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U.S. Department of State
Serbia-Montenegro Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
February 26, 1998
SERBIA-MONTENEGRO
Serbia--Montenegro, a constitutional republic, is dominated by Federal
President Slobodan Milosevic. President Milosevic continues to control the
country through his role as President of the Socialist Party of Serbia
(SPS)--a dual role arrangement proscribed by the federal Constitution--and
his domination of other formal and informal institutions. Although the SPS
lacks majorities in both the Federal and Serbian Parliaments, it controls
governing coalitions and holds the key administrative positions. The
Milosevic regime effectively controls the judiciary and respects the
country's legal framework only when it suits the regimeâs immediate
political interests.
Serbia abolished the political autonomy of Kosovo and Vojvodina in 1990,
and all significant decisionmaking since that time has been centralized
under Milosevic in Belgrade. The Milosevic regime's repressive policies
quashed any prospect of interethnic cooperation with Kosovoâs ethnic
Albanians and led to a full--fledged separatist insurgency that erupted
early in the year. The regime undertook a brutal police and military
crackdown against separatist insurgents in Kosovo--a crackdown that by some
measures resulted in the deaths of about 2,000 persons by yearâs end, the
vast majority of whom were ethnic Albanians.
The international community does not recognize the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia (FRY)--Serbia--Montenegro--as the sole successor state to the
former Yugoslavia. Accordingly, the "FRY" still is not permitted to
participate in the United Nations (U.N.), the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), or other international organizations and
financial organizations.
As a key element of his hold on power, President Milosevic effectively
controls the Serbian police, a heavily armed force of some 100,000 officers
that is responsible for internal security. Serbian police committed
numerous serious and systematic human rights abuses.
Despite the suspension of certain U.N. economic sanctions, economic
performance was anemic due to the imposition of new sanctions as a response
to the situation in Kosovo and the FRY's continued exclusion from
international financial institutions. Unemployment and underemployment
remained high (about 60 percent), since the Government was unable or
unwilling to introduce necessary restructuring measures. The Government
failed to implement needed sweeping economic reforms, including
privatization, which would help the economy but could undermine the
regimeâs crony system.
The Governmentâs human rights record worsened significantly, and there were
problems in many areas. Serbian police committed numerous serious abuses
including extrajudicial killings, disappearances, torture, brutal beatings,
and arbitrary arrests and detentions. The judicial system is not
independent of the Government, suffers from corruption, and does not ensure
fair trials. The authorities infringed on citizens' right to privacy. The
Government severely restricted freedom of speech and of the press, and used
overbearing police intimidation and economic pressure to control tightly
the independent press and media. The Government restricted freedom of
assembly and association. While under the Constitution citizens have a
right to stage peaceful demonstrations, in practice the police seriously
beat scores of protesters throughout the republic of Serbia, sending many
to hospitals. The Government infringed on freedom of worship by minority
religions and restricted freedom of movement. The Milosevic regime used
its continued domination of Parliament and the media to enact legislation
to manipulate the electoral process. In practice citizens cannot exercise
the right to change their government. The most recent electoral
manipulation by the regime was in the Serbian parliamentary and
presidential elections in the fall of 1997. The Federal and Serbian
Governments' record of cooperation with international human rights and
monitoring organizations was poor. The Federal Government remained
uncooperative with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia (ICTY): it failed to meet its obligations under numerous U.N.
Security Council Resolutions to comply fully with the Tribunal's orders,
failed to issue visas to allow ICTY investigators into Kosovo (and, in the
last quarter of the year, even into the rest of Serbia), and failed to
transfer or facilitate the surrender to the Tribunal of persons on Serbian
territory indicted for war crimes or other crimes against humanity under
the jurisdiction of the Tribunal. Instead, the Milosevic Government openly
harbored indicted war criminals--three of whom the Government openly
acknowledged were present on Serbian territory--and publicly rejected the
Tribunalâs jurisdiction over events in Kosovo. Discrimination and violence
against women remained serious problems. Discrimination against ethnic
Albanians, Muslims, Roma, and other religious and ethnic minorities
worsened during the year. Police repression continued to be directed
against ethnic minorities, and police committed the most widespread and
worst abuses against Kosovo's 90 percent ethnic Albanian population.
Police repression also was directed against Muslims in the Sandzak region
and other citizens who protested against the Government. The regime limits
unions not affiliated with the Government in their attempts to advance
worker rights.
Montenegro continued to be the only bright spot in the FRY, although
Milosevic's influence threatens to complicate the Republic's efforts at
democratization. In January 1998, Milo Djukanovic became Montenegro's
President after November 1997 elections judged by international monitors to
be free and fair, and his reform coalition won parliamentary elections in
May. The Milosevic regime continued a relentless campaign to undermine
Djukanovic's popular support, including by refusing to accept his choice of
delegates to the upper house of the Federal Parliament; refusing to accept
a Montenegrin Government choice for the new Federal Prime Minister; and
withholding financial contributions owed to the Montenegrin pension system.
Moreover, the Milosevic regime was believed to be behind a violent campaign
to wreak havoc at the time of Djukanovic's inauguration. In his effort to
crush Montenegrin democratization, Milosevic violated the Federal and
Montenegrin Constitutions by persuading the federal Constitutional Court to
review Montenegrin electoral legislation and by using his influence over
Federal judges to have Montenegrin legislation declared unconstitutional.
Elements of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA, an armed ethnic Albanian group
that seeks independence for Kosovo) were also responsible for abuses. They
committed killings, were responsible for disappearances, abducted and
detained Serbian police, as well as Serb and Albanian civilians (those
suspected of loyalty to the Serbian Government), and in a few isolated
cases "tried" suspects without due process. There are also credible
reports of instances of torture by the KLA.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom
From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
Political violence, including killings by police, became a significant
problem during the year as a result of the conflict in Kosovo (see Section
1.g.). Beginning in the early spring and again throughout the year,
Serbian police killed scores of ethnic Albanians often in brutal fashion.
In Likosane in early March police entered the family compound of the Ahmeti
family, rounded up the male members of the clan plus one acquaintance--12
individuals--and summarily executed them. A few days later, in Donji
Prekaz, police surrounded the family compound of Adem Jashari, whom they
believed to be well armed and a member of the KLA, and destroyed it. Over
80 persons died in the siege, including women and children.
On May 25, police in Ljubenic entered the compound of the Hamzaj clan and
allegedly executed at least five male members of the family. According to
witnesses who spoke to the Humanitarian Law Center, police lined up the
victims and forced them to strip down to their underpants before killing
them. News of the atrocities committed by the police spread rapidly in
Kosovo, fed the separatist insurgency, and led to more violence.
Rexhep Bislimi, an activist of the Urosevac chapter of the Pristina--based
Council for the Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms, died as a result of
injuries inflicted by Serbian security forces while in detention in July.
Serbian authorities denied Bislimi's family access to him, both while he
was in detention and after he was transferred to Pristina hospital with
serious injuries (see Section 4). Three humanitarian aid workers were
killed by Serbian mortar fire while trying to deliver food near Kijevo on
August 24 (see Section 1.g.).
On September 26 in Gornje Obrinje, Serbian special police allegedly killed
18 members of an ethnic Albanian family, including women and infants. In
December Serbian and FRY officials blocked access for a team of independent
international forensic experts to the site of the grave where those killed
in Gornje Obrinje were buried. On May 31, Serbian security forces attacked
the village of Novi Poklek, near Glogovac. Police seized 10 ethnic
Albanian men in the raid, one of whom was found dead later that day. The
other nine were still missing at year's end and presumed dead. According
to eyewitness accounts of international human rights groups, Serbian
special police summarily executed 13 ethnic Albanian men in Golubovac on
September 26.
The FRY, in contravention of repeated U.N. Security Council Resolutions,
denied investigators from the ICTY access to any part of Kosovo, preventing
them from undertaking a thorough and independent investigation into these
and other atrocities committed in the province that fall under the
Tribunal's jurisdiction (see Section 4).
On December 29 the bodies of five Kosovo Albanians were found alongside
roads or bridges, two in Prizren, two in Kosovska Mitrovica, and one on the
Pec--Decani road. On December 30 a Kosovo Albanian was killed near the
village of Dremnjak. By yearâs end according to credible reports, about 2,
000 persons were dead as a result of the conflict in Kosovo, the vast
majority of whom were ethnic Albanians. The domestic Pristina--based
Council for the Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms reported in late
December that the bulk of casualties among ethnic Albanians were unarmed
civilians.
According to an international human rights NGO, at least five persons died
from abuse in prison during the year in Serbia (see Section 1.c.). There
were reports of many extrajudicial killings by members of the armed ethnic
Albanian insurgency, including of several so--called ethnic Albanian
"collaborators" and several Serb civilians near one of the strongholds of
the KLA in Glodjane in the late summer (see Section 1.g.). Forces alleged
to be from the KLA kidnaped and killed the deputy mayor of Kosovo Polje,
Zvonko Bojanic, on December 17. According to international observers, two
masked persons entered a cafe in Pec during the night of December 14 and
began firing at customers. Six Serbs were killed in the attack, and three
others were hospitalized. Police identified 14 suspects and arrested 3
between December 15 and 17. In late December, a local police inspector was
killed in central Podujevo, an elderly Serb man was shot dead in the
village of Obranza, and a Serb janitor was killed in Urosevac, all in
circumstances that led to suspicion that the KLA was responsible for the
killings.
On December 27, three Roma were found dead in Kosovska Mitrovica. The Roma
community reportedly attributed responsibility for the deaths to the KLA.
