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Viewing cable 08BELGRADE677, SERBIA: DEMOCRATS AND SOCIALISTS FORM NEW GOVERNMENT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08BELGRADE677 2008-07-08 18:34 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Belgrade
VZCZCXRO2014
PP RUEHAG RUEHAST RUEHDA RUEHDF RUEHFL RUEHIK RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHLN
RUEHLZ RUEHPOD RUEHROV RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHBW #0677/01 1901834
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 081834Z JUL 08
FM AMEMBASSY BELGRADE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0142
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RHEHNS/NSC WASHDC
RUZEJAA/JAC MOLESWORTH RAF MOLESWORTH UK
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 05 BELGRADE 000677 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O.12958: N/A 
TAGS: PGOV PREL SR
SUBJECT: SERBIA: DEMOCRATS AND SOCIALISTS FORM NEW GOVERNMENT 
 
REF: BELGRADE 648 AND PREVIOUS 
 
Summary 
------- 
 
1. (SBU) After almost two months of coalition negotiations, Serbia's 
new European-oriented government under Prime Minister Mirko 
Cvetkovic was formed on July 7.  The cabinet, a mix of old faces and 
new, contains representatives of seven political parties.  The 
government enjoys the support of a slim majority of the members of 
parliament, but is nevertheless expected by many to be long-lasting. 
 Its effectiveness will depend on the resolve of President Tadic and 
PM Cvetkovic.  End Summary. 
 
Late Night Start 
---------------- 
 
2. (U) The Serbian parliament voted late on July 7 to approve the 
new coalition government proposed by Prime Minister-designate Mirko 
Cvetkovic of the Democratic Party.  The motion, which required a 
simple majority of 126 of 250 votes, passed with 127 votes in favor 
and 31 opposed.  Many opposition members were absent or abstained; 
Dragan Markovic "Palma" missed the vote, reducing the margin from 
the expected 128.  Prime Minister Cvetkovic and the new ministers 
took their oaths of office in Parliament immediately following the 
vote. 
 
3. (U) The governing coalition controls a slim majority of 128 seats 
and includes President Boris Tadic's Democratic Party (DS) and its 
electoral coalition partners (G-17 Plus, the Serbian Renewal 
Movement, the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina, and the 
Sandzak Democratic Party), which together hold 102 seats; Ivica 
Dacic's Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) and its electoral coalition 
partners (Pensioners Party and United Serbia) with 20 seats; and the 
Bosniak and Hungarian minority parties, with six seats.  The 
parliamentary opposition will consist of Vojislav Kostunica's 
Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) and its coalition partner New 
Serbia, which together hold 30 seats, and Vojislav Seselj's Serbian 
Radical Party (SRS) with 78 seats.  Cedomir Jovanovic's Liberal 
Democratic Party (LDP), with 13 seats, did not join the governing 
coalition but has promised to provide support on key issues of 
European integration.  The single Albanian minority MP Riza Halimi, 
who also declined to join Tadic's coalition, might also provide 
support on specific issues. 
 
Cvetkovic Outlines Goals 
------------------------ 
 
4. (U) In his opening policy statement, Cvetkovic highlighted six 
goals:  commitment to a European future for Serbia; non-acceptance 
of the independence of Kosovo; the need to strengthen the economy; 
increasing the social responsibility of the government; stepping up 
efforts to combat crime and corruption; and observing international 
law. 
 
5. (U) Cvetkovic said that it would be possible to expand political 
and economic relations (particularly investment) with Russia while 
pursuing EU membership.  He also said that Serbia will "strive to 
promote relations with the U.S. with the aim of having this greatest 
global power take the interests of Serbia and its people into 
consideration when resolving disagreements in the Balkans." 
 
6. (SBU) In his remarks, Cvetkovic said that ratification of the 
Stabilization and Association Agreement with the EU and the Gazprom 
gas deal are among the first items the new government will consider. 
 Both are expected to be contentious, with disagreements between the 
ruling coalition and the opposition over the SAA and tensions within 
the ruling coalition over the gas deal.  Deputy Prime Minister and 
Minister of Economy Mladjan Dinkic (G17 Plus) told us on July 3 that 
"over my dead body will we do the gas deal in its current form." 
Jovan Ratkovic from President Tadic's office told us on July 8 that 
when the SAA is ratified, parliament will also adopt a separate 
resolution reaffirming that EU integration does not mean recognition 
of Kosovo's independence. 
 
