutions in FRY, the country lost over $1 500bn due to the
sanctions. Monitor, 14.7.1995.
6 Over 70 per cent of the total trade of Montenegro was conducted with other republics within
the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Observing only the level of trade with other
republics within the former SFRY, Montenegro had a continuous deficit but, on the whole,
since 1982 it had a positive balance in foreign trade amounting to over $100m. On this issue,
see Monitor, 8.3.1991 and Monitor, 20.3.1992.
7 Petar Đukić: Iskušenja ekonomske politike: hronologija života pod sankcijama (Belgrade:
PS Grmeč, Privredni pregled, 1995).
8 Monet, April 2002.
140
The economic development of Montenegro
The volatility of the economic situation in Montenegro is witnessed by data on price in-
creases. Inflation in Montenegro in 2001 was as much as 26 per cent while in 2000 it
equalled 23 per cent. These are the years when the dinar, resented because of its inflation-
ary history, did not operate in Montenegro, with the German mark being used as the na-
tional currency instead.
Montenegro is currently facing numerous limitations to the reform processes initiated in
1998, resulting partly in its undefined status in the undefined state it holds with Serbia.
This political uncertainty and other circumstances have their economic repercussions. Ob-
solete technology, which is scarcely capable of being upgraded, and a lack of interest
among foreign investors are additional key economic problems in Montenegro. Monte-
negro is experiencing stagnation of industrial output, with great problems of a budget de-
ficit, a shortage of electricity, a critically low degree of utilisation of nominal economic
capacities, a high proportion of economic activities taking place in the shadow economy, a
high unemployment rate and the lowest average wage in the Balkans. Such a situation has
its deep roots that are explained in more detail in the following sections.
Growing unemployment
Economic and political conditions in Montenegro during the past decade inevitably resulted
in a radical reduction in the number of people employed. This can be clearly seen from the
following data. In 1989, about 163 000 people were working in Montenegro (while the
number of the unemployed was about 48 000). In 2002, the number of the employed
dropped to just 113 000, while the number of those seeking work rose to over 80 000. The
unemployment rate in Montenegro was 17 per cent in 1989 and now equals 28 per cent. In
the meantime, the number of pensioners in Montenegro has risen from 59 000 to over
81 000. Changes in the official number of the employed and the unemployed in Montenegro
during the last decade of the 20 th century are presented in the following table.
141
Dragan Đurić
A special problem for the Montenegrin economy is the rapid decrease in the number of
workers in the economy and the gradual increase of those whose salaries are financed from
public revenues. One-third of the workforce in Montenegro now works in public services.
As a result, over the past thirteen years the number of jobs in the Montenegrin economic sec-
tor has dropped by more than 30 per cent. Before the beginning of the economic reforms, at
a time when full employment was fostered, over 130 000 people worked in the Montenegrin
economic sector as opposed to slightly more than 80 000 today. The ratio in several charac-
teristic years between those working in the economic sector and in public services can be
seen from the following table.
Table 3 – Number of employees in the economy and public services11
Employment 1989 1992 1995 1999 2000
(annual average)
Total 163 351 133 587 125 399 115 328 114 768
Economy 131 543 104 295 93 126 80 423 78 752
Public services 32 808 29 292 32 273 34 905 36 016
142
The economic development of Montenegro
dertaken in all enterprises in Montenegro. This was an attempt to rid enterprises of the
burden of surplus labour inherited from the period of self-management and the maintenance
of full employment and thus, through organisational transformation, to prepare for actual
ownership transformation.
The legal rights of those workers who were to be dismissed under this process were for-
mally rather high, but they existed only on paper. They were entitled to one of the follow-
ing: retraining or advanced training; the buy-up of missing years for retirement; severance
pay amounting to 24 times the average monthly wage; employment with another com-
pany; or a loan for self-employment. However, partly due to the lack of programmes and
resources, and partly due to workers’ refusal to accept any other option except either the
buy-up of missing years for retirement or severance pay, settlement was delayed. Re-
sources for these purposes should have been provided by enterprises but, since they did
not have them, they shifted everything to the government. At that time, the single-party
government used these affairs, as with many others, for political purposes. Thus, the re-
sources required to deal with the problem of technical and economic redundancy were dis-
tributed according to the criteria of political suitability. In consequence, many of those
workers declared redundant (political manipulation was frequently obvious in these pro-
cesses, even within enterprises) were left jobless, with no other option but to join the army
or to secure their existence in the burgeoning smuggling and shadow economy.
Rising poverty
According to a methodology adopted on a tripartite basis, and defined in the General Col-
lective Agreement, 13 the minimum wage in Montenegro is determined according to two
central criteria: the results of economic performance; and workers’ family needs. The
needs of the average family are determined on the basis of an official statistical market
‘basket’, encompassing 65 different food products and then increased by 40 per cent (also
set down in the methodology) to account for the costs of housing, clothing, footwear,
transportation, health, hygiene, education, culture, sports and everything else required for
a family. Currently, the minimum wage (which also serves, very importantly, as the basis
for the adjustment of all welfare benefits in the Republic) equals Euro 50, while the aver-
age wage in Montenegro is Euro 116. 14 According to the data produced by the Confedera-
tion of Independent Trade Unions of Montenegro, real wages are now 50 per cent lower
than they were in 1990. In addition, also according to trade union sources, in May 2002 no
less than 30 296 workers had not received their wages for a period longer than three
months.
Average wage trends during the past few years (converted into German marks) are
shown in the following table.
13 The General Collective Agreement was adopted in 1995. Its signatories are the Chamber of
Commerce and Economy of Montenegro, the Government of the Republic of Montenegro
and the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of Montenegro. This Collective Agree-
ment is still in force.
14 At the time of the hyperinflation at the end of 1993, the value of average wages dropped to
only DM 5.
143
Dragan Đurić
Such a level of average income is insufficient for normal existence. Research studies
have concluded that, in 1996, as much as 28.9 per cent of the population of Yugoslavia,
hence including Montenegro, were poor. According to this study, families which were un-
able to cover the cost of the statistical market basket with their monthly income were con-
sidered to be poor. 16 A comparison between 1986 and 1990, when the poverty ratio in the
country (i.e. the share of the poor of the total population) was 14.1 per cent, reveals the so-
cial decline experienced by the population of Serbia and Montenegro during this period.
The situation has not changed much during recent years. According to research by the
Podgorica office of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), carried out at
the end of 2000 and the beginning of 2001, the poverty ratio ranges from 25 to 30 per
cent.17
In consequence of sanctions and hyperinflation, the middle class became almost extinct
while most of the population became equal in poverty. The first half of the 1990s was char-
acterised by a transitional recession in all the former socialist countries and the ruling polit-
ical forces in Montenegro (and in Serbia) tried to interpret the growing poverty as the result
of these transitional processes. However, Serbia and Montenegro at that time had not even
begun the structural reforms required for transition. A plummeting economy and rapid im-
poverishment of the population were the result of the destructive war policy of the regime,
an inefficient and expensive economy with obsolete technology and an inadequate struc-
ture, particularly its ownership structure. Altogether, these were additionally aggravated by
the sanctions. Economic policy based on an inefficient system and command-type manage-
ment of the economy caused a long-lasting and profound crisis. The transitional recession,
which inevitably occurs in radical changes of the economic system, is yet to be faced by
Montenegrin society, which will have to pay further for the price of economic reforms. 18
144
The economic development of Montenegro
19 The term ‘black labour’ implies work performed for the employer without legal grounding,
when the legal grounding is unlawful or when the work performed is prohibited.
20 The Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), published by Transparency International, ranks
south-east European countries at the very top of the list of countries which are burdened with
corruption. In 1999, on a list of 99 countries FRY was ranked 90th, Albania 84th and Croatia
74th, while Bulgaria, Romania and Macedonia shared 63rd place. See www.transparency.de/
document/cpi/index/html.
21 Dragan Đurić: ‘The Shadow Economy: Between Authority and Crime’, South-East Europe
Review for Labour and Social Affairs, Vol. 2 No. 1, April 1999, pp. 59-68.
145
Dragan Đurić
In the conditions of the command economy during Milo šević’s era, people learned
about the market and market operation through the shadow economy. However, in parallel
with this, collaboration between government organs and/or individuals within them with
the members of the new business class caused animosity amongst ordinary citizens toward
the private sector and created the predominant attitude that representatives of the new
business class were the same as criminals. Žarko Rakčević, deputy of the Social Demo-
cratic Party (Socijaldemokratska partija, SDP), pointed out in an address to the Mon-
tenegrin parliament 22 that these are:
the untaxed suppliers of scarce imported goods, phantom bankers, racketeers, suppliers of
war, arms traders… who got rich overnight owing to various suspicious and criminal con-
nections, money issuing, bribery and corruption. They are the core of the future establish-
ment. War was their ambience, their need and an opportunity for social promotion. War
gave them power, and they provided it with material and political support and political le-
gitimacy in return.23
Shortcomings in the regular part of the economy and in the official system were offset
by the informal economy, and that has contributed to the creation of the specific anti-so-
cial coalition in which all social strata took part. The gap between standards and reality
was too wide. Government organs and the social partners attempted to develop standards
through a formalised social dialogue, not realising that ‘life is somewhere else’, to para-
phrase Milan Kundera, the famous Czech author.
All this, incorporated into overall social insecurity and uncertainty, considerably af-
fected the political processes in Montenegro.
Unprotected labour
In Montenegro, people have become engaged in private business for a variety of reasons.
Some did it because they saw in it their entrepreneurial perspective, others sought to use
their position in the social or public sector, still others because they had no other option.
Thus, a very large number of new private enterprises have been created. There are cur-
rently about 17 000 enterprises and shops in Montenegro, of which about 12 000 are ac-
tive.24 Most of these enterprises – 45 per cent of the total number – engage in trade, 13 per
cent are in catering and tourism, and 19 per cent are in transport (taxi drivers). Neverthe-
less, a large number of new enterprises have not created many new jobs; the number of the
unemployed in Montenegro is still very high, as outlined earlier, and thus it represents one
of the gravest economic and social problems, particularly in the northern, less developed,
part of Montenegro.
22 Toward the end of 1993, the Assembly of Montenegro refused to debate information on the
economic and social situation in Montenegro which had been prepared for the parliamentary
session by the Montenegrin trade union and the then opposition SDP. It had been previously
agreed that this material would be put on the agenda but, on the decision of the ruling party,
it was eliminated from the parliamentary procedure. The chair of the SDP Deputy Club was
only permitted to deliver the address he had prepared as a keynote speech.
23 Monitor, 31.12.1993.
24 Active enterprises imply enterprises with recorded activity through a giro account in the last
two months.
146
The economic development of Montenegro
25 Employment Office of Montenegro and the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare.
26 Monet, June 2000, p. 8.
27 Zaposlenost, tržište rada i životni standard u Crnoj Gori (Podgorica: UNDP, 2002).
28 ‘Suzbijanje sive ekonomije: Pucanj u prazno,’ Skener, No. 2, April 2002.
147
Dragan Đurić
They may exist within a common state, but Montenegro and Serbia have different views
of transition, political and democratic reforms, and, hence, of privatisation. Political and
social consensus about the need for privatisation of social ownership 29 was reached much
earlier in Montenegro than in the other federal unit – Serbia.
However, the privatisation process in Montenegro has not been continuous. The
(dis)continuity of it can best be illustrated by the sequence of laws according to which it
has been conducted.
The first steps were taken in 1989 by the Federal government of Prime Minister Ante
Marković,30 with the Law on State Capital which served as the basis for the privatisation
of 23 enterprises in Montenegro. Then, in February 1992, the Assembly of Montenegro
adopted the Law on Ownership and Management Transformation. 31 Thus, Montenegro
formally started its privatisation process – the next to last of the former Yugoslav repub-
lics, with Serbia being the last to follow suit. 32 This law was amended in 1994 at the initi-
ative of the Montenegrin trade union. In addition to the acquisition of shares at discount,
the amendment enabled the free distribution of up to ten per cent of enterprise capital to
employees. According to this law, social ownership was eliminated in Montenegro and
distributed between the employees of the respective enterprises and state funds.