On December 31 a Serb janitor in the Urosevac agricultural school was found
dead on the outskirts of town.
b. Disappearance
There were unconfirmed reports of hundreds of disappearances. According to
Human Rights Watch, at least a hundred ethnic Albanians disappeared in
Kosovo during the worst fighting between February and September, about half
of whom were last seen in police custody.
In one instance several corpses were found hastily buried by Serbian forces
in a garbage dump near Orahovac in July. There were also reports of mass
graves, which Serbian authorities strongly denied. However, Serbian and
federal authorities failed to grant investigators from the ICTY access to
the gravesites. Among the persons who disappeared was Dr. Hafir Shala, a
medical doctor, who was apprehended on April 10 by police near Glogovac,
taken to the central police station in Pristina, and never heard from
again. The Belgrade--based Humanitarian Law Center documented numerous
cases of ethnic Albanians who were apprehended by police over the summer
months and were still missing at yearâs end. Access for international
humanitarian organizations such as the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) to those detained was impeded by the Serbian Government
throughout most of the year, but slightly improved after October.
The fate of some 136 Serbs and Montenegrins reported missing and presumed
to have been abducted by the KLA or other ethnic Albanian insurgent
fighters was still unknown at yearâs end, according to international
intergovernmental organizations, based on reports from family members of
the missing. Up to 280 Serbs were reported missing throughout the year.
Several Serbs reported cases of family members--mostly civilians--taken
hostage by separatist fighters and not heard from again, including many
reportedly taken after fighting between police and insurgent forces at
Orahovac in July. Many of those still missing are believed to have been
killed; others are presumed to be still alive. The KLA kidnaped a Serb
policeman on November 19 in the Podujevo area; after intervention by the
Kosovo Diplomatic Observer Mission (KDOM) the KLA released the policeman on
November 24. International organizations and diplomatic observers had very
little success in winning access to those believed to be detained by armed
Albanian groups.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
The law prohibits torture and other cruel forms of punishment; however,
Serbian security forces regularly and systematically used torture, beatings
in detention, and other forms of abuse against the ethnic Albanian
population after fighting erupted in Kosovo early in the year. There were
several police roundups in Kosovo during the year of ethnic Albanians
charged by the Serb authorities with supporting terrorism. The worst
police brutality takes place during the 3 to 4 day period of incommunicado
detention allowed by law. According to credible reports, police also used
electric shock and sleep deprivation to torture detainees. In one incident,
Serbian police took into custody Sokol Rugovci, an ethnic Albanian from
Montenegro. According to the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in
Sandzak, when Rugovci admitted during an interrogation that he supported
the reform government of Milo Djukanovic, the police used a welding machine
to brand "Milo" on his chest. In another incident, police carved a cross
on the chest of Arsim Krasnici, an ethnic Albanian, in a Pristina hospital.
In another incident, an ethnic Serb woman reported to authorities that
police threatened to carve off her genitals because she worked in a Muslim
restaurant. One of three policemen involved in the incident was sentenced
to 20 days in prison but by yearâs end had not served his sentence.
According to the Center for the Protection of Women and Children in
Pristina, Serb security forces reportedly engaged in the rape of Albanian
women in Kosovo. Two girls who reportedly were raped by Yugoslav Army
members committed suicide near the end of the year (see Section 1.c.). At
least five Kosovo Albanian males died in custody during the year--all
individuals who were in good health prior to their detention by Serbian
police, according to international human rights groups. Evidence of
torture in detention is widespread.
Human rights lawyer Destan Rukiqi, who defended dozens of ethnic Albanian
political prisoners in Kosovo in recent years, was arrested on July 23 and
then severely beaten by the police. On his third day of detention he was
beaten with rubber batons on the kidneys and spent 2 weeks on dialysis. On
July 30, he was taken from Lipljan prison to Pristina hospital with serious
injuries to his kidneys. Rukiqi was sentenced the same day in an expedited
procedure to the maximum 60 days in prison for the misdemeanor offense of
disturbing public order. His arrest was related to an incident in which he
raised his voice to a judge who refused to let him review the case file of
his client. Serb authorities denied Rukiqi's wife and his lawyers, as well
as diplomatic and human rights observers, access to him in prison and in
the hospital. Rukiqi was released on August 22 after 30 days in prison.
Ethnic Albanians continued to suffer at the hands of security forces
conducting searches for weapons, ammunition, and explosives. The police,
without following proper legal procedures, frequently extract "confessions"
during interrogations that routinely include the beating of suspects' feet,
hands, genital areas, and sometimes heads. The police use their fists,
nightsticks, and occasionally electric shocks. Apparently confident that
there would be no reprisals, and in an attempt to intimidate the wider
community, police often beat persons in front of their families. There has
been virtually no prosecution of those responsible, despite a public
commitment from the President of the Government of Serbia in October to do
so and despite repeated demands from the international community calling on
the Milosevic Government to cooperate in the investigation and prosecution
of those responsible. According to various sources, ethnic Albanians are
frequently too terrified to ask police to follow proper legal procedures--
such as having them provide written notice of witness interrogation. In
some cases, Serbian police also used threats and violence against family
members of suspects and held them as hostages. Local human rights monitors
report that Serbian police threatened and intimidated doctors working in
Kosovo to prevent them from treating KLA members. One doctor reported that
police entered his private clinic, held him at gunpoint, and threatened him
for treating suspected terrorists. According to Albanian and foreign
observers, the worst abuses against ethnic Albanians took place not in big
towns but in rural enclaves--a pattern which, according to many observers,
increased separatist sentiment and provided the basis for the strong
support for the KLA in these areas.
On December 15, police in Belgrade detained and beat a student activist
from the "Student Resistance Movement" Otpor, Srdjan Popovic. On December
29, unknown thugs (possibly special police forces) beat another prominent
Otpor activist, Boris Karajcic, just weeks after considerable media
exposure of his trip abroad to publicize the Milosevic regime's human
rights abuses (see Section 2.a.).
Police beat an APTV cameraman in Pristina in October (see Section 2.a.).
Police occasionally attacked Roma (also see Section 5). Police used
truncheons, tear gas, and water canons against student demonstrators in
Belgrade (see Section 2.b.).
The police harassed persons connected with the distribution of the Belgrade
independent newspaper Dnevni Telegraf. Kiosk owners were approached and
told that if they sold the newspaper the financial police would look into
their operations. Throughout the year the police systematically
intimidated printing houses--including in November the Forum of Novi Sad--
to prevent them from printing independent newspapers (see Section
2.a.).
In a country where many of the adult males are armed, the Serbian
government and police, according to some members of ethnic minorities,
selectively enforced the laws regulating the possession and registration of
firearms during the year so as to harass and intimidate ethnic minorities,
particularly Kosovo Albanians and Bosniak Muslims. The most frequent
justification given for searches of homes and arrests was the illegal
possession of weapons. Observers allege that in Kosovo the police use the
pretext of searching for weapons when in fact they are also searching for
hard currency. It is reported that local police authorities more easily
approve the registration of legal weapons for Kosovo Serbs and frequently
turn a blind eye to Serbs' possession of illegal weapons. In fact, the
Serbian police in some cases reportedly actively promoted the arming of
local Kosovo Serb civilians.
Prison conditions meet minimum international standards. According to human
rights monitors based in Belgrade, prison conditions deteriorated in recent
years. However, there were few confirmed reports of the abuse of prisoners
once they were sentenced and serving time. The vast majority of cases of
torture occur before the detainees are charged with offenses or during the
period between the filing of charges and the commencement of the
trial.
The Government generally permits prison visits by human rights monitors,
although access is sporadic and subject to the whim of local officials.
Access was poor for much of the year but improved slightly by October. On
several occasions, outside monitors, including representatives of the ICRC,
were denied access to individuals held by Serbian police. For example, in
September although the Government agreed to allow access to the 523 persons
it acknowledged to have in custody then, the ICRC gained access to less
than 30 of them.
After poor cooperation between the ICRC and the Serbian authorities,
relations improved significantly after Milosevic reached agreements with
international interlocutors in June and October. At yearâs end the
Ministry of Justice improved its record in notifying the ICRC of detainees.
According to Ministry of Justice statistics, 771 persons were detained on
charges relating to the conflict in Kosovo at yearâs end. The ICRC visited
421 of those detained; 276 of the 771 had been in detention since October.
However, the ICRC was denied access to persons detained by the Ministry of
Defense, which only has heightened international concern for the condition
and treatment of those prisoners. The ICRC estimates that the Ministry of
Defense had 40 persons in custody. Access to those civilians alleged by
the Government or by family members to be detained by the KLA has been
almost nonexistent.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
Police use of arbitrary arrest and detention was concentrated primarily in
Kosovo and, to a lesser degree, in Sandzak. Serbian police often apply
certain laws only against ethnic minorities and used force with relative
impunity. Sandzak Muslims as well as Kosovo Albanians were subjected to
trumped up or exaggerated charges, ranging from unlawful possession of
firearms to willfully undermining the countryâs territorial integrity.
According to Serbian Ministry of Justice statistics, the authorities were
in the process of charging or trying approximately 1,500 persons for
activities related to the Kosovo conflict. Serbian security forces
arrested Sylejman Bytyci, a member of the local leadership of the LDK
(Democratic League of Kosovo) Party, as well as Milaim Jashari, a senior
member of the local chapter of the Council for the Defense of Human Rights
and Freedoms, and his 21--year--old son, Zylbehar Jashari, during a large--
scale raid in Urosevac. In July Serbian police arrested several seasonal
workers from Kosovo in Novi Pazar without cause and kept them overnight
before releasing them the following day. According to the Helsinki
Committee in Sandzak, the police feared demonstrations on the first
anniversary of appointed rule, July 10 in Novi Pazar, which marked the date
when the Milosevic regime forcibly removed the elected local government in
the predominantly Muslim municipality. The police arrested many non--Serbs
to avoid problems. Earlier, without cause, the police on June 16 arrested
student activists in Novi Pazar who were involved in a national antiwar
campaign against the regime's Kosovo policy.
