http://www.b92.net/intervju/eng/2004/nikolic.php
Interview with Tomislav Nikolic
The frontrunner in Serbia’s presidential election on June 13, according
to opinion polls, is the deputy leader of the Serbian Radical Party,
Tomislav Nikolic. The party is a former coalition partner of Slobodan
Milosevic’s Socialist Party of Serbia and its leader, Vojislav Seselj,
is, like Milosevic, now in custody in The Hague, awaiting trial on war
crime charges. B92’s Sanda Savic interviewed Nikolic two weeks before
the election.
Guest: Tomislav Nikolic
Author: Sanda Savic
B92: Tonight’s guest is the Serbian Radical Party’s presidential
candidate, Tomislav Nikolic. Good evening and welcome.
Nikolic: Good evening. I’m happy to be here.
B92: Your slogan in this campaign is “Realistic”. Last time around it
was “Radically Better”. Does this mean that you have given up the
concept of radical changes or is it only a change of image?
Nikolic: Yes. “Radically Better” was a slogan for the parliamentary
elections. I think we will have something very similar for the coming
extraordinary parliamentary elections, after the June 13 election. My
victory is really something realistic in Serbia and many people I have
heard in the street had guessed what our slogan would be.
B92: We shall begin by looking at one day of your election campaign.
We had a crew with you yesterday in Kragujevac, but before we see this
footage I must ask you to comment on the fact that Vojislav Seselj made
a decision not to vote in the presidential elections. Does this mean
that you have lost his support or is this also because of the change of
image?
Nikolic: It’s not that. I know Vojislav Seselj very well. When we
drafted the law on election of members of parliament we said that there
would not be any voting organised where there is no control and we
don’t want to damage any candidate or political party. There is no
control in The Hague, no one knows how people will vote there and,
because the Foreign Ministry will count the votes, Vojislav decided not
to give his vote away to anyone else, they would discard the ballot
slips and substitute new ones anyway. This time it’s the goat who is
guarding the cabbage.
B92: You say you don’t doubt his support. So why is it you have not
mentioned him during the past few days of the campaign?
Nikolic: What do you mean I haven’t mentioned him.
B92: You have?
Nikolic: What do you mean I’m not mentioning him? I’m not the kind of
person who would betray a friend and teacher. I’m not interested in
what other people think about whether I should betray someone or not.
I do everything according to my conscience.
VIDEO FOOTAGE FROM KRAGUJEVAC
Nikolic in Kragujevac: I want to make sure you sleep peacefully, that
you have security, that the government starts providing jobs for you
instead of closing down factories. There should be workers in the
factories, not rats. There should not be wind blowing through broken
windows. I want you to be able to be productive and I know where the
market is for our goods. It’s not in the West. I want to cooperate
with the West. I want to cooperate in a way in which no has had the
guts to cooperate for a long time. In the way I broke Harri Holkeri’s
back in Strasbourg fifteen days ago.
Radical Party supporter: It only seems that the party has changed a
lot, but basically nothing much has changed. They look a bit
different, nothing more.
STUDIO
B92: Mr Nikolic, how would you reply to this supporter of yours? Will
you tell him that you’re the same Toma, or…
Nikolic: He didn’t ask me anything.
B92: … are you discarding your earlier policies?
Nikolic: These observations are correct: nothing has changed. I’m
only fed up with being defeated by people not worthy of me. I think
that our response to what befell us last year is the correct one.
We’ve behaved ourselves all these fourteen or fifteen years when we
were under constant attack from our political opponents, the media, you
name it. Finally, the truth has come to the surface. The Serbian
Radical Party has climbed to the top in times when we were really under
threat. When they were persecuting us, beating us, harassing us and
arresting us, we behaved differently; we showed how good we are at
defending ourselves. Now, when no one is persecuting us and when we
have room for activity, it would be really stupid of us to do what is
not necessary.
B92: You mean to use the violent methods you used before?
Nikolic: To respond to violence, to respond to violence. I don’t know
of anyone except Milosevic accusing us of violence, we’ve never
committed violence.
B92: All right, we’ll come back to that later. Let’s talk now about
your main election messages. We heard in Kragujevac about the change
of foreign policy and the improvement of the economy: these are the
two things you most emphasise. Let’s start from the beginning. You
say you want both the West and the East.
Nikolic: Foreign policy is somewhat defined by the changes which took
place after 2000. The West has brought its protégés to power in
Serbia, they’ve been in power for four years and they’re still in
power, so I can’t say the West is not present here. It’s here, it’s
penetrated our society considerably, and in a bad way. It’s possible
that it had the best of intentions, but that the people in power here
have failed those intentions. We must cooperate with the West.
B92: And, in your opinion, who is our main partner in the West at the
moment?
Nikolic: The European Union, I think.
B92: You’ve heard what Javier Solana said: “If Tomislav Nikolic wins,
the EU won’t support him and this will be a very bad signal to foreign
investors.”
Nikolic: He didn’t say that.
B92: That is exactly what he said.
Nikolic: He said this very gently and mildly, choosing his words very
carefully. He said that he believes foreign investors will not be too
happy if I win.
B92: “It’s going to be a bad signal,” that’s what he said.
Nikolic: What, am I going to steal from foreign investors?
B92: They won’t invest in this country: you know that. That’s our
second topic tonight, the economy. Let’s see how you can…
Nikolic: Let’s clear this up, because you’re convinced Solana said
something which he didn’t say. Does the EU want to invest in a country
in which people like these are in power? Does it want to invest in a
country in which there have been a thousand companies privatised but
none of the factories are working?
B92: I agree with you. The EU is investing very little, but the
economy can’t get off the starting blocks without favourable loans or
foreign investments.
Nikolic: But we’re more in debt at this point than we were in Tito’s
day. Only now we’re not spending it on production but on consumption,
that’s the problem.
B92: We’ll talk about the economy later. First let’s finish with
foreign policy. Tell me…
Nikolic: And if they’re not investing much, what is it that’s going to
stop if I win?
B92: That little will stop.
Nikolic: That little.
B92: That little will stop and…
Nikolic: It’s not enough. I don’t want to live on charity, you know.
B92: It’s not charity. It’s loans and foreign investments.
Nikolic: That’s charity. These are loans for repaying old loans and
debts.
B92: And how would you solve it, if you’re so keen to talk about the
economy.
Nikolic: When I come here as prime minister designate you can ask me
all those questions. I have answers to all those questions.
B92: But your messages from the presidential election campaign rallies…
Nikolic: Yes, but you heard what I said. I’m going to make the
government… I really want to make the government…
B92: How are you going to make it?
Nikolic: What do you mean? I will use the Constitution. I control
the government. I hear gaffes from certain media, even Radio Belgrade,
they say the government and the parliament control the president. I
can’t believe it. I can’t believe that so many people have gone into
the contest with me. I control the Serbian Government. The prime
minister reports directly to me. Ministers report directly to me, they
answer my questions, they answer my criticism. I’d like on day to take
over your thankless role and ask the prime minister some questions here.
B92: Who knows, perhaps you will.
Nikolic: It’s a thankless job, thankless, that’s why I’m saying this.
I would really like to be unbiased, unlike some other people. I oppose
the government politically and I’m the one who will control it. The
citizens of Serbia don’t trust the others when they say they’ll control
the government. They don’t trust the government representative because
he can’t control his government and its prime minister. They don’t
trust people who say the government will support them in the second
round of elections. If they support you, you can’t criticise them.
You can’t criticise them because you’ve been elected by their votes.
B92: All right. Let’s get back to the West and the East.
Nikolic: Yes, why not?
B92: So how are you going to go to the West without the EU? The US,
perhaps?
Nikolic: I don’t know what you’re getting at. Let’s say I’m the
elected president of the republic.
B92: You’re not.
Nikolic: But you’re saying I am and asking me how I would do…
B92: All right, all right.
Nikolic: So, I’m the elected president of the republic, and you know
I’ll be elected.
Savic: I don’t know that.
Nikolic: Let’s say I’ll be the elected president. I want to be.
B92: You said “Only if I’m dead will I not be elected on June 13”.
Nikolic: That was a reply to a democratic message from the prime
minister which you refused to comment on.
B92: I’ll comment on it when he’s present.
Nikolic: He said, during his visit to the West, that Tomislav Nikolic
won’t be president of the republic. If I’d said that you’d say the
Chetniks are rising again, the rusty spoons will be out, you’d say all
those things about me. Then I asked the prime minister publicly why I
won’t be president if the people vote for me.
B92: So this was only a reply, you don’t actually believe that you
will win the first round?
Nikolic: I’m certain.
B92: About what?
Nikolic: That I’ll win the first round.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: I’m on the road every day. I have been to sixteen towns in
the Srednje Banatski District and we finished with the rally in
Zrenjanin today. Every day.
B92: Let’s get back to the West and the East.
Nikolic: Please do get back.
B92: How will you go to the West, and with what will you go to the
East?
Nikolic: I’m the elected president of the republic. I have a
government to control. I have a parliament which I appreciate and
respect deeply. I have the Constitutional Court, I should appreciate
and respect that and, if everything goes well and there are respected
lawyers in it and the professors from the Law School, we will have a
constitutional court we can respect. And then the Serbian Government
will conduct an economic policy – I assume G17 Plus won’t be part of
it, they’ll resign the day I win – and it will have to think about the
West and the East. It won’t be a problem.
B92: But what will you be thinking about?
Nikolic: I’ll be thinking about how the people live.
B92: Wait a minute, as president of the republic?
Nikolic: As president of the republic I have to think about how the
people are living.
B92: You’re supposed to represent the state.
Nikolic: And then I call up the government and ask them: have you done
anything in the West, have you secured investments, have you secured
the right technology, have you made it possible for our businessmen…
B92: And they say it’s problematic because you’re the president of the
republic.
Nikolic: They say it’s difficult because I’m not allowing mobsters to
run the state, it’s difficult because I insist so much on democracy,
it’s difficult because I insist on human rights, it’s difficult because
I insist on us observing the Constitution and the laws.
B92: All right, but how will you represent Serbia in the West as
president?
Nikolic: My only sin against Serbia would be if I don’t warn the
government about the rise of crime: people who sell drugs to kids;
people who buy our natural resources or factories for a pittance;
people who were paying politicians while they were in opposition and
who now have to return the favour.
B92: You haven’t told me about the West. Or would you rather talk
about the East?
Nikolic: No, I want to talk about the West. My door will be open.
I’ll respond to every invitation from the West. If someone wants to
talk to me I’ll talk with them. I’ll tell them the views I’m telling
you right now. I really can’t believe that the West wants Serbia to be
the way it is at the moment. Serbia in the past four years is Serbia
the way the West wants it! I want with all my heart to believe that
the West wishes us better things than that. I want the West to
convince us of that, not to praise a government under which a million
people lost their jobs, not to praise a government under which not a
single worker has gone into the factories. They’re all the same to me.
