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Opposition camps challenge Montenegro ruling party

Podgorica, Montenegro—Montenegro’s pro-West party could be knocked from power for the first time in three decades after a tight election gave a slight edge to opposition camps, results showed on Monday.

Opposition camps challenge Montenegro ruling party
POLL REJOICING. Opposition supporters celebrate on the streets after the general elections in Podgorica, early hours on August 31. Montenegro’s ruling party was a hair ahead of the main pro-Serb opposition alliance in a hotly-fought election on August 30 that left both sides without a full majority, a preliminary exit poll showed, portending uncertain coalition talks for the Adriatic nation. AFP

The Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) led by President Milo Djukanovic is still the biggest party after winning just over third of the vote, according to official results, but it was their worst performance since independence. 

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If their main pro-Serb rivals join forces with two other opposition blocs, DPS could be ousted in what would be a political earthquake for the small Adriatic nation of 620,000 people.

The DPS has never lost an election, with Djukanovic leading Montenegro since the collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s to independence from Serbia and more recently into NATO and towards the EU.

But this year the party faced a stiff challenge from an emboldened right-wing and pro-Serb camp that wants closer links with Belgrade and Moscow.

Seat projections by election monitor CeMI gave the three main opposition parties 41 seats in the 81-member assembly.

A period of intense and competitive coalition talks are expected to follow, with Djukanovic, in his role as president, responsible for handing down the first mandate. 

In addition to long-running frustrations at a government accused of graft and state capture, analysts attributed DPS’s weak showing to a law that sparked intense controversy with the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC) and has dominated political debate for months.

Passed in late 2019, the religion law opened a path for hundreds of SPC-run monasteries in Montenegro to become state property.

This ignited huge anti-government protests, led by priests and backed by the pro-Serb opposition who accuse Djukanovic of trying to erase their heritage. 

While Montenegro declared independence from Serbia in 2006, a third of its population identify as Serb and the SPC remains its largest religious institution, making debates around identity highly sensitive.

‘Regime has fallen’

Throughout the Church row, Djukanovic has sought to present himself as the guardian of Montenegrin nationhood, saying it was threatened by Serb nationalist forces.

Speaking at the party’s headquarters late on Sunday, he underlined that DPS had the “strongest” finish in the poll and that the “struggle for the majority is still on”.

But Zdravko Krivokapic, the leader of the main pro-Serb alliance, announced triumphantly that “the regime has fallen”.

Supporters celebrated Sunday night in the streets of Podgorica, circling with cars, setting off fireworks and gathering in front of the main Orthodox church in the capital. 

Leaders of the other main opposition parties were also ecstatic, with Dritan Abazovic from the liberal Black on White party declaring that “Mafia will no longer rule Montenegro”.

It remains to be seen if the opposition, who range from far-right Serb nationalists to a civic-minded liberal camp, can forge a working alliance.

Djukanovic, who is now serving his second term as president after four stints as premier, will not face election himself until 2023.

While he has won plaudits for making Montenegro a front-runner in the Balkans on its path to joining the EU, Djukanovic’s critics accuse him of turning Montenegro into a personal fiefdom built on graft and crime links.

The US-based Freedom House rights group recently downgraded Montenegro from a democracy to a “hybrid regime” under Djukanovic’s “strongman” rule. 

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