The result was a phase called ‘managerial transformation’ in Montenegro. In fact, it
contributed to the re-nationalisation of enterprises. All untransformed social property
within enterprises – a part of the capital that was not transferred to workers – was trans-
ferred to state funds in the proportion of 60 per cent flowing to the Development Fund, 30
per cent to the Pensions and Disability Insurance Fund and 10 per cent to the Employment
Fund. Accordingly, state funds appointed most of the members of the boards of directors
of enterprises and, since political power was in the hands of one party, the Democratic
Party of Socialists (DPS), the situation was the same within the state funds. Consequently,
the ruling party had a dominant role in the management of the entire economy. In addi-
29 Social ownership is a specific category that existed only in SFRY. Namely, in the period of
self-management socialism, the institute of social ownership was elaborated which, in the opi-
nion of the communist ideologues, was to be the first step toward the non-ownership which
should characterise communism. Enterprises did not own capital but were only entitled to
manage enterprise capital as part of the general social capital. Such capital was not state capi-
tal, as it was in other east European countries.
30 Ante Marković was the last federal Prime Minister of SFRY. He is notable for his efforts to
introduce reforms in the country which, of course, failed. When he realised that republican
political oligarchies lacked the political will for co-operation and reform, he founded a poli-
tical party at the Yugoslav level, called the Alliance of Pro-Reform Forces of Yugoslavia.
This was another failed project. The Alliance participated in the first multi-party parliamen-
tary elections in Montenegro, when the League of Communists of Montenegro won by a
landslide. Subsequently, Montenegrin pro-European and pro-reform opposition parties
evolved from the Alliance.
31 Službeni list RCG, No. 2/92, 1992.
32 In August 1992, Serbia also adopted a Law on Transformation of Social Ownership into
Other Forms of Ownership. However, in August 1994, at the initiative of Đinđić’s Demo-
cratic Party, the notorious revaluation was introduced. This actually brought privatisation in
Serbia to a standstill and the whole process into a cul-de-sac from which Serbia has started to
emerge only after the democratic changes in October 2000.
148
The economic development of Montenegro
tion, the result of this process was a very pronounced role for employee share ownership
in Montenegro. On average, employees own about 25 per cent of capital in Montenegro. 33
The new Law on the Privatisation of the Economy was enacted in mid-1996. 34 It regu-
lated the issue of the further actual privatisation of previously-transformed social enter-
prises and introduced the model of voucher privatisation for employees in public services,
the unemployed and pensioners. This model was planned as a local variant of the models
of voucher privatisation implemented elsewhere. However, the political blockade (at that
time, UN Security Council sanctions had already been lifted but the so-called ‘outer wall
of sanctions’ remained in place) meant that privatisation proceeded very slowly. By 1998,
only 95 small and medium-sized enterprises had been privatised in Montenegro, with for-
eign capital invested in just five firms. About 9 000 employees worked in privatised enter-
prises at the time.
The valuation of the enterprises was largely conducted in 1996 and so that was the price
at which they were sold, subject furthermore to an average discount of around 40 per cent.
This trend has continued until today. The shares of some privatised enterprises are cur-
rently quoted on the two stock exchanges in Montenegro and their value is, on average,
only 30 per cent of the estimated value which served as the basis for mass voucher privati-
sation. The value of the enterprises has declined continuously due to the overall economic
degradation as well as to their low levels of current operation. The management of social
and transformed enterprises, through current business operations with newly-founded pri-
vate firms in which they had an interest, has actually moved a solid part of capital from
social into private enterprises.
As a result of the very slow privatisation – which, in addition, caused a range of every-
day concrete problems, resulting from the more or less obvious corruption and failure to
implement the provisions of privatisation agreements (in 1998 alone, 28 privatisation
agreements were cancelled due to these reasons) – a further reorganisation of the entire
process had to be undertaken. A special body – the Privatisation Council – was set up by
the Law on Privatisation of the Economy 35 which actually assumed a monopoly over the
entire process and, in 1998, the government pompously announced that it would acceler-
ate privatisation by introducing vouchers.
However, owing to the increasing conflict with the Milo šević regime in Belgrade,
NATO bombing and the fear of possible war in Montenegro, the Montenegrin authorities
stalled the implementation of the actual reforms and mass voucher privatisation ended
only in late 2001. With the modifications and amendments to the Law on Privatisation of
the Economy,36 all adult citizens of Montenegro (around 450 000 people) were granted
the right to receive vouchers that they later used to buy shares in enterprises or the privati-
sation funds. Capital for the mass voucher privatisation, to a total of DM 2.5bn, was ear-
marked out of the portfolio of the Development Fund of the Republic of Montenegro in
addition to the share of state capital.
Shares in 225 enterprises in all were offered to citizens. Not all enterprise capital was
included in this form of privatisation. In smaller and less successful firms, the percentage
149
Dragan Đurić
of capital allocated for privatisation was higher while in the strategically important ones,
of course it was much lower. Vouchers did not have a face value in monetary terms but
were denominated in points. However, one point was equal to the value of one German
mark which, at the time of the implementation of mass privatisation, had already become
the official currency in Montenegro. Citizens had the option freely to choose the shares
they would buy, either by directly purchasing shares in a certain enterprise or shares in
one of the six privatisation funds.
In summary, 90 per cent of citizens took their vouchers; 60 per cent of them subse-
quently exchanged their vouchers for shares in the privatisation funds and 30 per cent for
shares in individual enterprises. Immediately prior to the mass voucher privatisation,
about 21 per cent of total social capital in Montenegro had been privatised. 37 Now, after
the completion of the mass voucher privatisation, around 57 per cent of total social capital
in Montenegro has been privatised. The rundown of the current situation is as follows.
Over 95 per cent of citizens in Montenegro have become share owners in enterprises
(through various forms of privatisation). Furthermore, 130 companies have been fully pri-
vatised, while there are 179 companies with around 80 per cent privatised capital, 27 com-
panies which are 51 per cent privatised and 17 of the largest companies in which about 35
per cent of capital has been privatised.
One of the most important characteristics of the present situation is the majority owner-
ship of employees (through inside shares, on the basis of the former law) and citizens (on
the basis of vouchers invested directly in the enterprise) in as many as 92 companies in
Montenegro,38 albeit that these are largely smaller and poorer-performing ones.
The first half of 2002 was characterised by the establishment of new managerial struc-
tures in Montenegrin enterprises. This marked a break with the former practice of par-
astate and para-political boards of directors, which were viewed by the public as bearing
the main responsibility for poor performance and the high degree of corruption in the
Montenegrin economy.
Other privatisation models have also been implemented slowly. The biggest and most
valuable enterprises have been earmarked for sale through international tender but not
much progress has been made. In 2001, for example, the offer of the Montenegrin tele-
coms operator attracted no foreign buyers. The key capacities of the Montenegrin econ-
omy (the aluminium industry, hotel facilities, wood processing and metals processing fac-
tories) are still waiting for prospective buyers. According to the privatisation plan for
2002, seventeen of the largest enterprises in Montenegro, which account together for more
than 40 per cent of total capital in Montenegro, have been earmarked for privatisation via
international tender. They include hotel and tourist enterprises Boka in Herceg Novi, Bud-
vanska rivijera in Budva and Crna Gora in Podgorica; Duvanski kombinat (tobacco fac-
tory), Podgorica; Elektroprivreda Crne Gore (electricity generation and distribution),
Nikšić; Gornji Ibar, Rozaje; Jadransko brodogradiliste (shipyard), Bijela; Jugooceanija,
Kotor; Jugopetrol, Kotor; Kombinat aluminijuma (aluminium complex), Podgorica; Luka
Bar (port), Bar; Plantaže, Podgorica; Prekookeanska plovidba, Bar; Telekom Crne Gore,
150
The economic development of Montenegro
Podgorica; hotel and tourist enterprise Ulcinjska rivijera, Ulcinj; Željezara (steel mill),
Nikšić; and Željezničko-transportno preduze će (railway), Podgorica.
However, by the summer of 2002, none of these enterprises had been privatised, for rea-
sons which lie primarily in the lack of interest amongst foreign investors, as well as in the
slow preparation of the necessary tender documentation.
In August 1996, the author of this text conducted a survey among employees in the
Montenegrin economy with the aim of gaining a thorough insight into what workers in the
economy understood by the privatisation of social ownership which had been carried out
up until then and what they expected from the continuation of that process. The sample
consisted of 600 respondents drawn from separately-structured groups of employees in
public enterprises, transformed social enterprises, privatised enterprises, and enterprises
that were in private ownership from the outset. The results of this survey are particularly
interesting because it demonstrates that employee shareholding is very developed in Mon-
tenegro.
Employees’ lack of knowledge about the main aspects of the employee stock ownership
plan was conspicuous. An enormous number of respondents (78 per cent) did not know
what percentage of capital in the enterprise they work for belonged to the workers, while
86 per cent did not know how much the shares in their personal possession were worth
and a similar percentage did not know who were the employees’ representatives on the
company’s board of directors. The degree of employees’ ignorance on these issues was in
direct proportion to the level of their education and their earnings in the job. The vast ma-
jority of employees in the economy supported the idea of employee shareholding and that
workers should receive more than a 50 per cent level of ownership of their companies, a
long-standing trade union policy in Montenegro. This shows that, at the time of the sur-
vey, seven years after the end of self-management, the prevalent opinion among workers
was that they had created the social capital with their current labour and that they should
now claim the right to its distribution within the privatisation process.
Comparing these results with some earlier surveys shows that the development of the
privatisation process in itself has contributed to a better understanding of it amongst em-
ployees in the economy. It has also turned out that employees in those enterprises which
have progressed further in the privatisation process demonstrate a greater degree of under-
standing of its mechanics. Most of the employees in the economy of Montenegro accepted
the general concept of privatisation, criticising rather the manner of its implementation,
although as much as one-third of respondents could justly be called opponents of priva-
tisation.
The altogether painstaking, slow and controversial privatisation process in Montenegro
has decisively affected the course of political events in Serbia and Montenegro.
151
Dragan Đurić
foreign aid did start to flow into Montenegro. This aid was, in fact, required as the deficit
of the Montenegrin budget was ever-increasing. The government did not prevent the flight
of business into the informal sector to evade taxation because it was itself involved in in-
formal activities which enabled it, during the sanctions and for several years afterwards,
regularly to pay salaries in the public sector, to buy up a portion of Montenegro’s foreign
debt40 and, of course, to have slush funds for political propaganda purposes. Thanks to the
new policy (and to international donations), the economic recovery of Montenegro started
in 1997.
The citizens of Montenegro at that time were accustomed to comparing themselves only
with Serbia, which was collapsing disastrously, thus creating a false optimism and exces-
sive self-content in Montenegro over the slow improvements in the republic’s economy. In
such conditions, a national and political movement aimed at Montenegrin independence
continuously gained strength. Transitional reforms were missing, with the authorities reit-
erating the same excuse: the threat of the possible civil war that Milo šević could incite in
Montenegro. Discussions about reforms had begun in Montenegro, but it also managed to
extricate itself from some of the hardships felt in Serbia. For example, Montenegro sus-
tained far less damage from the NATO bombing than Serbia. 41 However, in 1999, Monte-
negro created a two-currency system, introducing the German mark in parallel with the
Yugoslav dinar and, in early 2000, officially proclaimed the mark as the only legal tender
in Montenegro.42 At the time of the introduction of the euro in the European Union, Monte-
negro also converted marks into euros so that the euro is now the only official currency.
The central political theme in Montenegro since 1998 has been the issue of independence.