We’ve been without a constitutional court for a year and a half, now
we have a political court. We’ve had our prime minister assassinated,
we’ve had a state of emergency which introduced a dictatorship, we’ve
had voting fraud in the parliament, we’ve become a lot poorer and we’re
another nine years further away from Europe. Before 2000 they told us
we were ten years away from Europe. Four years have passed and we’re
now fifteen years away.
B92: Do you think if you are elected president it will bring us closer
to the West.
Nikolic: I don’t know.
B92: You don’t know?
Nikolic: It will depend on the West and the Republic of Serbia.
B92: As I said, there are certain messages.
Nikolic: I won’t make a single move to justify any kind of measure by
the West against Serbia. I’ve told the head of the EU monitoring
mission in Belgrade: “Say it openly: if Serbian citizens vote for
Tomislav Nikolic, we will bomb you, and then I’ll withdraw from
politics. Say it openly.”
B92: They won’t bomb us, but there is a certain kind of isolation they
could apply.
Nikolic: What will they say? “Let’s isolate the people of Serbia
because they voted for Tomislav Nikolic?” Come on! Those days are
behind us. Labus said in an interview today that there’ll be no
isolation and sanctions if Tomislav Nikolic wins.
B92: And on what are you basing your belief that there’ll be no
isolation?
Nikolic: On the fact that I will be elected by the people. On the
fact that I respect the Constitution and the law. On the fact that I
will help the government to work well and criticise it when it does
not. On the fact that I will stop laws which are unconstitutional and
put them into procedure immediately if they’re in accordance with the
Constitution. On the fact that I will fight for the rights of each
individual in Serbia, each and every one. What will the West have
against me then? Is the West against people like that? If it is, I
don’t want to be supported by the West. And if they support me with
views like these I have nothing to be ashamed of.
B92: All right, if we’ve exhausted the West, let’s talk about the East.
Nikolic: I think that the East is a much more unpleasant topic for you.
B92: No, there are no unpleasant topics for me.
Nikolic: I visited Moscow again for the first time in four or five
years and I saw what I sensed when I was initially for cooperation with
Russia. Russia has been through expansion, an economic boom. Russia
has a hundred billion dollars of foreign currency reserves and each
year a forty billion dollar surplus in foreign trade. There’s not a
single deputy in the Duma who is against cooperation with Serbia, not a
single one. In the Russian Duma, there’s not a single pro-Western
deputy, people have simply not voted for them. The Russian president
has offered a better life to his citizens. First, I told them
everything I don’t like about the Russian administration, not the
Russian people. I know about the ties between them and us, but I won’t
forget the vote for sanctions, the vote for the weapons import embargo,
that Chernomyrdin brought the plan, that Russia took part in drafting
Resolution 1244, that its battalion was the first to arrive in Pristina
– the Serbs were immensely delighted by that – and then moved to
Slatina Airport only to eventually return to Russia. They withdrew
from the Balkans because they didn’t count on us as strategic partners,
as having historical ties. And then, after I’d scheduled talks with
only one faction, all the rest called me and wanted to talk to me: the
foreign ministry, the president’s advisors…
B92: Did you meet Zhirinovsky?
Nikolic: No.
B92: Why not?
Nikolic: We’ve not been in contact for five years, even more. I don’t
count the time that DOS wasted, three or four years before that our
relations became cold. We haven’t been at each other’s congresses,
that cooperation has withered away. We have no concrete cooperation
any more: we have another political party to cooperate with in Russia.
When I arrived in Belgrade…
B92: That’s good. I apologise. Go on.
Nikolic: I have learnt that the prime minister will travel to Moscow
on June 3. I’m happy about that. He’ll find an open door there. He,
who hasn’t been to Moscow for five years, he whom Moscow…
B92: Do you think that we have a chance, economically speaking?
Nikolic: There’s no other way out.
B92: There’s no other way out. What can we do?
Nikolic: I’m going to tell you now.
B92: What can we offer to the East?
Nikolic: I’m going to tell you now. And what can we sell to the West?
That’s what hurts me the most: no one has the guts to say openly that
we don’t have any products for the West, not a single factory of ours
has products for the West; we’ve closed down our factories so that we
can sell Western products here and we even have to sell European sugar
on the Serbian market, we don’t have our own sugar any more. The
question is when the farmers will again be able to produce sugar. We
import it from Slovenia for four dinars and sell it for one. We import
it from Croatia for three dinars and export it for one. Don’t talk to
me about cooperation with the West any more. I want that cooperation.
I want new technology, I want the government to secure capital,
investments, good legislation, democracy, human rights, at the highest
possible level, but I know that Serbia cannot survive without factories.
B92: But can a factory work without loans and investments?
Nikolic: It can’t, all right, it can’t. But no one wanted to use the
convenience we created in 2000, in early 2000. I hear now that the
government has shown interest in it and even that several ministers
have travelled to Moscow to deal with this. We can sell almost eighty
per cent of our products in Russia without customs duties. Current
products, the ones we already have. Any company in the world can make
its products here and then transport them to Russia and they will be
cheaper than if they were made on ships in duty free zones. Why hasn’t
this opportunity been picked up in the past five years? Why have we
had to sink so low? Why have we had to become this poor? I don’t know
how much you travel around Serbia. I travel a lot these days. I meet
a lot of people, honourable, honest men and none of them are wealthy.
There are poor people living in Serbia today and I’m going to ask the
government some questions about them.
B92: Were you meeting those poor people when you were deputy prime
minister?
Nikolic: We had a lot of serious work in those days.
B92: It was a time when, it seems to me, all of us were poor.
Nikolic: Yes, but we were fighting terrorism then. We were defending
ourselves from NATO and we were rebuilding the country. Those were our
three tasks which we were engaged on for a year and a half and nothing
more could have been done.
B92: But you did manage to resolve your housing problems during that
period.
Nikolic: Yes. I did.
B92: And members of your party, too. Were you thinking about poor
people then?
Nikolic: What do you have against my solving housing problems?
B92: Did you buy an apartment of 187 square metres?
Nikolic: That’s not true. I live in a 90 square metre apartment.
B92: Because you had to sell the big one.
Nikolic: And why did I have to sell it?
B92: Why did you sell it?
Nikolic: Not to make money, but to pay the taxes invented by the state
on the apartment.
B92: Never mind, you had a place to live then.
Nikolic: And where was that?
B92: In a house in Kragujevac. Is that true?
Nikolic: But I live and work in Belgrade. My son lives with his wife
in my house in Kragujevac. This year I will have a grandchild.
B92: Do you think it’s all right for anyone who becomes a state
official to accept a large apartment and, when his term ends, not to
return it but to sell it off?
Nikolic: I didn’t accept the apartment to use it. I’ll move now to
the presidential residence. I’ll use it while I’m president of the
republic and then I’ll leave it to the new president. What’s this got
to do with the East?
B92: It was you who turned the topic back to the West, but as we were
speaking about poor people, I wanted to ask you whether you had thought
at all about all of us being very poor at the time.
Nikolic: I thought about it. But I had to live somewhere, a million
people in Serbia live in apartments.
B92: Yes, but they don’t have a house and an apartment of 187 square
metres.
Nikolic: You can’t count a house which is a hundred and fifty
kilometres away.
B92: I say you could have returned your apartment.
Nikolic: A house a hundred and fifty kilometres away has never been an
obstacle to getting an apartment in any company I have worked for.
B92: Yes, but…
Nikolic: I want to tell you all…
B92: Yes, you want to talk about everything. That’s why you’re here.
Nikolic: But I don’t know the question.
B92: Make yourself at home. Say it.
Nikolic: No, you do it, please.
B92: What questions did you expect?
Nikolic: The ones B92 would ask a Serbian Radical.
B92: And what questions are they?
Nikolic: You haven’t tackled The Hague yet.
B92: No.
Nikolic: Do you want to talk about bread?
B92: Bread?
Nikolic: Yes. Three dinars for a loaf of bread.
B92: We can talk about bread. Not about three dinars a loaf, but I’m
interested in the kind of economic system you have in mind, we can come
to that later.
Nikolic: What did you have in mind. Feel free to use your prepared
script.
B92: Prepared script?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: I should have liked to talk a little more about the government.
Nikolic: I don’t believe I have intrigued you enough to ask more
questions. I think you’ve already asked them all.
B92: I want to talk about the honourable behaviour of the Serbian
Radicals when they are in government. How they find themselves
apartments.
Nikolic: Have you revealed anything new to the Serbian citizens. Have
I been secretive about this?
B92: I’d like you to comment on your behaviour in Zemun.
Nikolic: I want to get this over with. Do you think it would be
better if I took a hundred or two hundred thousand Deutschmarks from
the Mob and bought myself an apartment so that no one could bother me
about it?
B92: What kind of comparison is that? I don’t know what you mean.
Nikolic: It’s a powerful comparison. Everyone in DOS was doing it and
you’ve never asked them about it.
B92: It’s not true that we didn’t, but tonight you’re the guest here
and because you claim that the Serbian Radicals have nothing to do with
crime…
Nikolic: Tell me about Zemun. What’s wrong with Zemun?
B92: There are a lot of things wrong. I have a pile of documents
here. I’ll give them to you, although you already have them.
Nikolic: What you can give me isn’t important. Let’s see what we can
do while we’re on the air.
B92: We’ve obtained court records on some of this material. There’s
an enormous amount of documentation on how the Radicals behaved between
1996 and 2000 in the municipality of Zemun. There’s a debt of
sixty-eight million dinars; the courts established that there was a
series of abuses related to business premises in Zemun, and; according
to the financial police the Radicals received at least a million and a
half euros in campaign funding and gifts.
Nikolic: You see, there’s only one…
B92: All right, we can go through them one by one now…
Nikolic: There’s only one court case and only one man in question.
There is only one indictment against one man from the Serbian Radical
Party and you’re talking about an ongoing case. Nothing has been
proved, whether we’re guilty or not, but you say it’s fact because you
received it from the Zemun Municipality.
B92: I’m asking you, do you want to talk about these one by one?
Nikolic: Please do ask me. But I have to tell your viewers that not a
single Radical is in prison, not a single one has been convicted, and
we lost power in Zemun five years ago. Last year we had a landslide in
both the presidential and the parliamentary elections in Zemun. In the
parliamentary elections, in Zemun we had more votes than all our
opponents put together. That’s the attitude of the citizens of Zemun
to our tenure. All right, now tell me what the attitude of the
outgoing authorities is to our tenure in Zemun.
B92: But the people of Zemun probably don’t know, for example, that
they could have had two million dinars per month more if you had not
been leasing the Magistrate Building, more than two thousand square
metres, for 1.57 dinars per square metre. Is that honourable behaviour?