Laws regarding conspiracy, threats to the integrity of the government, and
state secrets are so vague as to allow easy abuse by the regime.
Federal statutes permit the police to detain criminal suspects without a
warrant and hold them incommunicado for up to 3 days without charging them
or granting them access to an attorney. Serbian law separately provides
for a 24--hour detention period. The police often combine the two for a
total 4--day detention period. After this period, police must turn a
suspect over to an investigative judge, who may order a 30--day extension
and, under certain legal procedures, subsequent extensions of investigative
detention up to 6 months. In Kosovo, Serbian police often detain and beat
persons without ever officially charging them and routinely hold suspects
well beyond the 3--day statutory period. Bail rarely is granted.
Defense lawyers and human rights workers complained of excessive delays by
Serbian authorities in filing formal charges and opening investigations.
The ability of defense attorneys to challenge the legal basis of their
clients' detention often was hampered further by difficulties in gaining
access to detainees or acquiring copies of official indictments and
decisions to remand defendants into custody. In some cases, judges
prevented defense attorneys from reading the court file. Investigative
judges in Serbia often delegated their responsibility for carrying out
investigations to the police or members of the state security service and
rarely questioned their accounts of the investigation--even when it was
obvious that confessions were coerced from the accused. Results of such
sham investigations were then used in court to convict defendants on
trumped up charges.
The regime ignored its pledge to grant amnesty for "crimes related to the
conflict in Kosovo," a pledge that was part of Milosevicâs October
agreement to end the repression there. Humanitarian organizations reported
in December that there were no reported cases of amnesty for individuals
charged with terrorist acts. As a result, about 1,500 ethnic Albanians
remained in custody at yearâs end charged with committing terrorist acts or
with "anti--State activities" related to the conflict in Kosovo. According
to an international human rights NGO, prosecutors in the Pec district in
Kosovo were increasing the charges in many cases to crimes against humanity
in an effort to circumvent the Serbian government's own pledge in October
to grant an amnesty for conflict--related crimes.
Four members of the "Student Resistance Movement" protesting Serbia's
repressive new information law and the removal of faculty from a university
for political reasons were arrested in late fall for spraying anti--Fascist
graffiti (see Section 2.a.). In November three of the four students were
sentenced to 10 days in jail and were released from custody. The four were
convicted in a hastily staged trial, and their sentences were considered
harsh for first--time offenders. Also unusual in such cases, the sentences
were served before the appeal was heard.
According to the Ministry of Justice, at yearâs end 771 persons were
detained on charges relating to the conflict on Kosovo.
The KLA kidnaped two journalists of the state--run news agency Tanjug on
October 18. On October 30 the "military court" of the KLA sentenced them
to 60 days in prison for violating the civilian and military regulations of
the KLA and the regulations of the KLA "police." The journalists were
given 7 days to appeal their sentences, according to the KLA. The ICRC
announced that it was unsuccessful in its repeated attempts to visit the
two (see Section 2.a.). The KLA finally released the pair in late
November. In October the KLA detained 13 Albanian politicians, including
members of the Kosovo Albanian Shadow Parliament, in Cirez for 2 days. The
KLA forces are reported to have repeatedly tortured 6 of the 13 detainees,
whom they considered to be too close to the Serbian Government.
International intergovernmental human rights organizations believe that the
KLA held at most a relatively small number of hostages/prisoners at yearâs
end.
Exile is not permitted legally, and no instances of its use are known to
have occurred. However, the practical effect of police repression in
Kosovo and Sandzak has been to accentuate political instability, which in
turn has limited economic opportunity. As a result, many ethnic Albanians
and Bosniak Muslims go abroad to escape persecution, although only in a few
cases could direct links to police actions be identified.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary, but in practice,
Federal and Serbian courts largely are controlled by the Government and
rarely challenge the will of the state security apparatus. Judicial
corruption is also widespread. While judges are elected for fixed terms,
they may be subjected to governmental pressure. Serbian authorities
frequently deny fair public trial to non--Serbs and to persons whom they
believe oppose the regime. The fraud that followed the November 1996
municipal elections was perpetrated mainly through the regime's misuse of
the judicial system. In Milosevic's FRY, the key perpetrator of that fraud,
president of the First Belgrade Municipal Court Dragoljub Jankovic, became
the Serbian Justice Minister. Another perpetrator, Balsa Grovedarica, at
the time the presiding judge of the Serbian Supreme Court, was awarded an
extra official position: he became president of the Serbian Electoral
Commission.
The court system comprises local, district, and supreme courts at the
republic level, as well as a Federal Court and Federal Constitutional Court
to which republic supreme court decisions, depending on the subject, may be
appealed. There is also a military court system. According to the Federal
Constitution, the Federal Constitutional Court rules on the constitutionality
of laws and regulations and relies on the constituent republic authorities
to enforce its rulings.
The Federal Criminal Code of the former Socialist Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia remains in force. Considerable confusion and room for abuse
remain in the legal system because the 1990 Constitution of Serbia has not
yet been brought into conformity with the 1992 Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia. Under federal law, defendants have the right to be
present at their trial and to have an attorney represent them, at public
expense if needed. The courts also must provide interpreters. The
presiding judge decides what is read into the record of the proceedings.
Either the defendant or the prosecutor may appeal the verdict.
Although generally respected in form, defense lawyers in Kosovo and Sandzak
have filed numerous complaints about flagrant breaches of standard
procedure, which they believed undermined their clients' rights. Even when
individual judges admitted that the lawyers were correct, the courts
ignored or dismissed the complaints.
Human rights lawyer Destan Rukiqi, who defended dozens of ethnic Albanian
political prisoners in Kosovo in recent years, was arrested on July 23 and
severely beaten by Serbian police (see Section 1.c.). His arrest was
related to an incident in which he raised his voice to a judge who refused
to let him review the case file of his client.
In November police in Belgrade arrested four students with the Otpor
student resistance movement, and a court sentenced them to 10--day prison
terms in a summary trial with no right of appeal (see Section
2.a.).
The Government continues to pursue cases previously brought against
targeted minority groups under the Yugoslav Criminal Code for jeopardizing
the territorial integrity of the country and for conspiring or forming a
group with intent to commit subversive activities--that is, undermining the
"constitutional order." Numerous questionable trials took place in Kosovo
during the year involving almost 500 ethnic Albanians. Over 90 percent of
the cases involved alleged violations under the Federal Penal Code of
Article 136 related to "association to conduct enemy activity," or Article
125 concerning "terrorism." According to the Ministry of Justice, as of
December some 1,500 Kosovo Albanians were being charged or tried for crimes
related to the Kosovo conflict. According to the ICRC, the Justice
Ministry stated that some 500 were being tried in absentia. The Office of
the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights was monitoring the cases of 1,
350 prisoners in the Pec and Prizren regional courts at year's end.
Generally, the evidence in these cases was inadequate, and the defendants
largely were denied timely access to their attorneys. According to
international civilian verifiers from the OSCE Kosovo Verification Mission
(KVM) office in Pec, some 80 "nonprofessional" judges work in the district
and municipal courts there, of whom the vast majority are former police
officers. Although there are two courtrooms in the court building, many
trials are held in the offices of the judges on the upper floors where no
members of the public are present. International human rights monitors
observed a lack of impartiality by Serb judges in the municipal and
district court system in the province. They also noted the absence of
legal counsel for the defense, the absence of witnesses or experts during
proceedings, and a failure to provide medical care during proceedings to
defendants obviously in need of immediate attention. Continuing a common
pattern of abuse, independent observers reported that several defendants
met their defense attorneys for the first time only after the investigative
judge already concluded the crucial investigation stage, while other
defendants had defense counsel assigned after they entered the courtroom.
Much evidence appeared to have been obtained by authorities through forced
confessions of defendants under duress. Other evidence was kept from
defense attorneys until just before the trial. Other international
observers monitoring the trials of alleged terrorists in Pristina
complained of irregularities in the process involving evidentiary standards,
the nonuse of native languages, and the failure to respect the presumption
of innocence.
Many legal scholars expressed concern in July over the passage of the Act
on Lawyers, which is said to be an attempt to restrict the freedoms of
lawyers and to interfere with the independence of lawyers in their dealings
with clients. In particular, according to an analysis done by the Helsinki
Committee for Human Rights in Serbia, the law is said to give too much
authority to the lawyersâ chambers--both at the republic and federal levels-
-which the Helsinki Committee alleges would enable the regime to exercise
stricter control over the profession. According to a Serbian
Constitutional Court Judge, the law will also enable the regime to
interfere with the lawyer--client relationship, which, even during the
Communist era, was upheld to a greater degree.
Ulsin Hoti, leader of UNIKOM, a political party that advocates Kosovoâs
unification with Albania, was in detention for the entire year. Hoti was
in a Nis jail and was reportedly in poor health. His lawyers have been
denied access to him since February.
The Government introduced a constitutional initiative in July to rein in
republic--level judges by discarding the provision that gives them their
mandates for life and requiring that they seek office periodically through
election. This process would involve obtaining Justice Ministry approval
for each judgeâs candidacy. Local observers fear that the provision would
in effect make judges functionaries of the regime, easily removed if they
do not cooperate.
The Government continues to hold some ethnic Albanians as political
prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference With Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The authorities infringed on citizensâ privacy rights. Federal law gives
republic ministries of the interior sole control over the decision to
monitor potential criminal activities, a power that routinely is abused.