Economists generally then agreed that state sovereignty would considerably help the eco-
nomic development of Montenegro. 43 However, in consequence of the political problems
both in relations with Serbia and with the very numerous opponents of independence within
Montenegro, the authorities have opted for the concept of so-called functional sovereignty.
The idea was, first, to secure economic independence which would, subsequently, produce
political effects and practically lead all by itself to state independence. This concept, of
course, failed to yield the anticipated effects, but it did result in Montenegro’s independence
in the monetary sphere, in the customs system and in foreign trade. On the other hand, it pro-
duced numerous problems for that part of the economy that inevitably continued to rely on
39 European Stability Initiative: Rhetoric and Reform. A Case Study of Institution Building in
Montenegro 1998-2001, Podgorica, Berlin, 1.7.2001.
40 The total debt of Montenegro amounts to $326m. The highest share of this amount is owed
to the international financial institutions ($131.9m) and to the London Club ($120.3m). The
debt to the Paris Club amounts to $46.7m. The biggest creditor among the international
financial organisations is the World Bank, which claims $116.2m. Data taken from Monet,
No. 8, April 2002.
41 Independent researchers in Serbia, gathered in Group 17, estimated the direct damage from
the NATO bombing in Serbia as over $100bn. See Mlađan Dinkić (ed.): Završni račun,
Ekonomske posledice NATO bombardovanja: procena štete i sredstava potrebnih za
ekonomsku rekonstrukciju Jugoslavije, Belgrade: Stubovi kulture, Grupa 17, 1999).
42 The Yugoslav dinar became proscribed in Montenegro primarily as a result of inflation.
According to data from the federal Statistical Office, it devalued as many as 23 times since
1952 and, in addition, was six times denominated.
43 See also the chapter by Beáta Huszka on The dispute over independence in this volume.
152
The economic development of Montenegro
co-operation with the Serbian economy. Payments for goods that crossed the border between
Serbia and Montenegro, for example, had to be effected via third countries. Imports from
Serbia account for 13 per cent of total imports in Montenegro while exports to Serbia re-
presented 8 per cent of total exports from Montenegro during 2000. Thus, the degree of co-
operation between the Montenegrin economy and Serbia is today lower than that between
Montenegro and Croatia. 44
However, the collapse of the regime of Slobodan Milo šević shifted the course of events
very swiftly. The international community turned its support toward newly democratic
Serbia, while Montenegro started to sustain damage as a result of its uncooperativeness
with the new position of the international community. It turned out that the pro-reform
rhetoric was insufficient and that the authorities in Montenegro had not the political will
to take the opportunity provided by a climate which was favourable to the launching of ac-
tual transitional changes. Owing to a series of radical reform laws and abundant foreign
aid, the Serbian economy has been rapidly recovering and has begun to surpass Monte-
negro in almost all the parameters of economic development.
Legislative reforms
Reforms in Montenegro have been carried out unevenly and in an unsynchronised man-
ner. Ownership transformation has been completed, but the fundamental laws – the Law
on Enterprises, the Law on Elements of Labour Relations – have long remained the same,
inherited from the socialist system and, still worse, from the system of SFRY, a state that
no longer exists. More serious legislative activities in Montenegro have started since
1997, following the split in the Democratic Party of Socialists and the democratic stream
which then prevailed. 45 Such a discrepancy in the reform processes has caused enormous
problems for the entire process of transition.
The absence of systemic laws has been, for many years, offset by the continual modifi-
cation of and amendments to republic laws. In consequence, an unregulated legal environ-
ment and rule by decree have created an atmosphere of overall insecurity and uncertainty,
privileging certain parts of the economic structure and fostering corruption and nepotism.
Such conditions have had a very adverse effect on the business climate and have reduced
the interest of potential foreign investors for investment in Montenegro. Laws on eco-
nomic companies, on insolvency and on employment, and a series of laws in the monetary
sphere, were adopted in Montenegro only at the beginning of 2002. The Law on Eco-
nomic Companies is a Montenegrin variant of the federal Law on Enterprises under which
the official name for enterprises (joint stock companies) in Montenegro is now economic
company, while the Law on Insolvency substituted the former federal Law on Bankruptcy
and Liquidation. However, the new Labour Law and laws on the reform of the pensions
system and on the reform of the health system are still in preparation.
44 Monet, No. 8, April 2002. This information, however, should be taken with a degree of reser-
vation because, due to payment transactions with Serbia being unregulated, many enterprises
from Montenegro have organised trade with enterprises in Serbia via third countries, most
frequently Republika Srpska and Croatia. This means that trade with Serbia is shown in the
official statistics as trade with other countries.
45 Even before that, however, federal laws had no particular importance in Montenegro.
153
Dragan Đurić
However, the most striking example of the repeated discontinuity in the economic poli-
cies of the authorities in Montenegro concerns its offshore laws.
A shortcut to h(e)aven
Searching for an answer to the question of how, after the lifting of sanctions, transition
processes could be accelerated and foreign capital attracted, the government of Montene-
gro prepared in 1996 a global development project entitled ‘Montenegro – A Free Eco-
nomic Zone’.
In co-operation with foreign experts, a special law on foreign companies and individu-
als was drafted, along with a separate study on the economic justification of the develop-
ment of Montenegro as an international offshore centre.
The project included numerous forms and modalities of arrangements for special busi-
ness operations. In addition to offshore firms, 46 there exist flagged-out shipping opportu-
nities, free warehouses, ports, airports, open zones for tourists, etc. The law, in addition,
guaranteed that:
The rights, reliefs, facilities and other benefits stipulated by this law cannot be changed for
a period of 15 years’.
The explanation for turning Montenegro into an offshore zone was that it could not pro-
pel its economy after the lifting of sanctions without foreign capital, that capital could no
longer be provided by taking out expensive loans and that effort had to be made to create
an attractive social and economic environment in which foreign capital would flow into
the republic. Using various business operation systems within this project, Montenegro
was promised by the government that it would become an attractive area for foreign capi-
tal which would generate domestic resources and introduce new products, programmes,
the transfer of technology, know-how and international standards, and which would en-
sure the growth of competitiveness of the local economy and its necessary changes in both
the organisational, managerial and information sense. Of course, all this would also con-
tribute to the considerable influx of foreign currency and the employment of a large pro-
portion of the local labour force. 47
This was, therefore, the Montenegrin way to a ‘tariff and tax heaven’. The project led
immediately to suspicions in Serbia and at the federal level. The Constitutional Court of
FRY immediately proclaimed the special law unconstitutional, and comments came from
Belgrade which likened Montenegro to Slovenia’s secessionist policy in the late 1980s.
The Montenegrin authorities, however, disregarded such comments. Nevertheless, the ul-
timate outcome was not particularly successful. By 2002, there were 1 200 offshore com-
panies registered in Montenegro, including about 500 offshore banks. This prompted nu-
merous comments from international consultants that Montenegro was being used for
uncontrolled money laundering through offshore banks. 48 Thus, the ‘Cypriot dream’ in
Montenegro was short-lived. Seven years later, on 18 June 2002, at the request of the go-
46 These are companies that cannot operate on the territory of the state on which they are regis-
tered because they enjoy special customs and tax benefits.
47 Monitor, 7.6.2002, p. 34.
48 Monitor, 5.7.2002, p. 30.
154
The economic development of Montenegro
vernment of Montenegro, the Constitutional Court declared that the provision on the dura-
tion of the Law was unconstitutional, with the explanation that it had created a monopolis-
tic position for foreign banks. Thus, the entire development of offshore business in
Montenegro was simply ruled null and void. Bearing in mind that offshore banks have
their seat only in Montenegro, but that they do not have the right to develop their business
there, the large number of offshore banks has had virtually no effect either on the econ-
omy or the general public.
49 See Sabrina Petra Ramet: Nationalism and Federalism in Yugoslavia, 1962-1991, (Blooming-
ton: Indiana University Press, 1992), pp. 150-161.
50 Centre for Democracy and Human Rights: Transition in Montenegro: Legislation, Media and
Privatisation, Report No. 9 (January-March 2001), Podgorica; available at: www.cedem.cg.yu/
cedem.htm.
51 Akcija: Osvrt na reforme u Crnoj Gori, unpublished study, Podgorica: February 2002.
155
Dragan Đurić
156
The economic development of Montenegro
The differences are even more obvious in monetary policy. Montenegro has introduced
the euro while Serbia has retained the national currency and the possibility of the issue of
money. Returning Montenegro to the dinar, according to Montenegrin economists, 53
would imply the closing of the Montenegrin economy, owing to its high dependence on
fluctuations in the dinar exchange rate, and would greatly restrict the freedom of import
and export now enjoyed by enterprises and individuals in Montenegro.
The high dependence of the Montenegrin economy on relations with Serbia also no
longer holds true. In the total imports of Montenegro, products from Serbia account for
10.6 per cent, with a steadily declining share in recent years. Montenegro has already sub-
stituted the import of products from Serbia partly from its own production and partly
through imports from other countries. In total exports, export to Serbia accounts for 4.4
per cent. Montenegro has, gradually, become more integrated at the regional level.
Neither can the cost that Montenegro would incur due to the existence of the federal
state be neglected. The federal budget for 2002 would cost Montenegro Euro 75m-80m.
Conclusion
After the signing of the Belgrade Agreement in March 2002 on relations between Serbia
and Montenegro, a new phase started on the Montenegrin political scene. The effects of
the new political instability may not yet be sufficiently visible, but it is evident that the
Belgrade Agreement, and the long process of preparations and the enactment of a new
constitutional charter for the common state, will cause further delay in the introduction of
the necessary reform actions. In addition, the limited timeframe for which a joint state is
required before one party can secede is further likely to delay the reform process.
Numerous reform laws prepared by the government have already been delayed by the
collapse of the minority government and preparations for early elections which have had
inevitable consequences for the quality of reform in Montenegro. In addition, in the ab-
sence of domestic capital, privatisation in Montenegro has had to rely on direct foreign in-
vestment; foreign capital is, in consequence of the political instability and risk, unlikely to
flow into Montenegro, at least not in the required amounts, for the foreseeable future.
The economy of Montenegro has, for many years, functioned as a hostage of politics
and, in all likelihood, it will continue to bear this burden on its shoulders.
53 Monitor, 8.3.2002.
157
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
1 Statistički godišnjak Republike Crne Gore 2000 (Podgorica: Republički zavod za statistiku,
2000), p. 248.
2 On the ambiguities of Montenegrin identity, see Srđa Pavlović´s chapter in this volume:
Who are Montenegrins? Statehood, identity and civic society.
3 The 1991 census, carried out in an atmosphere of nationalist tensions, did not precisely
reflect the real situation and somewhat under-represented the number of minorities. The cen-
sus scheduled for 2001 was postponed so that it would not interfere with the preliminary par-
liamentary elections. The new parliamentary and presidential elections in 2002 similarly
prevented the census from being carried out.
159
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
jority population has been Christian Orthodox, while Montenegro‘s minorities are Muslim
(Bosniaks-Muslims; around two-thirds of Albanians; most Roma); and Catholic (Croats;
around one-third of Albanians). Montenegro‘s minorities can also be defined territorially
to some degree since they are generally concentrated on the periphery of the republic (Al-
banians along the border with Albania; most Bosniaks-Muslims along the northern fron-
tier with Serbia in the Montenegrin part of the Sandžak region; Croats in the Boka Kotor-
ska close to the border with Croatia). Linguistically, Bosniaks-Muslims and Croats speak
the same language as the majority population, even though different appellations for it
(Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Montenegrin) have been used instead of the previous term,
Serbo-Croatian, by different groups and individuals since the break-up of Yugoslavia. The
Albanians and most Roma differ from the majority population also in linguistic terms, al-
though knowledge of the majority language is widespread.