Nikolic: Yes, it is.
B92: It is?
Nikolic: Yes. All parliamentary parties in Belgrade lease offices for
prices like that. We’re not a profit-making organisation: we’re paid
by the state. Why don’t you ask in which parts of town and in what
kind of buildings other parties have their offices.
B92: I’ll ask them when they’re here. Now I’m asking you.
Nikolic: But that’s the law. Those are the regulations. It’s a city
decree. We weren’t in power in the city, we went to Zemun. Everyone
else was in central Belgrade in huge offices, don’t we have the right
to do that? What are we? Aliens?” Under what conditions do we have a
long term lease?
B92: Shall we move on?
Nikolic: We have a long term lease in accordance with the law. We
have a long term lease contract, there’s nothing questionable about
that, it’s fully in line with the law. The price is not questionable
at all.
B92: I’m asking you whether it’s honourable behaviour: you say it is.
All right, you’ve answered my question, may we move on?
Nikolic: But please, listen to me. Thirty political parties in
Belgrade have offices like that. It’s an honourable thing for
political parties to have a place where they work.
B92: All right. Is it honourable, then, for Dragan Todorovic to
lease, on October 3, 2000, a thousand square metres of land in Zemun
for a dinar per square metre for thirty years?
Nikolic: Let me ask you something now. As Dragan Todorovic has sued
everyone who said this, are you reporting someone else’s words or will
he be able to sue you because these are your words?
B92: Here. I can give you the documents.
Nikolic: Let me ask you: according to the law are you not responsible
if you report someone else’s information? Is this your information?
Are these your words?
B92: This is a report from the Zemun Municipality from a meeting held
on October 2. A dinar per square metre per month.
Nikolic: It’s not true.
B92: One day later they changed it to a dinar per square metre per
year. For thirty years.
Nikolic: It’s not true. They’re lying.
B92: They’re lying? This is a forgery?
Nikolic: It’s not true. There are court proceedings under way.
B92: Okay, it’s a forgery then.
Nikolic: There’s a trial under way and Dragan Todorovic has sued all
of them.
B92: All right. We have Gordana Pop Lazic, then. Very similar thing.
There’s a contract, she also got some land.
Nikolic: I don’t know about her. Where did she get the land?
B92: She also got land.
Nikolic: Where did she get land.
B92: In Zemun, also. Land to build a private house. She and her
father, Andrija Milic of Barajevo, signed the contract jointly.
Nikolic: Please don’t do this.
B92: I’ll give you the document. Do you want something that concerns
you?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: Let’s see something that concerns you. We have another
interesting matter here, financing of the Serbian Radical Party from
the municipal budget and the budget of the public community works. The
money was transferred from the municipality to your party’s account.
Nikolic: How?
B92: Do you see this? The local Zemun paper, you must remember this.
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: Five hundred thousand copies were printed. And five hundred
thousand Deutschmarks were transferred to make this.
Nikolic: Are you sure it was five hundred thousand Deutschmarks?
B92: Five hundred thousand Deutschmarks. In dinars it was two point
one million dinars. It’s all here.
Nikolic: Why has it been converted into Marks?
B92: So that…
Nikolic: So that one copy cost one Mark.
B92: Who needs half a million copies of the Zemun paper? How many
people live in Zemun?
Nikolic: Where does it say five hundred thousand copies were printed?
B92: Here, take a look.
Nikolic: Does it say so in the paper?
B92: It does.
Nikolic: What does it say?
B92: It says…
Nikolic: Circulation.
B92: Circulation. Circulation. Five hundred thousand.
Nikolic: Copies.
B92: Yes. Take a look if you don’t believe me. Read it for yourself.
Nikolic: That’s the Zemun paper?
B92: Yes. The Zemun paper.
Nikolic: Do you have anything else?
B92: I have loads of things, but I still haven’t had a single answer
from you.
Nikolic: You don’t have anything.
B92: I haven’t had a single answer. I have a heap of material. An
enormous number of facts.
Nikolic: I knew this program would be like this.
B92: An enormous number of facts. I can read them out to you.
Nikolic: Don’t read someone else’s facts to me.
B92: These are not someone else’s facts.
Nikolic: Why didn’t you approach me with these before this program?
B92: The Serbian Public Revenue Bureau. A report. Listen to this.
Nikolic: I can’t respond to lies.
B92: These aren’t lies. This is an audit report.
Nikolic: Lies.
B92: This is a report on the audit of business dealings by the Zemun
Corporate Business System between January 1, 1997, and December 31,
2000. The register has been extracted to Tomislav Nikolic. That means
you have this too.
Nikolic: I have never worked in the Zemun Computer Business System.
B92: Excuse me?
Nikolic: I have never worked in the Zemun Computer Business System.
B92: This is public information. I’ve just told you it was the
Serbian Public Revenue Bureau.
Nikolic: I’m telling you something.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: Let me ask you one thing.
B92: Please do.
Nikolic: If you’re a good journalist, why didn’t you ask me to prepare
my answers in advance?
B92: This isn’t the first time these allegations have been made. I’ve
only asked you to comment on them.
Nikolic: These lies have never before been gathered in a heap like
this.
B92: Whether they are lies in a heap or not, I’m presenting them to
you for comment.
Nikolic: They’re piled up, these lies. Why didn’t you tell me? I
thought we were going to talk about the future of Serbia.
B92: We’ll talk about it now. You provoked me…
Nikolic: We won’t.
B92: … by talking about people being poor.
Nikolic: I haven’t provoked you at all.
B92: You’ve been talking about the poor people you meet in the city
squares so I needed to remind you of your honourable behaviour in the
past.
Nikolic: Why are you working so hard to prove the kind of television
this is?
B92: What kind of television is that?
Nikolic: Why am I a thorn in your side?
B92: Why are you a thorn in your side?
Nikolic: I’m a candidate for the president of the republic.
B92: That’s why you’re here tonight. To present yourself.
Nikolic: Yes, that’s why I’m here. Why didn’t you tell me you would
talk about Zemun so that I could bring the documentation?
B92: I have given you documentation which is public knowledge.
Nikolic: What have you given me?
B92: The documentation.
Nikolic: Can’t you see we’re sitting five metres apart?
B92: You have not answered a single question for me, but let’s forget
about that.
Nikolic: What can I tell you about stories about us launched by you,
Blic and some other news agencies.
B92: These are not stories. These are documents, as you can see.
Nikolic: They are stories. But why are we talking about them tonight?
Have I come here…
B92: You don’t want to talk any more?
Nikolic: Have I come here as a candidate for the presidency of the
republic?
B92: Yes. Yes, you have.
Nikolic: Then why don’t you talk to me in a way appropriate to that?
B92: I have, and you said “I will help the people to live better”.
Nikolic: But you’re doing it without motivation.
B92: I am saying…
Nikolic: But you’re doing this without motivation.
B92: No, I’m only saying…
Nikolic: I can see it in your eyes.
B92: I can take you at your word, but I have to judge you on your past
deeds.
Nikolic: Are you trying to justify something tonight?
B92: Absolutely not.
Nikolic: Are you trying to justify something tonight, some money,
perhaps?
B92: I have not had an answer to these questions. Money? We have no
reason…
Nikolic: You have no money?
B92: B92 has no reason to seek justifications of that kind. Let’s
take a commercial break now.
COMMERCIAL BREAK
B92: Our guest tonight is the Serbian Radical Party’s presidential
candidate, Tomislav Nikolic, who is still in the studio with us. Our
viewers have sent a lot of questions for you tonight, and I’ll ask some
of them myself. I’ll read as many as we have time for later, but a lot
of them are from people who have come from Croatia. They’re asking if
you will stick to your position that if you become president of Serbia
you will break all diplomatic communication with Croatia.
Nikolic: Unfortunately, that’s not in my jurisdiction, but I have one
clear message for Croatia. The authorities which call themselves
democratic will become democratic for me the very moment they allow
Serbs to return, and that’s all I have to say about Croatia. I would
remind them of the genocide they committed, I’m not reminding them that
there’s not a single Serb left in the whole territory of Croatia, that
many people are changing their religion, that children are changing
their names. I would remind them that they have to do a great deal in
order to gain the trust of Serbia, enough trust for us to have
diplomatic relations with Croatia. I’m only reminding them that
they’ve expelled people and not allowed them to return while, at the
same time, they want trade and other relations with us. We’re rather
hypocritical when we want to cooperate with Croatia: we take special
care of our refugees, offer them attention and kindness, but we are
unwilling to resolve their problems.
B92: And will you be helping Serbs to return to Croatia with this
attitude?
Nikolic: But I’m presenting my point clearly and cleanly. So far no
one has helped them to return, not with a different view, the complete
humiliation of Serbia and humiliation of them. You know, when you
visit them at the top of a mountain, in a ruined building, where
children and the elderly and the middle-aged all live together, then
you start thinking differently about them.
B92: Is there any other neighbouring country you would not go to?
Nikolic: I have nothing to do in Slovenia. I have nothing to do in
Croatia. Why should I go there?
B92: There are constitutional jurisdictions. This is also laid out in
your presidential platform: the Serbian president is the head of state
and represents…
Nikolic: Yes, he conducts diplomatic relations on all levels, of
course, but I think that the level of diplomatic support Serbia needs
right now for Kosovo and many other issues is not the level of Slovenia
and Croatia. It has to be done with the big players.
B92: As you’ve mentioned Kosovo, how do think Albanian extremists
would react to you winning the presidential election?
Nikolic: Who knows what goes on in the heads of extremists or how they
would react?
B92: And Albanians in general? How would they react?
Nikolic: I don’t understand the question. I’ve taken part…
B92: Would it suit their efforts for Kosovo’s independence?
Nikolic: How could my winning help them with that?
B92: You’re not electing yourself.
Nikolic: And is it any better the way it is? At the moment they’re
certainly prevented from winning independence. The state of Serbia and
the West are right now stopping them in their attempts to win
independence. Come on, I said it clearly and openly in Strasbourg.
First Harri Holkeri was speaking and everyone applauded. Then I said
“Why are you all applauding? This man here supports killers, people
who burn down churches and houses. He gave them a foreign ministry,
he’s giving them elections on October 23, which he says they will
conduct themselves. Why are you applauding?” Do you think that Serbia
hasn’t managed to persuade Albanians in the past five years that they
won’t have their own state? I think that they’ve rather convinced them
that they will have their own state. We should start working from
scratch. Draft a platform for a political solution to the Kosovo
crisis. The whole parliament has been active in this, I’m not standing
out as an individual on this matter: this is what all the people of
Serbia want. Kosovo must be part of Serbia, whether anyone is happy
about it or not, whether someone is disgruntled about it or not. It’s
defined in Resolution 1244. I didn’t write it, I was unhappy with it,
but now it’s our last hope. For five years the United Nations has
refused to meet the conditions of the resolution while we did whatever
they wanted. Every high representative revises the resolution every
day. We’ve come to the position that a new one should be written just
to cover what they’ve done so far.