Comment 
------- 
 
7. (SBU) Comment:  While at first glance this might appear to be an 
unwieldy governing coalition, with its seven parties, the reality of 
the political situation may give the new government an unexpected 
level of stability.  With the exception of DS, the coalition 
partners have seen their support at the polls weakening in recent 
elections; the SPS in particular expects to lose voters for making 
this deal with the DS and will be very hesitant to go back to the 
polls before it can produce results and rebuild support.  The 
effectiveness of the new government is another question entirely. 
Tadic and Cvetkovic can look for opportunities to move Serbia 
forward, or more excuses for why they can't.  Fear of giving the DSS 
 
BELGRADE 00000677  002 OF 005 
 
 
and SRS ammunition to use against them may well hamper their 
willingness to take bold action.  End comment. 
 
Members of the New Government 
----------------------------- 
 
8. (SBU) Prime Minister - Mirko Cvetkovic (DS):  Prior to this 
appointment, Mirko Cvetkovic served as Finance Minister in the 
previous government.  He was born August 16, 1950, in Zajecar, 
eastern Serbia.  He obtained bachelor's, MA, and PhD degrees from 
Belgrade's Faculty of Economics.  Following university he worked for 
ten years at the Mining Institute in Zemun (a Belgrade 
municipality), at the Economics Institute for six years, and then at 
the economic think tank CES MECON for seven years.  In January 2001 
he became Deputy Minister for Economy and Privatization.  From 2003 
to 2004, he was a Director at the Privatization Agency.  In 2005, he 
resigned to work as a Special Advisor at CEO Intercon Consulting/CES 
Mecon. Cvetkovic speaks English, is married and has two children. 
Cvetkovic has good relations with Serbia's major businessmen, but is 
seen by many as a technocrat who may have difficulty maintaining 
order in the cabinet.  While he was a consultant Cvetkovic worked 
with USAID and he was a constructive interlocutor as Finance 
Minister.  One former colleague told us that Cvetkovic was skilled 
at manipulating people behind the scenes. 
 
9. (SBU) First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior - 
Ivica Dacic (SPS):  Ivica Dacic has been Chairperson of the SPS Main 
Board since January 2003.  He was born January 1, 1966, in Prizren, 
Serbia (now the Republic of Kosovo).  Dacic completed secondary 
education in Nis and earned a bachelors degree in journalism from 
Belgrade's Faculty of Political Science.  During the first 
Parliament of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Dacic became a 
member of the Council of Citizens, vice president of the Information 
Council, and a member of the SPS Main Board Executive Council.  In 
1996 Dacic was reelected to the Belgrade City Council Executive 
Board.  From 1996 to 2004, he served as a party spokesperson, and in 
February 2000 Dacic became chairman of the Belgrade Socialists 
Chapter, winning re-election to this position in 2002.  Dacic was 
elected SPS Main Board Chairperson at the 6th Party Congress in 
January 2003 at the same time Slobodan Milosevic was re-elected SPS 
President.  He placed fifth in the 2004 presidential elections. 
After the January 2007 parliamentary elections, Dacic became chair 
of the Defense and Security Committee.  He is married to Sonja and 
has two children, son Luca and daughter Andrea.  He has limited 
English but refuses to speak it, and speaks fair Russian.  In post's 
limited contacts with Dacic to date he has been fairly forthcoming 
and pragmatic. 
 
10. (SBU) Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Science and 
Development - Bozidar Djelic (DS):  Djelic served as Deputy Prime 
Minister in charge of European Integration efforts in the previous 
government from May 2007.  Although his title has changed, post 
expects Djelic to retain the lead on EU integration.  Born in 1965 
in Belgrade, he graduated from the Institute of Political Science in 
Paris and earned an MBA from Harvard University and a second 
Master's at the College for Social Science in Paris.  From 1993 to 
2000, Djelic worked for the McKinsey consulting company, helping to 
devise the privatization programs in Russia and Poland.  During the 
Zoran Djindjic government (2001-2003) he served as Serbia's Finance 
Minister.  After the formation of the DSS-led government in early 
2004, Djelic went into private consulting.  In 2006 he became CEO of 
Meridian Bank, a Serbian bank sold to the French banking giant 
Credite Agricole.  Djelic has been a member of the Democratic Party 
(DS) since 2003, and was the PM candidate of the DS in the 
negotiations on forming the new government in January 2007. 
 
