Lead article
November 2000
Specter of workers' revolt haunts post-Milosevic Serbia
by Peter Hudis
The mass mobilizations which led to the overthrow of Serbia's President
Slobodan Milosevic seem, on the surface, to have receded now that its new
president, Vojislav Kostunica, has assumed power. Since taking office on
Oct. 6 Kostunica has worked with the military and police to clear the
streets; he has obtained control over government ministries for his
18-party coalition, the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS); and he has
pushed for new elections to the Serbian parliament, to be held Dec. 23. All
this is part of his effort to turn Serbia into what he calls "a normal
European society" after 13 years of rule by Milosevic.
Yet beneath the surface things are anything but normal. Dozens of
factories, firms, and enterprises have been occupied by workers. Workers
have thrown out their state-appointed managers and are demanding an
improvement in living and working conditions. Workers' committees have
taken over mines, auto plants, pharmaceutical factories, hospitals,
insurance agencies and trading companies.
Though this militancy erupted during the period of mass mobilization which
forced Milosevic from power, the occupations of factories and firms have
actually intensified since Kostunica took office.
Since Milosevic's overthrow a major strike has broken out at Trudbenik, one
of Serbia's biggest construction companies. The workers' committee there
has called for the firing of its managing director, the board of directors
and the trade union leadership. One report noted, "The strike committee
wants to be sure that the new rulers from DOS do not just reproduce the old
system by imposing so-called democrats [as the managers of] factories."
Though Kostunica rode a wave of strikes and protests to push Milosevic from
power, he has since condemned the factory occupations as forcefully as has
Milosevic's "Socialist" Party of Serbia (SSP). Kostunica's pleas to entrust
DOS with the task of running things has so far not succeeded. Whether this
remains so will help determine Serbia's future.
THE 'BULLDOZER' REVOLUTION
Kostunica's victory does not mean Serbia has broken from narrow nationalism.
He is a Serb nationalist who opposed Tito in the 1970s for granting
increased powers to Kosova. He was closely associated with the Serbian
Academy of Sciences in the mid-1980s when it drew up its rationale for what
later became known as "ethnic cleansing." He supported Milosevic's crushing
of movements for autonomy in Kosova and Vojvodina in the late 1980s and
Serbia's wars against Croatia, Bosnia and Kosova in the 1990s. But since
Kostunica was an anti-Communist who never joined Milosevic's government, he
was considered "clean" enough to run for president by the much-divided
opposition.
Many voted for Kostunica because they have grown tired of Milosevic's
promotion of narrow nationalism. Many others, however, voted for Kostunica
because they feel Milosevic didn't defend Serbian narrow nationalism
strongly enough.
Independent observers estimate that Milosevic won less than 40% of the
Sept. 24 presidential vote, with about 56% going to Kostunica. Milosevic
fared even worse in municipal elections: in Belgrade the DOS won 102 out of
110 contested seats.
Milosevic responded by trying to engineer electoral fraud. He claimed that
Kostunica won less than 50% of the vote, which would necessitate a runoff.
DOS refused to participate in the runoff, and called for street protests
and blockades to force the regime to recognize the election results.
Though many rallies were held in the days following the Sept. 24
elections, most were smaller than the opposition hoped for. What changed
everything was the outbreak of a strike at the Kolubara mine complex on
Sept. 29-a spontaneous action that was not envisioned by the DOS leaders.
Kolubara is the largest coal mine in Serbia (it employs 17,000) and
supplies coal to the Nikola Tesla electricity plant in Obrenovac, which
produces half of Serbia's electricity. The strike had a huge effect. Within
days a general strike was proclaimed, the first in Yugoslavia since World
War II. Some 4,500 miners at the Kostoloc mine in eastern Serbia joined the
strike, as did workers in other industries in Nis, Cacak, Pancevo, and
Uzice. In Kragulevac 30,000 auto workers and laborers in the armaments
industry demonstrated against Milosevic.
At the same time, tens of thousands of students and citizens came into the
streets of 20 cities, especially Belgrade. For the first time, a
worker-student alliance emerged in the struggle.
Milosevic responded by arresting dozens of strike leaders; he claimed they
were financed by NATO as part of a plot to take over the country. He
ordered the police to surround Kolubara, and sent in his army chief of
staff, Nebojsa Pavkovic (an architect of Serbia's war against Kosova).
Pavkovic said if the miners didn't return to work he would fire them and
replace them with Serb miners from Kosova.
The threat proved futile. On Oct. 4 angry miners drove a bus through a
police cordon, which allowed thousands of miners and their supporters to
enter Kolubara. This proved to be the turning point. The police abandoned
efforts to maintain control-perhaps in part because many in the army and
police had themselves voted for Kostunica.