B92: And what can you do to improve this situation? Increase
diplomatic activity?
Nikolic: Of course. We have to find our own protector out in the
world. I don’t know what our diplomats are doing, apart from closing
deal for businessmen in the countries they’re posted to, for a
commission, besides discrediting our country and telling everyone we
committed genocide. I don’t know what else our Foreign Ministry has
been doing.
B92: We’re back to my earlier question. To what extent are you able
to represent us, because a lot of doors around the world will probably
remain closed to you?
Nikolic: I probably wouldn’t be able to represent you, but I’ll
certainly be able to represent the majority of Serbian citizens.
B92: And why not me? You said all citizens.
Nikolic: I see you have different political views and, whatever I do,
I won’t please you. I’m really prepared to do everything for every
Serbian citizens, but something bothers certain individuals. Is it the
word “Radical”? I don’t know what it is. But we, who had three
hundred thousand votes in 2000, will now have a million and five
hundred thousand votes. That means we’ve probably been doing something
right in the past four years.
B92: All right. I’d like us to see a little history of the Serbian
Radical Party over the past few years, and then we’ll talk about it.
RECORDED SEQUENCE:
Presenter: The Serbian Radical Party was founded as an opposition
party, but the first decade of pluralist politics in Serbia showed that
it had more fruitful cooperation with the parties in power, such as the
Socialist Party of Serbia and the Yugoslav Left. While close to other
opposition parties for a brief period in 1993, by calling for the
ousting of the Socialist Government, the Radicals brought about early
parliamentary elections in Serbia, but did not take part in any mass
protest against Slobodan Milosevic before or since. They joined the
government with the Socialists and the Yugoslav Left in 1998, only to
be ousted along with them in 2000. They were the only party in the
governing coalition to acknowledge the victory of the democratic
opposition before the popular uprising on October 5, that year. In
2002, Slobodan Milosevic, from The Hague, gave his support in the
presidential elections to his “favourite opposition politician”,
referring to Radical leader Vojislav Seselj in the same way he had
during the nineties.
In the federal and republic parliaments, the Radicals have introduced
such techniques as destroying microphones, throwing water in their
opponents’ faces, punch-ups and other forms of obstructing the work of
the parliament.
Outside the parliament, students, taxi drivers, pensioners and some
lawyers have felt the wrath of the Radicals on their own skin. Their
opponents accuse them of using their period of power in the
Municipality of Zemun for financial machination, usurpation of
apartments, land and the Magistrate Building.
The Radicals respond by saying that these claims have not been proved
in court. The Serbian Radical Party lays great emphasis on patriotism
and the fact that they took part in the wars across the former
Yugoslavia. Vojislav Seselj refuses to give up his vision of Greater
Serbia, even in his prison cell in The Hague.
Seselj: Karlobag-Ogulin-Karlovac-Vitrovitica must be our option and
that’s the border line along which our army must deploy all our troops.
If it’s not capable of withdrawing troops from Zagreb without a fight,
it should withdraw them in a combat operation while Zagreb is being
bombed. That official operation was planned in Belgrade. It included
Bosnian Serb forces, many of them, but the majority of the special
forces came from this side, special police units, the so-called Red
Berets, special units of State Security and volunteers from the Serbian
Radical Party.
If NATO begins bombing us, if the US aggression ensues, we Serbs will
die in great numbers, but there won’t be a single Albanian left in
Kosovo.
Presenter: The Serbian Radical Party is the only political to have
been boycotted for period by the majority of independent media in
Serbia after threats and unfounded allegations that journalists were
accessories to the murder of Defence Minister Pavle Bulatovic. Even
today the Radicals don’t hesitate to say that they don’t regret the
death of publisher Slavko Curuvija, killed in central Belgrade at
Easter, 1999.
Seselj: The gloves are off. Everything has become crystal clear. He
who lives by the sword shall die by the sword, you need to keep that in
mind. You surely don’t think we will let you kill us off, one by one,
like rabbits, while we caress you and cherish you like potted plants.
Keep that in mind. You from B92 and the other traitor outlets. You
want to kill off statesmen like rabbits and keep yourselves safe at the
same time. Well, you’re mistaken. You’re very, very mistaken. No
more kid gloves. Anyone who works for the Americans will have to
suffer the consequences.
Interviewer: Would you take back the sentence “I don’t regret that
Slavko Curuvija was murdered”?
Tomislav Nikolic: No.
Interviewer: You wouldn’t take back the sentence. You still stand
behind it. You would repeat it again.
Tomislav Nikolic: What about it?
Interviewer: Nothing, I’m just asking. It’s just that I’m a little
bit disgusted.
Tomislav Nikolic: The fact that you’re disgusted doesn’t mean it’s not
nice.
STUDIO
B92: Mr Nikolic, how do you comment on this today?
Nikolic: I don’t know what.
B92: Everything you have just heard. Is there anything in this story
we’ve just heard that you would renounce today?
Nikolic: No.
B92: No? That’s it?
Nikolic: You tell me what.
B92: For example, what about the list of journalists which Mr Seselj
read out. He said on a number of occasions that he was only adding to
the list. Did he leave it to you as a legacy?
Nikolic: It is a list of journalists we don’t want to cooperate with.
B92: So the list still exists? You haven’t torn it up and thrown
away? You still stick to it?
Nikolic: I’m offering you tonight an opportunity to show Serbia that
you are at least to a small extent a good television, because for you
the Radical Party doesn’t exist. This is a goodwill gesture from me
because I want to cooperate with everyone, even with you who wish us
nothing but ill.
B92: You’ve changed your rhetoric: you no longer issue death threats,
nor do you threaten the people That’s why you’re here tonight. And,
among other things, because you’re a presidential candidate.
Nikolic: That’s not true.
B92: That’s the way it is.
Nikolic: And tonight of all nights, five years after we changed our
rhetoric. Come on!
B92: We have three or four minutes left. So you wouldn’t take back
anything of what we’ve shown here.
Nikolic: I don’t know what you mean. What exactly do you want to ask
me? What is wrong there?
B92: I’ve asked you about the lists.
Nikolic: You say our political opponents say we were thieves. The
Radicals say the truth will be proved in court. Is that journalism?
B92: We’ve heard many opinions from Mr Seselj. You say you still
stand behind them. I was only interested in that.
Nikolic: I knew you were only interested in that.
B92: Let’s go to some of the questions from our viewers. As
president, will you pardon the former head of state television,
Dragoljub Milanovic?
Nikolic: First I would have to look into the case, but I’m not afraid
to pardon him if something is not right. I won’t pardon notorious
criminals, the ones who sell drugs to kids, rapists, people sentenced
by politics to long prison sentences. I’ll look into the case in
detail. Or do you perhaps think Dragoljub Milanovic is guilty? Or may
he have been a scapegoat? In that case thousands of people should be
in prison, because NATO told us we were collateral damage, everything
they hit was a legitimate target. They were hitting hospitals. So all
the heads of hospitals should be in prison. You’ve set your sights on
Dragoljub Milanovic, he’s the embodiment of evil for you. He ran a
really bad television station but, believe me, it may not have been
half as bad as yours.
B92: As ours?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: He supported Slobodan Milosevic and the Yugoslav Left a lot
less than you support these others.
B92: I shan’t comment on that, we don’t have time. Next question: why
is Tomislav Nikolic afraid of a television debate with Boris Tadic.
Nikolic: It’s not that I’m afraid. If he gets through to the second
round we’ll have that television debate. All fourteen candidates can
seek a television debate with me, first they have to decide who
deserves to be in a television debate with me. Why Boris Tadic? What
reason is there for me to accept a debate with Boris Tadic.
B92: You don’t trust the opinion polls?
Nikolic: When did I ever trust the opinion polls? When did you?
B92: Then how do you know that you will win? How many did you say? A
million and a half votes?
Nikolic: I’m out there, from morning to evening, every day.
B92: So you count?
Nikolic: Look at the rallies. You avoided showing Kragujevac…
B92: How many people were there in Kragujevac?
Nikolic: … masses of people.
B92: How many people were there in Kragujevac?
Nikolic: All the others put together wouldn’t have that many…
B92: Tell us, how many were there?
Nikolic: I don’t know, I don’t count.
B92: Well, you must have some kind of estimate. You know how it is at
the rallies.
Nikolic: The only bigger rally we had in Kragujevac was in 1992, and
never after that. But how many people was that?
B92: Approximately? A thousand? Ten thousand?
Nikolic: I think it was ten thousand.
B92: Ten thousand?
Nikolic: Okay, someone else can say five hundred, but when you
consider the size of the square, and if people are standing close
together three of them fit into a square metre. The journalists who
was with us yesterday could have measured the square and say not more
than a thousand. That’s ten thousand, but also fifty thousand.
B92: When you say more than a thousand, that’s not ten thousand, not
even close.
Nikolic: How many is over a thousand, tell me so that I know in the
future?
B92: Okay. Now, to finish, let me ask you a question. Do you watch
Mile vs. Transition?
Nikolic: Not since he announced he was a member of the Democratic
Party. Up to then I liked the show.
B92: Do you identify yourself at all with that character?
Nikolic: Well, no. I appreciate art expressed in any way, but I don’t
like political campaigns on television which are aimed at drawing us
into a particular policy through a likeable actor. I don’t like it and
I steer clear of it.
B92: All right, and let me ask you, if you go through to the second
round of the election, and you probably will, all the opinion polls say
you will, will you come to this studio with your opponent?
Nikolic: Let me tell you something. I don’t think we will have
debates every day. I think we should have the debate on a much more
serious television station than yours.
B92: Such as?
Nikolic: Any other, really, your television is not in that league.
B92: Yes, it is the least serious of all.
Nikolic: Well, it’s not among the least serious ones. I go to
television stations which are watched only in, for example, Blace, but
trust me, don’t underestimate them. There are a lot more serious
people in small television stations than in the so-called big ones.
B92: All right, before we wrap this up, tell us what kind of
television station we are.
Nikolic: Usually very bad, partial and biased, and that’s standing in
your way. Take a look at the number of people who watch you. I’ll
come whenever you invite me. I won’t run away from it, but change the
direction a little. Or maybe you can’t, because you wouldn’t be
getting any money then.
B92: I hope our viewers have gained a little more insight into what
the Serbian Radical Party is today, and whether you are the former
Tomislav Nikolic or the only you would like to present yourself as
today.
Nikolic: You haven’t devoted this show to presenting me as a
presidential candidate, but I won’t hold that against you.
B92: Thank you very much for being our guest tonight. Good night.