It is widely believed that authorities monitor opposition and dissident
activity, eavesdrop on conversations, read mail, and tap telephones.
Although illegal under provisions of Federal and Serbian law, the Federal
post office registers all mail from abroad, ostensibly to protect mail
carriers from charges of theft.
Although the law includes restrictions on searches, officials often ignored
them. In Kosovo and Sandzak, Serbian police systematically subjected
ethnic Albanians and Bosniak Muslims to random searches of their homes,
vehicles, shops, and offices, asserting that they were searching for
weapons. According to the Kosovo Council for the Defense of Human Rights
and Freedoms, the police carried out scores of raids on homes, including in
areas not affected by the fighting. Police used threats and violence
against family members of suspects.
Serbian security forces systematically destroyed entire villages in Kosovo
by burning and shelling houses, contaminating water wells, and killing
livestock (see Section 1.g.).
A government law requiring universal military service is enforced only
sporadically; it was not vigorously enforced during the year. The informal
practice of the military has been not to call up ethnic Albanians. Of
approximately 100,000 draft evaders living abroad to avoid punishment, 40
percent were estimated to be ethnic Albanian. This number in part reflects
the large number of conscription--age men in the FRY's Albanian community.
Leaders of Kosovo's Albanian and Sandzak's Muslim communities maintained
that forced compliance of these ethnic groups with universal military
service was an attempt to induce young men to flee the country. According
to an amnesty bill passed in 1996, up to 12,000 young men for whom criminal
prosecution for draft evasion already had started were granted amnesty.
Others who did not fall into this category were told that if they returned
to the FRY their cases would be reviewed on a "case by case" basis, a
policy that has not inspired confidence among offenders. Another law
passed in October stated that draft dodgers who did not report for military
service would forfeit their right to inheritance.
In a related development, under a 1996 agreement with Germany, ethnic
Albanian refugees repatriated to the FRY were not supposed to be prosecuted
for fleeing the draft. However, according to the Humanitarian Law Center,
many returning ethnic Albanians faced irregular procedures on returning to
the FRY. The Center reported many misdeeds by authorities against returned
asylum seekers, including physical abuse, threats of imprisonment,
deportation, confiscation of identification cards, and a requirement that
persons report to their local police stations on a daily basis. Returning
ethnic Albanians and Sandzak Muslims are detained routinely on their
arrival at local airports. In many cases FRY officials have refused to
issue proper travel documents to children born to asylum seekers.
g. Use of Excessive Force and Violations of Humanitarian Law in
Internal Conflicts
The conflict in Kosovo placed civilian populations on both sides of the
ethnic divide in an unusually vulnerable position. The excessive and
indiscriminate use of force by Serbian police forces and the Yugoslav Army
(VJ) resulted in widespread civilian casualties and the mass forced
displacement of up to 250,000 persons by September, the vast majority of
whom were displaced within Kosovo while tens of thousands sought refuge in
Montenegro. The Milosevic Government's actions and the ensuing
humanitarian crisis nearly resulted in a humanitarian catastrophe in the
fall.
In Likosane in early March police entered the family compound of the Ahmeti
family, rounded up the male members of the clan plus one acquaintance--12
individuals--and summarily executed them. A few days later, in Donji
Prekaz, police surrounded the family compound of Adem Jashari, whom they
believed to be well armed and a member of the KLA, and destroyed it. Over
80 persons died in the siege, including women and children.
On September 26 in Gornje Obrinje, Serbian special police allegedly killed
18 members of an ethnic Albanian family, including women and infants. In
December Serbian and FRY officials blocked access for a team of independent
international forensic experts to the gravesites of those killed in Gornje
Obrinje. On May 31, Serbian security forces attacked the village of Novi
Poklek, near Glogovac. Police seized 10 ethnic Albanian men in the raid,
one of whom was found dead later that day. The other nine were still
missing at year's end and presumed dead. According to eyewitness accounts
of international human rights groups, Serbian special police summarily
executed 13 ethnic Albanian men in Golubovac on September 26. The FRY, in
contravention of repeated U.N. Security Council Resolutions, denied
investigators from the ICTY access to any part of Kosovo, preventing them
from undertaking a thorough and independent investigation into these and
other atrocities committed in the province that fall under the Tribunal's
jurisdiction (see Section 4).
According to international observers, two masked persons entered a cafe in
Pec during the night of December 14 and began firing at customers. Six
Serbs were killed in the attack, and three others were hospitalized.
Police identified 14 suspects and arrested 3 between December 15 and 17.
In late December, a local police inspector was killed in central Podujevo,
an elderly Serb man was shot dead in the village of Obranza, and a Serb
janitor was killed in Urosevac, all in circumstances that led to suspicion
that the KLA was responsible for the killings.
On December 27, three Roma were found dead in Kosovska Mitrovica. The Roma
community reportedly attributed responsibility for the deaths to the
KLA.
The international community was engaged continuously during the year in an
effort to compel Milosevic to act constructively to find a peaceful
solution to the Kosovo crisis. After police killed scores of civilians in
late February in the process of trying to eliminate what the regime alleged
was a "terrorist" cell, the international community imposed further
sanctions, including an investment ban, which went into effect in the
summer. However, further violence followed, and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) allies stepped up pressure on the regime in the fall.
In the face of the threat of NATO air raids, Milosevic agreed to steps
aimed at mitigating the humanitarian disaster unfolding in the province.
He undertook to comply fully with the terms of U.N. Security Council
Resolution (UNSCR) 1199 (adopted in September), which included demands that
the FRY cease all action by the security forces affecting the civilian
population, order the withdrawal of security forces used for civilian
repression, cooperate with the ICTY, and allow full and unimpeded access
for all international humanitarian aid organizations to Kosovo, including
the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the ICRC. Milosevic
also agreed to allow a NATO air verification mission to verify compliance
with UNSCR 1199 from the air and to allow 2,000 unarmed civilian
"verifiers" of the OSCE KVM to verify compliance on the ground in Kosovo.
Agreements establishing these missions were signed separately by the FRY,
with NATO and the OSCE respectively, in mid--October. In subsequent
meetings with NATO representatives, Milosevic agreed to specific limits on
Serbian police and Yugoslav Army presence in Kosovo.
According to a resolution adopted by the U.N. Third Committee in November,
Serbian security forces damaged by arson or artillery over 20,000 houses in
Kosovo, and the fighting resulted in over 1,000 documented deaths,
including many small children and the elderly. International diplomatic
observers witnessed Serbian armed forces purposefully destroying civilian
property: police systematically looted, trashed, and burned villages and
shot livestock with the intention of depopulating certain regions,
especially the villages near the border with Albania. In the summer,
international diplomatic observers and members of intergovernmental
organizations witnessed Serbian security forces torching and vandalizing
homes of ethnic Albanians after fighting between police forces and
insurgents had already ceased in those villages. Other NGOâs reported that
areas that were occupied by Serbian security forces were at high risk for
well water contamination. The security forces used the wells for waste
disposal (i.e., garbage, animal remains, and other contaminants) when they
departed. Numerous credible incidents were reported in which civilians
were seized from intercity buses and held hostage by both Serbian security
forces and Albanian insurgents. By yearâs end, the UNHCR estimated that
there were still over 180,000 internally displaced persons (IDPâs) as a
result of the conflict in Kosovo. According to the Pristina--based Center
for the Protection of Women and children, 89 percent of the IDPâs are women
and children.
In addition to the terror tactics employed by Serbian security forces
against the ethnic Albanian civilian population of Kosovo, credible sources
indicated that the Milosevic regime sought to block some shipments of food
into the province. When presented with a list alleged to have been
prepared by Belgrade authorities of products to be stopped from entering
the province, Serbian police in Kosovo did not deny the operation, but
stated that it was part of a countrywide campaign to stop "tax avoidance."
At the same time, the Milosevic regime compiled at best an uneven record of
cooperation and hostility toward nongovernmental organizations that sought
to deliver humanitarian shipments to the needy in Kosovo, including to
IDPâs forcibly displaced by the police campaign of shelling, looting, and
burning ethnic Albaniansâ homes after fighting had concluded.
Three local humanitarian aid workers were killed by mortar fire from
Serbian forces in the summer, and others were harassed and detained on
trumped up charges of "aiding and abetting" terrorist groups. On September
30 one ICRC employee was killed and three others were wounded after their
vehicle hit a land mine at Gornje Obrinje. On September 14 a KDOM vehicle
also struck a land mine in the area.
Separatist fighters set up roadblocks and denied passage to Serbs,
including civilians attempting to get to and from work. In Kijevo over the
summer, the KLA blockaded the Pristina--Pec road, forcing Serbian police to
extract some Serbian civilians--including a pregnant woman--from the
village by helicopter. Separatist fighters harassed Serbian journalists
and took some hostage. In addition to credible cases in which so--called
"collaborators" were killed, some ethnic Albanians employed by state--owned
enterprises were threatened.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and the Press
Federal law provides for freedom of speech and of the press; however, the
Serbian and Federal Governments severely restricted this right in practice.
The Milosevic regime's assault on these freedoms during the year was the
most pronounced since Milosevic came to power over a decade ago.
In October, after NATO threatened to intervene because of the deteriorating
humanitarian situation in Kosovo, the Serbian Government issued a decree
effectively allowing press censorship, possibly as a response to the
perceived threat to the regime of the free flow of information and ideas.
