NATO Doesn’t Care That Montenegro Is a Haven For Crime
and Corruption
Montenegro Is Đukanović’s Personal Fiefdom
December 9, 2019
There was international jubilation when Montenegro
seceded from its union with Serbia in 2006 after a controversial referendum.
The Referendum Law prevented Montenegrins living and registered in Serbia
from voting in the referendum, ensuring that tens of thousands of Montenegrins,
in a country of only 622,000, who would have voted to remain the union could
not vote in favour of maintaining it.
It must be remembered that state-paid workers like
teachers and police were told by the Democratic Party of Socialists
(DPS) leader Miodrag Vuković before the referendum May 2006, that someone
“cannot work for the state and vote against it,” something objectively untrue.
The pressure for independence was strong and in 2007, Jovan Markuš, a
politician, journalist and historian, published a 1,290-page document that revealed the irregularities of the
referendum.
There is little doubt that the dislocation of
Montenegro from its Serbian motherland is part of a wider and continued effort
to surround and isolate Serbia for its continued defiance against NATO and maintaining
strong relations with Russia. This is why the Prime Minister of
occupied Kosovo, Agim Çeku, announced that Kosovo would follow
Montenegro’s example to achieve independence, saying “This is the last act of
the historic liquidation of Yugoslavia.” Kosovo ultimately declared on February
17, 2008 in its pursuit of a Greater Albania.
Immediately the people of the Serbian-majority
autonomous Republika Srpska in Bosnia and Herzegovina demanded their own referendum
for independence or union with Serbia. However, this was ultimately withdrawn
because according to Milorad Dodik, the prime minister of Republika Srpska,
there was significant international pressure and opposition, demonstrating that
Serbia is always to be isolated and pressurized, so long as it continues its
close relations with Russia.
Although Montenegro became independent in 2006, it
took only until December 2009 for the country to reach the final process
of becoming a NATO member, the Membership Action Plan, before officially
becoming a full-fledged member on June 5, 2017. This was a rapid process that
has not been afforded to other aspiring members like Georgia. This is on top of
working towards the goal of becoming a European Union member. It appears
peripherally that everything is going well in integrating Montenegro into
Atlanticist and European interests and projects, particularly those against
Russia. But the country has been embroiled in constant political turmoil since
2015 with strong anti-government protests and corruption cases.
The protests were spearheaded by the opposition
Democratic Front, demanding a transitional government which would organise next
parliamentary elections, to end corruption and the resignation of then Prime
Minister Milo Đukanović, who has held leadership positions, either as
prime minister or president, in an authoritarian manner since 1990. The
anti-government movement finally culminated into anti-NATO protests, with the
wider anti-government movement continuing into 2016.
Đukanović and his proxies refused to submit to the
anti-NATO movement and on October 16, 2016 on the day of the parliamentary
elections, launched a mass arrest of Serbian and Montenegrin citizens on the
accusation that they were planning a coup d’état, in which Russian
individuals, without evidence as has become standard in Western anti-Russian
rhetoric, were allegedly involved. By February of the following year,
Montenegrin officials accused Russia of orchestrating the supposed coup attempt
that allegedly had the goal of assassinating Đukanović. This was immediately
rejected by Moscow.
Although Đukanović left his post in late 2016, a
reconciliation between the government and opposition has not been achieved as
he continued to chair the DPS, controlling the party with an iron fist.
Unsurprising since Đukanović is alleged to have strong links to the mafia and was listed in 2010 as one of the
richest world leaders, who is “mysteriously wealthy” with an estimated £10 million. There was little
surprise when the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project announced Đukanović as ‘Person of the Year in Organized Crime’ in
2015 as he “built one of the most dedicated kleptocracies and organized crime
havens in the world” despite portraying “himself as a progressive, pro-Western
leader who recently helped his country join NATO and is on track to join the
European Union.”
Although he ruled out the possibility of running as
President in 2018, claiming the DPS had strong candidates, he of course lied,
and was elected President in April 2018, allowing him to continue his
corrupt practises like smuggling, organized crime, privatizations that go to
his family like the Prva Banka. It is for this reason that a 2018 Freedom House report classified Montenegro as a
Semi-Consolidated Democracy and Received A democracy Score of 3.93 out of 7.
For this reason, the independence of Montenegro is
rather just a creation of a mafia state, similarly to neighboring Kosovo. This
demonstrates that NATO does not care for authoritarianism and corruption, and
rather, its current manifestation is just a continuation of anti-Russianism
that is being continued nearly 30 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Đukanović had created the Adriatic seaside state into his own personal fiefdom
and has never ventured far from complete ownership over Montenegro. NATO, and clearly the EU, simply do not care.
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