Interview with Tomislav Nikolic
The frontrunner in Serbia’s presidential election on June 13, according
to opinion polls, is the deputy leader of the Serbian Radical Party,
Tomislav Nikolic. The party is a former coalition partner of Slobodan
Milosevic’s Socialist Party of Serbia and its leader, Vojislav Seselj,
is, like Milosevic, now in custody in The Hague, awaiting trial on war
crime charges. B92’s Sanda Savic interviewed Nikolic two weeks before
the election.
Guest: Tomislav Nikolic
Author: Sanda Savic
B92: Tonight’s guest is the Serbian Radical Party’s presidential
candidate, Tomislav Nikolic. Good evening and welcome.
Nikolic: Good evening. I’m happy to be here.
B92: Your slogan in this campaign is “Realistic”. Last time around it
was “Radically Better”. Does this mean that you have given up the
concept of radical changes or is it only a change of image?
Nikolic: Yes. “Radically Better” was a slogan for the parliamentary
elections. I think we will have something very similar for the coming
extraordinary parliamentary elections, after the June 13 election. My
victory is really something realistic in Serbia and many people I have
heard in the street had guessed what our slogan would be.
B92: We shall begin by looking at one day of your election campaign.
We had a crew with you yesterday in Kragujevac, but before we see this
footage I must ask you to comment on the fact that Vojislav Seselj made
a decision not to vote in the presidential elections. Does this mean
that you have lost his support or is this also because of the change of
image?
Nikolic: It’s not that. I know Vojislav Seselj very well. When we
drafted the law on election of members of parliament we said that there
would not be any voting organised where there is no control and we
don’t want to damage any candidate or political party. There is no
control in The Hague, no one knows how people will vote there and,
because the Foreign Ministry will count the votes, Vojislav decided not
to give his vote away to anyone else, they would discard the ballot
slips and substitute new ones anyway. This time it’s the goat who is
guarding the cabbage.
B92: You say you don’t doubt his support. So why is it you have not
mentioned him during the past few days of the campaign?
Nikolic: What do you mean I haven’t mentioned him.
B92: You have?
Nikolic: What do you mean I’m not mentioning him? I’m not the kind of
person who would betray a friend and teacher. I’m not interested in
what other people think about whether I should betray someone or not.
I do everything according to my conscience.
VIDEO FOOTAGE FROM KRAGUJEVAC
Nikolic in Kragujevac: I want to make sure you sleep peacefully, that
you have security, that the government starts providing jobs for you
instead of closing down factories. There should be workers in the
factories, not rats. There should not be wind blowing through broken
windows. I want you to be able to be productive and I know where the
market is for our goods. It’s not in the West. I want to cooperate
with the West. I want to cooperate in a way in which no has had the
guts to cooperate for a long time. In the way I broke Harri Holkeri’s
back in Strasbourg fifteen days ago.
Radical Party supporter: It only seems that the party has changed a
lot, but basically nothing much has changed. They look a bit
different, nothing more.
STUDIO
B92: Mr Nikolic, how would you reply to this supporter of yours? Will
you tell him that you’re the same Toma, or…
Nikolic: He didn’t ask me anything.
B92: … are you discarding your earlier policies?
Nikolic: These observations are correct: nothing has changed. I’m
only fed up with being defeated by people not worthy of me. I think
that our response to what befell us last year is the correct one.
We’ve behaved ourselves all these fourteen or fifteen years when we
were under constant attack from our political opponents, the media, you
name it. Finally, the truth has come to the surface. The Serbian
Radical Party has climbed to the top in times when we were really under
threat. When they were persecuting us, beating us, harassing us and
arresting us, we behaved differently; we showed how good we are at
defending ourselves. Now, when no one is persecuting us and when we
have room for activity, it would be really stupid of us to do what is
not necessary.
B92: You mean to use the violent methods you used before?
Nikolic: To respond to violence, to respond to violence. I don’t know
of anyone except Milosevic accusing us of violence, we’ve never
committed violence.
B92: All right, we’ll come back to that later. Let’s talk now about
your main election messages. We heard in Kragujevac about the change
of foreign policy and the improvement of the economy: these are the
two things you most emphasise. Let’s start from the beginning. You
say you want both the West and the East.
Nikolic: Foreign policy is somewhat defined by the changes which took
place after 2000. The West has brought its protégés to power in
Serbia, they’ve been in power for four years and they’re still in
power, so I can’t say the West is not present here. It’s here, it’s
penetrated our society considerably, and in a bad way. It’s possible
that it had the best of intentions, but that the people in power here
have failed those intentions. We must cooperate with the West.
B92: And, in your opinion, who is our main partner in the West at the
moment?
Nikolic: The European Union, I think.
B92: You’ve heard what Javier Solana said: “If Tomislav Nikolic wins,
the EU won’t support him and this will be a very bad signal to foreign
investors.”
Nikolic: He didn’t say that.
B92: That is exactly what he said.
Nikolic: He said this very gently and mildly, choosing his words very
carefully. He said that he believes foreign investors will not be too
happy if I win.
B92: “It’s going to be a bad signal,” that’s what he said.
Nikolic: What, am I going to steal from foreign investors?
B92: They won’t invest in this country: you know that. That’s our
second topic tonight, the economy. Let’s see how you can…
Nikolic: Let’s clear this up, because you’re convinced Solana said
something which he didn’t say. Does the EU want to invest in a country
in which people like these are in power? Does it want to invest in a
country in which there have been a thousand companies privatised but
none of the factories are working?
B92: I agree with you. The EU is investing very little, but the
economy can’t get off the starting blocks without favourable loans or
foreign investments.
Nikolic: But we’re more in debt at this point than we were in Tito’s
day. Only now we’re not spending it on production but on consumption,
that’s the problem.
B92: We’ll talk about the economy later. First let’s finish with
foreign policy. Tell me…
Nikolic: And if they’re not investing much, what is it that’s going to
stop if I win?
B92: That little will stop.
Nikolic: That little.
B92: That little will stop and…
Nikolic: It’s not enough. I don’t want to live on charity, you know.
B92: It’s not charity. It’s loans and foreign investments.
Nikolic: That’s charity. These are loans for repaying old loans and
debts.
B92: And how would you solve it, if you’re so keen to talk about the
economy.
Nikolic: When I come here as prime minister designate you can ask me
all those questions. I have answers to all those questions.
B92: But your messages from the presidential election campaign rallies…
Nikolic: Yes, but you heard what I said. I’m going to make the
government… I really want to make the government…
B92: How are you going to make it?
Nikolic: What do you mean? I will use the Constitution. I control
the government. I hear gaffes from certain media, even Radio Belgrade,
they say the government and the parliament control the president. I
can’t believe it. I can’t believe that so many people have gone into
the contest with me. I control the Serbian Government. The prime
minister reports directly to me. Ministers report directly to me, they
answer my questions, they answer my criticism. I’d like on day to take
over your thankless role and ask the prime minister some questions here.
B92: Who knows, perhaps you will.
Nikolic: It’s a thankless job, thankless, that’s why I’m saying this.
I would really like to be unbiased, unlike some other people. I oppose
the government politically and I’m the one who will control it. The
citizens of Serbia don’t trust the others when they say they’ll control
the government. They don’t trust the government representative because
he can’t control his government and its prime minister. They don’t
trust people who say the government will support them in the second
round of elections. If they support you, you can’t criticise them.
You can’t criticise them because you’ve been elected by their votes.
B92: All right. Let’s get back to the West and the East.
Nikolic: Yes, why not?
B92: So how are you going to go to the West without the EU? The US,
perhaps?
Nikolic: I don’t know what you’re getting at. Let’s say I’m the
elected president of the republic.
B92: You’re not.
Nikolic: But you’re saying I am and asking me how I would do…
B92: All right, all right.
Nikolic: So, I’m the elected president of the republic, and you know
I’ll be elected.
Savic: I don’t know that.
Nikolic: Let’s say I’ll be the elected president. I want to be.
B92: You said “Only if I’m dead will I not be elected on June 13”.
Nikolic: That was a reply to a democratic message from the prime
minister which you refused to comment on.
B92: I’ll comment on it when he’s present.
Nikolic: He said, during his visit to the West, that Tomislav Nikolic
won’t be president of the republic. If I’d said that you’d say the
Chetniks are rising again, the rusty spoons will be out, you’d say all
those things about me. Then I asked the prime minister publicly why I
won’t be president if the people vote for me.
B92: So this was only a reply, you don’t actually believe that you
will win the first round?
Nikolic: I’m certain.
B92: About what?
Nikolic: That I’ll win the first round.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: I’m on the road every day. I have been to sixteen towns in
the Srednje Banatski District and we finished with the rally in
Zrenjanin today. Every day.
B92: Let’s get back to the West and the East.
Nikolic: Please do get back.
B92: How will you go to the West, and with what will you go to the
East?
Nikolic: I’m the elected president of the republic. I have a
government to control. I have a parliament which I appreciate and
respect deeply. I have the Constitutional Court, I should appreciate
and respect that and, if everything goes well and there are respected
lawyers in it and the professors from the Law School, we will have a
constitutional court we can respect. And then the Serbian Government
will conduct an economic policy – I assume G17 Plus won’t be part of
it, they’ll resign the day I win – and it will have to think about the
West and the East. It won’t be a problem.
B92: But what will you be thinking about?
Nikolic: I’ll be thinking about how the people live.
B92: Wait a minute, as president of the republic?
Nikolic: As president of the republic I have to think about how the
people are living.
B92: You’re supposed to represent the state.
Nikolic: And then I call up the government and ask them: have you done
anything in the West, have you secured investments, have you secured
the right technology, have you made it possible for our businessmen…
B92: And they say it’s problematic because you’re the president of the
republic.
Nikolic: They say it’s difficult because I’m not allowing mobsters to
run the state, it’s difficult because I insist so much on democracy,
it’s difficult because I insist on human rights, it’s difficult because
I insist on us observing the Constitution and the laws.
B92: All right, but how will you represent Serbia in the West as
president?
Nikolic: My only sin against Serbia would be if I don’t warn the
government about the rise of crime: people who sell drugs to kids;
people who buy our natural resources or factories for a pittance;
people who were paying politicians while they were in opposition and
who now have to return the favour.
B92: You haven’t told me about the West. Or would you rather talk
about the East?
Nikolic: No, I want to talk about the West. My door will be open.
I’ll respond to every invitation from the West. If someone wants to
talk to me I’ll talk with them. I’ll tell them the views I’m telling
you right now. I really can’t believe that the West wants Serbia to be
the way it is at the moment. Serbia in the past four years is Serbia
the way the West wants it! I want with all my heart to believe that
the West wishes us better things than that. I want the West to
convince us of that, not to praise a government under which a million
people lost their jobs, not to praise a government under which not a
single worker has gone into the factories. They’re all the same to me.