Before the break-up of socialist Yugoslavia, the Titoist categorisation concerning na-
tional and ethnic groups was applied in Montenegro. The category of narod (nation) was
applied to the constitutive South Slavic nations – Croats, Serbs, Slovenes, Macedonians,
Montenegrins and Muslims. The term narodnost (before 1963 this was nacionalna man-
jina – national minority) designated nationalities which had their matrix state outside Yu-
goslavia (Albanians, Hungarians, Italians, Turks etc.). Finally, the category of etnička
grupa (ethnic group) described ‘stateless’ minorities such as Roma and (after 1948 quite
awkwardly) Jews. 4
The 1992 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (composed of just two re-
publics, Serbia and Montenegro) used the designation of nacionalne manjine (national mi-
norities), while the Montenegrin republican Constitution from the same year talked about
nacionalne i etničke manjine (national and ethnic minorities). The break-up of socialist
Yugoslavia made the position of Croats and Bosniaks-Muslims particularly problematic
since both groups lost their previously-privileged status of constitutive nations as regards
the whole federation. A special document on the position of minorities, ratified by all
Montenegrin parliamentary parties in September 1997, used the new designation of man-
jinski narodi (minority nations), which has been applied to Bosniaks-Muslims, Albanians
and Croats. The primary reason was to underline that the three groups have been autoch-
thonous in parts of the territory of Montenegro, distinguishing them from ethnic minori-
ties which have resulted from migration (Roma and small groups such as Macedonians,
Hungarians and Slovenes). 5
160
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
clared that they belonged to the ‘Yugoslav’ nationality. The majority of Montenegro‘s
Bosniaks-Muslims 6 live in the Montenegrin part of the Sandžak region in the north of the
republic. This historical region was divided between Serbia and Montenegro after the Bal-
kan wars of 1912-1913, while a substantial number of Bosniaks-Muslims also live in the
neighbouring Serbian part of Sandžak. In Montenegro, the largest Bosniak-Muslim popu-
lation can be found in the municipality of Bijelo Polje, which is the most important centre
in the northern part of Montenegro (22 977, 41.6%). Bosniaks-Muslims form a majority in
two municipalities, Ro žaje (19 983, 86.9%) and Plav (11 199, 58.1%). Furthermore, Bos-
niaks-Muslims represent a significant share of population in the municipalities of Berane
(11 769, 30.3%) and Pljevlja (6 964, 17.6%). A certain part of the Bosniak-Muslim popu-
lation also resides in the south of the republic, especially in the municipalities of Podgo-
rica (7 622, 5.1%) and Bar (5 136, 13.77%).7
Montenegro‘s Bosniaks-Muslims are indigenous, descendants of that part of the local
Slavic population which accepted Islam during the long period of Ottoman rule. 8 The Otto-
man administrative, cultural and religious presence in this part of the Balkans was stronger
in the lower altitudes and towns than in the mountains. It was in such regions where the
process of Islamisation succeeded more significantly. The tribes of Old Montenegro and the
Brda (literally, Highlands) were not greatly touched by this process and retained the Chris-
tian Orthodox faith. These regions gradually developed central rule and an administration in-
dependent of the Ottomans, forming therefore the core of the Montenegrin state. Substantial
numbers of Slavic Muslims came under Montenegrin dominance after the territorial expan-
sion and international recognition of Montenegro in 1878, while an even greater number of
Muslims resided in the regions absorbed by the monarchy in 1912.
There have been both elements of co-existence and conflict between Montenegrins and
Bosniaks-Muslims in their turbulent history. During the period of Montenegro‘s indepen-
dence, a great number of Bosniaks-Muslims emigrated from the newly absorbed areas,
mostly to Turkey. The proportionate number of Bosniaks-Muslims was greatly reduced in
many of the traditional areas of their settlement (Podgorica), while some areas were com-
pletely re-populated by people of the Orthodox faith (Nik šić, Kolašin). The massive emigra-
tion continued during the first Yugoslavia and, partly, even in the Communist federation. 9
Similar to other areas of the Balkans, occasional excesses, pogroms and anti-Islamic preju-
6 There is an ongoing debate concerning the appropriate appellation for the largest minority in
Montenegro. This is described at the end of this section. We have chosen to use the dual term
Bosniak-Muslim instead of taking sides with either the proponents of the term ‘Bosniak’ or
those who defend the name Muslim.
7 Statistički godišnjak, p. 248. It is generally acknowledged that a number of Slavic Muslims
in the south of Montenegro declare Montenegrin nationality and describe themselves as
Montenegrins of Islamic faith (Crnogorac islamske vjeroispovijesti).
8 Ejup Mušović: Muslimani od pada Zete (1499) (Novi Pazar: Muzej Ras, 1997), is the best
short overview of Bosniak-Muslim history in Montenegro. The journal Almanah, published
in Podgorica, is also an excellent source on the history, traditions and culture of Montene-
gro’s Bosniaks-Muslims.
9 The minority position of Bosniaks-Muslims and the feeling of insecurity were definitely impor-
tant reasons in the large-scale migration. The dominant ethnic Montenegrin and Serb population,
however, was similarly affected by large-scale economically and socially motivated migrations
throughout the 19th and 20th centuries (to Serbia, USA, etc.). For more on the Bosniak-Muslim
migrations, see Safet Bandžović: Iseljavanje Muslimana iz Sandžaka (Sarajevo, 1991).
161
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
dices have also negatively affected the co-existence of the Slavic Orthodox and Muslim po-
pulations in mixed areas. However, there is also an important tradition of co-existence which
has served as a powerful intellectual argument for the proponents of ethnic tolerance – both
Bosniak-Muslim and Montenegrin – in the past decade. There have been, as also with the re-
lations between Montenegrins and Albanians, certain traditions of mutual respect between
the two communities, based on shared patriarchal and moral values which persisted much
longer in Montenegro (and northern Albania) than in other parts of the Balkans. The politics
of the last ruler of independent Montenegro, King Nikola (1860-1918), regarding religious
and ethnic minorities was relatively liberal for the time. His era, far from being ideal, never-
theless established some basic precedents for further co-existence. 10
After the incorporation of regions with substantial numbers of Muslims into the Mon-
tenegrin state in 1878, an Islamic religious community of Montenegro was founded to or-
ganise the religious life of Muslims (mostly Slavic and Albanian). It was the first organi-
sation of such a type in a predominantly Christian Balkan country. 11 After the creation of
Yugoslavia, Islamic believers in Montenegro were organised by the Islamic community of
Yugoslavia, which ceased to function after the dissolution of the federal state at the begin-
ning of the 1990s. In 1994, an independent Islamic Community of Montenegro ( Islamska
zajednica Crne Gore, IZCG), with a seat in Podgorica, was founded. The religious orga-
nisation which covers the entire territory of the republic has been headed by the ethnically
Bosniak-Muslim reis-ul-ulema,12 Idriz Demirović, since it was founded. However, there
has been a controversial competition for religious control of the Montenegrin part of the
Sandžak region between the IZCG and the mešihat of Sandžak, with its seat in Novi
Pazar, headed by muftija Muamer Zukorlić. In 1993, the Islamic mešihat of Sandžak was
founded with the aim of representing Islamic communities from both the Serb and the
Montenegrin parts of the historical region. The Islamic mešihat of Sandžak formally be-
came a part of the Islamic Community of Bosnia-Herzegovina (IZBH), headed by reis-ul-
ulema, Mustafa Cerić, in 1997.13 Through Novi Pazar, religious authority over the Mon-
tenegrin part of Sand žak is claimed by the IZBH. Despite that, the IZCG, supported by
Montenegro’s government, fully controls religious affairs over the whole territory of the
republic. For all practical purposes, the IZBH exercises its authority only in the northern,
Serbian part of Sand žak.14
At the beginning of the 1990s, political developments within the ethnic Bosniak-Mus-
lim community in Montenegro somewhat resembled developments in the Serbian part of
Sandžak and Bosnia-Herzegovina, although it later followed a more independent path.
Similar to Bosnia and the Serbian part of Sand žak, the Party of Democratic Action
162
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
(Stranka demokratske akcije, SDA) was founded in Montenegro with the aim of homoge-
nising ethnic Muslim voters and representing their interests in that republic. The SDA of
Montenegro, represented by Harun Had žić, Rasim Šahman, Rifat Veskovi ć and others,
gained some support among the Muslims of Sand žak in the first half of the 1990s. In the
historically and geographically specific municipality of Plav, where a Bosniak-Muslim
majority lives intermingled with Albanians, it was not the ethnically Bosniak SDA but the
local Party of National Equality (Stranka nacionalne ravnopravnosti) which won the sup-
port of Bosniaks-Muslims in the towns of Plav, Gusinje and their vicinity. 15 The SDA par-
ticipated in the republican parliamentary elections of 1996 and 1998 without receiving
enough support to enter the republican parliament. 16
Apart from the small ethnically defined parties, in the first half of the 1990s many Bos-
niaks-Muslims supported the Liberal Alliance of Montenegro ( Liberalni savez Crne Gore,
LSCG), a multi-ethnic independence-oriented opposition party. A part of Bosniak-Mus-
lim voters also supported the Social Democratic Party (Socijaldemokratska partija, SDP)
of a similar multi-ethnic, pacifist and pro-independence orientation.
The first half of the 1990s, the time of increased Serb nationalism in Montenegro and
the war in neighbouring Bosnia-Herzegovina, was also the period of the most serious inci-
dents which affected Bosniaks-Muslims. Apart from various forms of repression by a
Montenegrin regime which was firmly allied at the time with that of Slobodan Milo šević,
the gravest incidents were caused by the activities of the Serb paramilitary units which
were also operating in the Serb-controlled part of Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Serb parami-
litaries which were involved in the ethnic cleansing of Bosniaks-Muslims in Bosnia also
attempted to reduce the Bosniak-Muslim presence in the regions of Montenegro and Ser-
bia which lay adjacent to the Bosnian border. The aim of this strategy was, probably, to
prevent any possible connection between Bosniaks-Muslims in Sandžak and those in Bos-
nia-Herzegovina.
In August 1992, several hundred members of Serb paramilitary forces, led by Milika
Dačević, occupied the Montenegrin town of Pljevlja, overpowered the Montenegrin po-
lice, encircled the town with artillery and intimidated the local Muslim population which,
justly, feared the danger of physical extermination. The paramilitaries vacated the town
only after the personal intervention of Yugoslav President, Dobrica Ćosić, and the Mon-
tenegrin President, Momir Bulatović.17
In February 1993, Serb paramilitary forces ethnically cleansed the rural region of Bu-
kovica, north of Pljevlja, of local Bosniaks-Muslims. Several people were killed, some
were kidnapped and taken to Bosnia, while others were forced to flee deeper into Mon-
tenegrin territory. The houses of local Bosniaks-Muslims were burned. The expulsion of
some 800 Bosniaks-Muslims from 30 villages in the Bukovica region, which included
15 Xavier Bougarel: ‘L’islam bosniaque, entre identité culturelle et idéologie politique’, Xavier
Bougarel and Nathalie Clayer (eds.): Le Nouvel Islam balkanique. Les musulmans, acteurs
du post-communisme 1990 – 2000 (Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 2001), p. 87. Most acti-
vists from the Party of National Equality later merged with the Social Democratic Party.
16 See the section on Albanians for information about co-operation between Bosniak-Muslim
and Albanian political subjects in the period 1990-1992.
