Veran Matic on Sat, 10 Oct 1998 12:37:17 +0100 |
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Syndicate: <nettime> ANEM letter of protest to NATO |
[there has been some debate here in the netherlands about the counter-perspective to this, which focusses on the kosovo albanians stuck in the woods, driven from their homes, a position that argues that milosevic may not be stopped otherwise; i don't know what to think about this whole dilemma, but thought it is important to point out that there are people here who sympathise with the anti-government movement in serbia without necessarily being in agreement with ANEM about the question of bombing. what to do? -abroeck] Association of Independent Electronic Media URGENT To: NATO Secretary General Xavier Solana Hans van den Broek Madeleine Albright Richard Holbrooke Robin Cook From: Veran Matic, ANEM / B92 Date: 9 October 1998 Fax: 99 322 707 4666 PLEA FOR PEACE FROM THE INDEPENDENT MEDIA IN YUGOSLAVIA If NATO carries out its threat of military intervention in Yugoslavia, the possible consequences for the long-term stability of the Balkans are unimaginable. Intervention would unite the Serbian people behind President Milosovic in a way that no internal political action could. It would mobilise behind the Yugoslav President the very opposition forces that the West has been trying to promote. Military action would make a mockery of the assertion that democratization of Serbia is the only way to secure future peace in the Balkans. Such action would set back by years any chance of bringing the democratic process to Serbia - the best chance of effecting an end to the Kosovo crisis and the unfolding humanitarian catastrophe. Instead, military action is likely to encourage ultra nationalist forces to take the law into their own hands. The Serbian Deputy Prime Minster Vojislav Seselj, who is also president of the ultra nationalist Radical Party, has already threatened to arrest independent and foreign journalists, whom he describes as spies. The Serbian Government has also decreed that no media should carry international news services - a move described as an "intolerable and illegal censorship" by editors of the independent media. Nationalist feelings would almost certainly be ignited the moment any military threats were to become reality - putting at serious risk any members of the independent media, either local or foreign. Military action may also convince Milosevic that he has nothing to lose and could result in an even harsher crack down on the Albanians in Kosovo. The action would, among other things, also severely restrict the work of aid agencies carrying in Kosovo. Military action will not bring to an end the crisis in the Balkans. It is more likely to bolster Milosevic's totalitarian regime and pile more misery on the people of Yugoslavia by guaranteeing more years of international isolation. The first to suffer would be the very minorities that the West is striving to protect. Veran Matic Chief Editor Radio B92, ANEM Chairman -- Veran Matic, Editor in Chief tel: +381-11-322-9109 Radio B92, Belgrade, Yugoslavia fax: +381-11-322-4378 Radio B92 Official Web Site --- http://www.opennet.org/ --- # 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