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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=91TT1484>
<title>
July 08, 1991: Yugoslavia:Blood in the Streets
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 38
YUGOSLAVIA
Blood in the Streets
</hdr><body>
<p>Slovenia and Croatia are determined to go their own way, but the
federal government shows its willingness to crack heads to keep
the nation together
</p>
<p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by James L. Graff/Ljubljana
</p>
<p> As in a school-yard brawl, the opening provocation was a
taunt: "Independence!" But within 36 hours, the war of words
between the republic of Slovenia and forces of the Yugoslav
People's Army had escalated into a real fight, with the two
sides trading lethal blows that left at least 40 dead and many
more injured.
</p>
<p> While Slovenia had been voicing separatist ambitions for
months, few could have predicted that the situation would career
so quickly to the edge of civil war. Time and again during the
past year, ethnic and political tensions in and among the six
republics and two semiautonomous provinces have threatened to
rip apart the Yugoslav nation. But Slovenia's quest to
extricate itself from the quarrelsome federation had been
relatively peaceful. The sudden eruption of armed hostilities
between Slovenia and the central government in Belgrade raised
fears that Yugoslavia's breakup might be at hand.
</p>
<p> Last Monday both Slovenia and Croatia vowed to declare
independence by midweek. Yugoslav federal Prime Minister Ante
Markovic warned, "We would find ourselves sitting on a bomb,
which could destroy us all." His words proved prophetic. On
Tuesday each republic proclaimed its sovereignty. The next day
tank columns moved toward border crossings, and the 20,000
federal troops in Slovenia were placed on combat alert. In the
early-morning hours of Thursday, 40 tanks and 20 armored
personnel carriers rolled toward the Slovenian capital of
Ljubljana to secure the republic's main airport, and traded
artillery and antitank fire with small pockets of Slovenian
defense forces. The airport was hit by air-to-ground missiles--one of the few aerial bombardments on the European continent
since World War II.
</p>
<p> By Friday afternoon, the army claimed to have secured all
27 border posts, but the Slovenian government insisted that it
still controlled a number of crossings. The high command in
Belgrade told Slovenian defense minister Janez Jansa that since
its objectives had been met, all action would cease. The
cease-fire was supposed to go into effect at 9 p.m., but
fighting continued well after the deadline, raising disturbing
questions about who was in control. And who in Belgrade had
ordered the army to attack? Markovic had earlier vowed to use
only "legal measures," not force, to keep Slovenia within the
federation. The heavy-handed army response suggested that
hard-line Serbian generals were running their own operation.
</p>
<p> As a precarious truce settled over the country, it was
difficult to predict whether the bloodshed had scared the two
sides sufficiently to cool them down so they could resume
negotiations--or if the army's tactics would provoke more
belligerence from Slovenia. Early Saturday each side agreed to
cease-fire terms under which the army would withdraw its troops
and Slovenia would suspend claims to sovereignty. But the
arrangement seems tenuous at best. The Slovenian government
stated that it had agreed only to hold off for three months on
further steps toward independence. Said Slovenian foreign
minister Dimitrij Rupel: "What we've done, we shall keep." After
the army issued another harsh threat of "decisive military
action," the Slovenian parliament voted to affirm its
independence stand.
</p>
<p> Plainly the Slovenes have no interest in maintaining a
joint tenancy. Their independence declaration states that
Slovenia "will no longer be a part" of the federation and that
the Yugoslav constitution will no longer apply. The longing to
carve out a separate state is lodged deep in the Slovene soul.
Because the republic shares a border with Austria and for
centuries was a part of the Habsburg empire, Slovenes feel a
greater historic, social and psychological kinship with Europe
than with the poorer southern republics, which languished under
Ottoman rule. Says Vladimir Mljac, the mayor of the town of
Lokev: "We have no place in a Balkan nation."
</p>
<p> For all the cultural differences, economics is the main
engine propelling the separatist drive. Slovenia, the richest
republic, is tired of seeing its dinars siphoned off to support
its underdeveloped southern neighbors. "The poorer parts of
Yugoslavia have commanded the richer parts for too long," argues
Toman Bojan, a waiter in a seaside restaurant that has lost its
Italian tourist clientele since ethnic hostilities erupted this
year.
</p>
<p> For nearly a decade, Slovenes have squirmed as state funds
have been spent by the Serb-dominated federal government to
suppress the Albanian majority in the Serbian province of
Kosovo. More recently they watched angrily as the free-market
reform program pressed by Prime Minister Markovic was undermined
by Serbia, whose leadership still suffers from a communist
hangover. After last week's hostilities, Slovenes see only more
evidence of wastage of their hard-earned dinars. "We bought them
tanks and guns," says Franci Mavric, a taxicab driver in Sezana.
"Now they want to kill us with them."
</p>
<p> Of all the republics, Slovenia seems the best poised to
make a success of independence. Unlike Croatia, which contends
with a militant Serbian minority, Slovenia is ethnically
homogeneous. Internally it borders only Croatia. And Slovenia's
economy shows a potential for robustness: although output shrank
9.6% last year, per capita production is on a par with the
poorest members of the European Community. Still, foreign
assistance is needed, so Slovenia had proceeded cautiously in
order not to alienate potential donors.
</p>
<p> If Slovenia had hoped to use its bold declaration of
independence as a negotiating card, by week's end the republic
had its stalwart performance to buttress resolve. The Yugoslav
army, by contrast, will have much to explain. The use of
missiles on Ljubljana's airport seemed excessive, given the
purported objective of restricting access to Slovenia. More
inexplicable still, Yugoslav jets fired on civilian trucks and
reportedly entered Austrian airspace.
</p>
<p> There is reason to hope calmer emotions will prevail.
Slovenes are undoubtedly dismayed that no country has recognized
their independence. The Yugoslav army, in turn, has received no
encouragement for its actions, and speculation is keen that
senior officers will be held accountable for excesses once
civilian order is restored. Perhaps the most encouraging sign
is that many among the estimated 500 prisoners of war taken by
Slovenia turned themselves in. If civilians and troops alike can
signal their interest in cooling the hotheads, perhaps there is
still hope that Yugoslavia can settle its differences
peacefully.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>