17 Crnovršanin and Sadiković, op. cit., pp. 708-709.
163
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
several murders, constituted the gravest incident against minorities in Montenegro during
the 1990s. Almost ten years later, the refugees have not yet been able to return home. 18
Several days after the ethnic cleansing of the Bukovica region, on 27 February 1993, 18
Bosniaks from Montenegro and Serbia, as well as one ethnic Croat, were kidnapped by
Serb paramilitaries and massacred on a regular train travelling from Belgrade to Bar. The
crime, which took place in Štrpci, a narrow stretch of Serb-controlled Bosnian territory
through which the line between Montenegro and Serbia passes, received more publicity
than the ethnic cleansing of Bukovica. However, only one of the murderers, Neboj ša
Ranisavljević, has so far been captured; he was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2002 by
the municipal court in Bijelo Polje. 19
Many incidents were caused by Serb paramilitaries beyond the control of the Montene-
grin government, but there were also a few cases of serious harassment of Bosniaks-Mus-
lims for which representatives of the official state can be held responsible. At the begin-
ning of the war in Bosnia, the Montenegrin leadership entertained cordial relations with
the Bosnian Serb leadership of Radovan Karadžić. In the summer of 1992, following an
official request of the Bosnian Serb institutions, the Montenegrin police captured dozens
of Bosniaks-Muslims from Bosnia in various places in Montenegro, including seaside re-
sorts where some of the Bosniaks-Muslims were on holiday or where they were taking
refuge from the Bosnian conflict (many of them had already acquired official refugee sta-
tus in Montenegro). These Bosnian nationals were arrested and extradited to the Bosnian
Serb forces which subsequently slaughtered them. 20
The repression of local Bosniak-Muslim representatives culminated in a political trial
of SDA activists in 1994. In February 1994, 21 leading SDA representatives in Montene-
gro including the party chair, Harun Had žić, were accused of separatist activities. The po-
litical trial, which took place in Bijelo Polje, was closely connected with the similar trial
of SDA activists in Novi Pazar, Serbia, who had already been arrested on identical
grounds in May 1993. Alleged members of the artificially constructed ‘Bijelo Polje group’
underwent repeated and brutal torture while in prison. After the Dayton peace agreement,
at the beginning of 1996, Montenegrin President Momir Bulatović granted amnesty and
financial compensation to the Bosniak political prisoners who had spent two years in jail.
The government responsible for the staging of the trial thereby acknowledged its purely
political nature.21
164
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
Support for ethnically-defined Bosniak-Muslim political parties such as SDA and their
demands (including territorial autonomy for the Sand žak region) was never as widespread
and unanimous in Montenegro as it was in the Serbian part of Sand žak. On the contrary,
the support of multi-ethnic parties which advocated Montenegrin independence became a
very important factor in the political life of Bosniaks-Muslims. Together with other fac-
tors, it further marginalised the position of the ethnically-defined parties in the second half
of the 1990s. After distancing himself from Slobodan Milošević and Momir Bulatović,
Milo Đukanović increasingly focused on Bosniak-Muslim support. Đukanović and his
Democratic Party of Socialists (Demokratska partija socijalista, DPS) included notions of
multi-ethnicity, tolerance, pro-western political orientation, economic reform and greater
political autonomy from Belgrade. The party programme – spread massively through the
state-owned media – appealed to the Bosniaks-Muslims, who overwhelmingly voted for
Đukanović and the DPS-led coalition in the 1997/1998 presidential and parliamentary
elections as well as in several subsequent elections. Harun Had žić, SDA chair, had ap-
pealed in vain for Bosniaks-Muslims to abstain. Disappointed and marginalised within
SDA, Hadžić left the party to form a new one, the International Democratic Union
(Internacijonalna demokratska unija, IDU). The IDU, despite being supported by the
SDA of Sulejman Ugljanin, has since remained without any real influence outside
Hadžić´s hometown of Rožaje. The SDA, headed next by Rifat Veskovi ć, instead joined
the DPS-dominated coalition government of Filip Vujanovi ć.22 After Milo Đukanović
and DPS assumed the political platform of ethnic tolerance and embarked on the pro-inde-
pendence course in 1997-98, the Liberal Alliance similarly experienced a reduction in
Bosniak-Muslim votes in favour of the ruling DPS and SDP. 23 Despite their continued
commitment to a multi-ethnic society, the Liberals have not been able to regain the confi-
dence of more significant numbers of Bosniak-Muslim voters. The party‘s political for-
tunes in the north of Montenegro have subsequently been minimal. 24
Several smaller ethnic parties representing Bosniaks-Muslims have had marginal influ-
ence on the Montenegrin political scene. In addition to low electoral results, these parties
had been plagued by personal conflicts. Thus far, the parties had enjoyed limited electoral
success only at the local level in the two municipalities which have a Bosniak-Muslim
majority. In the 2002 local elections, SDA received 13.07% of the votes in Plav, while
two coalitions of several smaller parties, the Bosniak Democratic Coalition ( Bošnjačka
demokratska koalicija) and the Bosniak-Muslim Democratic Coalition (Bošnjačka-musli-
manska demokratska koalicija) won respectively 21.4% and 4.01% of the votes in the mu-
nicipality of Rožaje. Even so, there was greater support for multi-ethnic parties even in
these two municipalities. In Plav, DPS and SDP each received more votes than the SDA;
while in Rožaje, the DPS overwhelmingly won with 51.18% of the vote while the SDP re-
ceived 13.66%.25
165
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
Similarly in the 20 October 2002 parliamentary elections, two ethnic coalitions – the
Bosniak Democratic Coalition (Bošnjačka demokratska koalicija) of Harun Hadžić and
the Bosniak Coalition (Bošnjačka koalicija) of Kemal Purišić won just 2 480 and 2 173
votes respectively. Harun Had žić blamed the lack of “national consciousness and political
maturity” of the Bosniaks-Muslims for the results. 26
It is certain that many Bosniaks-Muslims (together with other national minorities) have
seen Milo Đukanović and his administration as a guarantee of ethnic stability and a peaceful
life after the war in Bosnia and during the Kosovo conflict and the last years of the
Milošević rule.27 Despite the increased political and military pressure on the Montenegrin
government from Belgrade during and after the Kosovo crisis, the Bosniak-Muslim popula-
tion felt somewhat safer during this period of serious tension than in the first half of the
1990s. The massive presence of Montenegrin police loyal to President Đukanović protected
the Bosniak-Muslim population from the excesses of the Yugoslav Army and Serb paramil-
itaries. In the most peripheral municipality of Ro žaje, the Montenegrin police distributed
weapons to the local civilian population so that it would not be defenceless in case it was at-
tacked by armed formations loyal to Milo šević. The Bosniak-Muslim population certainly
appreciated these signs of protection from the republican government, as well as its decision
not to participate in the Kosovo war and the military conflict with NATO.
However, voices critical of the Montenegrin government have been raised by the mar-
ginalised ethnic parties and by Bosniak-Muslim politicians from the Serbian portion of
Sandžak, an area where Bosniak-Muslim support for ethnic parties has been almost abso-
lute for years. Politicians and intellectuals in Novi Pazar have repeatedly claimed that the
Montenegrin government ‘manipulates’ the Bosniak-Muslim minority and that it has
managed to repress the ‘authentic’ representation of Bosniaks-Muslims, i.e. the ethni-
cally-defined parties. Similarly, Bosniak-Muslim representatives from the Serbian dis-
tricts of the Sandžak region, as well as some (though not all) Bosniak-Muslim ethnic par-
ties from Montenegro, have been concerned that the majority of Montenegrin Bosniaks-
Muslims support the idea of Montenegrin independence. If this project was realised, it
would further confirm the division of the historical Sand žak region. The Novi Pazar elite
therefore, somewhat paradoxically, supports the position of Belgrade on the question of
Montenegrin independence. Charges of the ‘manipulation’ of Montenegrin Bosniaks-
Muslims by independence-minded political subjects have often been raised. Despite that,
Bosniaks-Muslims living in Montenegro, as well as other minorities, have overwhel-
mingly supported the restoration of Montenegro‘s independent statehood and have de-
monstrated this with their electoral preferences and the engagement of their elites in
favour of this idea, as well as in public opinion polls. 28
It is clear that Montenegrin political representation has not been favourable to the estab-
lishment of ethnically-defined parties of the Bosniak-Muslim minority. It has consistently
avoided both the designation ‘Bosniak’ for the Bosniak-Muslim minority as well as no-
26 Sanapress, 24.10.2002.
27 Veselin Pavićević: ‘Muslimani u Crnoj Gori u svjetlu etničkih i socijalnih distanci prema
istraživanjima CEDEM-a’, Almanah No. 13-14, 2000, p. 129.
28 Pavićević, “Muslimani u Crnoj Gori”, p. 129, 131. According to the CEDEM statistics ana-
lysed by Pavićević, only 2.3 % of Bosniaks-Muslims favoured the preservation of the federal
state in 2000.
166
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
tions of the Sandžak region, which is usually referred to as ’the north’. 29 Many critical
voices, from within as well as from outside Montenegro, also point to Bosniaks-Muslims
continuing to be gravely under-represented in most sectors of public life despite official
commitment to ‘multi-culturalism’ and ‘multi-ethnic tolerance’. In the last several years,
however, Bosniaks-Muslims have been represented in the Montenegrin government by
several ministers and other government officials of lesser rank. There have been several
Bosniak-Muslim deputies in the Montenegrin parliament and Rifat Rastoder (SDP) has
served as vice-chair of the chamber. Bosniaks-Muslims have been numerous in the police
forces although they are under-represented amongst officer grades. There have also been
Bosniaks-Muslims appointed to the judiciary (being members of DPS or the SDP).
Despite these visible achievements, Bosniaks-Muslims are still under-represented at all
levels of state institutions as well as in public services, local administration, etc. 30
The fundamental discord concerning Bosniak-Muslim political representation and po-
litical preferences is quite clear and has a wider significance for the whole region. One
side believes that the only adequate representation of a national minority is through ethni-
cally-defined parties and their representatives. If a national minority does not demonstrate
political allegiance to its ‘own’ ethnic parties, something must be wrong. It is probably
manipulated and harassed by the majority, or morally and nationally corrupt, or else it is
collectively ‘unconscious’. When the outside forms of oppression cease and the minority
becomes conscious of itself, the natural state of affairs will return – it will support the eth-
nic parties. In contrast, the other side maintains that ethnically-defined parties only serve
to petrify nationalist prejudices and lead to ‘ghettoisation’ and the isolation of the respec-
tive national communities. The right solution is the integration of national minorities
within the multi-ethnic parties on the basis of their general political programme rather
than the ethnic (or ‘tribal’) agenda. Neither solution automatically guarantees that the in-
terest of the minority group will be satisfied, since too much depends on the position of
the majority or the dominant political subjects and personalities.
Since the beginning of the 1990s, Bosniak-Muslim intellectuals in Montenegro have
been involved in debates concerning the appellation of their nation. These debates have
been incited by the similar debates originating in Sarajevo at the beginning of the war in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Similarly to Montenegrins and Macedonians, the development
of the modern national consciousness of Bosniaks-Muslims was fully achieved only in the
20th century. Under Communist Yugoslavia, the existence of their separate ethnic identity
was recognised by the state. The Serbo-Croatian speaking inhabitants of Bosnia-Herze-
govina, Serbia, Montenegro and Kosovo who adhered to the Islamic faith were called
Muslims (Muslimani – the capital ‘M’ distinguishes them as an ethnic category, as op-
posed to the term muslimani which identifies the adherents of the Islamic religion in ge-
neral). In 1993, Bosnian Muslim intellectuals proposed the term Bosniak ( Bošnjak) as
more fitting than Muslim, citing two main reasons. A designation based purely on the tra-
ditional religion was not seen as fitting in modern society since many members of the
29 The notion of “the north” also includes other areas which did not form a part of the historical
Sandžak of Novi Pazar (Kolašin, Žabljak, Mojkovac etc.). In Serbia, the notion of Sandžak
has been repressed more systematically. The region is archaically referred to as Raška after
the medieval Serbian kingdom which flourished in the area before the Ottoman conquest.
30 Vukadinović, op. cit. p. 43.
167
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
Muslim nation can, at the same time, be atheist or religiously indifferent. Secondly, the
name ‘Bosniak’ used to be the traditional and widely-used term in the more distant past,
although it was scarcely used during the 20th century. The relationship between the term
‘Bosniak’ and the land of Bosnia as the ‘mother country’ ( matična država) of all Bos-
niaks (therefore, including those living in Sandžak and elsewhere outside the boundaries
of Bosnia) is also evident.