11. (U) Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economy - Mladjan 
Dinkic (G17 Plus):  Dinkic was Minister for Economy and Regional 
Development under the previous DS/DSS/G-17 government.  He was born 
in 1964 in Belgrade.  He has a BA and an MS in Belgrade's Economics 
Faculty, where he later worked as a professor.  From 1999-2000, he 
was Executive Director of G-17 prior to it becoming a political 
party in December 2002.  From 2000 to 2003 Dinkic served as Governor 
of the National Bank of Yugoslavia.  From 2004 to 2006, Dinkic 
served as Serbia's Minister of Finance.  He was appointed Party 
President of G17 in 2006. 
 
12. (U) Deputy Prime Minister for Social Issues - Jovan Krkobabic 
(PUPS):  Born in 1930, Krkobabic earned his undergraduate, graduate 
and PhD degrees from the Belgrade's Political Science Faculty.  From 
1969 until 1989, Krkobabic was director of the Pension and 
Retirement Fund of Serbia.  He became president of the Association 
of Serbian Pensioners in 1996 and an MP in 1997. Krkobabic is the 
leader of Party of United Pensioners of Serbia (PUPS), which first 
appeared in the January 2007 Serbian parliamentary election but won 
no seats.  In the 2008 parliamentary elections, PUPS won five seats 
in coalition with Socialist Party of Serbia and United Serbia.  As 
the oldest MP, Krkobabic served in June as the Acting Speaker while 
the new parliament was constituted. 
 
BELGRADE 00000677  003 OF 005 
 
 
 
13. (U) Minister of Foreign Affairs - Vuk Jeremic (DS):  Jeremic 
will continue to serve as Foreign Minister, a role he has had since 
May 2007.   Born in 1975 in Belgrade, he graduated from the 
University of London with a degree in finance.  He also holds a B.S. 
in theoretical physics from the University of Cambridge in England, 
and an MPA in International Development from Harvard's Kennedy 
School of Government.  In the 1990s Jeremic worked for several 
financial institutions in London, including Deutsche Bank and 
Dresdner Kleinwort, and then for AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals. 
Jeremic was one of the founders of the anti-Milosevic "Otpor" 
("Resistance") movement.  Jeremic served as Special Envoy of the 
Democratic Opposition of Serbia to Western Europe before the change 
of Milosevic's regime.  Jeremic later served as an advisor to the 
Minister on International Business Affairs, Advisor to the Prime 
Minister on International Relations, the Minister's Special Envoy 
for Euro-Atlantic Affairs and President Boris Tadic's Senior 
Advisor, and the head his foreign policy team.  In February 2006 
Jeremic was elected to the Main Board of the Democratic Party. 
 
14. (U) Minister of Defense - Dragan Sutanovac (DS):  Dragan 
Sutanovac will continue to serve as Minister of Defense, a position 
he has held since May 2007.  Born in Belgrade in 1968, Sutanovac 
graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of Mechanical Engineering.  He 
holds a diploma from the Marshall Center for Security Studies in 
Garmisch-Partenkirchen.  In September 2000, he was appointed special 
advisor at the Federal Ministry of Interior.  In 2001, he became 
Assistant Federal Minister of Interior.  He was elected to 
parliament in 2000, 2003, and 2007. From 2002 to 2003, he was 
Chairperson of the parliament's committee for defense and security. 
In local elections in 2000 and 2004, he won election to Belgrade's 
City Assembly.  Sutanovac has also held several positions in the 
Democratic Party including member of the Executive and Main Board. 
In February 2006, he was elected Vice President of the DS. 
 
15. (SBU) Minister of Finance - Diana Dragutinovic (DS): 
Dragutinovic has served as Vice Governor of the National Bank since 
September 1, 2004. Born in 1958 in Belgrade, she graduated from the 
Belgrade Faculty of Economics, where she also completed her PhD 
studies.  Her further education includes the London School of 
Economics and George Washington University.  From 2001 to 2002, 
Dragutinovic served as a special adviser with the Serbian Ministry 
of Finance and Economy.  She also previously served as special 
advisor to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.  She is 
not active in the DS party, but is close to PM Cvetkovic as a result 
of work together at the consulting firm CES Mecon. 
 