We’ve been without a constitutional court for a year and a half, now
we have a political court. We’ve had our prime minister assassinated,
we’ve had a state of emergency which introduced a dictatorship, we’ve
had voting fraud in the parliament, we’ve become a lot poorer and we’re
another nine years further away from Europe. Before 2000 they told us
we were ten years away from Europe. Four years have passed and we’re
now fifteen years away.
B92: Do you think if you are elected president it will bring us closer
to the West.
Nikolic: I don’t know.
B92: You don’t know?
Nikolic: It will depend on the West and the Republic of Serbia.
B92: As I said, there are certain messages.
Nikolic: I won’t make a single move to justify any kind of measure by
the West against Serbia. I’ve told the head of the EU monitoring
mission in Belgrade: “Say it openly: if Serbian citizens vote for
Tomislav Nikolic, we will bomb you, and then I’ll withdraw from
politics. Say it openly.”
B92: They won’t bomb us, but there is a certain kind of isolation they
could apply.
Nikolic: What will they say? “Let’s isolate the people of Serbia
because they voted for Tomislav Nikolic?” Come on! Those days are
behind us. Labus said in an interview today that there’ll be no
isolation and sanctions if Tomislav Nikolic wins.
B92: And on what are you basing your belief that there’ll be no
isolation?
Nikolic: On the fact that I will be elected by the people. On the
fact that I respect the Constitution and the law. On the fact that I
will help the government to work well and criticise it when it does
not. On the fact that I will stop laws which are unconstitutional and
put them into procedure immediately if they’re in accordance with the
Constitution. On the fact that I will fight for the rights of each
individual in Serbia, each and every one. What will the West have
against me then? Is the West against people like that? If it is, I
don’t want to be supported by the West. And if they support me with
views like these I have nothing to be ashamed of.
B92: All right, if we’ve exhausted the West, let’s talk about the East.
Nikolic: I think that the East is a much more unpleasant topic for you.
B92: No, there are no unpleasant topics for me.
Nikolic: I visited Moscow again for the first time in four or five
years and I saw what I sensed when I was initially for cooperation with
Russia. Russia has been through expansion, an economic boom. Russia
has a hundred billion dollars of foreign currency reserves and each
year a forty billion dollar surplus in foreign trade. There’s not a
single deputy in the Duma who is against cooperation with Serbia, not a
single one. In the Russian Duma, there’s not a single pro-Western
deputy, people have simply not voted for them. The Russian president
has offered a better life to his citizens. First, I told them
everything I don’t like about the Russian administration, not the
Russian people. I know about the ties between them and us, but I won’t
forget the vote for sanctions, the vote for the weapons import embargo,
that Chernomyrdin brought the plan, that Russia took part in drafting
Resolution 1244, that its battalion was the first to arrive in Pristina
– the Serbs were immensely delighted by that – and then moved to
Slatina Airport only to eventually return to Russia. They withdrew
from the Balkans because they didn’t count on us as strategic partners,
as having historical ties. And then, after I’d scheduled talks with
only one faction, all the rest called me and wanted to talk to me: the
foreign ministry, the president’s advisors…
B92: Did you meet Zhirinovsky?
Nikolic: No.
B92: Why not?
Nikolic: We’ve not been in contact for five years, even more. I don’t
count the time that DOS wasted, three or four years before that our
relations became cold. We haven’t been at each other’s congresses,
that cooperation has withered away. We have no concrete cooperation
any more: we have another political party to cooperate with in Russia.
When I arrived in Belgrade…
B92: That’s good. I apologise. Go on.
Nikolic: I have learnt that the prime minister will travel to Moscow
on June 3. I’m happy about that. He’ll find an open door there. He,
who hasn’t been to Moscow for five years, he whom Moscow…
B92: Do you think that we have a chance, economically speaking?
Nikolic: There’s no other way out.
B92: There’s no other way out. What can we do?
Nikolic: I’m going to tell you now.
B92: What can we offer to the East?
Nikolic: I’m going to tell you now. And what can we sell to the West?
That’s what hurts me the most: no one has the guts to say openly that
we don’t have any products for the West, not a single factory of ours
has products for the West; we’ve closed down our factories so that we
can sell Western products here and we even have to sell European sugar
on the Serbian market, we don’t have our own sugar any more. The
question is when the farmers will again be able to produce sugar. We
import it from Slovenia for four dinars and sell it for one. We import
it from Croatia for three dinars and export it for one. Don’t talk to
me about cooperation with the West any more. I want that cooperation.
I want new technology, I want the government to secure capital,
investments, good legislation, democracy, human rights, at the highest
possible level, but I know that Serbia cannot survive without factories.
B92: But can a factory work without loans and investments?
Nikolic: It can’t, all right, it can’t. But no one wanted to use the
convenience we created in 2000, in early 2000. I hear now that the
government has shown interest in it and even that several ministers
have travelled to Moscow to deal with this. We can sell almost eighty
per cent of our products in Russia without customs duties. Current
products, the ones we already have. Any company in the world can make
its products here and then transport them to Russia and they will be
cheaper than if they were made on ships in duty free zones. Why hasn’t
this opportunity been picked up in the past five years? Why have we
had to sink so low? Why have we had to become this poor? I don’t know
how much you travel around Serbia. I travel a lot these days. I meet
a lot of people, honourable, honest men and none of them are wealthy.
There are poor people living in Serbia today and I’m going to ask the
government some questions about them.
B92: Were you meeting those poor people when you were deputy prime
minister?
Nikolic: We had a lot of serious work in those days.
B92: It was a time when, it seems to me, all of us were poor.
Nikolic: Yes, but we were fighting terrorism then. We were defending
ourselves from NATO and we were rebuilding the country. Those were our
three tasks which we were engaged on for a year and a half and nothing
more could have been done.
B92: But you did manage to resolve your housing problems during that
period.
Nikolic: Yes. I did.
B92: And members of your party, too. Were you thinking about poor
people then?
Nikolic: What do you have against my solving housing problems?
B92: Did you buy an apartment of 187 square metres?
Nikolic: That’s not true. I live in a 90 square metre apartment.
B92: Because you had to sell the big one.
Nikolic: And why did I have to sell it?
B92: Why did you sell it?
Nikolic: Not to make money, but to pay the taxes invented by the state
on the apartment.
B92: Never mind, you had a place to live then.
Nikolic: And where was that?
B92: In a house in Kragujevac. Is that true?
Nikolic: But I live and work in Belgrade. My son lives with his wife
in my house in Kragujevac. This year I will have a grandchild.
B92: Do you think it’s all right for anyone who becomes a state
official to accept a large apartment and, when his term ends, not to
return it but to sell it off?
Nikolic: I didn’t accept the apartment to use it. I’ll move now to
the presidential residence. I’ll use it while I’m president of the
republic and then I’ll leave it to the new president. What’s this got
to do with the East?
B92: It was you who turned the topic back to the West, but as we were
speaking about poor people, I wanted to ask you whether you had thought
at all about all of us being very poor at the time.
Nikolic: I thought about it. But I had to live somewhere, a million
people in Serbia live in apartments.
B92: Yes, but they don’t have a house and an apartment of 187 square
metres.
Nikolic: You can’t count a house which is a hundred and fifty
kilometres away.
B92: I say you could have returned your apartment.
Nikolic: A house a hundred and fifty kilometres away has never been an
obstacle to getting an apartment in any company I have worked for.
B92: Yes, but…
Nikolic: I want to tell you all…
B92: Yes, you want to talk about everything. That’s why you’re here.
Nikolic: But I don’t know the question.
B92: Make yourself at home. Say it.
Nikolic: No, you do it, please.
B92: What questions did you expect?
Nikolic: The ones B92 would ask a Serbian Radical.
B92: And what questions are they?
Nikolic: You haven’t tackled The Hague yet.
B92: No.
Nikolic: Do you want to talk about bread?
B92: Bread?
Nikolic: Yes. Three dinars for a loaf of bread.
B92: We can talk about bread. Not about three dinars a loaf, but I’m
interested in the kind of economic system you have in mind, we can come
to that later.
Nikolic: What did you have in mind. Feel free to use your prepared
script.
B92: Prepared script?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: I should have liked to talk a little more about the government.
Nikolic: I don’t believe I have intrigued you enough to ask more
questions. I think you’ve already asked them all.
B92: I want to talk about the honourable behaviour of the Serbian
Radicals when they are in government. How they find themselves
apartments.
Nikolic: Have you revealed anything new to the Serbian citizens. Have
I been secretive about this?
B92: I’d like you to comment on your behaviour in Zemun.
Nikolic: I want to get this over with. Do you think it would be
better if I took a hundred or two hundred thousand Deutschmarks from
the Mob and bought myself an apartment so that no one could bother me
about it?
B92: What kind of comparison is that? I don’t know what you mean.
Nikolic: It’s a powerful comparison. Everyone in DOS was doing it and
you’ve never asked them about it.
B92: It’s not true that we didn’t, but tonight you’re the guest here
and because you claim that the Serbian Radicals have nothing to do with
crime…
Nikolic: Tell me about Zemun. What’s wrong with Zemun?
B92: There are a lot of things wrong. I have a pile of documents
here. I’ll give them to you, although you already have them.
Nikolic: What you can give me isn’t important. Let’s see what we can
do while we’re on the air.
B92: We’ve obtained court records on some of this material. There’s
an enormous amount of documentation on how the Radicals behaved between
1996 and 2000 in the municipality of Zemun. There’s a debt of
sixty-eight million dinars; the courts established that there was a
series of abuses related to business premises in Zemun, and; according
to the financial police the Radicals received at least a million and a
half euros in campaign funding and gifts.
Nikolic: You see, there’s only one…
B92: All right, we can go through them one by one now…
Nikolic: There’s only one court case and only one man in question.
There is only one indictment against one man from the Serbian Radical
Party and you’re talking about an ongoing case. Nothing has been
proved, whether we’re guilty or not, but you say it’s fact because you
received it from the Zemun Municipality.
B92: I’m asking you, do you want to talk about these one by one?
Nikolic: Please do ask me. But I have to tell your viewers that not a
single Radical is in prison, not a single one has been convicted, and
we lost power in Zemun five years ago. Last year we had a landslide in
both the presidential and the parliamentary elections in Zemun. In the
parliamentary elections, in Zemun we had more votes than all our
opponents put together. That’s the attitude of the citizens of Zemun
to our tenure. All right, now tell me what the attitude of the
outgoing authorities is to our tenure in Zemun.
B92: But the people of Zemun probably don’t know, for example, that
they could have had two million dinars per month more if you had not
been leasing the Magistrate Building, more than two thousand square
metres, for 1.57 dinars per square metre. Is that honourable behaviour?