In Montenegro, the debate has been particularly lively. One part of the Bosniak-Muslim
elite fully accepted the new term. The acceptance of ‘Bosniak’ was demonstrated by the
founding of a national cultural organisation (modelled after similar organisations which
have existed in Slavic countries since the 19th century), Matica Bošnjaka Crne Gore, 31
headed by Hamdija Šarkinović. However, one part of the intellectual elite did not accept
the designation, arguing that ‘Bosniak’ was an artificial term in the service of political in-
strumentalisation and the dominance of Sarajevo-based nationalists over Sand žak. In ad-
dition, no-one may have attempted to deny the affinity between the Slavic Muslims of
Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina, but the opponents of the term ‘Bosniak’ have ar-
gued that there are, indeed, many differences between both groups and the countries they
inhabit. Moreover, they also expressed fears that the use of the term ‘Bosniak’ would un-
dermine the autochthonous status of the minority in Montenegro which would then be
considered merely as a diaspora of Bosniaks from Bosnia and be treated accordingly by
the state authorities. Supporters of the term ‘Muslim’ have centred around Matica musli-
manska Crne Gore, represented by Avdul Kurpejovi ć.32
It seems that ‘Bosniak’ has been slowly prevailing in Montenegro within the Bosniak-
Muslim community itself, similarly to Bosnia and the Serbian part of Sandžak, while the
majority society and, especially, the government has been more reluctant to accept the term.
However, the sometimes heated debates about the name itself do not in any case signify the
construction of two or more different ethnic groups. There is no doubt that the national con-
sciousness of the group as such remains united. Most representatives of Bosniaks-Muslims
have so far been using both terms at the same time (Bošnjaci-Muslimani or Muslimani-
Bošnjaci) in order not to offend any of the factions. The problem of the name will probably
be resolved by natural preferences in the long run rather than by arbitrary decisions such as
the consensus of the intellectual elite or state intervention and codification.
Many Bosniaks-Muslims have greatly contributed to the democratisation of Monte-
negro and the development of a more tolerant society in recent years. The activities of
most Bosniak-Muslim intellectuals have not been confined to a narrow ethnic audience.
There has been a great deal of co-operation between Bosniak-Muslim and Montenegrin
intellectuals in the framework of different independent institutions and media which have
supported the ideas of open society, democratic reforms and ethnic tolerance since the be-
ginning of the 1990s. Ethnic Bosniaks-Muslims from different segments of public life,
such as writer Husein Ba šić, historian Šerbo Rastoder, journalist Esad Ko čan and many
others, have been respected by the Montenegrin majority as some of Montenegro‘s most
eminent intellectuals of the last decade. Membership of the Almanah Association, which
168
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
Albanians
Montenegro‘s Albanians reside along the republican borders with Albania and Kosovo. Ac-
cording to the 1991 census, there were 40 415 (6.57%) Albanians living in Montenegro. As
in the case of other minorities, this number is probably somewhat under-estimated. Most Al-
banians reside in the southernmost coastal municipality of Ulcinj (17 469, 72.19%) while a
smaller number of Albanians can also be found in the neighbouring littoral municipality of
Bar (4 619, 12.38%). Most Albanians living by the Adriatic are adherents of the Islamic
faith while a smaller proportion belongs to the Roman Catholic Church. In the Podgorica
municipality, 12 777 (7.73%) people have declared Albanian nationality. A certain number
of Albanians resides in the city of Podgorica itself; the majority lives in the town of Tuzi and
its vicinity in the south of the Podgorica municipality, in a region known as Malesia. A large
number of the Albanians living in Malesia is Catholic, Tuzi being their most important cen-
tre, but Muslim Albanians can also be found in the area. Another area of Albanian settlement
is the municipality of Plav (4 032, 20.89%), which is surrounded by Albanian and Kosovo
borders. In Plav, Muslim Albanians live alongside the Bosniaks-Muslims who form the ma-
jority in the municipality. Finally, some Albanians (900, 3.91%) can also be found in the
similarly Bosniak-Muslim dominated municipality of Ro žaje.33
Similarly to Bosniaks-Muslims, the regions with an Albanian presence were incorpo-
rated into Montenegro in two successive waves, in 1878/80 and after the Balkan wars of
1912-13. The Albanians generally resented the inclusion of their ethnic space into the
Montenegrin state, which could be carried out only after breaking the considerable resist-
ance of the local Albanian population (especially in the case of Plav and Gusinje, which
managed to avoid inclusion into Montenegro in 1878 and were incorporated only after the
Balkan wars). The Albanian population which fell under Montenegrin dominance resem-
bled Montenegrins in many aspects of tribal structure, moral code and patriarchal values
which were almost identical in the case of both Montenegrin and north Albanian tribes.
However, Albanians also stood apart because of their distinct language. It is indeed the
Albanian language which, together with historical reminiscences, forms the key element
of the Albanian national consciousness which is shared by the various Albanian commu-
nities living in the western Balkans. The same is true for the religiously, culturally and ge-
ographically diverse Albanian communities in Montenegro which, nevertheless, share Al-
banian national consciousness despite the many differences.
A larger part of Montenegro’s Albanians is of Islamic faith. The Islamic Community of
Montenegro (Bashkësia islame në Mal të Zi) organises the religious life of all Muslims in
the republic, including Albanians. The smaller part of the Albanian community (around
169
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
one-third) is adherents of the Catholic Church (especially members of the Malisori tribes
around the town of Tuzi, the Shestani/ Šestani tribe on the banks of Lake Skadar and some
Albanians in the Bar and Ulcinj municipalities). Ecclesiastically, these believers are orga-
nised within the Archbishopric of Bar. The territory of the Archbishopric of Bar covers
the whole territory of Montenegro with the exception of the Bay of Kotor, which is a part
of the Archbishopric of Split. The Archbishopric of Bar gathers primarily Albanian-
speaking Catholics as well as some Slavic-speaking ones – altogether around 20 000 be-
lievers. The Archbishopric of Bar is an ancient and respectable institution which has en-
joyed the status of Archbishopric since 1089. 34 The current Archbishop, Zef Gashi, is an
ethnic Albanian.
Within the first months of political pluralism in Montenegro, in September 1990, the
first ethnic Albanian party, the Democratic League in Montenegro ( Lidhja demokratike në
Mal të Zi; Demokratski savez Albanaca u Crnoj Gori, LDMZ) was founded to protect the
interests of ethnic Albanians at a time of rising Serb nationalism and ethnic tensions. In
the first parliamentary elections, held in December 1990, the party joined forces with the
Bosniak-Muslim SDA and the Party of National Equality under the name of Democratic
Coalition (Demokratska koalicija). This coalition of ethnic minorities won 10.1 per cent
of the votes and twelve mandates in the parliament. Similar co-operation between ethnic
Albanian and Bosniak-Muslim parties, however, did not occur in subsequent periods
when the ethnic parties of both minorities participated independently in the elections. 35
The coastal town of Ulcinj has been the centre of LDMZ political activities. The party
has either controlled or else participated decisively in the local government of the Ulcinj
municipality since 1991. In 1996, a second ethnically Albanian party, the Democratic
Union of Albanians (Unioni demokratik i Shqiptarëve, UDSH; Demokratska unija Alba-
naca, DUA) was founded. 36 The LDMZ party chairman Mehmet Bardhi and the UDSH
leader Ferhat Dinosha have represented their parties in the republican parliament. Both
parties have raised very similar demands on behalf of Montenegro’s Albanians. In 2000, a
third Albanian ethnic party, the Party of Democratic Prosperity of Montenegro ( Partia e
prosperitet demokratik në Mal të Zi, PPD; Partija demokratskog prosperiteta Crne Gore,
PDP) was founded by Osman Rexha, a former mayor of Ulcinj. The Party of Democratic
Prosperity, however, gathers less supporters than the first two political parties and has, so
far, only played a marginal role.
Unlike other minorities in Montenegro, Albanians have benefited from special treatment
which has ensured the participation of Albanian deputies in the Montenegrin parliament. Be-
fore the early parliamentary elections of 1998, a new law codified the creation of a special
single electoral district composed of the most compact, predominantly ethnic Albanian areas
(the municipality of Ulcinj and the Albanian-inhabited parts of the Podgorica and Bar mu-
nicipalities). The law guaranteed that five of the total number of 78 deputies in the Montene-
grin parliament would be elected from this Albanian electoral district. In the 1998 elections,
170
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
UDSH and LDMZ each won one mandate in the new district while the multi-ethnic coalition
‘For Better Life’ (DPS, SDP and the People‘s Party, Narodna stranka, NS) won the remain-
ing three mandates.37 The situation remained almost unchanged after the October 2002 par-
liamentary election. The coalition of all the three Albanian parties won 8 498 votes and two
deputies. Before the elections in October 2002, the number of mandates provided by the Al-
banian electoral district was reduced, with the consensus of all parliamentary parties and the
approval of the international community, to four.
Ethnic Albanian voters have shown more preference for minority parties than Bosniaks-
Muslims. However, even the Albanians have, so far, favoured multi-ethnic parties over
ethnic ones. It is estimated that there are around 32 000 voters of Albanian nationality in
Montenegro.38 In the April 2001 early parliamentary elections, the three ethnic Albanian
parties won roughly one-third of the minority votes (UDSH 4 232; LDMZ 3 570; PDP
1 572) while most of the remaining two-thirds of Albanian voters decided to cast their
votes in favour of the DPS-SDP coalition. 39 Ethnic Albanian politicians can be found in
the ranks of Montenegrin parliamentary parties which have an independent, multi-ethnic
orientation (DPS, SDP, LSCG). The grievances of Albanian ethnic parties have been sim-
ilar to those which attempt to represent Bosniaks-Muslims. Their representatives believe
that minority interests cannot be defended through multi-ethnic parties and regard the par-
ticipation of ethnic Albanians in these parties as a pretence, or personal mistake. UDSH
and LDMZ (each represented by one deputy in the republican parliament – in both cases
the party chairs, Ferhat Dinosha and Mehmet Bardhi) have often been close to the posi-
tions of the DPS and SDP in the parliament. Despite a good level of communication and
co-operation, the ethnic parties continue to view the DPS and SDP with a degree of mis-
trust and suspicion.
Albanians in Montenegro have not been physically harassed since the break-up of Yu-
goslavia. The only exception was the massacre of several villagers in the rural community
of Kaludjerski Laz, near Rožaje, during an incursion of Yugoslav Army units from Ko-
sovo in April 1999. The Kosovo conflict and its aftermath was probably the most difficult
period for Montenegro’s Albanians. In 1998 and 1999, Montenegro accepted tens of thou-
sands of refugees from Kosovo. Before the entry of NATO forces to the province, the
overwhelming majority of these refugees were Albanians. Most of them found refuge in
ethnic Albanian areas of Montenegro, usually in private houses. Montenegrin Albanians,
as well as other citizens, demonstrated great solidarity with the refugees. Nevertheless, the
Albanian minority in Montenegro also became the target of nationalist propaganda in the
last years of Miloševićs rule. This tendency continued – and even further escalated – after
his fall, especially in 2001 during the ethnic conflict in Macedonia. Certain Serbian and
Montenegrin media, as well as some foreign outlets, repeatedly indicated that Montenegro
was endangered by a similar ethnic conflict, with the Albanian minority represented as a
threat to Montenegro’s stability and territorial integrity. Anti-Albanian propaganda was
frequently raised by the pro-Belgrade parties which had programmes based on Serb na-
tionalist ideology (the coalition Together for Yugoslavia, Zajedno za Jugoslaviju and its
171
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
components: the Socialist People‘s Party, Socijalistička narodna partija, SNP; the Peo-
ple‘s Party, Narodna stranka, NS; and the Serbian People‘s Party, Srpska narodna
stranka, SNS).40 In fact, the political demands of Albanian politicians in Montenegro have
been consistently moderate and there has been no evidence of any armed or terrorist acti-
vities. The accusations have, rather, been a part of a strategy for discrediting the Montene-
grin independence project. Representing minorities as a threat to territorial integrity and
stability, as well as limiting the rights of minorities to decide on fundamental questions
such as independence, have been an important part of such nationalist propaganda, not
just in the Montenegrin case. 41
The position of the Albanian minority and the degree of co-operation and integration
with the majority society has been far greater than in the case of Albanian minorities in
Kosovo before 1999, or in Macedonia or southern Serbia. Montenegrin Albanians have
not attempted to organise referendums on territorial autonomy or independence, they have
not boycotted republican elections and there have been no attempts at armed rebellion or
signs of terrorist activities. Albanians in Montenegro have been concerned by the dramatic
developments concerning Kosovo Albanians and, to a much lesser degree, the Albanian
minority in Macedonia. Some family and individual ties exist between Montenegrin and
Kosovo Albanians due to the recent history of life in the Yugoslav state. However, politi-
cal relations between both communities are practically non-existent. Montenegrin Albani-
ans had historically close family and economic ties with the Albanians of northern Alba-
nia (Shkodër/Skadar region), although these were drastically reduced by the severed
relations between Yugoslavia and Albania after 1948. Subsequent to the change in politi-
cal orientation of the Montenegrin ruling elite in 1997-98, the government has, likewise,
demonstrated an increased degree of co-operation and dialogue.
