A Look Into the Past. Serbia 1965-91, part 7: Homogenization
April 1987 – S. Milosevic goes to the town of Kosovo Polje and promises to the Serbian masses, “No one is allowed to beat you.” In June 1989 in Gazimestan, he goes public with his solution to the crisis and says, “Six centuries after the Battle of Kosovo we are again in battle. Though this is not an...
Other Authors: | |
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Institution: | Open Society Archives at Central European University |
Language: | Serbian |
Published: |
Anрelizh, Bojan
2003
Serbia and Montenegro |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10891/osa:7da34528-437c-4496-98db-2748fd2926b0 |
Summary: | April 1987 – S. Milosevic goes to the town of Kosovo Polje and promises to the Serbian masses, “No one is allowed to beat you.” In June 1989 in Gazimestan, he goes public with his solution to the crisis and says, “Six centuries after the Battle of Kosovo we are again in battle. Though this is not an armed conflict, even such conflicts are not to be ruled out.” The Berlin wall is toppled. Instead of opting for political and economic reforms, the Serbian regime, cultural elites and opposition parties which emerged in 1990 actually reach a consensus on the Greater Serbia program. |
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Published: | 2003 |