Author (Person) | Reljić, Dušan |
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Publisher | German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) |
Series Title | SWP Comments |
Series Details | No.10, June 2004 |
Publication Date | June 2004 |
ISSN | 1861-1761 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: The candidate with the best chances to win the first round of the Serbian presidential election on June 13 is the 52-year old construction engineer, Tomislav Nikoli , a member of the ultra-nationalist populist Serbian Radical Part (SRS). Despite the expected devastating domestic and international consequences of a Nikoli victory, Serbia's so-called democratic camp couldn't unite around a single candidate of its own. To the contrary: full-blown in-fighting among the democratic parties has left many voters gravely disillusioned and has strengthened the Radicals' hand. In the run-up to the vote, the West should avoid provoking a backlash among Serbia's voters by showing excessive sympathy for the EU's and the U.S.'s favoured candidate Bojan Tadić, a forty-six-year old psychologist and head of the Democratic Party (DS). Rather, in light of Serbia's key role in the region, the West must try to stabilise the country through a strategic combination of carrots and sticks. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source https://www.swp-berlin.org/en/publication/a-step-backwards-in-serbia/ |
Countries / Regions | Europe, Serbia |