Albanians have a satisfactory number of elementary schools as well as several high
schools with instruction in their native language. There are local radio stations in Alba-
nian-inhabited municipalities, in addition to state TV and radio which regularly broadcasts
programmes in Albanian. Apart from the guaranteed mandates in parliament, Albanians
have been represented by one minister and two lower-ranking government officials since
1998. In 2002, an Albanian language weekly, Koha Jone, was founded and has been fi-
nanced by the Montenegrin parliament. The absolute majority of Montenegro’s Albanians
are perfectly fluent in Serbo-Croatian, which facilitates their increased integration into the
majority society.42 A great part of ethnic Albanian grievances and aspirations can be
solved by the decentralisation of state administration, which would grant more compe-
tence and responsibilities to the municipalities.
Despite the many positive signs, the position of Albanians in Montenegro is still far
from satisfactory. Albanians are gravely under-represented in all sectors of public life (le-
gal institutions, police forces, education sector, etc.). Ethnic Albanian politicians and in-
tellectuals often point out that Albanians, who represent over six per cent of Montenegro‘s
population, form only 0.03-0.05 per cent of the employees of all state structures com-
40 Prior to the October 2002 parliamentary election, the coalition changed its name to Zajedno
za promjene (Together for changes).
41 Florian Bieber: ‘The Instrumentalisation of Minorities in the Montenegrin Dispute over
Independence’, ECMI Brief 8 (March 2002).
42 Knowledge of Albanian among members of the ethnic majority is very rare.
172
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
bined.43 Apart from that, the educational sector has, likewise, been of concern to Albanian
representatives in Montenegro, especially the limited room accorded to Albanian national
history and culture. Albanian representatives had already proposed in 1992 a Memoran-
dum on the Special Status of Albanians, which included many elements of positive dis-
crimination; however, the document was ignored by the state authorities of the time. Dur-
ing 2001-02, Albanian representatives reached consensus concerning their key demands.
These have included: providing the town of Tuzi with municipality status; opening an Al-
banian-language pedagogical faculty at the University of Podgorica; opening a second
border crossing with Albania in the Ulcinj area; recognition of university diplomas issued
in Tiranë, Priština and Tetovo; establishing a maternity hospital in Ulcinj; and installing
ethnic Albanians to the positions of chief of police and head judge in Ulcinj. 44 Goals for
the more distant future which have not been seriously discussed so far include, especially,
the establishment of a second chamber of the Montenegrin parliament which would repre-
sent the republic‘s national communities.
It seems that most of the demands of the Albanian representatives can realistically be
fulfilled by the government in the forthcoming period, 45 while some Albanian demands
have clashed with the political stance of the most important Montenegrin parties and will
certainly continue to do so. This concerns, in particular, the status of municipality for the
town of Tuzi. Technically, the town and its vicinity have sufficient population, while they
also form the cohesive unit necessary to the meeting of the criteria for a municipality.
However, politics in Montenegro has been largely dictated by party interests. The interests
of the most influential parties dictate the structure of the political system in Montenegro
and any changes to it. In the case of Tuzi, it is largely the electoral mathematics which are
currently favourable to the DPS, rather than the fear of another local Albanian-dominated
government, which has kept the town within the Podgorica municipality until now. The
political preferences of voters in Podgorica have been more or less evenly divided bet-
ween the DPS and the pro-Yugoslav forces led by the SNP. The several thousand Alba-
nian voters in the south of the Podgorica municipality have been voting for the DPS in
considerable numbers, thus helping the party to preserve its dominance in the administra-
tive capital and the most important of Montenegrin cities. If Tuzi formed a separate mu-
nicipality, the sudden lack of Albanian votes could certainly weaken the position of the
DPS in the Podgorica local government. This seems to be the main reason why it might
take some time to fulfil the most consistently repeated Albanian demand.
Croats
Croats are autochthonous inhabitants of the northern part of the Montenegrin littoral. In
the 1991 official census, 6 244 persons declared themselves as having Croat nationality
and Croats thus form just one per cent of the republic‘s population. The highest concen-
tration of Croats was to be found in the three municipalities of the Bay of Kotor (Boka
Kotorska): Tivat (2 640, 23.16%); Kotor (1 620, 7.23%); and Herceg Novi (636, 2.3%).
43 ‘Albanians in Montenegro’, in: Human Rights and Transition. Serbia 2001 (Belgrade: Hel-
sinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia, 2002), pp. 283-290.
44 ‘Inter-Ethnic Relations in Montenegro’, Second PER Roundtable: Albanians in Montenegro,
October 26-27 2001’, available at: www.per-usa.org/montenegro2nd.doc.
45 The border crossing south of Ulcinj has already been opened.
173
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
Apart from the area of their traditional settlement, the highest number of Croats was regis-
tered in Podgorica (608, 0.4%). 46 The census took place in the spring of 1991 during the
break-up of the Yugoslav federation, in an atmosphere of increased anti-Croat propa-
ganda. The number of Croats in Montenegro was certainly somewhat higher than the
number of people who declared Croat nationality, although it did not exceed 10 000.
The historical region of Boka Kotorska where Montenegro‘s Croats primarily reside is
a religiously mixed area where both Catholics (mostly in urban settlements) and Orthodox
(residing rather in the countryside or at higher altitudes) traditionally lived side-by-side.
After centuries of Venetian rule, the Bay of Kotor became part of the Habsburg Empire at
the end of the 18th century and then part of the new Yugoslav state in 1918. Within Aus-
tria-Hungary, the region formed a single administrative district. Except for a brief episode
during the Napoleonic wars, the Bay of Kotor was not controlled by Montenegro, being
integrated into the newly-constituted Montenegrin republic within Communist Yugosla-
via only after World War Two. This distinct history has marked both the landscape and
population of the Bay of Kotor.
In the complex process of ethnic identification in this part of Europe during the 19th
and 20th centuries, the Catholic population of the Bay of Kotor developed a Croatian na-
tional identity while the Orthodox of the area identified themselves as Montenegrins or
Serbs. The relative number of Croats/Catholics in the region has decreased in the last one
hundred years: at the beginning of the 20th century, Catholics represented a majority in all
the towns of Boka Kotorska except Risan 47 but, before the break-up of Yugoslavia in
1991, they found themselves in the minority in all urban settlements of the region. This
can be explained mostly by increased migration to the coastal region after it was united
with the Dinaric hinterland (Old Montenegro, Herzegovina) within the Yugoslav state.
The Catholic Church continues to exercise an important influence on the collective
identity and cultural development of the Croat minority. The borders of the former Aus-
tro-Hungarian territorial district continue to serve as the administrative boundaries of the
Kotor bishopric (670 square km and less than 10 000 adherents; current bishop is Ilija
Janjić).48 As indicated above, the bishopric is formally a part of the Archbishopric of Split
in the Republic of Croatia and not the Archbishopric of Bar. This division underlines the
predominantly Croatian character of the Catholic Church in the Bay of Kotor. Representa-
tives of the Croat minority in Montenegro, as well as those of the Catholic Church in
Croatia, continue to support this structure despite the new state borders resulting from the
break-up of Yugoslavia.
The 1990s were a very difficult period for Croats living in Montenegro. Croats in the
Bay of Kotor became the target of Serb nationalist propaganda, especially in the first half
of the decade. Croats were frequently labelled as traitors and fifth-columnists who
planned to join the Montenegrin littoral to ‘Greater Croatia’. Apart from the Belgrade po-
174
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
litical elite and media, the hysterical anti-Croatian campaign was also orchestrated by the
Montenegrin leadership of the time (Momir Bulatović, Milo Đukanović and Svetozar
Marović) through the state daily Pobjeda (the only daily in Montenegro before 1997),
state TV and radio. 49 The atmosphere of fear and lynch law culminated in 1991 with
Croatia‘s declaration of independence and the subsequent attack of Montenegrin reser-
vists on the Dubrovnik region. There were no cases of ethnic cleansing or organised at-
tempts to remove local Croats, but the atmosphere of fear and insecurity forced many of
them to leave their homes and seek safer conditions abroad. There are no precise data con-
cerning this gradual exodus, though credible unofficial estimates claim that probably one-
quarter of the total Croat population left the country during the 1990s. It remains to be
seen whether the exodus will remain permanent.
Apart from the exodus of many Croats, the Boka Kotorska region experienced a large
influx of predominantly Serb refugees from Herzegovina and Croatia during the 1990s.
This migration significantly altered the ethnic and social structure of the region, especially
in the municipality of Herceg Novi. However, the position of local Croats in the Bay of
Kotor cannot be simply characterised as one of ethnic tension and marginalisation on eth-
nic grounds (i.e. Croats versus Serbs/Montenegrins). Some segments of the majority pop-
ulation frequently demonstrated support for the harassed Croats. Many Orthodox inhabit-
ants of the Boka (typically those who identified themselves ethnically as Montenegrins)
and who had longer roots in the region felt similarly threatened by the rise of Serb nation-
alism and the influx of refugees and economic settlers in the region. Therefore, the divi-
sion felt by many autochthonous inhabitants of the Boka has been rather between the orig-
inal inhabitants (the starosjedioci), both Catholic and Orthodox, who usually considered
themselves to be urban, civilised and ethnically tolerant, as opposed to the new immi-
grants (the došljaci), who were regarded as rural, primitive and ethnically intolerant. The
solidarity and perceived common destiny of the Bokelji (a regional term describing the in-
habitants of the Boka Kotorska), regardless of ethnic or religious division, somewhat
eased the position of the Croats. In addition, the Liberal Alliance of Montenegro and the
Social Democratic Party, both multi-ethnic, anti-war opposition parties committed to
Montenegro’s independence, repeatedly protested against the harassment of Montenegrin
Croats and the anti-Croatian campaign during the 1990s. Apart from raising domestic and
international awareness, one of their major achievements was to prevent attempts to con-
fiscate the houses of those Croats who had left Montenegro in order to providing perma-
nent accommodation for Serb newcomers from the Krajina in 1995. 50
After Milo Đukanović had distanced himself from the regime of Slobodan Milo šević,
the government‘s attitude toward minorities, including Croats, improved. The gradual im-
provement of relations with Croatia was very beneficial for Croats in Montenegro. In
1999, the border crossing between Croatia and Montenegro at Debeli Brijeg was re-
opened to regular traffic, while a consulate of the Republic of Croatia opened in Kotor.
Croats, as well as others in the region, could renew their family and cultural links with
175
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
Croatia, and especially the neighbouring Dubrovnik region, although much remains to be
done in order fully to normalise relations between Montenegro and Croatia.