It later passed a new information law, which incorporated many of the
decree's strict provisions that left the country's independent media
severely constrained. Under the law, private citizens or organizations can
bring suit against media outlets for printing materials not sufficiently
patriotic, or "against the territorial integrity, sovereignty and
independence of the country." Media outlets also can be fined for
publishing items of a personal nature without the consent of the individual
concerned (an apparent reference to political cartoons). The rebroadcast
of foreign news programs, including from the British Broadcasting
Corporation and the Voice of America, was banned. Media outlets whose
practices do not conform to the new law may be subjected to exorbitant
fines, which must be paid within a 24--hour period. Two independent radio
stations, Radio Indeks and Radio Senta, were shut down. On October 28,
criminal charges were filed against Nenad Cekic, the editor in chief of
Radio Indeks. In October independent radio stations Radio/Television
Kursumlija, Radio Globus Kraljevo, and Radio Velika Kikinda stopped
broadcasting altogether after government pressure to stop broadcasting
foreign programs. According to its management, the Government froze the
bank accounts of Belgrade City Television Studio B in early December,
although the station was associated with a coalition partner in the
Government. The Government annulled existing contracts with Studio B on
frequencies and offered new contracts effective retroactively to June,
which offered fewer frequencies at a significantly increased cost: $100,
000 per month. Since Studio B refused to sign the contracts, according to
the director, the station was already operating illegally, effectively
providing the Government with grounds for closing the station.
The Government shut down several other stations during the year, using
confusing regulations governing frequency allocations, including Radio
Kontact in Pristina in July, the independent city radio in Nis in August,
and STV Negotin in September. A problem that often renders independent
electronic media outlets vulnerable is the deliberate vagueness of the
relevant laws. Radio and television stations, depending on their political
dispositions, can be harassed bureaucratically. Instead of obtaining long--
term licenses to broadcast, stations receive only 1--year temporary
licenses if they are approved at all. The bureaucratic procedures are so
difficult that stations frequently cannot possibly fulfill the requirements-
-leaving them at the mercy of the regime. For example, under current law,
to obtain a license to broadcast, a station must obtain approval of a
government "construction inspector" on its office space. But to obtain a
construction inspector's approval, a station needs a broadcast license. In
another example, in the spring authorities closed Feman, a newly opened
television station in Jagodina and justified their action by the fact that
the station was operating without a license. The station editor in chief
claimed that the Federal Telecommunications Ministry had informed him that
he did not need a license prior to opening the station and led him to
believe that there was a grace period during which to obtain proper
documentation. Two other private television stations in Jagodina operate
without licenses. The day after the station broadcast a program critical
of the Government's financial policies, an inspector from the
Telecommunications Ministry, escorted by five police officers, closed the
station. According to the NGO Fund for Humanitarian Law, in the spring
authorities closed down Radio Lazarevac, Radio/Television Studio M in
Vranje, and Radio Herc in Zitoradje, much in the same manner as the Feman
television station.
In addition to license problems, those stations that do obtain licenses are
forced to pay exorbitantly high fees, the nonpayment of which is enforced
selectively by Serbian authorities to close down those stations that do not
adhere to the Government's line.
Although there are many independent television and radio stations operating
throughout the country, their broadcasts typically cannot be received
beyond the major cities. The only network that covers the entire country
is the Serbian State Television and Radio Network RTS. An estimated one--
third of the population of Serbia only receives RTS, the official voice of
President Milosevic.
In October police beat an APTV cameraman in Pristina (see Section
1.c).
According to independent journalists, most journalists started practicing
self--censorship in an effort to avoid a violation under the media law.
Journalists had been informed that printing anything that was not true--
even an advertisement or a death announcement--could be punished under the
information law. One independent newspaper reported that it was publishing
half as many articles as usual, in view of the new need to check
extensively the facts in every article. The weekly Zrenjanin decided not
to publish public statements after it was sued for publishing false
statements made at a press conference, since such comments cannot be
verified easily.
The police harassed persons connected with the distribution of the widely
circulated Belgrade independent daily Dnevni Telegraf. Kiosk owners were
approached and told that if they sold the newspaper the financial police
would look into their operations. Days after the repressive new Serbian
information law was passed in late October, it was used to justify the
imposition of an exorbitant fine on Slavko Curuvija, the newspaperâs
publisher. Police barged into the paper's offices, confiscated property,
and prompted the publisher to move his operations to Podgorica, the capital
of Montenegro. According to the newspaperâs management, it wanted to pay
the fine and return operations to something like the conditions that
prevailed before the crackdown, but the regime was more interested in
keeping the newspaper off the streets. As a result of the media crackdown
and its changed circumstances, the daily circulation of Dnevni Telegraf
dropped from 60,000 to 70,000 copies to 10,000 to 12,000 copies.
Dnevni Telegraf's experience had a chilling effect on other independent
dailies, including Danas and Nasa Borba. Both newspapers, less financially
secure than Dnevni Telegraf, suspended operations to avoid fines that could
destroy them. By yearâs end, Danas was publishing using a printing house
in Montenegro. In November Serbian authorities confiscated shipments of
Montenegro's only weekly independent newsmagazine, Monitor. Although the
magazine is completely Montenegrin--owned, Serbian authorities claimed that
the law on information covered distribution channels as well. In November
the regime attempted to levy a large fine under the Serbian information law
on the publisher of Monitor. The Federal Government issued a decree in
November that the independent magazine Ekonomska Politika would from that
point on be part of the Borba publishing house. Borba's first act was to
replace the director and managing director of Ekonomska Politika with
individuals close to the Yugoslav Left Party (JUL), the neo--Communist
Party headed by Mira Markovic, wife of FRY President Milosevic.
Publication of the magazine was stopped completely just as an issue highly
critical of the Government's economic planning policies was going to press
in late December. Nasa Borba and NT Plus, another independent daily, were
still shut down at year's end.
After the media law went into effect the Serbian Government started
prosecuting the owner and editor of the newsmagazine Evropljanin. On
December 17, Serbia's Ministry of Information issued threatening letters to
five Albanian--language newspapers and magazines in Kosovo to the effect
that they were in violation of the new public information law. Shortly
thereafter, the newspaper Bujku was effectively closed down. Editors from
Koha Ditore, the leading Albanian--language daily, Zeri, an intellectual
Albanian weekly, and Kosovo Sot, a new Albanian daily, reported that
threats against the Albanian language media, which began with warning
letters from the Serbian Ministry of Information, were escalating.
Throughout the year Serbian police systematically intimidated printing
houses--including in November the Forum of Novi Sad--to prevent them from
printing independent newspapers.
Before the Montenegrin parliamentary elections in 1998, state--
controlled RTS openly campaigned on behalf of Momir Bulatovic's Socialist
Peoples Party (SNP), considered to be Milosevic's surrogate political party
in the republic of Montenegro.
In March Belgrade public prosecutor Miodrag Tmusic called on police to
investigate five major independent newspapers (Nasa Borba, Blic, Danas,
Dnevni Telegraf, and Demokratija) along with some unidentified television
stations to determine whether there were elements of "biased reporting"
that incited terrorist acts or condoned terrorism
On December 10, the new government--appointed Dean of Belgrade University's
School of Electrical Engineering Vlada Teodosic, ordered "filters" to
prevent users of the academic Internet network from accessing the OpenNet
web site, a major source of independent news and information. The measure
also affects the independent media and NGO's in the country, many of which
access OpenNet through the university. According to Human Rights Watch,
the filters appeared to have been prompted by a link on the web site to a
political cartoon that showed Teodosic in a Nazi uniform and portrayed
Milos Laban, another newly appointed administrator, as a monkey.
Montenegrin newspaper publishers not friendly to the Belgrade regime
frequently had their papers removed from trains and buses entering Serbia
(see Section 2.d.).
The KLA kidnaped two Serbian journalists for the state--run news agency
Tanjug on October 13. The KLA finally released the two journalists in late
November (see Section 1.d.) after a "trial."
In May the Serbian Parliament passed the new Universities Law. It severely
curtails academic freedom by allowing the Government to appoint rectors and
governing boards and hire and fire deans of faculties. Deans in turn under
the new law can hire and fire professors--in effect taking away tenure and
promoting regime loyalists inside the universities. The law also
discourages political activism among students, who were a mainstay of the
antigovernment protests of 1996--97. According to the Belgrade Center for
Human Rights, some 22 professors were fired and 30 were suspended after the
law went into effect for refusing to sign new contracts, as required by the
law. By yearâs end, protests over the law were gathering force. In
November police arrested four students affiliated with the Student
Resistance Movement Otpor, and a court sentenced them to 10--day prison
terms in a summary trial with no right of appeal (see Section 1.e.). In
one incident on December 29, unknown thugs (allegedly special police
forces) beat a prominent student activist from the Otpor movement, Boris
Karajcic, after considerable media exposure and his trip abroad to
publicize human rights abuses in Serbia. Serbian police detained and beat
another Otpor activist, Srdjan Popovic, in Belgrade on December 15 (see
Section 1.c.).
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Federal and republic--level Constitutions provide for freedom of
peaceful assembly and association; however, the Serbian and Federal
Governments restricted this right. In Belgrade in May the police beat
university protesters over passage of the new universities law. In
November four students with the Otpor movement were arrested and convicted
and given 10--day prison sentences in a summary trial with no right of
appeal (see Section 1.e.). In Kosovo the regime cracked down on peaceful
demonstrators during the 1997--98 academic year. When ethnic Albanian
students in Kosovo staged peaceful protest marches in Pristina during the
1997--98 academic year, they were accused by the state--controlled media of
instigating violence in one clash during the winter when police moved in
with truncheons, tear gas, and water cannons. The regime cited the student
protesters' unwillingness to apply for demonstration permits from the
authorities. Moreover, the state--controlled media took advantage of the
protests to accuse the Belgrade opposition of being in league with
"Albanian separatists." In Sandzak the Milosevic regime banned all outdoor
rallies, even for election campaigning.