16. (SBU) Minister of Justice - Snezana Malovic (DS):  Malovic has 
been State Secretary at the Ministry of Justice since November 2007. 
 Born in Belgrade in 1976, Malovic received her bachelor's degree 
from Belgrade's Faculty of Law in 1999 and passed the bar exam in 
2002.  From 1999 to 2001, Malovic worked as a legal assistant.  From 
2001 to 2002 she was a Deputy State Secretary at the Ministry of 
Justice and Local Self Governance.  From 2002 to 2003 she served as 
Chief of Staff at the Ministry of Justice.  From 2004 to 2007, 
Malovic served as general secretary for the War Crimes Prosecutors' 
office.  Although post has found Malovic to be a hard-working and 
serious interlocutor, as State Secretary at MOJ she seemed 
deferential to former Minister Petrovic rather than an independent 
voice. 
 
17. (U) Minister of Agriculture - Sasa Dragin (DS):  Dragin was 
appointed Minister of Environmental Protection in 2007.  Born in 
1972 in Sombor, Serbia.  Dragin graduated from the Faculty of 
Agriculture in the University of Novi Sad in 1999 and obtained his 
masters in 2003.  In 1999 Dragin became a faculty assistant in Novi 
Sad University's Agriculture Faculty.  In 2003, he became adviser to 
the President of Vojvodina's Executive Council and in 2004 became 
Deputy to the Provincial Secretary of Agriculture. 
 
18. (U) Minister of Mining and Energy - Petar Skundric (SPS): 
Skundric is a lecturing professor at the Technology-Metallurgy 
Faculty in Belgrade, and honorary professor of the Technology 
University of St. Petersburg.  He was born in February 1947 in 
Gradacac, and obtained bachelor's, MA, and PhD degrees from the 
Faculty of Technology-Metallurgy of the University of Belgrade.  He 
previously served as an MP in the Parliament of Serbia and 
Montenegro. Skundric is one of the founders and the first 
Secretary-General of the SPS, and is a member of the SPS Main 
Board. 
19. (U) Minister of Infrastructure - Milutin Mrkonjic (SPS):  Prior 
to this appointment, Mrkonjic had been a Deputy Speaker of the 
Parliament since May 2007.  Born in 1942 in Belgrade, Mrkonjic 
graduated from Belgrade's Civil Engineering Faculty in 1971.  Upon 
graduation he worked at the Design and Research Railway Center. 
When the Center merged with the Institute for Transportation, 
Mrkonjic becames its CEO.  Mrkonjic is a long standing member of the 
Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) and is Deputy of the SPS Main Board. 
 
 
BELGRADE 00000677  004 OF 005 
 
 
20. (U) Minister of State Administration and Local Self-Government - 
Milan Markovic (DS):  Markovic has been a member of parliament since 
2001, serving as a deputy speaker since 2003.  Born in Belgrade in 
1970.  Markovic has his bachelor's degree in Belgrade's Faculty of 
Law. Markovic worked as an associate professor at the Faculty of 
Security of Belgrade University.  From 2000 to 2004 Markovic was the 
president of the Palilula municipality. 
 
21. (U) Minister of Trade - Slobodan Milosavljevic (DS): 
Milosavljevic was appointed Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, and 
Water Management in May 2007.  Born in Belgrade in 1965. 
Milosavljevic holds B.S., M.S. and PhD degrees from Belgrade's 
Faculty of Economy.  From 1991 to 1996, he worked at the Institute 
for Marketing Research working on areas related to business 
restructuring.  In 1996, he became a director at the Center for 
Combined Research and Macroeconomic Analysis.  Milosavljevic was 
Zoran Djindjic's economic advisor.  In January 2001 he became 
Minister of Trade, Tourism, and Services, a position he held until 
March 2004.  Milosavljevic became president of the Serbian Chamber 
of Commerce (SCK) in December 2004. 
 
22. (U) Minister of Education - Zarko Obradovic (SPS): Obradovic is 
the vice president of the Main Board of the Socialist Party of 
Serbia and has been a member of parliament since 2001.  He was born 
in 1960 in Belgrade.  Obradovic holds a master's and PhD degrees 
from Belgrade's Faculty of Political Science. 
 
23. (U) Minister of Youth and Sport - Snezana Samarzic Markovic 
(G-17 Plus):  Markovic will continue to serve as Minister for Youth 
and Sport, a position she has held since May 2007.  Born in 1966 in 
Belgrade, she graduated from the Faculty of Philology in Serbian 
Language and Literature.  From 2001 to 2005 she worked in the 
bilateral department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as Deputy 
Director for Neighboring Countries, Deputy Chief Mission at the 
Serbia-Montenegrin Embassy in Oslo, and Advisor in the Directorate 
for Europe of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.  From 2005 to 2007, 
she was Assistant Minister of Defense in charge of strategic 
planning and international military cooperation.  She also served as 
Co-President of the Serbia-NATO Defense Reform Group. 
 
