Geert Lovink on Sat, 22 May 1999 19:32:14 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> (fwd) Mladjan Dinkic: Group of 17: Even Democratic Countries Kill |
Even democratic countries kill civilians, don't they? Mladjan Dinkic, University of Belgrade, Department of Economics Coordinator of Group 17* Two and a half years ago I was one of hundreds of thousands of people who protested against Milosevic's regime in the streets of Belgrade after the electoral fraud. We demanded justice and democratic future for Serbia. Many protesters carried the German and American flags, symbolically expressing their wish for Serbia to become a part of modern Europe and join the world trends. It was a terribly cold and snowy winter, but the people gathered every day; often at minus 10-15 degrees, and, as if in a trance, marched towards the goal they deeply believed in - the victory of democracy. This evening I am one of two million citizens of Belgrade who do not sleep, but listen to the banging of the bombs of all sorts trying to tell the explosions of NATO missiles from the Yugoslav Army flak. While writing this I wonder whether our former champions will pursue their bombing for as many days as we used to protest, wishing somehow to get closer to them. It is depressing that NATO countries, whose democracy and civic institutions represent the most valuable achievement, have decided to teach a small European country a lesson and send it a political message through bombs and aggression, instead of supporting its economic reforms and democratic developments. Does anyone know why NATO bombs Yugoslavia? Do those who know really believe that it is right? NATO politicians keep repeating that the goal of the military action is to punish the so-called Milosevic's war machinery and to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Kosovo. That effort has resulted in the killing of over 1,000 civilians so far. Parts of residential districts have been razed to the ground (Aleksinac, Surdulica, Cuprija, Vranje, Pristina, etc.). Many industrial facilities have been destroyed, as well as a great deal of transportation, telecommunications and other infrastructure networks. NATO has also bombed hotels, buses, trains, TV stations and refugee convoys. It does not take much reckoning to realize that the destruction of factories, bridges and other civilian installations has brought no damage, political or otherwise, to Mr. Milosevic, but only to the citizens of Yugoslavia, whose president Mr. Milosevic happens to be. President Milosevic has not worked in the destroyed factories. He rarely crossed the demolished bridges. Ordinary people - guards, technicians, editors, etc. were killed in the television building wreckage. Some of them tried in vain to pull out from under the ruins, begging their colleagues outside for help, over the cellular phones. They were burnt alive before the rescue teams managed to arrive. Few days ago, a stray shell killed a three-year-old girl in a neighboring district while she was sitting on her potty in the bathroom, getting ready for bed. The TV is now showing the dead bodies of two people in a street in the center of Belgrade; killed when a restaurant called "Zlatni ovan" (Golden Ram) was hit and reduced to a shambles of bricks and beer crates. So, things are not so nice and morally clean, despite NATO's efforts to present them as such at its press conferences. Hiding behind the personality of president Milosevic in front of its public, NATO is actually retaliating against all citizens of Yugoslavia. It is both impossible and unnecessary to analyze who has suffered the most: Serbs, Albanians, Montenegrins...All those, whose protection was invoked to start the war have now become its victims. Facts prove that everything NATO has done so far is completely opposite to its alleged interest in humanitarian issues. Prior to NATO aggression on 24 March 1999, there was no humanitarian catastrophe in Kosovo. The Albanians were complaining about their political and legal status in Serbia, demanding more rights, even secession from Serbia, but they have never been existentially endangered. No TV station in the world at that time screened pictures of endless convoys of Albanian refugees from Kosovo, because none existed. They emerged when the first NATO bombs started to drop. I think that NATO politicians were aware of what was going to happen, but nevertheless ordered the air strikes against Yugoslavia. Without much of a guilty conscience a horrible humanitarian catastrophe in Kosovo, Montenegro, Macedonia and Albania has been produced, and after enormous economic destruction all citizens of Yugoslavia have become victims in need of humanitarian assistance. After a month and a half of daily bombing of Yugoslavia, it is absolutely clear that the scope of material destruction of economic and other civilian targets has little to do with military operations NATO formally refers to as an excuse for what it does. Important parts of industry have been either completely destroyed or heavily damaged: oil refineries, chemical plants, fertilizer production, car manufacturing, construction machinery factories, tobacco processing, household appliances industry, etc. Around 30 bridges have been torn down. Citizens of Novi Sad, one of the most beautiful cities in Yugoslavia and the capital of the province of Vojvodina, are forced to cross the river Danube by ferry and to use water brought in by tanker trucks. NATO destroyed all three bridges in this city (and thus also disrupted the water supply system), although Novi Sad is located some 500 km from the border with Kosovo. One of the most famous Yugoslav musicians who lives in Novi Sad, has recently said: "Had I known that any bridge in Novi Sad caused the suffering of Albanian children in Kosovo, I would have destroyed it myself." The democratic opposition marked a landslide victory at the elections in Novi Sad two years ago and Milosevic's party had almost no representatives in the city parliament. I wonder how the citizens of Novi Sad, one of the most developed and most civilized cities in Yugoslavia until now, will come to terms with the fact that they have actually been reverted to the stone age by that