According to the president of the Presevo city assembly, police officers in
Presevo (southern Serbia, bordering Kosovo and Macedonia) beat peaceful
protestors demonstrating against the Serbian police campaign against Kosovo
Albanians in the Drenica region of Kosovo. The police reportedly attacked
the ethnic Albanian political leaders who were attempting to control the
crowds. The police arrested and detained several ethnic Albanian leaders
for 5 hours in connection with the protest. The Assembly of Presevo issued
a declaration against the police action. The Assembly claimed that one
leader was denied medical treatment and that an ethnic Albanian journalist
was given a 15--day prison sentence.
In response to the passage of the new law on universities (see Section
2.a.), between 2,000 and 3,000 students protested in Belgrade on May 27,
but police blocked the students from marching to the Parliament. No
violence was reported. According to Serb authorities, the students blocked
traffic and police were required to ensure that traffic through the city
was undisturbed.
The Federal and republic level Constitutions provide for freedom of
association, but the Serbian and Federal Governments restricted this right.
Prior to the most recent Serbian elections, in the fall of 1997, officials
blocked the coalition Sandzak--Dr. Rasim Ljajic from forming an alliance
with the Kosovo--based Democratic Reform Party of Muslims, a move that
protected regime candidates from additional competition. During the year
Serb authorities obstructed the registration of an NGO, the Independent
Jurists' Association.
c. Freedom of Religion
There is no state religion, but the Milosevic regime gives preferential
treatment, including access to state--run television for major religious
events, to the Serbian Orthodox Church to which the majority of Serbs
belong. The regime subjected religious communities in Kosovo to
harassment. For example, in 1998 a Roman Catholic parish in Klina had the
money, property, and permission (including up to the supreme court of
Serbia) to build a church for its 6,000 member parish. However, the local
chapter of Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia continued to block
construction. Other Catholic and Muslim communities in the province had
similar experiences.
The Serbian Government made no progress in the restitution of property that
belonged to the Jewish community, despite President Milosevic's promises to
resolve the disputes. The Orthodox and Catholic Churches have had similar
difficulties with the restitution of their property.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
The Constitution provides for freedom of movement; however, the Federal and
Serbian Governments restrict this right in practice. The FRY Government
makes passports available to most citizens; however, the authorities
frequently bar FRY citizens from reentering the country. The Milosevic
regime also continues to restrict the right of Kosovo Albanians and Sandzak
Muslims to travel by holding up the issuance or renewal of passports for an
unusually long period of time and reserves the option of prosecuting
individuals charged previously with violating exit visa requirements.
Kosovo Albanians also have problems with the issuance and renewal of
passports and are sometimes called in for interrogation by state security
officers before passports are issued.
Citizens reported difficulties at borders and the occasional confiscation
of their passports. Ethnic Albanians, Sandzak Muslims, and Vojvodina
Croats frequently complained of harassment at border crossings. There were
numerous reports that border guards confiscated foreign currency or
passports from travelers, as well as occasional complaints of physical
mistreatment. The authorities generally allowed political opposition
leaders to leave the country and return. FRY embassies overseas generally
are considered to apply a double standard in issuing passports to their
citizens; ethnic Serbs have a much easier time obtaining passports than
members of ethnic minorities.
Many inhabitants of Serbia--Montenegro who were born in other parts of the
former Yugoslavia, as well as large numbers of refugees, have not been able
to establish their citizenship in the FRY, leaving them in a stateless
limbo.
The FRY Government has been very slow to issue passports to refugees. This
is a particular problem for asylum--seeking parents. For example, German
authorities issue such children born in Germany a document certifying their
birth. FRY officials in Germany refuse to issue passports to such
children. When these asylum seekers who have been refused in Germany
return to the FRY with their children, the children travel on the basis of
this document. FRY authorities take the paper at the port of entry and
issue a receipt for it. Then the children have no documentation in a
country where documentation is a basic requirement. In January 1997 a new
citizenship law entered into force, which, when fully implemented, is
expected to affect adversely the rights of many inhabitants, including
those born in other parts of the former Yugoslavia, refugees, and citizens
who migrated to other countries to work or seek asylum.
The U.N. Special Rapporteur for the former Yugoslavia noted in 1997 that
the new law would give the Ministry of Interior almost complete control
over the granting of citizenship. The Government served notice that it
plans to limit severely the granting of citizenship to refugees from the
conflicts in Bosnia and Croatia. The Government also plans to revise the
eligibility status of a large number of persons; refugees who have been
granted citizenship since 1992 may stand to lose their FRY citizenship if
they have acquired the citizenship of a former Yugoslav republic.
Observers in the Sandzak region also noted that Muslim residents who were
forced to flee to Bosnia from Sandzak in 1992 and 1993 may not be permitted
to return to Serbia, particularly if they obtained Bosnian passports in the
interim. In violation of the Dayton Accords, Muslims from Sandzak
frequently have been harassed on attempting to reenter Serbia after visits
to Sarajevo or elsewhere in the Federation entity of Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
As part of its campaign to undermine the reform government in Montenegro,
the Milosevic regime also implemented a commercial blockade against the
FRY's junior republic, a direct violation of the FRY Constitution's
protection of the free flow of goods. Businesses frequently had their
goods confiscated without cause by Serbian police. Newspaper publishers
not friendly to the regime frequently had their papers removed from trains
and buses entering Serbia (see Section 2.a.).
The FRY Government cooperated to a large extent with the Office of the
UNHCR in assisting (predominantly Serb) refugees who fled to the FRY from
neighboring Croatia and Bosnia--Herzegovina.
In sharp contrast to the record of the Federal and Serbian governments in
this area, the Government of the Republic of Montenegro actually accepted
tens of thousands of IDPâs fleeing the fighting in the neighboring Kosovo
province in Serbia. The international community contributed financial
support to the IDPâs in Montenegro through the UNHCR and other
intergovernmental and nongovernmental humanitarian organizations. In
September the Montenegrin Government temporarily closed its border to
Kosovo Albanian IDPâs after almost 50,000 had entered the republic. The
Montenegrin Government stated that the IDPâs, when combined with 30,000
refugees from Croatia and Bosnia, put too much pressure on the
infrastructure of the junior republic, where the total population is only
600,000. Many speculated that the Milosevic regime deliberately channeled
the IDPâs in the direction of Montenegro to undermine its multiethnic
reform government. The issue of first asylum did not arise during the
year.
There were no reports of the forced return of persons to a country where
they feared persecution during the year.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
Their Government
The three Constitutions--the Federal constitution and those of the Serbian
and Montenegrin Republics--provide for this right, but in practice citizens
in Serbia are prevented from exercising it by the Milosevic regimeâs
domination of the mass media and manipulation of the electoral process.
Through its control of the purse strings at the Serbian republic level, the
regime sought to undermine the effectiveness of the opposition leadership
of most major cities. Only Montenegro's electoral system showed marked
improvement, with the Government of then--Prime Minister Djukanovic holding
a roundtable with the political opposition, including ethnic minorities, in
September 1997. The Montenegrin government invited the OSCE to take part
in preparing election legislation in time for Montenegrin parliamentary
elections in May. Montenegrin presidential elections in late 1997 and the
subsequent May parliamentary elections were judged by the OSCE to be free
and fair. Djukanovic's invitation to outside observers came in stark
contrast to the grudging last--minute acceptance of monitors by Milosevic
during the fall 1997 Serbian elections. In February the Montenegrin
Parliament approved a third law changing the electoral process and
fulfilled the major recommendations of the OSCE. The law lowered the
threshold for party representation from 4 percent to 3 percent of votes
cast and established strict procedures to prevent vote fraud. The other
two laws concerned voter lists and the media. The law also granted
Albanians special status in accordance with an agreement reached by a
consensus among all parties in the Montenegrin Parliament. The law
combined regions where Albanians constitute a majority that are spread out
among different cities into one parliamentary district that elects 5 of the
78 seats in Parliament. Minorities won seats both in the Republic's
Assembly and in the Republic's coalition government.
The most recent Serbian elections, held in the fall of 1997, were seriously
flawed. According to a 1998 study by the Belgrade--based Center for Free
Elections and Democracy, both rounds of the Serbian presidential elections
in September and December 1997 involved widespread fraud. In the latter
campaign, the Center estimated that 500,000 votes were stolen to give the
victory for the Serbian presidency to Milosevic ally Milan Milutinovic.
Several disaffected SRS members charged in the fall that the Milosevic
regime extracted mandates from the Radical Party of Serbia in exchange for
giving the Radical Party a role in the Government.
Earlier, in July 1997, the regime gerrymandered electoral districts to
smooth the way for candidates in the ruling coalition, expanding the number
of districts in Serbia from 9 to 29. Most opposition politicians charged
that changes in the election law, including the redrawing of districts,
were designed specifically to favor the ruling party. The redistricting
was one factor that compelled a number of opposition parties to boycott the
last Serbian elections.
Slobodan Milosevic dominates the country's political system and is
attempting to consolidate institutional power at the federal level as a
result of his move from the Serbian republic--level presidency to the
federal presidency. This precipitated a clash with authorities in
Montenegro, who were intent on protecting that republic's rights under
constitutional arrangements and its position within the FRY, which is made
up of Serbia and Montenegro. Manipulating power within the federation
based on the comparative size of the Serbian and Montenegrin populations
and economies, Milosevic has been able to circumscribe the Montenegrin
Government's capacity for independent action. As a result of Serbia's
political crisis during the winter of 1996--97, Montenegro's then Prime
Minister, Milo Djukanovic, began to take a steadily more assertive,
reformist course. Djukanovicâs victory in November 1997 presidential
elections and his coalition's victory in the May parliamentary elections
over forces led by incumbent Montenegrin president and Milosevic crony
Momir Bulatovic threatened Milosevic's complete control over the
institutions of power in the FRY and prompted a standoff. Bulatovic's
supporters--likely with the backing of the Milosevic regime--attempted to
thwart Djukanovic's victory by staging violent protests against
Djukanovic's inauguration as President in January.