Nikolic: Yes, it is.
B92: It is?
Nikolic: Yes. All parliamentary parties in Belgrade lease offices for
prices like that. We’re not a profit-making organisation: we’re paid
by the state. Why don’t you ask in which parts of town and in what
kind of buildings other parties have their offices.
B92: I’ll ask them when they’re here. Now I’m asking you.
Nikolic: But that’s the law. Those are the regulations. It’s a city
decree. We weren’t in power in the city, we went to Zemun. Everyone
else was in central Belgrade in huge offices, don’t we have the right
to do that? What are we? Aliens?” Under what conditions do we have a
long term lease?
B92: Shall we move on?
Nikolic: We have a long term lease in accordance with the law. We
have a long term lease contract, there’s nothing questionable about
that, it’s fully in line with the law. The price is not questionable
at all.
B92: I’m asking you whether it’s honourable behaviour: you say it is.
All right, you’ve answered my question, may we move on?
Nikolic: But please, listen to me. Thirty political parties in
Belgrade have offices like that. It’s an honourable thing for
political parties to have a place where they work.
B92: All right. Is it honourable, then, for Dragan Todorovic to
lease, on October 3, 2000, a thousand square metres of land in Zemun
for a dinar per square metre for thirty years?
Nikolic: Let me ask you something now. As Dragan Todorovic has sued
everyone who said this, are you reporting someone else’s words or will
he be able to sue you because these are your words?
B92: Here. I can give you the documents.
Nikolic: Let me ask you: according to the law are you not responsible
if you report someone else’s information? Is this your information?
Are these your words?
B92: This is a report from the Zemun Municipality from a meeting held
on October 2. A dinar per square metre per month.
Nikolic: It’s not true.
B92: One day later they changed it to a dinar per square metre per
year. For thirty years.
Nikolic: It’s not true. They’re lying.
B92: They’re lying? This is a forgery?
Nikolic: It’s not true. There are court proceedings under way.
B92: Okay, it’s a forgery then.
Nikolic: There’s a trial under way and Dragan Todorovic has sued all
of them.
B92: All right. We have Gordana Pop Lazic, then. Very similar thing.
There’s a contract, she also got some land.
Nikolic: I don’t know about her. Where did she get the land?
B92: She also got land.
Nikolic: Where did she get land.
B92: In Zemun, also. Land to build a private house. She and her
father, Andrija Milic of Barajevo, signed the contract jointly.
Nikolic: Please don’t do this.
B92: I’ll give you the document. Do you want something that concerns
you?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: Let’s see something that concerns you. We have another
interesting matter here, financing of the Serbian Radical Party from
the municipal budget and the budget of the public community works. The
money was transferred from the municipality to your party’s account.
Nikolic: How?
B92: Do you see this? The local Zemun paper, you must remember this.
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: Five hundred thousand copies were printed. And five hundred
thousand Deutschmarks were transferred to make this.
Nikolic: Are you sure it was five hundred thousand Deutschmarks?
B92: Five hundred thousand Deutschmarks. In dinars it was two point
one million dinars. It’s all here.
Nikolic: Why has it been converted into Marks?
B92: So that…
Nikolic: So that one copy cost one Mark.
B92: Who needs half a million copies of the Zemun paper? How many
people live in Zemun?
Nikolic: Where does it say five hundred thousand copies were printed?
B92: Here, take a look.
Nikolic: Does it say so in the paper?
B92: It does.
Nikolic: What does it say?
B92: It says…
Nikolic: Circulation.
B92: Circulation. Circulation. Five hundred thousand.
Nikolic: Copies.
B92: Yes. Take a look if you don’t believe me. Read it for yourself.
Nikolic: That’s the Zemun paper?
B92: Yes. The Zemun paper.
Nikolic: Do you have anything else?
B92: I have loads of things, but I still haven’t had a single answer
from you.
Nikolic: You don’t have anything.
B92: I haven’t had a single answer. I have a heap of material. An
enormous number of facts.
Nikolic: I knew this program would be like this.
B92: An enormous number of facts. I can read them out to you.
Nikolic: Don’t read someone else’s facts to me.
B92: These are not someone else’s facts.
Nikolic: Why didn’t you approach me with these before this program?
B92: The Serbian Public Revenue Bureau. A report. Listen to this.
Nikolic: I can’t respond to lies.
B92: These aren’t lies. This is an audit report.
Nikolic: Lies.
B92: This is a report on the audit of business dealings by the Zemun
Corporate Business System between January 1, 1997, and December 31,
2000. The register has been extracted to Tomislav Nikolic. That means
you have this too.
Nikolic: I have never worked in the Zemun Computer Business System.
B92: Excuse me?
Nikolic: I have never worked in the Zemun Computer Business System.
B92: This is public information. I’ve just told you it was the
Serbian Public Revenue Bureau.
Nikolic: I’m telling you something.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: Let me ask you one thing.
B92: Please do.
Nikolic: If you’re a good journalist, why didn’t you ask me to prepare
my answers in advance?
B92: This isn’t the first time these allegations have been made. I’ve
only asked you to comment on them.
Nikolic: These lies have never before been gathered in a heap like
this.
B92: Whether they are lies in a heap or not, I’m presenting them to
you for comment.
Nikolic: They’re piled up, these lies. Why didn’t you tell me? I
thought we were going to talk about the future of Serbia.
B92: We’ll talk about it now. You provoked me…
Nikolic: We won’t.
B92: … by talking about people being poor.
Nikolic: I haven’t provoked you at all.
B92: You’ve been talking about the poor people you meet in the city
squares so I needed to remind you of your honourable behaviour in the
past.
Nikolic: Why are you working so hard to prove the kind of television
this is?
B92: What kind of television is that?
Nikolic: Why am I a thorn in your side?
B92: Why are you a thorn in your side?
Nikolic: I’m a candidate for the president of the republic.
B92: That’s why you’re here tonight. To present yourself.
Nikolic: Yes, that’s why I’m here. Why didn’t you tell me you would
talk about Zemun so that I could bring the documentation?
B92: I have given you documentation which is public knowledge.
Nikolic: What have you given me?
B92: The documentation.
Nikolic: Can’t you see we’re sitting five metres apart?
B92: You have not answered a single question for me, but let’s forget
about that.
Nikolic: What can I tell you about stories about us launched by you,
Blic and some other news agencies.
B92: These are not stories. These are documents, as you can see.
Nikolic: They are stories. But why are we talking about them tonight?
Have I come here…
B92: You don’t want to talk any more?
Nikolic: Have I come here as a candidate for the presidency of the
republic?
B92: Yes. Yes, you have.
Nikolic: Then why don’t you talk to me in a way appropriate to that?
B92: I have, and you said “I will help the people to live better”.
Nikolic: But you’re doing it without motivation.
B92: I am saying…
Nikolic: But you’re doing this without motivation.
B92: No, I’m only saying…
Nikolic: I can see it in your eyes.
B92: I can take you at your word, but I have to judge you on your past
deeds.
Nikolic: Are you trying to justify something tonight?
B92: Absolutely not.
Nikolic: Are you trying to justify something tonight, some money,
perhaps?
B92: I have not had an answer to these questions. Money? We have no
reason…
Nikolic: You have no money?
B92: B92 has no reason to seek justifications of that kind. Let’s
take a commercial break now.
COMMERCIAL BREAK
B92: Our guest tonight is the Serbian Radical Party’s presidential
candidate, Tomislav Nikolic, who is still in the studio with us. Our
viewers have sent a lot of questions for you tonight, and I’ll ask some
of them myself. I’ll read as many as we have time for later, but a lot
of them are from people who have come from Croatia. They’re asking if
you will stick to your position that if you become president of Serbia
you will break all diplomatic communication with Croatia.
Nikolic: Unfortunately, that’s not in my jurisdiction, but I have one
clear message for Croatia. The authorities which call themselves
democratic will become democratic for me the very moment they allow
Serbs to return, and that’s all I have to say about Croatia. I would
remind them of the genocide they committed, I’m not reminding them that
there’s not a single Serb left in the whole territory of Croatia, that
many people are changing their religion, that children are changing
their names. I would remind them that they have to do a great deal in
order to gain the trust of Serbia, enough trust for us to have
diplomatic relations with Croatia. I’m only reminding them that
they’ve expelled people and not allowed them to return while, at the
same time, they want trade and other relations with us. We’re rather
hypocritical when we want to cooperate with Croatia: we take special
care of our refugees, offer them attention and kindness, but we are
unwilling to resolve their problems.
B92: And will you be helping Serbs to return to Croatia with this
attitude?
Nikolic: But I’m presenting my point clearly and cleanly. So far no
one has helped them to return, not with a different view, the complete
humiliation of Serbia and humiliation of them. You know, when you
visit them at the top of a mountain, in a ruined building, where
children and the elderly and the middle-aged all live together, then
you start thinking differently about them.
B92: Is there any other neighbouring country you would not go to?
Nikolic: I have nothing to do in Slovenia. I have nothing to do in
Croatia. Why should I go there?
B92: There are constitutional jurisdictions. This is also laid out in
your presidential platform: the Serbian president is the head of state
and represents…
Nikolic: Yes, he conducts diplomatic relations on all levels, of
course, but I think that the level of diplomatic support Serbia needs
right now for Kosovo and many other issues is not the level of Slovenia
and Croatia. It has to be done with the big players.
B92: As you’ve mentioned Kosovo, how do think Albanian extremists
would react to you winning the presidential election?
Nikolic: Who knows what goes on in the heads of extremists or how they
would react?
B92: And Albanians in general? How would they react?
Nikolic: I don’t understand the question. I’ve taken part…
B92: Would it suit their efforts for Kosovo’s independence?
Nikolic: How could my winning help them with that?
B92: You’re not electing yourself.
Nikolic: And is it any better the way it is? At the moment they’re
certainly prevented from winning independence. The state of Serbia and
the West are right now stopping them in their attempts to win
independence. Come on, I said it clearly and openly in Strasbourg.
First Harri Holkeri was speaking and everyone applauded. Then I said
“Why are you all applauding? This man here supports killers, people
who burn down churches and houses. He gave them a foreign ministry,
he’s giving them elections on October 23, which he says they will
conduct themselves. Why are you applauding?” Do you think that Serbia
hasn’t managed to persuade Albanians in the past five years that they
won’t have their own state? I think that they’ve rather convinced them
that they will have their own state. We should start working from
scratch. Draft a platform for a political solution to the Kosovo
crisis. The whole parliament has been active in this, I’m not standing
out as an individual on this matter: this is what all the people of
Serbia want. Kosovo must be part of Serbia, whether anyone is happy
about it or not, whether someone is disgruntled about it or not. It’s
defined in Resolution 1244. I didn’t write it, I was unhappy with it,
but now it’s our last hope. For five years the United Nations has
refused to meet the conditions of the resolution while we did whatever
they wanted. Every high representative revises the resolution every
day. We’ve come to the position that a new one should be written just
to cover what they’ve done so far.