Apart from the media propaganda in the first half of the 1990s, Croats in Montenegro
have been practically overlooked by the Montenegrin authorities. There are several cul-
tural Croatian associations in Montenegro, such as Napredak (Progress) and Hrvatski dom
(Croatian Home) as well as several musical associations (traditional groups of tamburaši).
In 2002, a Croat ethnic party, the Croat Civil Association ( Hrvatsko gradjansko dru štvo)
was formed. The party is primarily concerned with local politics. It won 4 out of the total
32 deputies in the Tivat municipal election in October 2002.
There has been little interest in Croatia in the position of Montenegro‘s Croats, except
for some unimportant nationalist circles whose rhetorical interest has been motivated by
primarily domestic concerns. Even during the nationalist rule of President Franjo
Tuđman, there were no attempts politically to instrumentalise the issue of Croats in the
Boka (the southernmost ethnically Croat community), let alone to raise territorial de-
mands. Overall, Croats in Montenegro have been a small, half-forgotten and very quiet
minority since the break-up of Yugoslavia.
Roma
Similarly to other east European countries, it is very difficult to estimate the number of
Roma in Montenegro. According to the official census of 1991, 3 282 people declared a
Roma nationality, most of them in Podgorica (1 676) and Nikšić (802).51 This number is,
however, a clear under-estimate of the total size of the Roma population. Despite the lack
of precise data, it seems certain that the number of Roma living in Montenegro has further
increased since the break-up of Yugoslavia. The approximate number of Roma may well
be over 20 000.52
Both historical and contemporary sources concerning the Roma minority are very lim-
ited. A small number of Roma people (around 500) lived within the pre-1878 Montene-
grin borders while a greater number resided in the Ottoman areas joined to Montenegro
during the 19th and 20th centuries. The Roma in Old Montenegro were an Orthodox, set-
tled population, well integrated into Montenegrin society. The Montenegrins treated the
settled Roma tolerantly, referring to them as Egyptians (Jeđupaci) or majstori/meštari (ar-
tisans, crafts people) in order to distinguish them from nomadic Gypsies ( Ciganji) who
occasionally passed through Montenegro. 53
The majority of Roma living in Montenegro today are Muslims (Orthodox Roma prob-
ably became fully integrated with Montenegrins during the 20th century). The local Roma
community living in the old centre of Bar (Stari Bar) is a relic of the traditional, settled
way of life which was typical for most Montenegrin Roma in the past. 54 However, it
seems that the majority of Roma living in Montenegro today have arrived from other areas
of the Balkans (mostly from Serbia and Kosovo). The most recent influx of Roma came
176
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
after the conflict in Kosovo in 1999. Some Roma from Kosovo used Montenegro only as a
transitional stop on their exodus to the west, but many have stayed, especially in cities
such as Podgorica.
Unlike 100 years ago, the Roma in Montenegro today are living on the margin of soci-
ety and in dismal conditions. Anti-Roma prejudices and intolerance have been widely
present in Montenegrin society. The most serious outburst of anti-Roma sentiment was the
expulsion of Roma from the town of Danilovgrad in April 1995. Following a rape of a 14
year old girl by allegedly two Roma adolescents, angry crowds demanded the expulsion
of all Roma from the town. The Roma fled Danilovgrad in panic and their settlements
were burned down. 55 The problems of the Roma – both new refugees/immigrants as well
as those who were living in the republic before the dissolution of Yugoslavia – have been
generally overlooked in Montenegro, except for occasional articles which mostly point
out the bad social and economic situation of this minority and the visible demonstrations
of their condition, such as increased begging on the streets of Montenegrin towns. The in-
fluence of the main minority organisation, the Association of Roma in Montenegro,
headed by Izen Ga ši, on Roma people has been extremely limited. There are no schools or
classes with Roma language as the language of instruction in Montenegro. Roma continue
to be completely overlooked in internal Montenegrin debates about minority issues, al-
though their current number is possibly several times higher than indicated by the official
statistical data. Neither has the position of Montenegro’s Roma received more than limi-
ted attention from foreign observers and NGOs. 56
Others
Small numbers of different ethnic groups can be found scattered around Montenegro, es-
pecially in the big cities. The absolute majority of these individuals settled in Montenegro
in the second half of the 20th century as a result of internal migrations within the pre-1991
Yugoslav state. These individuals number usually only several dozens, hundreds at best.
According to the 1991 census, only Macedonians numbered slightly over 1 000 people.57
177
František Šístek and Bohdana Dimitrovová
sues. Intellectual elites amongst minorities have actively participated in the process of de-
mocratisation alongside the ethnic Montenegrin elites.
During the regime of Slobodan Milošević as well as afterwards, Montenegro has had to
face many serious problems which often diverted attention from the position of minorities.
In the first half of the 1990s, the Montenegrin government largely followed the official
politics of the Belgrade regime and frequently demonstrated intolerance toward minorities
and political opponents. The position of minorities, as well as individual freedoms, have,
however, greatly improved since the mid-1990s. Despite that, minorities continue to be
seriously under-represented in most segments of public life in Montenegro. The represen-
tation of minorities has often been rather simulated by the appointment to administrative
positions of carefully selected and controllable individuals as representatives of respective
minorities.58 The limited legitimacy of such appointments has been often highlighted by
activists of ethnic political parties who have themselves not gained sufficient legitimacy
in the electoral process.
The Montenegrin political scene has been radically polarised by the division between
supporters and opponents of Montenegro’s independence. 59 Political subjects which are in
favour of continued alliance with Serbia have been ethnically exclusive parties based on
Serb nationalist values (SNP, NS, SNS and several smaller political groupings of lesser
importance). The membership and electoral base of the pro-Yugoslav bloc do not include
members of Montenegro‘s minorities. On the contrary, minorities have been consistently
attacked and demonised by supporters of alliance with Serbia as a threat to Montenegro‘s
territorial integrity. Montenegro‘s minorities have shown a great degree of loyalty to
Montenegro as their homeland and have not threatened it with nationalist and territorial
pretensions. In fact, threats that Montenegro could be partitioned (and parts of it joined to
Serbia) have in recent years come only from some radical circles of the supporters of a
federal state. In Montenegro‘s case, some segments of the majority society have been de-
finitely more dangerous to the future stability of the republic and the wider region than the
loyal and restrained minorities.
It is indicative that, unlike those supporters of alliance with Serbia, political subjects
which have an independent orientation have shown a pro-western attitude and have wel-
comed minority participation (LSCG, SDP, DPS and a few miniscule parties). Apart from
organisations based on Serb nationalism, there are some organisations whose ideological
orientation could indeed be described as Montenegrin nationalist. However, Montenegrin
nationalism has traditionally defined itself primarily in terms of opposition to Serbia and
pro-Serb forces in Montenegro. Its proponents have had a friendly attitude toward Bos-
niaks-Muslims, Albanians, Croats and other Montenegrin minorities. It cannot be denied
that some latent prejudices and misconceptions concerning minorities continue to prevail
among those who consider themselves ethnically Montenegrin and who support Mon-
tenegrin independence while, in the case of pro-Yugoslav political groups, a hostility to
178
National minorities in Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia
minorities and nationalist ideas form a standard part of their political agenda and beliefs.
The policy of the EU and the US in supporting the formal preservation of a federal state of
Serbia and Montenegro almost at any cost has strengthened the position of Serb national-
ist forces in Montenegro. This will probably have some negative consequences for minor-
ities, as well as for political stability and democratisation processes in the republic.
Despite the many obstacles, the problems of national minorities in Montenegro can be
resolved more easily than in other parts of the Balkans. The first step would clearly be to
increase the representation of minorities in all segments of public life within the existing
institutions and structures to a level which would correspond with their share of the popu-
lation. Increased attention to the grievances of minorities and the fulfilment of their realis-
tic demands (such as those raised by Albanian ethnic parties) could improve the situation
still further. Later, when the basic but most pressing problems have been resolved, other
solutions, such as measures of positive discrimination and the increased constitutional and
legal protection of minority rights, might be discussed in an open and democratic atmos-
phere. There have been many encouraging signs in Montenegro‘s treatment of minorities,
but domestic political dynamics in the direction of increased minority participation and
rights has been quite slow. The balanced and sensitive assistance of foreign mediators, ad-
visors and NGOs could certainly speed up this process.
179
The authors
Florian Bieber is a senior non-resident research associate of the European Centre for
Minority Issues based in Belgrade and an International Policy Fellow with the Open Soci-
ety Institute, Budapest. He teaches at the regional Masters programme for Democracy and
Human Rights at the University of Sarajevo and at the Central European University in Bu-
dapest, Hungary. He has published articles on nationalism and politics in south-eastern
Europe in Nationalities Papers, Third World Quarterly, Current History and other jour-
nals. He authored Bosnien-Herzegowina und Libanon im Vergleich [Bosnia-Herzegovina
and Lebanon in Comparison] (Sinzheim: Pro Universitate Verlag, 1999) and edited, to-
gether with Džemal Sokolović, Reconstructing Multiethnic Societies: The Case of Bosnia-
Herzegovina (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2001), and with Židas Daskalovski: Understanding
the War in Kosovo (London: Frank Cass, 2003). He is co-editor of the journal South-East
European Politics and founder and editor of Balkan Academic News.
Dragan Đurić is currently the Head of the Department for International Co-operation
of the Confederation of Independent Trade Unions of Montenegro. He graduated in Polit-
ical Sciences from the University of Belgrade and worked as a journalist for 15 years. He
is one of the founders of the prominent Montenegrin weekly Monitor. He is also a founder
and President of the Montenegrin NGO, the Centre for the Development of Industrial
Democracy. His research interests lie in the economic and social aspects of the transition
process in Montenegro. He has published numerous articles for newspapers and maga-
zines, as well as for journals in Yugoslavia and abroad, including the South-East Europe
Review.
Beáta Huszka is a researcher for the Public Foundation for European Comparative Mi-
nority Research in Budapest. She graduated in economics and international relations from
the Budapest University of Economic Sciences in 2001. In 2002, she continued her studies
at the Central European University in Budapest on the Nationalism Studies programme.
She is currently conducting research on the Hungarian minority of Vojvodina and on in-
ter-ethnic relations in Kosovo.
Wim van Meurs has been a senior research fellow and project co-ordinator for South-
Eastern Europe at the Centre for Applied Policy Research since 1997. He received his MA
(in 1988) and Ph.D. (in 1993) in Russian and East European studies from Utrecht Univer-
sity in the Netherlands. Between 1994 and 1997, he was a researcher and lecturer in tran-
181
The authors
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TRANSFER EUROPEAN REVIEW OF LABOUR AND RESEARCH
Q u a r t e r l y j o u r n a l p u b l i s h e d b y t h e E u r o p e a n Tr a d e U n i o n I n s t i t u t e ( E T U I )
The regulation of conflicts in the German industrial relations system: legal and extra-
legal institutions and procedures
Eva Kocher
Even after the breakdown of the Communist regime in Albania in the 1990ies, this
small country of the Balkan peninsula remains one of the least known areas of
Europe. In this volume, a number of authors from the fields of Balkan studies,
Anthropology and History examine various aspects of the transition process which
the country has been dealing with after more than 40 years of complete isolation.
The contributions to this volume focuses on the Albanians‘ quest for their own
identity when facing contradictory influences from East and West – caught between
tradition and modernism, post-Communist adaptation to capitalism and main-
tenance of pre-Communist social structures. Among other topics, the role of Islam
in the former self-proclaimed ’first atheist state of the world‘, enduring patriarchal
patterns of gender relations, mass migration, the position of ethnic minorities, and
stereotype images of Albanians and Albania in the West are highlighted. Thus, this
compendium offers a wide range of background information to scholars of Balkan-
related subjects as well as to the average reader who is interested in history, culture
and religion of south-eastern Europe.
NOMOS Verlagsgesellschaft
76520 Baden-Baden