Slaviša Ristić
Slaviša Ristić (Serbian Cyrillic: Славиша Ристић; born November 17, 1961) is a Serbian politician. He is a prominent figure in the Kosovo Serb community and served for many years as president of the municipality (i.e., mayor) of Zubin Potok, a Serb community in Kosovo on the border with Central Serbia. He was elected to the National Assembly of Serbia in 2016 as a member of the Democratic Party of Serbia (Demokratska stranka Srbije, DSS), although he left the party later in the same year. He has been the leader of the Otadžbina (Fatherland) movement since 2018.
Slaviša Ristić | |
---|---|
Славиша Ристић | |
Mayor of Zubin Potok | |
In office 2002–2013 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Zubin Potok, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia | 17 November 1961
Nationality | Serbian |
Political party | Democratic Party (1990–1992) Democratic Party of Serbia (1992–2016) Fatherland (2017-present) |
Alma mater | University of Priština |
Private career
Ristić was born in Zubin Potok, Autonomous Region of Kosovo and Metohija, then part of the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He has an economics degree from the University of Priština.[1]
Political career
Ristić joined the opposition Democratic Party (Demokratska stranka, DS) on its founding in 1990. Following a split in the party two years later, he became a founding member of the breakaway Democratic Party of Serbia. During the 1990s, he was one of the few Kosovo Serb politicians to oppose the policies of Slobodan Milošević's administration in the region.[2] He was vice-president of the executive committee on Zubin Potok from 1993 to 1996.[3]
In 2000, in the immediate aftermath of the Kosovo War, he served as chair of the municipal committee of the Serbian National Council of Kosovo and Metohija in Zubin Potok.[4] In July 2000, he attended talks in Washington, D.C., as a representative of the council; the talks did not deal with the status of Kosovo but instead focused on ending the ongoing violence between Serb and Albanian communities in the region and creating the conditions for the development of democratic institutions.[5][6] He strongly opposed the introduction of customs checkpoints on Kosovo's border with Central Serbia in 2001.[7]
Mayor of Zubin Potok
Ristić became the mayor of Zubin Potok in February 2002.[8] The following year, he helped to organize rallies held by the Serb community in response to the Goraždevac murders.[9] In 2005, he took part in discussions between Kosovo Serb leaders and the government of Serbia concerning trade over the Kosovo administrative border.[10]
Ristić, like most other Kosovo Serb leaders, strongly opposes the secession of Kosovo from Serbia and the establishment of an independent Kosovo. In 2006, he was quoted as saying, "No one will force us to accept Priština's authority, which is hostile to Serb people. Serbs do not want a partition [of Kosovo], but if it comes to that, it will be the fault of the international community for succumbing to an ultimatum of independence by (Kosovo) Albanians."[11] During subsequent discussions between Serbs and Albanians in the province meditated by the United Nations, he said, "We want co-operation with the Albanian community but we cannot cooperate with the Kosovo government which is working purely for independence."[12]
In 2007, he remarked that a visit by United States president George W. Bush to Kosovo could only be interpreted as support for independence. He was quoted as saying, "The message that he would be sending by his visit would come as nothing new to us Serbs in Kosmet [Kosovo and Metohija], because the United States has already openly stated its position on Kosmet's status, which is support for independence. [...] I do not think that Bush's visit would provoke any particular reaction from the Serb community, because we have become used to this kind of behaviour from the United States."[13] Later in the year, Ristić was a delegate of Kosovo Serb community in discussions with representatives of the Contact Group.[14]
When the Kosovo government issued its unilateral declaration of independence in February 2008, Ristić repeated his previous opposition, saying, "We cannot allow the institutions of a nonexistent state to be imposed on us and to pay taxes to some independent Kosovo. That is impossible."[15]
Riots broke out at two different United Nations border crossings near Zubin Potok following the declaration of independence, resulting in the destruction of the checkpoints on the roads into Central Serbia. Ristić subsequently indicated that these acts were prompted by the Kosovo government's announcement that it would send its own officials to monitor the border, a development that was unacceptable to the Serb community in the area. He further stated that his municipal forces had acted to prevent the riots from escalating (observing that no-one was injured), drew attention to the anger of Serbs over the declaration of independence, and urged international authorities not to sanction "the false state of Kosovo in its attempts to set up its authorities in the territory of our municipalities."[16]
Later in the year, Ristić led a protest against both the deployment of the European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo (EULEX) and an effort to re-introduce cameras to the border crossings; he described the latter development as "the first step in re-establishing the customs zone."[17] At a separate protest in 2009, he said that Kosovo Serbs would never accept a border dividing Kosovo from Serbia.[18] He later became reconciled to the presence of EULEX in the area (after the terms of its mission were changed), although he suspended Zubin Potok's co-operation with the agency in July 2011, charging that it had become "a force of occupation."[19]
North Kosovo crisis
In 2011, the Kosovo Police crossed into the Serb-controlled municipalities of North Kosovo in an attempt to control several administrative border crossings without consultation with either Serbia or Kosovo Force (KFOR)/EULEX. This action precipitated what became known as the North Kosovo crisis. Ristić said that Kosovo Serbs would respond with peaceful methods of protest such and barricades and roadblocks,[20] though he added that it would be "impossible to control the situation" if the Kosovo government and the international entities used force to accomplish their goals.[21] He subsequently led the Zubin Potok community in a high-profile standoff against NATO over access to the checkpoints, in which Kosovo Serb protesters defied a deadline to remove their roadblocks.[22][23] Ristić said that his community would only permit KFOR and EULEX forces to cross the barricades "when they will confirm their neutrality ... and withdraw Kosovo customs officials from the two crossings."[24] During the course of the crisis, Ristić and other Kosovo Serb leaders met with Serbian president Boris Tadić in a bid to resolve the situation; their talks were unsuccessful.[25]