Despite the Montenegrin Government's legal rights under the FRY
Constitution, federal authorities under Milosevic's control by yearâs end
had not recognized the 20 Montenegrin members to the upper chamber of the
Federal Assembly designtaed by the Montenegrin President. The Montenegrins
in the federal body, including the speaker of the upper house, were not
changed to reflect the results of Montenegrin elections. Moreover, in
violation of the law, Milosevic installed Momir Bulatovic as Federal Prime
Minister and ignored the Montenegrin Government's wish to have some voice
in who was picked for this key position in the Federal power structure.
Milosevic's antidemocratic control over Federal courts was demonstrated
when the Federal Constitutional Court ruled against the Montenegrin
Government late in the year in disallowing the Montenegrin presidentâs
attempt to select all 20 Montenegrin representatives to the Federal
Assembly's Chamber of the Republics. The ruling was a complete reversal of
a 1994 decision, which allowed Milosevic's ruling coalition in Serbia at
the time to name all 20 Serbian representatives to the upper chamber while
he was the President of the Serbian republic.
No legal restrictions exist on women's participation in government and
politics, and women are active in political organizations. However, they
are greatly underrepresented in party and government offices, holding less
than 10 percent of ministerial--level positions in the Serbian and Federal
Governments. An exception is the controversial Mira Markovic, wife of
Federal President Milosevic. She is the leading force in the neo--
Communist Yugoslav Left Party (JUL), through which she exerts extraordinary
and disproportionate influence on policy makers. (In Montenegrin elections
in May, JUL obtained 0.1 percent of the vote, which according to press
reports was less than the Party of Universal Flying Yogis. To avoid
humiliation, the Party pulled out of the race at the last moment.) In
Kosovo, a woman leads one wing of the Social Democratic Party of Kosovo,
and the LDK has three women in its 12--member presidency. However,
according to Albanian women's groups, those women are exceptional in their
political participation, and few Albanian women enter Kosovo politics
because of a lack of interest, money, and family support.
No legal restrictions affect the role of minorities in government and
politics, but ethnic Serbs and Montenegrins dominate the country's
political leadership. Few members of other ethnic groups play any role at
the top levels of government or the state--run economy. Ethnic Albanians
in Kosovo refused to take part in the electoral process at the Serbian
republic and federal level, including most recently in Serbian elections in
1997. They have virtually no representation in the Serbian republic and
FRY government structures. However, this situation is not the case in
Montenegro.
Ethnic Albanians' refusal to participate in FRY and Serbian elections has
the practical effect of increasing the political influence of President
Milosevic and his supporters. Ultranationalist parties, including
Milosevic's coalition partner the Radical Party of Serbia, also have taken
advantage of the ethnic Albanian boycott to garner representation beyond
their numbers. Ethnic Albanians in the republic of Montenegro do
participate in the political process. Albanian parties, candidates, and
voters participated to a large degree in the republic's parliamentary
elections in May and won a handful of seats in the republic's assembly.
Several towns in Montenegro have Albanian mayors. Montenegro's current
ruling coalition is multiethnic. Albanians and Muslims hold posts at the
ministerial and deputy ministerial levels in the new Government formed in
July.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
The Governments of the republics of Serbia and Montenegro formally maintain
that they have no objection to international organizations conducting human
rights investigations on their territories. However, the Serbian regime
routinely hindered the activities of and regularly rejected the findings of
human rights groups. With some exceptions, the Milosevic Government's
Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs systematically denied visas to
international nongovernmental human rights organizations and denied entry
visas to investigators from the ICTY who wished to conduct impartial
investigations into allegations of atrocities committed by Serbian forces
and Albanian paramilitary groups in Kosovo. In October the Government
agreed to the establishment of the OSCE Kosovo Verification Mission (KVM).
By year's end, the KVM had expanded to several hundred international
verifiers, including human rights personnel, who verified civilian aspects
of implementation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1199. The
Montenegrin Government's record toward outside investigations was much more
cooperative, with the then Prime Minister taking the initiative to invite
OSCE observers well in advance of presidential and parliamentary elections
in the Republic.
The Milosevic regime repeatedly has ignored the ICTY's orders to transfer
indicted war criminals known to be living in Serbia, in blatant defiance of
the U.N. Security Council, which created the Tribunal. It also publicly
rejected the Tribunalsâ mandate in Kosovo and obstructed all efforts by the
ICTY to investigate allegations of crimes in Kosovo.
A number of independent human rights organizations operate in the country,
researching and gathering information on abuses, and publicizing such
cases. The Belgrade--based Humanitarian Law Center and Center for Antiwar
Action researches human rights abuses throughout Serbia--Montenegro and, on
occasion, elsewhere in the former Yugoslavia. The Belgrade--based Helsinki
Committee for Human Rights in Serbia publishes studies on human rights
issues and cooperates with the Pristina--based Helsinki Committee in
monitoring human rights abuses in Kosovo. In Kosovo the Council for the
Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms (CDHRF) collects and collates data on
human rights abuses and publishes newsletters. A number of reliable
international human rights monitors reported that one worker of the CDHRF
was missing at year's end, and all the organization's workers are routinely
and severely harassed and distrusted by Serbian authorities. In the
Sandzak region, two committees monitor abuses against the local Muslim
population and produce comprehensive reports. Most of these organizations
offer advice and help to victims of abuse.
Local human rights monitors (Serbs as well as members of ethnic minorities)
and NGO's worked under difficult circumstances. Human Rights Watch reports
that three humanitarian aid workers were killed by mortar fire from Serbian
forces while trying to deliver food near Kijevo on August 24. Rexhep
Bislimi, an activist of the Urosevac chapter of the Pristina--based CDHRF
died as the result of injuries inflicted by Serbian security forces while
in detention (see Section 1.a.). Police arrested Bislimi on July 6 and
later took him to Pristina hospital in critical condition, with several
broken ribs. He underwent surgery on his kidneys and died after several
days in a coma. In May according to the ethnic Albanian Kosovo
Information Center, Serbian police raided the premises of the local LDK
party branch and the local chapter of the CDHRF in Glogovac. Police broke
into the offices, destroyed furniture, and seized written materials. The
Council reported that the police seized written materials, including copies
of all recent human rights reports.
Serbian police arrested a local human rights activist, Zahrida Podrimcaku,
in Pristina in June. She had been investigating events on May 31 in the
village of Poklek, where police detained 10 ethnic Albanian men during an
attack on the village. The body of one of the men was found the next day;
the other nine are missing and presumed dead. Podrimcaku was charged with
supporting terrorists and was awaiting trial as of the end of
September.
NGOâs reported several blockages to the delivery of humanitarian
commodities. The Mother Teresa Society, a local humanitarian aid NGO,
reported consistent harassment and detention of its staff. NGO's and the
press reported that some 50 humanitarian aid workers were missing from
Prizren. Mercy Corps--Pristina reported that police raided the warehouse
of the Mother Teresa Society in Vucitrn in July. Serbian police
confiscated 12.5 metric tons of flour and about 350 pounds (800 kg) of
detergent during the distribution of relief supplies. Police also beat two
aid workers and their driver.
ICRC officials complained in September of difficulties in securing access
to detainees. However, by year's end ICRC officials reported that access
to detainees improved (see Section 1.d.).
On December 10, Serbian police in armored vehicles prevented a Finnish
forensic team from visiting the site of an alleged massacre of ethnic
Albanians at Gornje Obrinje. Serbian authorities insisted on accompanying
the team but would not permit ethnic Albanian observers to participate as
well. Serbian authorities also failed to allow access to ICTY
investigators to the Kosovo province, preventing the ICTY from carrying out
independent and objective investigations into crimes within the Tribunal's
jurisdiction.
Several NGO's and international organizations reported to international
observers in December that they were experiencing unacceptable delays of up
to a month or more in obtaining Serbian government approval of visas for
international humanitarian aid workers for Kosovo.
As a signatory of the 1995 Dayton Accords that ended the war in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Serbia--Montenegro is obliged to cooperate fully with the ICTY
by turning over to the Tribunal the persons on its territory who were
indicted for war crimes or other crimes against humanity under the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
In December, in open defiance of UNSCR 1207 and previous resolutions that
demanded that the FRY turn over all indicted war criminals on its territory,
a Belgrade military court invited three Yugoslav generals, two retired and
one active, who were indicted by the ICTY to "hearings." The "Vukovar
Three" as they are known--Veselin Sljivancanin, Mile Mrksic, and Miroslav
Radic--were indicted by the Tribunal in 1995 for their role in the murder
of over 200 unarmed men at Vukovar Hospital in Croatia 1991. They appeared
at the hearings in Belgrade in late December, in open defiance of the
Tribunal's request for deferment of the case to its jurisdiction. The
Milosevic government's actions constituted an open acknowledgment that it
harbors indicted war criminals. In the 5 years since the Tribunal was
established, the Milosevic regime has yet to transfer one Serbian or
Bosnian Serb indictee to the Hague, in violation of its obligations under
repeated U.N. Security Council resolutions and its commitments under the
Dayton Accords. Some of those indicted live openly in Serbia, and others
travel freely in and out of Serbia. It is widely alleged that Ratko Mladic,
who was indicted by the Tribunal in 1995 for his command and responsibility
role in crimes against humanity, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions,
and violations of the laws and customs of war committed during the conflict
in Bosnia and Herzegovina, continues to travel in and out of the country.