same democratic West they gravitated towards until yesterday. Probably out of its concern for the people, NATO attacked several chemical industry targets in the vicinity of Belgrade, which stored extremely poisonous materials (Petrohemija, Azotara - Pancevo, Prva Iskra - Baric), consciously risking a global environmental catastrophe which could have resulted in poisoning a huge number of people. Although a Bhopal-like tragedy has been initially avoided, the degree of air pollution by toxic vapors from the destroyed factories has yet to be established. It is depressing that NATO could be so cold-blooded allowing the use of depleted uranium bombs, which might have dreadful consequences for the health of citizens, similar to those seen after the Gulf war. Radioactivity in Yugoslavia is said to have increased by 10% today. We wish to convince ourselves that it is still within the normal limits. I don't know whether to cry or to laugh when I listen to the German foreign minister, Mr. Joschka Fischer, representative of the Green party, who strongly supports the return of refugees to a radioactively contaminated and completely ruined Kosovo. Who actually benefits from this war? Of course, NATO soldiers, who have been polishing their missiles for years, and could hardly wait to finally use them. All sorts of weapons the world has ever produced are being tested on us these days. NATO has been given an opportunity to study the results of their effects, while the Russians have probably learned some interesting data by analyzing the use of their weaponry by the Yugoslav defense. I doubt it that either were shaken by the fact that human beings, who are incidentally called Serbs and Albanians, have been sacrificed in the experiment. On the contrary, I presume that they all had fun. Just remember the expressionless face of NATO spokesman, Mr. Shea, while he declared his "deep regret" over the inevitable collateral damage, after a few missiles killed 70 Albanians in a refugee convoy in Kosovo, or 50 Serbs in a train set ablaze on the Nis-Pristina road, or 30 people in a charred bus in Grdelicka gorge, or 15 people in the state TV building in Belgrade, or…It is not easy to accept the fact that NATO should think of ordinary citizens of Yugoslavia merely in terms of a possible collateral damage. The war in Yugoslavia certainly works in favor of the U.S. defense industry and its numerous subcontractors. They have seen a real boost. In a month, the stocks of cruise missile producer (Raytheon) and airplane manufacturer (Boeing) have gone up by 20%, while Boeing obtained new orders worth 8.8 billion dollars. European partners within NATO have so far sustained only damage (with the exception of Great Britain). Regardless of what certain analysts try to prove, it is absolutely clear that the Kosovo crisis has added to the significant drop in the value of the euro against the US dollar. Among the NATO countries, Greece and Italy are bearing the brunt of economic consequences, and if the conflict is prolonged and intensified, the coming tourist season would be a total disaster. Hungary, Austria and Germany are particularly affected by the lack of navigation along the Danube, since the concrete structures of the demolished bridges block the passage of the ships. The increase in costs due to using alternative routes to transport goods comes up to 300%. NATO operations are also threatening the economies of the neighboring countries, primarily Macedonia and Albania, as well as Bulgaria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Romania. That is the reason for the plans already prepared by the WB and IMF to provide financial support for the economic renewal of these countries ranging between 1 and 2,5 billion dollars (the precise amount is to be defined in accordance with the duration of the war). Naturally, Yugoslavia, the direct victim of NATO aggression, is sustaining the greatest economic losses. In only a month, the total losses caused by NATO attacks, measured in terms of the GDP, are greater than those inflicted on the country during the second World War. The Yugoslav GDP in 1999 could be reduced by 25% to 50%, depending on the duration of the war. Until a month ago, many Yugoslav economists warned that because of its extremely misled economic policy, Yugoslavia would need 15 years to reach the level of economic development it had in 1989. Today, after the NATO bombing, it will probably take 10 years to reach the level we had only a month ago. The destruction of industrial facilities has left hundreds of thousands of workers jobless. The already high unemployment rate of around 27% before this war could quickly double. With its industry destroyed and per capita income unlikely to exceed $1,000, Yugoslavia will not be able to sustain even the current low level of health and social security or the existing level of education. Millions of people in Serbia, impoverished workers and their families will be left without guaranteed income and will qualify for humanitarian assistance. Unless they quickly receive it, primarily in the form of new job openings, there will be an outpour of economic refugees from Yugoslavia to the developed Western countries. No visa regimes, controls or embargos will be able to prevent hundreds of thousands of people to seek refuge from poverty by leaving Yugoslavia forever. The developed countries, which are themselves facing a serious problem of unemployment and immigrants intake, are unlikely to benefit from it. When this war ends, the whole of the Balkans will need economic assistance from the developed countries. It is the only way to create lasting stability in this region. While it is positive that programs of economic assistance for the neighboring countries have already been prepared, it is paradoxical that they do not include Serbia at all. It appears that all these "poor" countries sustain damage but not us. Leaving Serbia isolated is a grave error which will sooner or later provoke a new war disaster. When you punish a disobedient child, there are limits you must not cross or you risk creating a future criminal. One wonders if Germany would be economically so strong and stable as it is today without the program of