Filter by Categories
Audit Reports
Awards
Blog
Calendar
Criminal Justice
Criminal complaints
Dossiers
Joint proceedings
Vetting
War crime trials
ICTY trials and before the courts in the other post-Yugoslav states
Before the internationalised courts in Kosovo
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatia
Montenegro
Transcripts
War crime trials in Serbia
Analysis
Individual Cases
Zone of (non)responsibility
Dajte potpis
Documentation
Dokumentovanje i pamcenje
Donatori
Education
Education
National School of Transitional Justice
Regional School of Transitional Justice
HLC Annual Report
HLC Archives
HLC Governing Board
HLC YouTube Channel
Human Losses
Data Base
Human Losses in Kosovo
Human losses in NATO bombing of Serbia and Montenegro
Human Losses in the armed conflict in Macedonia
Human losses of Serbia and Montenegro in the armed conflicts in Slovenia, Croatia and B&H
Kosovo Memory Book
Register of Croatian citizens of Serbian ethnicity, killed in the armed conflict in Croatia
Internships
Justice
Koalicija za REKOM
Kontakt
Linkovi
Memory
O nama
Others about HLC
Podcast
Pravda i reforma institucija
Public Information
Bulletin through ACCESSION towards JUSTICE
Conferences
HLC Video Production
Library
Magazine Forum on Transitional Justice
News
Press Releases
Reports
Transitional justice in focus
Video documents
Publications
Reparations
Financial Reparations
Symbolic Reparations
Reports on Transitional Justice
Search the Data Base of Human Losses of Serbia and Montenegro in the Period 1991-1995.
The RECOM Process
Transkripti
Uncategorized
Uncategorized @en
Vacancies
Video produkcija
21.02.2008.

Serbian Human Rights Defenders at Risk

The radicalization of the Serbian political scene since Kosovo’s declaration of independence on Sunday has put the country’s few, though dedicated, human rights defenders and liberally-oriented politicians at risk. Not since 1999, when Serbian forces under Slobodan Milosevic’s direction were ethnically cleansing Kosovo of its Albanian inhabitants, have Serbian human rights defenders been so vulnerable.

Commenting in parliamentary session the day after the declaration of independence, Leader of the opposition Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), Ivica Dacic, said that Kosovo’s declaration of independence proved Slobodan Milosevic’s policy was right. Worryingly, not one voice in the Parliament disagreed with Dacic.

That same day Dacic demanded the work of “all political parties and NGOs who recognize independent Kosovo” be banned. The next day, the Socialist Party of Serbia announced that it had begun collecting signatures to bring a criminal complaint against human rights defender, and Executive Director of the Humanitarian Law Center, Natasa Kandic, under the suspicion that “she committed a serious criminal act against the constitutional order and security of the Republic of Serbia by threatening the state’s independence and territorial integrity”. The Socialist Party of Serbia bases its allegations on the fact that Natasa Kandic was in the Kosovo assembly when the Declaration of Independence was adopted.

Not only Serbia’s Socialist Party, but its populist tabloid press has launched a sustained attack on Natasa Kandic accusing her being a traitor to the Serbian nation and state. One piece of commentary titled Natasa, the woman who does not exist published in the daily Novosti, on Tuesday 19 February, implies that since Natasa Kandic is a non-person her elimination would carry no consequences.

Although the comments and actions of the Socialist Party of Serbia and the tabloid press may appear divorced from reality, in Serbia they radicalize a population already in the grip of nationalist fervour, and seek to marginalize voices of civil society and the non-governmental sector that promote the protection of human rights and justice for victims. Such comments and actions therefore create a climate which not only poses a significant threat to the security and work of human rights defenders, but also pushes society to the extreme right of the political spectrum.

Tagovi:

Podržali:

Pogledajte još...

We use cookies to provide a better user experience and to enable the functioning of this presentation in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.