Ristić announced the removal of the barriers in February 2012, with the underlying issues still unresolved.[26] Later in the year, the governments of Serbia and Kosovo agreed to implement a system of integrated border management. Ristić and other Kosovo Serb leaders met with Tadić's successor Tomislav Nikolić and Serbian prime minister Ivica Dačić prior to the implementation of the new system. After the meeting, Ristić was quoted as saying, "If we receive some sort of guarantee that we will not pay customs at the borders to the sham state of Kosovo, that no one will force us to change our citizenships and personal documents, then we will certainly not create any problems [...] We do not plan to create problems anyhow, apart from exercising our right to pursue the peaceful protests because we cannot allow anyone to force Priština's will upon us."[27] He later led a further round of protests at the border crossing, not having received the aforementioned guarantees, but in December 2012 he acknowledged that there was insufficient popular turnout from the local Serb community for the protests to continue.[28]
2013 Brussels Agreement
Ristić was critical of the absence of Kosovo Serb voices from the negotiations that ultimately led to the 2013 Brussels Agreement, which normalized relations between Serbia and Kosovo while leaving larger questions as to the status of the territory unresolved.[29] In March 2013, he indicated that the Serb community in North Kosovo would form its own assembly if the Serbian government abandoned its claims to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Kosovo and Metohija.[30] He ultimately rejected the accord following the conclusion of negotiations on 19 April 2013 and led further protests against its implementation.[31] He was quoted as saying, "It is not an agreement, it is a surrender; they have killed the state in these parts and betrayed Serbs in Kosovo-Metohija."[32][33]
Serbian political leaders such as Dačić and Aleksandar Vučić subsequently took part in discussions with Ristić and other Kosovo Serb leaders in a bid to win their support for the Brussels Agreement.[34] These talks were unsuccessful. Ristić also rejected the Serbian government's efforts to ensure the participation of Kosovo Serbs in the 2013 local elections in Kosovo that were sanctioned by the Priština government, describing this course of action as "collective suicide."[35]
The Serbian government dissolved the municipal assemblies of Zubin Potok and three other Serb municipalities in northern Kosovo in September 2013, thereby bringing Ristić's tenure as mayor to an end.[36] Despite Ristić's opposition, the community subsequently participated in the 2013 local elections held throughout Kosovo.
Member of the National Assembly of Serbia
Ristić appeared in the 120th position on a combined electoral list of the Democratic Party of Serbia and New Serbia in the 2008 Serbian parliamentary elections.[37] The list won thirty seats, and he was not subsequently included in the DSS's assembly delegation. (From 2000 to 2011, Serbian parliamentary mandates were awarded to sponsoring parties or coalitions rather than to individual candidates, and it was common practice for mandates to be awarded out of numerical order.[38] Ristić could have been selected to received a mandate notwithstanding his position on the list, but, in the event, he was not).
Serbia's electoral system was reformed in 2011, such that parliamentary mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists. Ristić received the eighth position on the DSS's electoral list for the 2014 parliamentary election.[39] The party did not, on this occasion, receive enough votes to cross the electoral threshold.
The DSS contested the 2016 parliamentary election in an alliance with Dveri. Ristić received the fourth position on their combined list and was elected when the list won thirteen mandates.[40] The election was won by the Serbian Progressive Party and its allies, and Ristić became an opposition member.
Ristić resigned from the DSS in October 2016, against the backdrop of a serious split within the party. He condemned the DSS's new leadership for its decision to expel Sanda Rašković Ivić and accused it of accommodating itself to the Progressive Party's rule.[41] He subsequently joined the New Serbia–Movement for Serbia's Salvation parliamentary group under Rašković Ivić's leadership. Ristić supported Dveri leader Boško Obradović in the 2017 Serbian presidential election.[42]
Ristić is an extremely vocal critic of Serbian President Vučić and has accused the Progressive Party of overseeing the Serb communities in North Kosovo via a "criminal" network whose task is to intimidate critics of Vučić and the party. In a 2017 interview with Vreme magazine, he blamed these forces for shots that were fired on his family home on election night in 2016 (no-one was injured in the attack). During the same interview, he argued that Serbia should continue to fight for its sovereignty in Kosovo, and was quoted as saying, "I do not advocate the division of Kosovo in a geographical sense, but an institutional division should be considered" to ensure Serbs in the territory have the same right as Albanians to choose their political destiny.[43]
Ristić became a member of the Fatherland movement (which represents Kosovo Serbs who oppose co-operation with the institutions and government of the disputed Republic of Kosovo) on its formation in 2017.[44] In February 2018, he was chosen as the movement's leader.[45] He has been a vocal opponent of the Serb List's participation with the government of Kosovo.[46]
He is currently a member of the National Assembly committee on Kosovo and Metohija; a deputy member of the committee on the economy, regional development, trade, tourism, and energy; and a member of the parliamentary friendship groups with China and Russia.[47] Like several other opposition parties, the Fatherland movement is boycotting the 2020 Serbian parliamentary election.[48]
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