The IMF people thought they should, perhaps, set some conditions for Belgrade to grant loans, but then they found out that it's the other way around because Milosevic thinks he's selling even when he's buying
Borka Vucic (her last name means wolf in Serbian) who has been in Cyprus for the past five years and has received visits from the Milosevic family occasionally (wife, son, daughter and Unkovic) has to know something about those papers
Montenegro expressed its wish to conduct an independent foreign policy from the first day of the new federation. After setting up the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Serbia abolished its republican foreign ministry but Montenegro kept hers. In June 1994 when he was appointed FRY Ambassador to Italy, Miodrag Lekic (the Montenegrin foreign minister until then) said he "won't take the post if it means the Montenegrin foreign ministry will be abolished". The republic's constitution says it is "sovereign in issues not transferred to the competence of the FRY" and that "the government defines and conducts internal and foreign policy and concludes international agreements".
I don't understand how anyone in Yugoslavia can even think that a big company like Renault can be directed by political criteria in choosing its authorized representatives or salespeople
John Keeney is a teacher of political science at London's Westminster university and undoubtedly one of the leading sociologists in the world. He is also director of the center for democracy studies at Westminster.