The next day, as crowds gathered at the federal parliament in Belgrade, the
police stepped aside and did not fire on them. Ljubislav Djokiv, an
unemployed construction worker, used his bulldozer to help break into the
building. Parliament and the state-run TV and radio stations were soon in
flames.
One worker said, "I've been waiting 10 years for this and out of that I
spent 5 years in a queue. I just want to see Milosevic finished like
Ceausescu" (a reference to the Romanian Communist leader who was shot
during the revolution of 1989).
Within 24 hours of his failure to break the Kolubara strike, Milosevic
decided the game was up. Rather than risk going down like Ceausescu, he
stepped aside, admitting that Kostunica had won the election after all. Yet
by retaining his leadership of the SSP-the largest party in Serbia-he
remains a formidable, though weakened, political force.
The events in Serbia show how fast a tyrannical regime can come apart once
the working class takes the initiative.
For years an array of bourgeois politicians tried to unseat Milosevic,
without success. When he annulled the results of elections in 1996, massive
protests occurred. Yet Milosevic kept finding ways to outflank and
disorient the opposition.
What was different this time is that in the aftermath of Serbia's military
defeat in Kosova the workers decided they had had enough of Milosevic's
lies and took the initiative to get rid of him.
The role played by the working class in the recent events differs in a
number of respects from the upheavals which brought down the other
Stalinist regimes in East Europe in 1989.
The Stalinist regimes collapsed in 1989 as a result of genuine mass
upheavals. Yet for the most part the working class did not step forth as an
independent force in its own right. Factory occupations and major strikes
were few. Though the collapse of the exploitative "Communist" regimes were
welcomed by all layers of the populace, a genuine revolutionary alternative
did not arise from the Left. What predominated instead was the notion that
there is no alternative to free market capitalism.
While there were many reasons for this, the global context was critical.
The East European revolts of 1989 occurred at a moment of deep
retrogression, with the triumph of Reaganism, the collapse of revolutionary
alternatives in the Third World, and the decline of explicitly
anti-capitalist movements in the West.
Today, the global context is somewhat different. Important cracks have
appeared in capital's ideological edifice. The massive strikes in West
Europe since 1995; the growing movements against globalization and
sweatshop labor; and the Seattle protest against the WTO and its aftermath
have rekindled new opposition to global capitalism. Even if only slowly and
quietly, an undefined foreboding is emerging that we may not be fated to
forever suffer the indignities of global capitalism after all.
It may be coincidental that the protest against the IMF and World Bank was
held in nearby Prague on Sept. 26, just days before Serbia's workers took
the initiative against Milosevic. Yet it may reflect the fact that
something new is in the air which has helped reawaken the specter of
workers' revolt.
THE LEFT IN DISARRAY-ONCE AGAIN
Just as with the East European revolts of 1989, Serbia's new rulers are
trying to ensure that the "revolution" remains within manageable channels
without any real change in class or social relations.
Kostunica is being aided in this by the U.S. and West Europe. He was barely
in office when the European Union announced it would lift sanctions against
Serbia. The Clinton administration likewise hailed Kostunica's victory and
agreed to lift sanctions, even though Kostunica says that he will not turn
over Milosevic to the war crimes tribunal in The Hague-as demanded by the
U.S. for the past year. The Clinton administration no longer appears
concerned about bringing Milosevic to justice.
Despite the U.S.'s effort to bolster Kostunica, his position remains
precarious. Milosevic still has many supporters in the military and
government who can make life difficult for Kostunica. The DOS has a
minority of seats in the Yugoslav parliament. Real political power in any
case lies in the Serbian parliament, in which DOS has no seats. The leaders
of Montenegro, who are pushing for independence, boycotted the election. In
response, Kostunica-who opposes independence for both Montenegro and
Kosova-has allied himself with a pro-Milosevic Montenegrin Party (the SNP)
in order to obtain a majority in the Yugoslav parliament. And the DOS is a
faction-ridden 18-party coalition which can split apart at any time.
The U.S. signaled its support for Kostunica even before the election by
sending millions of dollars to the DOS. Some "leftists" are using this to
argue that the Clinton administration "engineered" the overthrow of
Milosevic.
Diana Johnstone-who wrote a series of scurrilous attacks on the Kosova
Albanians and Kosova Liberation Army (KLA) during NATO's imperialist
bombing of Kosova last year-has denounced the overthrow of Milosevic as a
CIA-engineered coup. Events like the storming of parliament, she says in Z
MAGAZINE, were faked for the TV cameras!