24. (U) Minister of Health - Tomica Milosavljevic (G17 Plus): 
Milosavljevic will continue to serve as the Minister of Health, a 
position he has held since May 2007.  Born in 1955 in Krusevac. 
Milosavljevic graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of Medicine in 1979, 
where he also later earned masters and PhD degrees.  Milosavljevic 
worked at different medical centers in Munich, Amsterdam and London. 
 Beginning in 2001 he served as the assistant managing director of 
Serbia's Clinical Center and the managing director of the 
gastroenterology clinic.  He is a member of the G17 Plus Presidency. 
 
 
25. (SBU) Minister of Telecommunications - Jasna Matic (G17 Plus): 
Matic was most recently the state secretary at the Ministry of 
Economy and Regional Development, a post to which she was appointed 
in 2007.  She was born January 14, 1964 in Belgrade.  Matic obtained 
a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Belgrade University 
in 1994 and an MBA from the University of Washington.  From 
2001-2002, Matic was a special advisor to former Yugoslav Deputy 
Prime Minister Miroljub Labus. She then served as the Director of 
the Serbian Investment and Export Promotion Agency (SIEPA).  She is 
an expert on competitiveness issues and FDI and has over ten years' 
experience in the Serbian private sector and administration, as well 
as in international organizations.  Matic is close to Dinkic and has 
a long history of cooperation with the Embassy.  She is considered 
to be very competent, straightforward, and honest, but cautious. 
Post expects her to be active in pushing reform in the 
telecommunications industry. 
 
26. (U) Minister of Labor and Social Policy - Rasim Ljajic (SDP): 
Rasim Ljajic will continue as Minister of Labor and Social Policy, a 
post he has held since May 2007.  Born in Novi Pazar in 1964, Ljajic 
graduated from Sarajevo's Faculty of Medicine.  From 1989 to 2000, 
he worked as a journalist.  In 1990 he was elected Secretary General 
of the Party of Democratic Action of Sandzak Coalition (SDA); he 
left the party in 1993 to form the Sandzak Democratic Party (SDP), 
criticizing Sulejman Ugljanin for being an extremist and endorsing 
separatism from Yugoslavia.  After the fall of Milosevic in October 
2000, Ljajic was appointed Minister of National and Ethnic 
Communities in the Federal Government and Vice President of the 
Coordinating Body for Presevo, Bujanovac and Medvedja 
Municipalities.  In August 2001, Ljajic became Vice President of the 
Coordinating Center for Kosovo.  In March 2003, he became Minister 
of Human and Minority Rights.  He has served as President of the 
National Council for Cooperation with the ICTY since July 2004. 
Since September 2005, he has been the president of the Coordinating 
Body for Municipalities of Presevo, Bujanovac and Medvedja. 
 
27. (U) Minister of Environment and Urban Planning - Oliver Dulic 
(DS):  Dulic was most recently Speaker of the Serbian Parliament; 
 
BELGRADE 00000677  005 OF 005 
 
 
elected to that position in May 2007, he was the youngest speaker in 
the parliament's history.  He was born in 1975 in Belgrade and 
raised in Vojvodina. He graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of 
Medicine in 1999 and completed his specialization in orthopedics and 
traumatology in Belgrade.  He stepped onto the political scene in 
1996 as a student leader, later joining the anti-Milosevic "Otpor" 
("Resistance") group.  He joined the Democratic Party in 1997.  From 
2001 to 2003, Dulic was head of the DS's North Backa District.  In 
2003, he served as an MP in the Parliament of Serbia and 
Montenegro. 
28. (U) Minister of Culture - Nebojsa Bradic (G17 Plus):  Bradic has 
been the director and head manager of the Belgrade Theatre of Drama 
Art since 2000.  Born in 1956 in Trstenik, Serbia,  Bradic graduated 
from Belgrade's Faculty of Theatrical Arts.  From 1981 to 1996 he 
was a director, artistic director and the head manager at the 
Theater of Krusevac. In 1996 he went to the National Theater in 
Belgrade and was its director until 1999. 
29. (U) Minister of National Investment Plan - Verica Kalanovic (G17 
Plus):  Kalanovic has been a vice president of G17 Plus since 2006. 
Born in 1954 in Trstenik, Serbia.  Kalanovic graduated from 
Belgrade's Metallurgical Engineering Faculty in 1980 with a master's 
degree.  She worked for the PPT Zaptivke gasket manufacturing 
company in Trstenik from 1983 to 1993, when she started working as a 
high school teacher.  From 2003-2006 Kalanovic was an MP in the 
Parliament of Serbia and Montenegro and became State Secretary in 
the Ministry of Finance in 2007. From 2004 to 2006 she served as the 
G17 Plus Executive Board President. 
 
