
Milosevic's
Coffin an Event for Serbians
Mourners filing past the casket of the former Yugoslav president
call him a hero.
March 17, 2006
BELGRADE, Serbia - Former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic
remained a divisive figure in death Thursday as controversies
erupted over the display of his coffin and former political
opponents hurried to organize a demonstration to counter the
adulation expected at his
funeral.
The opponents launched a text-message campaign urging people to
come to the center of Belgrade on Saturday and let fly balloons
at the same time as the rites.

The former president was found dead Saturday in the United
Nations detention center at The Hague, where he was being tried
on charges of genocide and war crimes before the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Milosevic was
alleged to have orchestrated the Balkan wars of the 1990s that
raged across Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia and Kosovo
province,
killing more than 225,000 people and devastating the region.
Milosevic's coffin went on display Thursday afternoon at the
Museum Space 25th of May, one of several buildings that make up
the Museum of Yugoslav History. The building perches between the
house where Milosevic was arrested in 2001, and the grave of
Josip Broz, known as Tito, who led Yugoslavia for 35 years after
World War II.
The museum director, Ljiljana Cetinic, expressed anger over not
being consulted about the coffin and accused the government of
perverting the use of a cultural institution. Directors of
museums and cultural institutions in Belgrade signed a petition
joining her protest.
A leader of Milosevic's Socialist Party said permission to use
the building had come from chief figures in the current
government, but in an echo of the Milosevic era, no one would
admit to having signed off on placing the coffinin the museum.
"I protest this in the strongest terms," Cetinic said,
speaking on the B92 television station, adding that the incident
had "dragged cultural institutions into daily politics."
The 1970s-style building where Milosevic's casket was displayed
was built in honor of Tito. At one time it housed a collection of
carved sticks that were carried in relay races through the
country and presented to Tito on his birthday, May 25.
Milosevic's coffin sat alone in a large, white-walled exhibition
hall, where the museum lately has displayed avant-garde art. It
rested on a table in the middle of the room, a large framed
photograph of Milosevic leaning against it.
As people filed by, many crossed themselves and then kissed the
photo's frame as they would an icon in a Serbian Orthodox church.
The mood was somber but resigned - in many ways Milosevic died
here in Serbia in 2001, when the deposed leader vanished from
public view.
Many mourners appeared to be Socialist Party members or
supporters, and at one point about 2,000 crowded the stairs in
front of the building. Most were gray-haired; many were bent and
wore modest clothes. There were a few highfliers, too: women in
long fur coats that all but swept the slushy snow and well-groomed
men with bodyguards.
The mourners seemed oblivious to the terrible destruction of the
Balkan wars Milosevic helped precipitate and the furies of ethnic
and sectarian hatred the conflicts unleashed. Many blamed the
isolation of Serbia and its economic deprivation on the
international community and painted their former leader in the
most glowing terms.
"People in the world can talk badly about him, but he was a
great man.. He loved all of the people, he didn't distinguish
between Serb and non-Serb," said Veslana Bogdanov, 64, a
Belgrade librarian who emerged from the exhibition space, her
eyes red from weeping.
Tomislav Sterovic, 67, who, like many here, thinks Milosevic was
poisoned during his imprisonment at The Hague, spoke warmly about
the former leader and blamed the United States for aiding in his
downfall.
"He will be recorded in history as a hero, and it's shameful
that the current government did not give him the honors of a
former president,"Sterovic said, referring to the government's
decision to refuse to allow Milosevic to lie in state in
parliament or be buried in the Alley of Heroes, a special section
of Belgrade's cemetery. "Wherever he is buried will be the
alley of heroes."
CFPA: To some he was a hero and to others like the Muzis and their sympathizers he was a monster, but could he ever be as bad as the mad prophet Muham-mad, not hardly.
![]()