Another Stalinoid "leftist" who was the source of much disinformation about
the KLA, Michel Chossudovsky, has written similar nonsense. Neither
Johnstone nor Chossudovsky explain how the CIA managed to infiltrate the
Kolubara mines, spark a spontaneous strike, and then engineer workplace
occupations across the country.
It is telling that those who denounced the KLA for being a "terrorist"
group run by the CIA now denounce factory occupations and strikes as
"illegal" CIA-run activities. The failure to support a national liberation
movement now extends to opposing actual workers' revolt-all because the
U.S. supported the campaign of the man brought to power through it!
Such bizarre analyses totally misread U.S. policy in Serbia and the region
as a whole.
It is true that the U.S. has an ally in Kostunica. But it also had an ally
for years in Milosevic. The U.S. treated Milosevic as a friend upon the
signing of the Dayton Accords in 1995, which prevented the Bosnians from
achieving a military victory against Serbian forces. The U.S. figured:
better to go along with Serb nationalism, in a somewhat tamed form with the
Dayton Accords, than risk "regional instability" by allowing the Bosnians
to win. From 1995-98 Serbia, like Croatia, was treated as a U.S. regional
ally.
That changed only in 1998-99, when Milosevic overreached himself by
readying a full-scale crackdown against the Kosovar Albanians. This
occurred just as NATO was about to expand into the former countries of the
Warsaw Pact. Faced with the outbreak of hostilities that could make NATO
look like a helpless giant, Clinton and Albright decided to launch the U.S.
air war against Serbia.
The U.S did not attack Milosevic because of his narrow nationalism. Nor did
it bomb Belgrade in order to obtain independence for Kosova. The U.S. has
long opposed independence for Kosova. After the war it forced the KLA to
disarm and insisted that Kosova be rejoined with Serbia-once one man,
Milosevic, was removed from power.
Now that Milosevic is gone, the U.S. has no problem supporting Kostunica
who shares Milosevic's basic nationalist standpoint. For that standpoint
has never posed a serious threat to U.S. interests.
Nor did Milosevic's Serbia serve as an economic "bulwark" against the West.
Under Kostunica, as under Milosevic, Serbia will have a state-capitalist
economy with a set of rulers skimming off the proceeds, this time in the
name of "democracy." Milosevic's plans to privatize 75 of the country's
largest firms will now be carried out. That will be enough to satisfy the
U.S., who will also find a way to sneak out of major commitments of
economic aid, as it has in so many other areas of the Balkans.
WHICH KOLUBARA?
Now that the new regime is having a hard time stopping the occupations of
work sites, it may try to whip up national chauvinism as a way to unite the
nation behind it. Kostunica has long supported Serbia's dominance over
Kosova and there is little indication he is prepared to let the region go.
He has not released over 800 Kosovar Albanians still in Serbian jails.
Though he has admitted to Serbian "atrocities" against the Albanians in
Kosova, he has not acknowledged the genocide inflicted on Bosnia.
Given the new situation in Belgrade, the U.S. will no doubt pressure the
Kosovar Albanians to accept a form of limited autonomy within Serbia. Those
KLA leaders who aspired for independence but who chose to ally themselves
with the U.S. occupation will find themselves with no room to maneuver. The
Kosovar struggle is now in grave jeopardy.
The situation in Bosnia and Kosova remains critical, not just for those
areas, but for Serbia itself. As Marx said about freedom struggles in this
country, "Labor cannot emancipate itself in the white skin where in the
Black skin it is branded." Marx insisted that class struggles cannot reach
fulfillment so long as they remain confined by the mind-forged manacles of
racism and national chauvinism.
The future of workers' struggles in Serbia hinges on whether the masses
face up to the "ethnic cleansing" inflicted upon Bosnia and Kosova and
extend a hand of solidarity with those who fought it. Solidarizing with the
ongoing fight of the Albanian Kosovar miners of Trepca is key in that.
In 1914 Kolubara was the site of a Serb victory over the Austro-Hungarian
army. The event became part of nationalist folklore and was later featured
in a famous novel by Dobrica Cosic, TIME OF DEATH. The novel helped fuel
the nationalist mania which seized Serbia in the late 1980s and 1990s.
In 2000 Kolubara was the site of a strike which helped end the reign of an
architect of genocide. Which Kolubara will define the new Serbia? The
nationalist mythology of 1914, or the workers' revolt of 2000 which, in
reaching to realize itself, will rid itself of the vestiges of narrow
nationalism? Upon this question the future of Serbia rests.
--October 20, 2000
|