In August indicted war crimes suspect Slobodan Miljkovic was killed in a
barroom brawl in the Serbian city of Kragujevac.
The Milosevic regimeâs brutal crackdown in Kosovo prompted calls for the
ICTY to conduct investigations into alleged atrocities committed there.
The ICTYâs jurisdiction also is delineated clearly under UNSCR 827 of 1993
and many subsequent resolutions. The regime so far has been uncooperative,
claiming that the violence in Kosovo does not constitute an "armed
conflict." In contrast, authorities in Montenegro have cooperated with the
ICTY.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability,
Language, or Social Status
While Federal and republic laws provide for equal rights for all citizens,
regardless of ethnic group, religion, language, or social status, and
prohibit discrimination against women, in reality the legal system provides
little protection to such groups.
Women
The traditionally high level of domestic violence persisted. The few
official agencies dedicated to coping with family violence have inadequate
resources and are limited in their activity by social pressure to keep
families together at all costs. Few victims of spousal abuse ever file
complaints with the authorities. The Center for Autonomous Women's Rights
offers a rape and spousal abuse hot line, as well as sponsors a number of
self--help groups. The Center also offered help to refugee women, many of
whom experienced extreme abuse or rape during the conflict in the former
Yugoslavia. However, tradition prevents much discussion of the topic of
rape among Albanians, since the act is seen as dishonoring the entire
family. According to the Center for the Protection of Women and Children
in Pristina, rape is not recognized as a crime in Albanian society, making
the subject even more secretive.
Women do not enjoy status equal to men in the FRY, and relatively few women
obtain upper level management positions in commerce. Traditional
patriarchal ideas of gender roles, which hold that women should be
subservient to the male members of their family, have long subjected women
to discrimination. In some rural areas, particularly among minority
communities, women are little more than serfs without the ability to
exercise their right to control property and children. However, women in
the FRY legally are entitled to equal pay for equal work and are granted
maternity leave for 1 year, with an additional 6 months available.
Moreover, the lack of job opportunities for women in Kosovo has reinforced
the traditional culture in which women remain at home. The cost of an
education in Kosovo--fees for enrollment in the parallel system,
transportation, clothes, and school supplies--made families reluctant to
send girls to school since the prospect of future employment was slim.
Women are active in political and human rights organizations. Women's
rights groups continue to operate with little or no official
acknowledgment.
Children
The State attempts to meet the health and educational needs of children.
The educational system provides 8 years of mandatory schooling.
Montenegrin authorities at one point denied the children of IDP's from
Kosovo basic education, claiming that the republic lacked sufficient
resources to educate this group. Montenegrin officials were working with
international organizations in the second half of the year to seek
assistance that would allow them to ensure education benefits to the IDPâs.
The current division of Kosovo into parallel administrative systems results
in Serb and Albanian Kosovar elementary age children being taught in
separate areas of divided schools, or attending classes in shifts. Older
Albanian Kosovar children attend school in private homes. The quality of
the education thus was uneven before the conflict started, and the tension
and division of society in general has been replicated to the detriment of
the children.
An agreement negotiated under the auspices of the Rome--based Sant--Egidio
community and signed in 1996 by President Milosevic and Dr. Ibrahim Rugova,
the leader of the Democratic League of Kosovo, sought to resolve the
division of the educational system and lend impetus to efforts to normalize
the situation within Kosovo. An "implementation" agreement was signed in
March, but it unraveled as a result of the outbreak of conflict in Kosovo
at about the same time. Small gains remain, including the turnover of a
large classroom facility to the ethnic Albanian parallel university in
Pristina. In November the U.N. Children's Fund estimated that between 55,
000 and 60,000 Albanian children were not in school in the Albanian
parallel educational system because schools were not functioning in Decane,
Klina, Glogovac, Srbica, and Djakovica. According to ethnic Albanian
educational authorities, there were 100 destroyed or damaged schools
throughout Kosovo. In December international observers reported multiple
incidents of police being stationed near schools in Kosovo. Albanian
villagers claimed that they were intimidated by the police presence and
that consequently children would not return to those schools.
Economic distress spilled over into the health care system, adversely
affecting children. In Kosovo the health situation for children remained
particularly poor. Humanitarian aid officials blamed the high rate of
infant and childhood mortality, as well as increasing epidemics of
preventable diseases, primarily on poverty that led to malnutrition and
poor hygiene and to the deterioration of public sanitation. Ethnic
minorities in some cases fear Serb state--run medical facilities, which
results in a low rate of immunization and a reluctance to seek timely
medical attention. According to the Center for Protection of Women and
Children in Pristina, 63 percent of Kosovo IDP's are children.
There is no societal pattern of abuse of children.
People With Disabilities
Facilities for persons with disabilities are inadequate, but the Government
made some effort to address the problem. The law prohibits discrimination
against persons with disabilities in employment, education, or in the
provision of other state services. The law mandates access to new official
buildings, and the Government enforces these provisions in practice.
Religious Minorities
Religion and ethnicity are so closely intertwined as to be inseparable.
Serious discrimination against, and harassment of, religious minorities
continued, especially in Kosovo and Serbian Sandzak. Violence against the
Catholic minority in Vojvodina, largely made up of ethnic Hungarians and
Croats, also was reported.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
There were credible reports that ethnic Albanians and Muslims in Serbia
continued to be driven from their homes or fired from their jobs on the
basis of religion or ethnicity. Other ethnic minorities, including ethnic
Hungarians in Vojvodina, also allege discrimination. Vojvodina Croats
reported no progress during the year on their demand for separate
curriculums in the schools or programs in the media in the Croatian
language. However, an hour was set aside for programs in Croatian on the
local radio station, Radio Subotica. The Romani population generally is
tolerated, and there is no official discrimination. Roma have the right to
vote, and there are two small Romani parties. However, prejudice against
Roma is widespread. Local authorities often ignore or condone societal
intimidation of the Romani community. Skinheads and police occasionally
violently attacked Roma (see Section 1.c.).
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
All workers except military and police personnel have the legal right to
join or form unions. Unions are either official (government affiliated) or
independent. The total labor force is approximately 2.3 million. The
government--controlled Alliance of Independent Labor Unions (Samostalni
Sindikati) claims 1.8 million members but probably numbers closer to 1
million in reality. The largest independent union is the United Branch
Independent Labor Unions (Nezavisnost), which has about 170,000 members.
Most other independent unions are sector specific, for example, the
Independent Union of Bank Employees (12,000 members). Due to the poor
state of the economy, over one--half of union workers are on long--term
mandatory leave from their firms pending increases in production. The
independent unions, while active in recruiting new members, have not yet
reached the size needed to enable countrywide strikes. The independent
unions also claim that the Government prevents effective recruiting through
a number of tactics, which include preventing the busing of workers to
strikes, threatening the job security of members, and failing to grant
visas to foreign visitors who support independent unions. Some foreign
union organizers managed to secure visas during the year after long
delays.
The largely splintered approach of the independent unions left them little
to show in terms of increased wages or improved working conditions. The
Nezavisnost union gained new members as a result of its well--organized and
tough bargaining positions during strikes of teachers and health workers in
the spring. The official union lost credibility with some of its members
because it ultimately accommodated the governmentâs position on these
strikes. The ability of unions to affiliate internationally remains
constrained.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
While this right is provided for under law, collective bargaining remains
at a rudimentary level of development. Individual unions tend to be very
narrow and pragmatic in their aims, unable to join with unions in other
sectors to bargain for common purposes. The history of trade unionism in
the country has centered not on bargaining for the collective needs of all
workers but rather for the specific needs of a given group of workers.
Thus, coal workers, teachers, health workers, and electric power industry
employees have been ineffective in finding common denominators (e.g., job
security protection, minimum safety standards, universal workers' benefits,
etc.) on which to negotiate. The overall result is a highly fragmented
labor structure composed of workers who relate to the needs of their
individual union but rarely to those of other workers. Additionally, job
security fears, which stem from the high rate of unemployment, limited
workers' militancy.
The Government still is seeking to develop free trade zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
Forced labor, including that performed by children, is prohibited by law
and is not known to occur.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for
Employment
The minimum age for employment is 16 years, although in villages and
farming communities it is not unusual to find younger children at work
assisting their families. With an actual unemployment rate (registered
unemployed plus redundant workers who show up at the workplace but perform
only minimal work) in excess of 60 percent, real employment opportunities
for children are nonexistent. Forced and bonded labor by children is
prohibited by law and is not known to occur (see Section 6.c.). However,
children can be found in a variety of unofficial "retail" jobs, typically
washing car windows or selling small items such as cigarettes.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
Large government enterprises, including all the major banks, industrial,
and trading companies generally observe minimum wage standards. The
monthly minimum wage is approximately $20 to $40 (Din 250 to 500). However,
this figure is roughly comparable to unemployment benefits and (at least
theoretically) is paid to workers who have been placed in a mandatory leave
status. The actual minimum wage is at the low end of the range of average
net salaries, $85 to $106 (Din 700 to 1,200). The minimum wage is
insufficient to provide a decent standard of living for a worker and
family. The cost of food and utilities alone for a family of four is
estimated to be $230 (Din 2,150) per month. Private enterprises use the
minimum wage as a guide but tend to pay somewhat higher average
wages.
Reports of sweatshops operating in the country are rare, although some
privately owned textile factories operate in very poor conditions. The
official workweek, listed as 40 hours, had little meaning in an economy
with massive underemployment and unemployment. Neither employers nor
employees tended to give high priority to the enforcement of established
occupational safety and health regulations, focusing their efforts instead
on economic survival. In light of the competition for employment, and the
high degree of government control over the economy, workers are not free to
leave hazardous work situations without risking the loss of their
employment.
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