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The Earth Times Online Newspaper (Free subscription) | 07/30/2008
... last week called Tadic a traitor and warned he could end up like the late Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic. Djindjic, who led the Democratic Party now headed by Tadic, was killed in 2003 by Milosevic's special police forces. His government had extradited the late Serbian autocrat in 2001 to The Hague, where he died in 2006 while awaiting trial. The Radicals plan to continue...
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Times Online (Free subscription) | 07/29/2008
... death threats after the arrest of Dr Karadzic, not least from a Radical MP who compared him to Zoran Djindjic, Mr Tadic’s predecessor as head of the Democratic Party, who was assassinated in 2003 in revenge for the arrest of Slobodan Milosevic, the wartime President. Related LinksBy 7pm, about 15,000 flag-waving demonstrators had gathered in Republic Square, chanting the name of Dr...
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Times Online (Free subscription) | 07/29/2008
Boris Tadic, the pro-Western President of Serbia, had appealed for calm before the rally. He has received death threats after the arrest of Dr Karadzic, not least from a Radical MP who compared him to Zoran Djindjic, Mr Tadic’s predecessor as head of the Democratic Party, who was assassinated in 2003 in revenge for the arrest of Slobodan Milosevic, the wartime President.
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Financial Time (Free subscription) | 07/28/2008
... a hardline nationalist MP, Vjerica Radeta, at the weekend pointedly likened Mr Tadic to Zoran Djindjic, the pro-western prime minister assassinated in 2003."We remind Tadic that in Serbia there is no forgiveness for treachery. We are not threatening, just warning him of the curse that follows all traitors in Serbian history," she said at a Radical Party press conference at the weekend.Slobodan...
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FT.com - Europe homepage (Free subscription) | 07/27/2008
... a hardline nationalist MP, Vjerica Radeta, at the weekend pointedly likened Mr Tadic to Zoran Djindjic, the pro-western prime minister assassinated in 2003. “We remind Tadic that in Serbia there is no forgiveness for treachery. We are not threatening, just warning him of the curse that follows all traitors in Serbian history,” she said at a Radical Party press conference at the weekend....
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The Earth Times Online Newspaper (Free subscription) | 07/26/2008
Belgrade - After the arrest of war crimes suspect Radovan Karadzic, Serbian President Boris Tadic has received death threats, the president's office confirmed Saturday. "You are a dead man," "Remember God is great and the curse is upon you," "You call yourself a Serb? You betrayed the Serbs and God willing you'll end up like Djindjic" were just some of the threats that began coming into the...
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Trinidad Express (Free subscription) | 07/26/2008
... new president who sent Milosevic and a couple of his close allies off to face trial at The Hague, Zoran Djindjic, was assassinated by a Serbian extremist in 2003. Indeed, in recent years it seemed likely that none of the major Serbian perpetrators of the genocide would be punished at all. Milosevic died before he could be convicted, and Serbia wasn't handing over any more suspects...
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The Earth Times Online Newspaper (Free subscription) | 07/25/2008
... have a bomb under your car," while Ljajic got the most direct threat - "You'll end up like your Djindjic. First we'll shoot you in the knees."Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic, the leader of the Democratic Party now headed by Tadic, was assassinated by Milosevic's special police forces in 2003, two years after he extradited Milosevic, also charged with genocide and crimes...
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Global Voices Online (Free subscription) | 07/22/2008
... in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Hopefuly Serbian President Boris Tadić will fare better than the late Zoran Djindjić. Perhaprs, just perhaps, the wars of Yugoslavia will finally be brought to an end. […] […] [From the comments section, another note by Pengovsky] After the first couple of hours looking for reactions, caution seems to prevail. Noone wants to get his/her hopes too high too soon....
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The Earth Times Online Newspaper (Free subscription) | 07/23/2008
... to the tribunal in 2001 by the then prime minister and head of the pro-European Democratic Party, Zoran Djindjic. Djindjic was assassinated in 2003 by Milosevic's special police forces and Milosevic died while in custody in The Hague in 2006. Djindjic's successor, Boris Tadic, formed Serbia's ruling coalition with Dacic less than two weeks ago. The International Tribunal...
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The Guardian (Free subscription) | 07/23/2008
That arrest was "a courageous decision by the government", said a Serbian official, pointing out that Zoran Djindjic, a former pro-western prime minister, was assassinated in 2003 for handing Slobodan Milosevic over to The Hague. "Getting Mladic could be more dangerous than getting Karadzic. Probably he still has a friend or two," said the official.
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The Daily Dish (Free subscription) | 07/09/2008
A bit of a clusterfuck, but the end result impresses Douglas Muir: This is the most liberal government Serbia has had since Zoran Djindjic was shot back in March 2003. (I don’t include Djindjic’s hapless successor Zivkovic.) It’s worth recalling...
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A Fistful of Euros (Free subscription) | 07/08/2008
... ago, so take them with a grain of salt. This is the most liberal government Serbia has had since Zoran Djindjic was shot back in March 2003. (I don’t include Djindjic’s hapless successor Zivkovic.) It’s worth recalling that when Djindjic was shot, his approval ratings were in single digits… which is one reason his killers thought they could get away with it. I’m just...
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France24 (Free subscription) | 07/08/2008
... the 1990s, when with Milosevic at the helm, it led the country to war and isolation.Late DS leader Zoran Djindjic was the architect of a popular uprising that ousted Milosevic in 2000, while the SPS deemed unforgivable his decision to hand the former strongman over to the UN war crimes tribunal the following year.However, both sides now vow to reconcile their differences in order...
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Raw Story (Free subscription) | 07/08/2008
... the 1990s, when with Milosevic at the helm, it led the country to war and isolation.Late DS leader Zoran Djindjic was the architect of a popular uprising that ousted Milosevic in 2000, while the SPS deemed unforgivable his decision to hand the former strongman over to the UN war crimes tribunal the following year.However, both sides now vow to reconcile their differences in order...