reconstruction within the Marshall Plan. One also wonders whether the disintegration and terrible inter-ethnic wars in the former Yugoslavia could have been avoided had the West granted the loans of only 4 billion dollars promised to the last Prime Minister of Yugoslavia Ante Markovic, who hoped in vain until the last moment. That amount, certainly small for the developed countries, might have changed the history of my country. A weak economy and social insecurity of the people provide the most suitable ground for irrational thinking and rapidly developing tensions among nations. I strongly believe that this was one of the main reasons for the violent disintegration of the former Yugoslavia, which also brought about the present war madness. I learned about similar situations by studying history, but now I have experienced one myself, and I do hope that such huge mistakes will not happen again. Without extensive foreign assistance Yugoslavia will certainly be unable to recover. There will be enough food, as always, thanks to the fertile soil and God, notwithstanding the government's blundering agricultural policy. So, people will survive, but everything else…I hate to think that the reconstruction and development of Yugoslavia as well as the future of its young generations will mostly depend on the money of those who are bombing it now. Unfortunately, reality is not always as we wish to see it. On the other hand, although I distrust the generosity and humanity of the developed Western countries, I believe in their ability to calculate the indirect costs they are bound to sustain owing to the irrational NATO policy. There are always the current and the future victims of a war. I assume that - guided by its own interests rather than by good deeds - the West will sooner or later realize that it is better to assist Yugoslavia then to bear the costs it made itself. It is, therefore, realistic to expect international aid in the reconstruction of infrastructure, social programs, and perhaps assistance in overcoming the balance of payments and budget difficulties. A major part of this assistance should be donated by the European Union countries. Although their culpability for the present war destruction is not the greatest (with the exception of Great Britain), they might be exposed to the largest economic and social costs because of the foreseeable uncontrollable inflow of immigrants from Yugoslavia. I have recently made a public recommendation to our government to see the chance to pull out from poverty in a strong connection with European Union countries, primarily Germany, Italy and France, of course when this war is over. These countries have always been the most important trade partners of Yugoslavia. It will also be in their interest to rebuild the infrastructure first, and then make direct investments. Naturally, nobody will invest in a country that has no bridges, railways and roads. But one should take into account that unless the destroyed bridges over the Danube are rebuilt there will be no international river transport and many countries will incur heavy losses. Taking this into consideration, once the economic interests prevail over an irrational war logic, all problems will be easily resolved. With its aggression on a sovereign country NATO has undoubtedly violated many provisions of the international law. But, punishing a whole nation and sacrificing its future are contrary not only to the legal, but also to the moral tradition of Europe. I therefore believe that sooner or later the developed countries of the West will seize an opportunity to demonstrate their basic principles. I pray that justice, democracy and humanity are expressed as described in books and political pamphlets. I am aware that such a picture does not correspond to the reality, but it is still nice to believe in it. It should not be forgotten that only a month ago many people in my country sincerely believed in the principles of Western democracy and were ready to fight for them politically. I can only hope that, not counting NATO itself, some civic institutions have remained in NATO countries. I cannot believe that the money from the huge NATO budget has managed to corrupt all Western politicians and destroy the common sense of the whole public opinion in Europe and the USA. The largest part of the world will forget the things I am writing about here the very moment when the horrible pictures of innocent civilian victims and refugee convoys disappear from the TV screens. Many things will no longer be important. After all, I am sure that NATO strategists have never been interested either in the Albanians and their rights or in the problem of democracy in Serbia and the rights of its citizens. It appears that the only goal NATO has always had is the deployment of its troops in Kosovo! After so many civilians have been killed, I do not know whether this military power will reach its goal, directly or indirectly or why should it be so important to reach it. I believe that the alleged interest in the people and human rights, democracy and the future of this region, is a great farce indeed. When Serbia refused to accept what had been determined by someone's strategic plans long ago, when it refused to give up the sovereignty over its own territory, the bombs, the destruction and the killing of innocent citizens all begun. Obviously, even democratic countries kill civilians, don't they? * The Group 17 gathers 20 most distinguished Yugoslav economists employed at universities, banks, consulting agencies and international financial institutions (WB and IMF). The Group 17 has been urging swift and comprehensive economic reforms and democratization in Serbia and Montenegro. It is led by two coordinators: Veselin Vukotic, chief architect of economic reforms in Montenegro and Mladjan Dinkic, author of economic bestseller "The Economics of Destruction". More about Group 17 at our website: www.g17.org.yu -- e-mail:grupa@sezampro.yu internet: www.g17.org.yu tel/fax:+381 11 624-669; 636-491 -- _____________________________________________________________________ "Belgrade today, your town tomorrow..." The New World Order --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl