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  eventy-eight days of aerial bombing, resulting 
              in 1,500-5,700 civilian casualties; a decade of international sanctions; 
              20 percent unemployment; a $12.2 billion debt&amp;mdash;eight years after 
              NATO&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;humanitarian war,&amp;rdquo; Kosovo remains the key 
              factor in the long division of Serbia.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  A short distance from the busy shopping district of downtown Belgrade, 
              the carcasses of the military and police headquarters remain as 
              NATO&amp;rsquo;s legacy&amp;mdash;gaping holes where offices used to be, vacant, 
              blown-out windows, crumbling bricks and debris. Residents wait for 
              buses and chat with friends in front of the once-majestic facades, 
              each one occupying a whole city block. Although the Serb government 
              claims to have no money to repair the buildings&amp;mdash;still containing 
              unexploded ordinance&amp;mdash;they serve a more abstract, powerful purpose 
              in their current state. Rather than instill contriteness for their 
              role in the Yugoslav wars, the buildings remind Serbs of a foreign 
              war of aggression, the first time a European city has been bombed 
              since World War II. Though NATO&amp;rsquo;s Balkan adventures (and their 
              dubious justification) have been all but forgotten in the West, 
              Serbs are not so fortunate.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  When the subject of Kosovo comes up in conversation, even the most 
              even-tempered Serb will have an abrupt change in body language. 
              Considerations for the Albanian population&amp;rsquo;s grievances are 
              cloaked in the rhetoric of wounded pride. No one has recognized 
              the violence committed against Serbs, they say, certainly not in 
              The Hague tribunals, not during the NATO &amp;ldquo;intervention,&amp;rdquo; 
              or after a series of ethnically-motivated Albanian attacks in Kosovo 
              in March 2004. Although an estimated 63 percent of Serbs have never 
              visited the province&amp;mdash;mirroring the number of Kosovars who have 
              been to Serbia&amp;mdash;the prospect of losing the province has less 
              to do with land and everything to do with vindication.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  Since the March-June 1999 bombings, ostensibly Clinton&amp;rsquo;s only 
              recourse to quell a Serbian &amp;ldquo;policy of ethnic cleansing,&amp;rdquo; 
              the demographics of Kosovo have changed. Following a mass exodus 
              of 120,000 Serbs from the province, the Albanian population now 
              outnumbers that of the Serbs by 9 to 1. UN Interim Mission in Kosovo 
              (UNMIK) troops, in tandem with the NATO police force KFOR, maintain 
              a virtual occupation. Serbia and its Kosovo statelet operate as 
              two separate entities&amp;mdash;with separate tax systems and jurisdiction 
              over schools, hospitals, and the like. Belgrade rules from an arm&amp;rsquo;s-length. 
              Kosovo&amp;rsquo;s two million inhabitants had no chance to vote in last 
              October&amp;rsquo;s referendum concerning the new constitution of Serbia, 
              which defines Kosovo in the preamble as an &amp;ldquo;integral part&amp;rdquo; 
              of Serbia with &amp;ldquo;fundamental autonomy.&amp;rdquo; The Western press 
              slammed the document for being &amp;ldquo;undemocratic,&amp;rdquo; but not 
              the exclusion of 20 percent of the country&amp;rsquo;s eligible voters.&amp;nbsp;
 


 
  After a period of diplomatic dormancy, the breakaway province is 
              back in the headlines, following the long-awaited status report 
              by UN Special Envoy Maarti Ahtisaari. The proposal, announced in 
              early February, never mentions the word &amp;ldquo;independence.&amp;rdquo; 
              But by granting Kosovo the right to &amp;ldquo;negotiate and conclude 
              international agreements,&amp;rdquo; to seek membership in the UN and 
              the World Trade Organization, to have a national flag that &amp;ldquo;reflect[s] 
              the multi-ethnic character of Kosovo&amp;rdquo; and its own holidays&amp;mdash;even 
              its own army&amp;mdash;statehood is basically implied. The proposal would 
              shift ultimate authority from NATO to an International Civilian 
              Representative (representing Brussels), &amp;ldquo;appointed by an International 
              Steering Group comprised of key international stakeholders&amp;rdquo; 
              during an undetermined length of transition.
 
 
  
  
 
 
 


 
  
   The Ahtisaari plan mirrors the 1995 Dayton Accords, proposing an 
              ethnically-divided &amp;ldquo;two-state solution,&amp;rdquo; which satisfies 
              the international community, but not the people of the region. Skirting 
              the issue of statehood, while paying lip service to Serbian cultural 
              and religious rights, the proposal is regarded by all parties as 
              the first step towards Kosovo&amp;rsquo;s independence. Though the official 
              line is that they will respect Serbian sovereignty, Western politicos 
              don&amp;rsquo;t deny that eventual statehood is desireable, even inevitable. 
              &amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The Kosovar Albanians have indicated as much in street demonstrations 
              where two Albanians were killed and several wounded by UN police 
              on February 10, as well as in statements made to the
   
    Washington 
              Times
   
   by Ylber Hasa, a member of Kosovo&amp;rsquo;s negotiating team 
              in Vienna: &amp;ldquo;[The] package includes serious compromises in favor 
              of the Serbs...so if anybody tries to buy time, I don&amp;rsquo;t think 
              anyone will win. We&amp;rsquo;ll just lose the possibility of a political 
              solution,&amp;rdquo; the paper reported on February 20. &amp;ldquo;If you 
              want to see a new Balkan war, that is the perfect scenario.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Not surprisingly, the Serbian government is treating the negotiation 
              process with caustic contempt. During talks in Vienna in February, 
              Serb and Albanian leadership hit a predictable stalemate. Given 
              the low odds of an amicable compromise, the future of the province, 
              based on the Ahtisaari proposal, will be decided by the UN Security 
              Council. Although a Russian veto is seen as a possible option to 
              counteract Western support for the plan, Serbs are not hedging their 
              bets on an outside savior. It&amp;rsquo;s as if Kosovo, a historic battleground 
              in Serbia&amp;rsquo;s age-old struggle against the Turks, is already 
              lost. Negotiating a partition state, gaining a better deal for the 
              remaining Kosovar Serbs, and a fair financial settlement is seen 
              by some Serb politicians as the only way to get out of the breakup 
              with dignity.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   While the U.S. tried to bomb Serbia into submission, the European 
              approach is more coy. Seduced by promises of improved trade relations, 
              thousands of jobs and billions of euros of economic development, 
              Eurocrats are hoping the Serbs won&amp;rsquo;t notice as they slip a 
              blindfold over Kosovo. Serbia&amp;rsquo;s pre-accession negotiations 
              have stagnated in recent months over what Brussels considers unwillingness 
              to cooperate with the International Criminal Tribunal: namely, to 
              extradite Ratko Mladic, the commanding general of the Bosnian Serb 
              Army during the Srebrenica massacre. But this quest for &amp;ldquo;justice&amp;rdquo; 
              seems to have taken a back seat to Serbian cooperation regarding 
              Kosovo. Although the EU&amp;rsquo;s official line is that Mladic is still 
              a condition for resuming talks, the &amp;ldquo;Kosovo question&amp;rdquo; 
              has taken center stage.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The European Union&amp;rsquo;s Kosovo strategy is tied into Serbia&amp;rsquo;s 
              entry into the fold, the only way it can guarantee control over 
              the mercurial Balkan country. Not to be outdone by the U.S., the 
              EU is using a &amp;ldquo;kinder, gentler&amp;rdquo; ruse to wrest control 
              of Kosovo. The province has its own process, separate from that 
              of Serbia, for joining the Union. Under the Ahtisaari plan, EU troops 
              will control the province, only their second deployment after Bosnia. 
              Although EU officials insist that the status of Kosovo has nothing 
              to do with renewing accession negotiations with Serbia, it is more 
              or less understood to be a fair exchange: give up Kosovo and we&amp;rsquo;ll 
              recognize you as an equal partner in Europe, eventually.&amp;nbsp;
  
 




 
 


 While 
            U.S. and EU talking heads publicly express support for each other&amp;rsquo;s 
            diplomatic efforts, Kosovo is at the center of a power struggle over 
            who will eventually control the region: NATO or the EU? It may be 
            two sides of the same tarnished coin, but to Vladimir Unkovski-Korica, 
            a Serbian law and history specialist, the EU&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;50-year 
            credibility is at stake. They&amp;rsquo;re telling us, &amp;lsquo;the solution 
            for Kosovo is a European solution,&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo; comments Unkovski-Korica. 
            &amp;ldquo;The only carrot they can offer Serbian people is eventual entry 
            into the EU.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;


 
  
   However, Maja Bobic, deputy secretary of the European Movement in 
              Serbia, an NGO dedicated to promoting EU integration, denies that 
              the issues of Kosovo and the EU are connected. She says the Serbian 
              government must do more to fulfill its obligations, not just to 
              the EU, but to the Serbian people. &amp;ldquo;All the (EU-required) reforms 
              we need to conduct are necessary anyway. It&amp;rsquo;s better to do 
              this with the nice goal of joining the EU family,&amp;rdquo; says Bobic. 
              It&amp;rsquo;s more productive to concentrate on the EU negotiations, 
              she says, rather than view everything through the prism of Kosovo&amp;rsquo;s 
              status. &amp;ldquo;Serbia doesn&amp;rsquo;t have very many choices now. It 
              has to show a willingness to participate and be involved,&amp;rdquo; 
              says Bobic. &amp;ldquo;There&amp;rsquo;s narrow space for negotiation.&amp;rdquo; 
              To paraphrase a U.S. despot, it&amp;rsquo;s a &amp;ldquo;you&amp;rsquo;re either 
              with us or without us&amp;rdquo; situation.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   After the accession of fellow Balkan states Romania and Bulgaria 
              to the EU this year, the noose is tightening around the Balkan peninsula. 
              But even without tying the knot, the Balkan states will hang. Before 
              gaining Union status, imposed neo-liberal trade reforms have opened 
              up new markets in the former Eastern bloc, allowing companies to 
              tap Eastern Europe&amp;rsquo;s most plentiful resource: a cheap yet eager 
              and educated labor pool. Needless to say, freedom of movement is 
              much more limited for citizens of these countries.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Widely seen as a &amp;ldquo;ghetto within the Balkan ghetto,&amp;rdquo; Serbians 
              cannot travel abroad&amp;mdash;even to neighboring EU countries&amp;mdash;without 
              a visa, a costly and time-consuming process. The new, improved Serbian 
              constitution promises the lofty goals of gender equality, recognition 
              of human rights, and a &amp;ldquo;European&amp;rdquo; standard of living, 
              but the country is plagued by gender-based violence, unequal representation 
              of women and minorities in government, and an average monthly salary 
              of $300&amp;mdash;less in the rural regions.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Bobic admits that privatization and rising unemployment&amp;mdash;even 
              Serbia&amp;rsquo;s first reported case of poverty-related starvation&amp;mdash;are 
              nasty side effects of the transition to capitalism. &amp;ldquo;In a globalized 
              world companies are coming and taking over anyway. It will happen 
              whether we&amp;rsquo;re in the EU or not,&amp;rdquo; Bobic says.&amp;nbsp;
  
  
   
  
 
 
  
   
    F
   
   rom a historical point of 
              view, the current &amp;ldquo;Kosovo crisis&amp;rdquo; is a continuation of 
              resistance to foreign invasion. Smack in the middle of the crossroads 
              between rival empires, Serbia has hosted a never-ending series of 
              power struggles, from the Romans to the Byzantines to the Bulgarians 
              and Mongols to the Austro-Hungarians and the Ottomans. The centuries 
              of brutal occupation endured by the Serbs lit a spark of rage that 
              ignited both World Wars and played out viciously during its brief 
              glory as the dominant state in Tito&amp;rsquo;s Yugoslavia.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   These days &amp;ldquo;Yugo-nostalgic&amp;rdquo; Serbians claim that the country&amp;rsquo;s 
              tenuous existence as a &amp;ldquo;third way&amp;rdquo; between Stalinism and 
              McCarthyism during the Cold War was the only time the state knew 
              independence. But this was only in relative terms. Unkovski-Korica 
              is writing his PhD thesis on what he describes as &amp;ldquo;the hoax 
              of a self-sufficiency&amp;rdquo; during Tito&amp;rsquo;s 30-year reign. Just 
              as is common practice today, he says, the one-party communist government 
              relied on nationalism&amp;mdash;whether the threat lay inside or outside 
              of the border&amp;mdash;as a cheap tool to remain in power.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   &amp;ldquo;At first, nationalism was a temporary attempt to exit the 
              crisis imposed by the world market,&amp;rdquo; posits Unkovski-Korica. 
              &amp;ldquo;One can argue that Yugoslavia could have done better, but 
              it&amp;rsquo;s a system based on competition. There are winners and losers 
              in the world market and, let&amp;rsquo;s face it, we lost.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 




 
 


 The 
            right-wing Radical Party&amp;rsquo;s much-publicized (and criticized) majority 
            gain in January&amp;rsquo;s elections was based on a similar scare tactic 
            wherein the &amp;ldquo;Other,&amp;rdquo; in this case, was the international 
            community and Serbian &amp;ldquo;traitors&amp;rdquo; who would sell out Serbia 
            via Kosovo. But closer examination of the Radical Party&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;All 
            Serbia, One Party&amp;rdquo; platform shows that they were just as willing 
            to exploit the population for the sake of joining the EU.&amp;nbsp;


 
  
   U.S. foreign policy operates on the same principle of manipulation. 
              With local populations occupied by ethnic tensions, it&amp;rsquo;s easier 
              to invade, even to be perceived as the &amp;ldquo;good guys.&amp;rdquo; It&amp;rsquo;s 
              a model that has resulted in disaster in Iraq, but has worked in 
              most of the Balkans.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Unkovski-Korica notes the parallel roles Kosovo and Israel play 
              in areas of geo-strategic interest. &amp;ldquo;The [Americans] don&amp;rsquo;t 
              want it to be entirely independent or self-sufficient, but in a 
              general state of dependency. I don&amp;rsquo;t think they want to solve 
              the issue. If they gave Kosovo away, they wouldn&amp;rsquo;t be able 
              to keep tensions up in the region.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   As pipelines from the Caspian Sea crisscross the Balkans on their 
              way to lucrative European and U.S. markets, controlling even small 
              areas can mean big bucks for the oil dons. The Burgas-Vlore project, 
              which will shuttle Caspian oil from Bulgaria&amp;rsquo;s Black Sea coast 
              through Macedonia to Albania&amp;rsquo;s Adriatic sea port, is one of 
              several pipelines slated for construction through the region in 
              the next few years. There&amp;rsquo;s fierce competition for the U.S.-registered 
              Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian Oil (AMBO) consortium&amp;mdash;which has 
              direct ties to Halliburton&amp;mdash;to start digging before Russia&amp;rsquo;s 
              Gazprom or France&amp;rsquo;s Total can do so. As Centre for Global Research 
              founder Michel Chossudovky commented in the
   
    Guardian
   
   (July 
              18, 2001), the AMBO deal is sweetened by the inclusion of a transportation 
              and communications corridor linking the underdeveloped East with 
              the rest of Europe. From all sides, political rhetoric concerning 
              human rights and economic development lies under a slick veneer 
              of oil greed.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The modus operandi of destabalization and obfuscation has served 
              both European and U.S. interests, making the impoverished region 
              ripe for foreign corporate buy-outs and the NGO industry. Since 
              the NATO takeover in June 1999, Western NGOs&amp;mdash;most notably, 
              USAID&amp;mdash;have force-fed Kosovo into virtual dependency. In an 
              area with 50 percent unemployment and an annual per capita income 
              of $1,300, foreign aid is the primary basis for the economy. In 
              Ahtisaari&amp;rsquo;s vision Kosovo would be a weak, decentralized state 
              owned by foreign corporations and run by international &amp;ldquo;peacekeepers&amp;rdquo;&amp;mdash;a 
              replication of present-day Bosnia. &amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Kosovo is already well on its way. Under the auspices of the UN-controlled 
              Kosovo Trust Agency (Serbia has its own privatization board), the 
              province&amp;rsquo;s coal mines and electrical facilities, the postal 
              service, the Pristina airport, the railways, landfills, and waste 
              management systems have all been privatized. As is the case across 
              the Balkans, &amp;ldquo;publicly-owned enterprises&amp;rdquo; are auctioned 
              for a fraction of their value on the private market with little 
              or no compensation for taxpayers.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Interpress News Service (February 20) reports that the sale of 300 
              public firms since 2003 has garnered the impoverished province only 
              $344.5 million. According to the Serbian daily
   
    Politika
   
   , 
              it was a &amp;ldquo;mono-ethnic privatization&amp;rdquo; based on undervalued 
              prices favoring ethnic Albanians. Anticipating the worst, Serbia 
              is seeking to regain $30 billion in &amp;ldquo;lost investment&amp;rdquo; 
              should Kosovo gain statehood, IPS reports. The Ahtisaari proposal 
              accounts for a mere $250 million worth of moveable property to return 
              to Belgrade&amp;rsquo;s control.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   In Serbia dollars have accomplished what bombs could not. After 
              U.S.-led international sanctions were lifted with Milosevic&amp;rsquo;s 
              ouster in 2000, the United States has emerged as the largest single 
              source of foreign direct investment. According to the U.S. embassy 
              in Belgrade, U.S. companies have made $1 billion worth of &amp;ldquo;committed 
              investments&amp;rdquo; represented in no small part by the $580 million 
              privatization of Nis Tobacco Factory (Phillip Morris) and a $250 
              million buyout of the national steel producer by U.S. Steel. Coca-Cola 
              bought a Serbian bottled water producer in 2005 for $21 million. 
              The list goes on.&amp;nbsp;
  
 




 
 


 
  
   
    W
   
   ord on the streets of Belgrade 
              is that joining the EU is inevitable&amp;mdash;if not entirely enviable. 
              Polls conducted by the European Movement in Serbia and Freedom House 
              show that around 70 percent of Serbians are in favor of joining 
              the EU, but as Ratibor Trivuvac, organizer of the University of 
              Belgrade&amp;rsquo;s Education Union, points out, the main attraction 
              is to leave Serbia, not for the benefits it will bring the country. 
              When asked specific questions concerning workers&amp;rsquo; rights to 
              equal pay or even to make homemade rakija (plum brandy), he said 
              that the majority showed a preference for more socialist policies.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   &amp;ldquo;The government wants to be part of the EU, but they&amp;rsquo;re 
              not pro-West. The young people want the EU, but they&amp;rsquo;re not 
              into the free market,&amp;rdquo; says Trivuvac. &amp;ldquo;It&amp;rsquo;s a false 
              dichotomy, a reaction against nationalism. Ideals are being replaced 
              with free market ideas, pushed by the media and repeated by people 
              who are confused.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The political assumption is that Serbians want to join the EU, but 
              Bobic admits that even the main stakeholders&amp;mdash;in Parliament, 
              the business world, and the media&amp;mdash;don&amp;rsquo;t fully understand 
              the implications. Euroskepticism runs high among a world-weary older 
              generation; Serbian youth are inclined towards a mixture of apathy 
              and cynicism.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Yet for the 80 percent of young Serbians who have never left the 
              country, the EU represents a chance to work for a living wage and 
              to escape what&amp;rsquo;s come to be seen as the Serbian destiny of 
              occupation and isolation. As depicted in Emir Kosturica&amp;rsquo;s film
   
    Underground
   
   , the Serbian characters prefer to live in a manufactured 
              subterranean environment making weapons for a fictional war, rather 
              than be exposed to a cruel and misunderstanding outside world. But 
              it hasn&amp;rsquo;t always been this way. &amp;ldquo;This used to be a wonderful 
              country,&amp;rdquo; Mirica Popovitch tells me, almost beseechingly, as 
              she walks her dogs through the Bohemian section of Belgrade. &amp;ldquo;Now, 
              I don&amp;rsquo;t know where it&amp;rsquo;s going. We don&amp;rsquo;t have many 
              visitors these days, not even from places that used to be part of 
              this country.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   During Tito&amp;rsquo;s dictatorship, Yugoslavians were the only members 
              of the communist bloc with the ability to move freely. Popovitch, 
              a swim instructor, remembers traveling to Rome and Greece as a teenager 
              with her parents. Now, even to participate in international events, 
              Popovitch must go through the visa ordeal or wait for the competitions 
              to take place in Serbia.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   It&amp;rsquo;s an irony of globalization when young people are faced 
              with an isolation their parents barely noticed under communism. 
              &amp;ldquo;What&amp;rsquo;s the best thing if we join the EU?&amp;rdquo; asks Sanja, 
              a teenager checking her cellphone outside a McDonald&amp;rsquo;s in downtown 
              Belgrade. She&amp;rsquo;s the model of capitalist perfection. &amp;ldquo;It 
              will be easier to get to other countries. I want to work somewhere 
              else after my studies, there&amp;rsquo;s no point here,&amp;rdquo; she says 
              in flawless English. &amp;ldquo;It&amp;rsquo;s not like it will happen tomorrow. 
              But it would be good if more bands can come.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Others have a more skeptical, yet just as apathetic view. Vladimir 
              Miloicic is a history student at the University of Belgrade, focusing 
              on Serbian history in the 20th century. Incidentally, he feels the 
              same way about the European Union as he does about the International 
              Criminal Tribunal. &amp;ldquo;It&amp;rsquo;s out of my power to influence 
              so I don&amp;rsquo;t care about it. No one my age is truly interested&amp;mdash;it&amp;rsquo;s 
              a non-topic,&amp;rdquo; he says. &amp;ldquo;No one ever managed to unite Europe. 
              The big question is, will the EU survive? I don&amp;rsquo;t see why we 
              need to rush into it. But I don&amp;rsquo;t think the politicians will 
              let us decide. Sooner or later, we will be in the EU.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Stepping outside her NGOspokesperson role for a moment, Bobic tells 
              of a running joke in Serbia: when the entire Balkans have joined 
              the EU, it will be dissolved. As if somehow &amp;ldquo;Balkanization&amp;rdquo; 
              is a contagious disease, not the result of external forces. Yet, 
              however flawed, the process of EU integration can be seen as a barometer 
              of cooperation between the divided Yugoslav states and their neighbors.&amp;nbsp;
  
 




 
 


 While 
            NGOs use trade agreements such as CEFTA (between Central European 
            and Balkan countries) to promote regional dialogue, anti-EU organizers 
            across the continent believe that a common struggle for sovereign 
            rights will unite Europeans. Contrary to popular opinion, it&amp;rsquo;s 
            not a nationalist agenda, but an expectation of empowerment shared 
            by primarily working-class people across the Union. &amp;ldquo;If the EU 
            is a rallying point, it&amp;rsquo;s not the right one,&amp;rdquo; says UnkovskiKorica. 
            &amp;ldquo;As an alternative to the U.S., it&amp;rsquo;s like saying, &amp;lsquo;Another 
            form of imperialism is possible.&amp;rsquo; But fundamentally, it&amp;rsquo;s 
            the same. I don&amp;rsquo;t want to fight for a better EU; I want to fight 
            for a better Europe.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;


 
  
   Power is based on control, whether communist, socialist, or capitalist, 
              Unkovski-Korica says. But if Tito&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;third way&amp;rdquo; was 
              a myth, he and Trivuvac see the opportunities opening up for another 
              &amp;ldquo;third way,&amp;rdquo; embodied in a pan-Balkan alliance spanning 
              from the former Yugoslavia, Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece, 
              and Romania. Unification based on the specific needs of the post-communist 
              region, claims Trivuvac, will bring people results that have eluded 
              them in the last 17 years of transition to capitalism. &amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Trivuvac&amp;rsquo;s enthusiasm would sound like any other anarcho-syndicalist 
              &amp;ldquo;pipedream&amp;rdquo; if it were not for his recent success organizing 
              a six-day sit-in of the philosophy faculty at the University of 
              Belgrade, after which the Administration accepted student demands 
              to halve university tuition, with continuing decreases. On their 
              own volition, Trivuvac says, students who had never heard of anarchist 
              principles adopted an &amp;ldquo;extremely radical&amp;rdquo; manifesto, collectively 
              composed in a student assembly. Although Triviuvac complains that 
              Serbians are far behind their Greek counterparts in resisting university 
              privatization, he says the experience woke many up from their apathy 
              or aversion to political involvement&amp;mdash;an example he believes 
              could spread to other sectors of society.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   Given the tradition of worker-oriented policies in the former Yugoslavia, 
              the level of union organizing is fairly low, Trivuvac says. Whether 
              due to corruption, indifference, or simply exhaustion, strikes haven&amp;rsquo;t 
              been successful in Serbia for some time. But signs of a sea change 
              are beginning to make waves in Serbian society. Taking a cue from 
              the worker take backs in Argentina, the Jagodina beer factory has 
              been operated by workers since last year, unbeknownst to most beer 
              drinkers. Jugoremedija, a pharmaceutical plant that worker shareholders 
              rescued from privatization in 2003, is a further example of successful 
              resistance to factory closures and corporate takeovers.&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   &amp;ldquo;The problem is really between markets and democracy,&amp;rdquo; 
              says Trivuvac. &amp;ldquo;We as Serbs really have to start to develop 
              alternatives across the region. If we can show that fighting each 
              other is not solving the issue, but about fighting the common enemy.&amp;rdquo;&amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
  
   The big &amp;ldquo;if&amp;rdquo; is whether or not this generation of Serbs 
              will recognize how the patterns of nationalism, corruption, and 
              warfare have allowed each successive empire to divide and conquer 
              the region. Kosovo, NATO, and the European Union are modern-day 
              examples of a continuing foreign occupation, which many Serbs believe 
              they are powerless to resist. In a country rocked by violence and 
              poverty, middle-class idealism is quite strong. But the desire for 
              self-determination is an integral part of the capitalist-democracy 
              daydream. By forming alliances with historic rivals&amp;mdash; Albanians, 
              Bulgarians, Greeks and Romanians&amp;mdash;the occupiers can be beaten 
              at their own game. Not only Serbia, but the entire region, will 
              finally come into its own.
  
  
   &amp;nbsp;
  
 
 
 
  
   
    Elise 
            Hugus is an activist and a freelance writer.&amp;nbsp;</description>
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