FIRST-EVER COMPENSATION AGREEMENT BETWEEN EX-YUGOSLAV REPUBLICS

Published: 29 July 2005 y., Friday

Montenegrin Agriculture Minister Milutin Simovic and his Croatian counterpart Petar Cobankovic signed an agreement in Cavtat on 27 July according to which Montenegro will pay Croatia about $450,000 for 650 cows taken by Montenegrin paramilitaries and reservists from a farm in Konavle near Dubrovnik in 1991.

 President Stipe Mesic of Croatia and his Montenegrin counterpart Filip Vujanovic watched the signing of the document, which is the first compensation agreement between two former Yugoslav republics dealing with damages from the conflicts of the 1990s. In June 2000, Milo Djukanovic, who was then Montenegrin president, apologized to "all citizens of Croatia and especially of Dubrovnik...for all the pain and suffering and material losses inflicted by Montenegrins" during the Belgrade-led campaign against Croatia in 1991 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 26 June 2005). At that time, Montenegrin irregulars burned and looted properties in the Konavle, Cavtat, and Dubrovnik areas. A well-publicized photo appeared in newspapers around the world showing apparently drunken Montenegrin fighters carrying photos of their national heroes and enjoying the proceeds from looting the duty-free shop at Dubrovnik airport.

Šaltinis: RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Justice and citizenship - a look ahead at the issues MEPs face

The EU policy area broadly known as 'justice and citizenship' covers a series of important areas such as European police and customs cooperation and asylum and immigration policy. more »

Deadly end to Pakistan army siege

Suspected Taliban gunmen staged a brazen attack on the heart of Pakistan's military establishment on Saturday. Five gunmen were also killed and two captured. more »

Energy security – common goal pursued by Lithuanian and Estonian leaders

In the meeting, Lithuanian and Estonian leaders discussed Lithuanian-Estonian bilateral cooperation and the most important EU and NATO policy issues. more »

EU and Georgia start negotiations on a Common Aviation Area Agreement

Delegations from Georgia and the European Union meet on 6/7 October 2009 in Tbilisi / Georgia for the first round of negotiations on a comprehensive aviation agreement between both sides. more »

Green partnership: EU and US mayors pledge to work together on climate change

Mayors from both sides of the Atlantic have pledged to work together to highlight the key role played by the local and regional level in adapting to the effects of climate change in a bid to ensure recognition of this role in the conclusions of the UN climate change summit in Copenhagen next December. more »

Nato’s new Secretary General will pay a visit to Lithuania

On 9 October, NATO’s new Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen will pay a visit to Lithuania. more »

Wolf Klinz on EP special committee to tackle the financial crisis

The European Parliament is about to set up a special committee to examine ways to avoid a future economic crisis. more »

Afghanistan: “EU police force must be beefed up”, says Ettore Sequi

The EU's special representative in Afghanistan, Ettore Francesco Sequi, called for EUPOL, the EU police mission in Afghanistan, to be strengthened, when he addressed Members of the EP Foreign Affairs Committee on Tuesday. more »

Turkey IMF protests turn violent

Hundreds of protesters took to the streets of the Turkish capital showing their dismay towards the International Monetary Fund meeting. more »

China-N.Korea in new courtship

China and North Korea established formal ties 60 years ago but this visit by Chinese premier Wen Jiabao to Pyongyang marks a renewed phase in their courtship. Chinese state television showed Wen meeting North Korea's nominal number two leader on the second day of his rare visit to the isolated state. more »