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International
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Milosevic concedes defeat, quits
BELGRADE, OCT. 7. The Yugoslav President, Mr. Slobodan Milosevic,
bowed to people's pressure and accepted defeat by announcing his
resignation in an address broadcast on the state-owned TV station
Yu Info on Friday night.
``I congratulate Vojislav Kostounica on his election victory and
I wish our nation success over the next term,'' Mr. Milosevic
said in a brief recorded statement. ``I've just got official
information that Vojislav Kostounica won the elections,'' he
said, adding his Socialist Party would be a strong political
opponent to the new administration.
``I intend to rest a bit and spend some more time with my family,
and after that to help my party gain force and contribute to
future prosperity,'' he said.
The statement followed an hour-long meeting between Mr
Kostounica, the man hailed by the West as Yugoslavia's new
President, and Mr. Milosevic. They were reported to have shaken
hands.
It appeared to signal that Mr. Milosevic has abandoned hopes of
blocking Mr Kostounica from taking his oath as President, and
instead will try to carve out a role in Yugoslav political life.
Earlier in the day, Mr. Milosevic, heavily guarded in his
Belgrade villa, greeted the visiting Russian Foreign Minister,
Mr. Igor Ivanov, with a confident presidential handshake and
indicated ominously that he was intent on maintaining a
``political role''.
Mr. Milosevic, a master of political manipulation, appeared to be
playing for time in the hope of turning back, or at least
diverting, the revolutionary tide. But his Friday night statement
appeared to throw in the towel - though his record of survival
suggests he could still be a dangerous player on the political
scene. It was an abrupt turn-around as Mr Kostounica strove to
consolidate the popular uprising in Belgrade and pre-empt any
attempt by Mr. Milosevic to reclaim power.
Yugoslav Television earlier reported a statement from Mr.
Milosevic's office denouncing ``the violence and destructive
disorder ... endangering the functioning of the state and
weakening it, which is only in the interest of its enemies''.
With Belgrade close to anarchy and no police to stop sporadic
looting, Opposition leaders tried to establish control of the
country.
They held talks with army commanders, who made no attempt to stop
thousands of protesters from storming the Federal Parliament on
Thursday, to ensure that soldiers remained in their barracks and
backed the transfer to power.
The Constitutional Court formalised Mr Kostounica's position by
upholding an Opposition complaint that he had won the first round
of presidential elections last month.
The European Union has promised to lift most economic sanctions
when Foreign Ministers meet in Brussels, while the French
President, Mr. Jacques Chirac, invited Mr Kostounica to attend
the E.U.'s Biarritz summit next Friday.
- Telegraph Group Limited, London, 2000
Son headed for Moscow
Reuters reports:
Mr. Marko Milosevic, the hated son of Mr. Slobodan Milosevic,
boarded a plane for Moscow today along with his wife and child,
witnesses at the airport said.
``This morning at 0840 hours (12.10 p.m. IST) Marko Milosevic and
his wife and child, left Yugoslavia in a Jat (Yugoslav airlines)
plane, he left for Moscow,'' a pilot for the Avio Genex company,
said.
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