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The Helsinki Committee
Communicates the News Reported by B92 News Service for KOSTUNICA CONTRIBUTED AN ARTICLE TO OBRAZ 12/23/2005 Novi Sad In 1996, incumbent Serbian Premier Vojislav Kostunica contributed an article to the Obraz magazine originating the Obraz Fatherland Movement. This is what the professor at the Social Sciences Department, Nottingham University, England, Jovan Byford said today at the forum titled Racism, Fascism, Xenophobia He said that Kostunica had written one nationalistic article for the Obraz and wondered what has prompted him to contribute to an almost unknown magazine, the more so since he must have been aware that the papers ideological profile had often been anti-Semitic and racist. Byford explained that the Obraz magazine had been set up in 1993, then issued irregularly and, later on, gradually turned into a movement. "The Obraz movement was founded by late Nebojsa Krstic, a man very close to the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC), a man whom the Patriarch awarded for a paper he had written as a student at the Theological College, said Byford. He added that the Obrazs tie-up with the SPC considerably abated in 2001 when Krstic was killed in a traffic accident. Mladen Obradovic, Krstics successor, is less capable and has less links with the SPC than Krstic. However, today they establish this connection with the SPC through the Serbian Popular Movement Svetozar Miletic close to Bishop of Backa Irinej. So, though no longer direct, the connection between Obraz and the SPC exists for sure, while the SPC has never distanced itself from Obraz, said Byford. Byford said that what marked todays Serbian scene was overall convergence of the so-called patriotic political forces, including neo-Nazi groupings and movements belonging to the Christian Right such as Obraz, Dveri and St. Justin the Philosopher. "They are coming closer, willing to wipe out mutual controversies, given that they now have a common enemy the liberal public opinion and non-governmental organizations, said Byford. The forum Racism, Fascism, Xenophobia is a part of a larger project the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia has been implementing with the support of the Council of Europe.
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