30. (SBU) Minister for Kosovo - Goran Bogdanovic (DS):  Bogdanovic 
is president of the DS for Kosovo and Metohija and a member of the 
DS national presidency.  He was born in 1963 in the village of 
Lesak, Leposavic municipality (now the Republic of Kosovo). 
Bogdanovic graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of Agriculture.  After 
graduation, he worked at the "Juko" agricultural cooperative in 
Srbica, Kosovo.  In 1996 he became an agriculture inspector in the 
Mitrovica region of Kosovo.  Bogdanovic joined the Democratic Party 
(DS) in 2000.  He was Minister Agriculture of Kosovo from 2000 - 
2004, although he spent most of his ministerial mandate out of the 
office due to the Serb boycott of the Assembly.  Post knows 
Bogdanovic to be a relatively mild-mannered individual. 
 
31. (U) Minister of Religion - Bogoljub Sijakovic (DS):  Born in 
Niksic, Montenegro in 1955. He holds his BA and MA in philosophy 
from Belgrade's Faculty of Philosophy and completed his PhD in 
philosophy at Sarajevo's Faculty of Philosophy in 1989.  He received 
advanced training in Germany and Greece and was a professor of 
philosophy at the Faculty of Niksic, Montenegro. He is a lecturing 
professor at the Orthodox Seminary Faculty of the University in 
Belgrade, where he teaches philosophy.  Between 2000 and 2001 he was 
minister of religion in the former Yugoslav federal government. 
 
32. (U) Minister of Diaspora - Srdjan Sreckovic (SPO):   Born in 
1974 in Belgrade.  Sreckovic graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of 
Economics in 1997.  In 2008 he earned a master's degree in fiscal 
management.  Sreckovic has been an SPO member since 1992. From 
2004-2007, Sreckovic served as Assistant Minister of Trade. 
 
33. (U) Minister of Human and Minority Rights - Svetozar Ciplic 
(DS):  Born in Novi Sad in 1965, Ciplic graduated from the Faculty 
of Law of the University of Novi Sad where he also received his MA. 
Ciplic joined the Public Law Department of the Novi Sad Faculty of 
Law in 1995.  From 2002 - 2007 he was a judge of the Constitutional 
Court of Serbia. 
 
34. (U) Minister without Portfolio - Sulejman Ugljanin (SDA): 
Ugljanin, the leader of the Democratic Action of Sandzak (SDA) 
party, was mayor of Novi Pazar from 2004 to 2008.  Born in 1953 in 
Kosovska Mitrovica (now the Republic of Kosovo), Ugljanin graduated 
from the Dental Faculty in Sarajevo and worked for twelve years as a 
dentist in the Novi Pazar Medical Center.   In 1990 Ugljanin was one 
of the founders of Alija Izetbegovic's Party of Democratic Action, 
and, together with Rasim Ljajic, was co-founder of the Party of 
Democratic Action of Sandzak (SDA).  In 1990's first Serbian 
multi-party presidential elections, Ugljanin took fourth place out 
of 33 candidates.  In 1991, he established the National Council of 
Sandzak Bosniaks.  From 1993 until 1996, he lived in exile in Turkey 
to escape charges of conspiracy against the state.  He returned when 
the Milosevic regime granted him amnesty and established the "List 
for Sandzak" coalition, which won an absolute majority in the 1996 
local elections in Novi Pazar, Sjenica, and Tutin (all Sandzak 
municipalities with a Bosniak majority).  In 2007 Ugljanin was the 
leader of the "List for Sandzak" coalition in the Serbian 
parliamentary elections, winning two seats.  In the May 2008 
parliamentary elections, his "Bosniak List for a European Sandzak" 
coalition won two seats. 
 
MUNTER