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Encyclopedia > Milo Djukanovic

Milo Đukanović (born 1962) is the current Prime Minister of the state of Montenegro, within the state union of Serbia and Montenegro. He has served in this role since November 26, 2002, after resigning the position of president the previous day. He had previously served as Montenegrin prime minister between 1991 and 1997. There are ongoing investigations by the Italian authorities relating to Đukanović's possible involvement in people trafficking, as well as cigarette smuggling.


Đukanović was born in Nikšić. In his youth, he became involved with the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (in what was then the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), before joining the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia in 1979.


In 1991, at the age of 29, he rose to the post of Montenegrin prime minister for the first time, with the support of former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milošević. At this time, he was the youngest prime minister in Europe.


In 1996, he began to fall out with Milošević, publicly blasting him in an interview. At that time Milosevic was facing harsh criticism in Serbia with student protests in the Winter of 1996/1997. This was in stark contrast to the stance of Momir Bulatović who was then both president of Montenenegro and the pro-Milošević Democratic Party of Socialists. Bulatović's protégé wrested control of the party and the republic from his mentor. Đukanović won a narrow, but majority support in the DPS party and cleansed the party of pro-Bulatović supporters while taking over the state-controlled media and the security apparatus with the help of his DPS ally Vukašin Maraš.


In July of 1997, Đukanović contested Bulatović for the position of president of Montenegro. In the first round of the elections, Đukanović lagged by 2000 votes behind Bulatović (a staunch ally of Slobodan Milosević). Three of the other candidates, who received 11,000 votes, gave support to Bulatović for the second round. However, in a historic second round vote seen as the most significant electoral victory in Montenegro's democratic history, Đukanović won the elections by a margin of five thousand, after assembling 29,000 more votes than in the first round.


Since the downfall of Milošević, he has struggled with Serbia over the issue of Montenegrin independence. His pro-independence policy resulted in a compromise "imposed" by the EU and its foreign policy commissioner Javier Solana and the creation of the new state union of Serbia and Montenegro (replacing the two-republic Federal Yugoslavia), but this also caused fallout with elements of his supporters who wanted him to push for full independence.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Djukanovic President of Montenegro (1429 words)
In Bar, Djukanovic won two times more than his opponent, and similar was the case with Rozaje: the first time the difference was 9,097, and the second time 10 and a half thousand more in favour of Djukanovic.
Djukanovic and his supporters will be closely watched by the opposition and the public - forced to respect the law, as well as all agreements and contracts.
Djukanovic's victory is in this sense a torch of hope at the end of a long, dark tunnel.
Rage Against the Regime in Serbia: Federal Elections, September 24 (1666 words)
This is precisely why Djukanovic was asked repeatedly both by his colleagues in Serbian opposition(4), who offered a lot of understanding and solidarity(5), and by the ‘international community’ (in person by Madeleine Albright) to rethink his boycott idea(6).
Ideally Momo and Milo would have met, settled their differences and found a way for one Yugoslavia with no Milosevic, but that could be just a bit too utopian a conclusion.
Public opinion polls conducted in Montenegro show that Djukanovic is simply bluffing when he "scares" Belgrade with the prospect of a referendum on the republic's exit from the Yugoslav federation: only a third of those polled support the creation of an "independent and sovereign" Montenegro.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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