B92: And what can you do to improve this situation? Increase
diplomatic activity?
Nikolic: Of course. We have to find our own protector out in the
world. I don’t know what our diplomats are doing, apart from closing
deal for businessmen in the countries they’re posted to, for a
commission, besides discrediting our country and telling everyone we
committed genocide. I don’t know what else our Foreign Ministry has
been doing.
B92: We’re back to my earlier question. To what extent are you able
to represent us, because a lot of doors around the world will probably
remain closed to you?
Nikolic: I probably wouldn’t be able to represent you, but I’ll
certainly be able to represent the majority of Serbian citizens.
B92: And why not me? You said all citizens.
Nikolic: I see you have different political views and, whatever I do,
I won’t please you. I’m really prepared to do everything for every
Serbian citizens, but something bothers certain individuals. Is it the
word “Radical”? I don’t know what it is. But we, who had three
hundred thousand votes in 2000, will now have a million and five
hundred thousand votes. That means we’ve probably been doing something
right in the past four years.
B92: All right. I’d like us to see a little history of the Serbian
Radical Party over the past few years, and then we’ll talk about it.
RECORDED SEQUENCE:
Presenter: The Serbian Radical Party was founded as an opposition
party, but the first decade of pluralist politics in Serbia showed that
it had more fruitful cooperation with the parties in power, such as the
Socialist Party of Serbia and the Yugoslav Left. While close to other
opposition parties for a brief period in 1993, by calling for the
ousting of the Socialist Government, the Radicals brought about early
parliamentary elections in Serbia, but did not take part in any mass
protest against Slobodan Milosevic before or since. They joined the
government with the Socialists and the Yugoslav Left in 1998, only to
be ousted along with them in 2000. They were the only party in the
governing coalition to acknowledge the victory of the democratic
opposition before the popular uprising on October 5, that year. In
2002, Slobodan Milosevic, from The Hague, gave his support in the
presidential elections to his “favourite opposition politician”,
referring to Radical leader Vojislav Seselj in the same way he had
during the nineties.
In the federal and republic parliaments, the Radicals have introduced
such techniques as destroying microphones, throwing water in their
opponents’ faces, punch-ups and other forms of obstructing the work of
the parliament.
Outside the parliament, students, taxi drivers, pensioners and some
lawyers have felt the wrath of the Radicals on their own skin. Their
opponents accuse them of using their period of power in the
Municipality of Zemun for financial machination, usurpation of
apartments, land and the Magistrate Building.
The Radicals respond by saying that these claims have not been proved
in court. The Serbian Radical Party lays great emphasis on patriotism
and the fact that they took part in the wars across the former
Yugoslavia. Vojislav Seselj refuses to give up his vision of Greater
Serbia, even in his prison cell in The Hague.
Seselj: Karlobag-Ogulin-Karlovac-Vitrovitica must be our option and
that’s the border line along which our army must deploy all our troops.
If it’s not capable of withdrawing troops from Zagreb without a fight,
it should withdraw them in a combat operation while Zagreb is being
bombed. That official operation was planned in Belgrade. It included
Bosnian Serb forces, many of them, but the majority of the special
forces came from this side, special police units, the so-called Red
Berets, special units of State Security and volunteers from the Serbian
Radical Party.
If NATO begins bombing us, if the US aggression ensues, we Serbs will
die in great numbers, but there won’t be a single Albanian left in
Kosovo.
Presenter: The Serbian Radical Party is the only political to have
been boycotted for period by the majority of independent media in
Serbia after threats and unfounded allegations that journalists were
accessories to the murder of Defence Minister Pavle Bulatovic. Even
today the Radicals don’t hesitate to say that they don’t regret the
death of publisher Slavko Curuvija, killed in central Belgrade at
Easter, 1999.
Seselj: The gloves are off. Everything has become crystal clear. He
who lives by the sword shall die by the sword, you need to keep that in
mind. You surely don’t think we will let you kill us off, one by one,
like rabbits, while we caress you and cherish you like potted plants.
Keep that in mind. You from B92 and the other traitor outlets. You
want to kill off statesmen like rabbits and keep yourselves safe at the
same time. Well, you’re mistaken. You’re very, very mistaken. No
more kid gloves. Anyone who works for the Americans will have to
suffer the consequences.
Interviewer: Would you take back the sentence “I don’t regret that
Slavko Curuvija was murdered”?
Tomislav Nikolic: No.
Interviewer: You wouldn’t take back the sentence. You still stand
behind it. You would repeat it again.
Tomislav Nikolic: What about it?
Interviewer: Nothing, I’m just asking. It’s just that I’m a little
bit disgusted.
Tomislav Nikolic: The fact that you’re disgusted doesn’t mean it’s not
nice.
STUDIO
B92: Mr Nikolic, how do you comment on this today?
Nikolic: I don’t know what.
B92: Everything you have just heard. Is there anything in this story
we’ve just heard that you would renounce today?
Nikolic: No.
B92: No? That’s it?
Nikolic: You tell me what.
B92: For example, what about the list of journalists which Mr Seselj
read out. He said on a number of occasions that he was only adding to
the list. Did he leave it to you as a legacy?
Nikolic: It is a list of journalists we don’t want to cooperate with.
B92: So the list still exists? You haven’t torn it up and thrown
away? You still stick to it?
Nikolic: I’m offering you tonight an opportunity to show Serbia that
you are at least to a small extent a good television, because for you
the Radical Party doesn’t exist. This is a goodwill gesture from me
because I want to cooperate with everyone, even with you who wish us
nothing but ill.
B92: You’ve changed your rhetoric: you no longer issue death threats,
nor do you threaten the people That’s why you’re here tonight. And,
among other things, because you’re a presidential candidate.
Nikolic: That’s not true.
B92: That’s the way it is.
Nikolic: And tonight of all nights, five years after we changed our
rhetoric. Come on!
B92: We have three or four minutes left. So you wouldn’t take back
anything of what we’ve shown here.
Nikolic: I don’t know what you mean. What exactly do you want to ask
me? What is wrong there?
B92: I’ve asked you about the lists.
Nikolic: You say our political opponents say we were thieves. The
Radicals say the truth will be proved in court. Is that journalism?
B92: We’ve heard many opinions from Mr Seselj. You say you still
stand behind them. I was only interested in that.
Nikolic: I knew you were only interested in that.
B92: Let’s go to some of the questions from our viewers. As
president, will you pardon the former head of state television,
Dragoljub Milanovic?
Nikolic: First I would have to look into the case, but I’m not afraid
to pardon him if something is not right. I won’t pardon notorious
criminals, the ones who sell drugs to kids, rapists, people sentenced
by politics to long prison sentences. I’ll look into the case in
detail. Or do you perhaps think Dragoljub Milanovic is guilty? Or may
he have been a scapegoat? In that case thousands of people should be
in prison, because NATO told us we were collateral damage, everything
they hit was a legitimate target. They were hitting hospitals. So all
the heads of hospitals should be in prison. You’ve set your sights on
Dragoljub Milanovic, he’s the embodiment of evil for you. He ran a
really bad television station but, believe me, it may not have been
half as bad as yours.
B92: As ours?
Nikolic: Yes.
B92: All right.
Nikolic: He supported Slobodan Milosevic and the Yugoslav Left a lot
less than you support these others.
B92: I shan’t comment on that, we don’t have time. Next question: why
is Tomislav Nikolic afraid of a television debate with Boris Tadic.
Nikolic: It’s not that I’m afraid. If he gets through to the second
round we’ll have that television debate. All fourteen candidates can
seek a television debate with me, first they have to decide who
deserves to be in a television debate with me. Why Boris Tadic? What
reason is there for me to accept a debate with Boris Tadic.
B92: You don’t trust the opinion polls?
Nikolic: When did I ever trust the opinion polls? When did you?
B92: Then how do you know that you will win? How many did you say? A
million and a half votes?
Nikolic: I’m out there, from morning to evening, every day.
B92: So you count?
Nikolic: Look at the rallies. You avoided showing Kragujevac…
B92: How many people were there in Kragujevac?
Nikolic: … masses of people.
B92: How many people were there in Kragujevac?
Nikolic: All the others put together wouldn’t have that many…
B92: Tell us, how many were there?
Nikolic: I don’t know, I don’t count.
B92: Well, you must have some kind of estimate. You know how it is at
the rallies.
Nikolic: The only bigger rally we had in Kragujevac was in 1992, and
never after that. But how many people was that?
B92: Approximately? A thousand? Ten thousand?
Nikolic: I think it was ten thousand.
B92: Ten thousand?
Nikolic: Okay, someone else can say five hundred, but when you
consider the size of the square, and if people are standing close
together three of them fit into a square metre. The journalists who
was with us yesterday could have measured the square and say not more
than a thousand. That’s ten thousand, but also fifty thousand.
B92: When you say more than a thousand, that’s not ten thousand, not
even close.
Nikolic: How many is over a thousand, tell me so that I know in the
future?
B92: Okay. Now, to finish, let me ask you a question. Do you watch
Mile vs. Transition?
Nikolic: Not since he announced he was a member of the Democratic
Party. Up to then I liked the show.
B92: Do you identify yourself at all with that character?
Nikolic: Well, no. I appreciate art expressed in any way, but I don’t
like political campaigns on television which are aimed at drawing us
into a particular policy through a likeable actor. I don’t like it and
I steer clear of it.
B92: All right, and let me ask you, if you go through to the second
round of the election, and you probably will, all the opinion polls say
you will, will you come to this studio with your opponent?
Nikolic: Let me tell you something. I don’t think we will have
debates every day. I think we should have the debate on a much more
serious television station than yours.
B92: Such as?
Nikolic: Any other, really, your television is not in that league.
B92: Yes, it is the least serious of all.
Nikolic: Well, it’s not among the least serious ones. I go to
television stations which are watched only in, for example, Blace, but
trust me, don’t underestimate them. There are a lot more serious
people in small television stations than in the so-called big ones.
B92: All right, before we wrap this up, tell us what kind of
television station we are.
Nikolic: Usually very bad, partial and biased, and that’s standing in
your way. Take a look at the number of people who watch you. I’ll
come whenever you invite me. I won’t run away from it, but change the
direction a little. Or maybe you can’t, because you wouldn’t be
getting any money then.
B92: I hope our viewers have gained a little more insight into what
the Serbian Radical Party is today, and whether you are the former
Tomislav Nikolic or the only you would like to present yourself as
today.
Nikolic: You haven’t devoted this show to presenting me as a
presidential candidate, but I won’t hold that against you.
B92: Thank you very much for being our guest tonight. Good night.