SERBIA-MONTENEGRO
Serbia-Montenegro, a constitutional republic, is dominated by Slobodan 
Milosevic who, after two terms as President of Serbia, became Federal 
President in July. President Milosevic continues to control the country 
through his role as President of the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS)--a 
dual role arrangement proscribed by the federal Constitution--and his 
domination of other formal and informal institutions. Although the SPS 
lacks majorities in both the Federal and Serbian Parliaments, it controls 
governing coalitions and holds the key administrative positions. Serbia 
abolished the political autonomy of Kosovo and Vojvodina in 1990, and all 
significant decision making since that time has been centralized under 
Milosevic in Belgrade. The Milosevic regime effectively controls the 
judiciary and has used this power to manipulate the election process, most 
notably to reverse opposition victories in Serbian municipal elections over 
the winter of 1996-97--an effort that the regime abandoned in February 
after sustained domestic and international pressure.
During 1997 the international community continued to work intensively with 
the Milosevic regime to implement the Dayton Accords, a step-by-step 
process designed to end the war in Bosnia and secure the peace. United 
Nations (U.N.) sanctions against the "Federal Republic of Yugoslavia" (FRY) 
were formally lifted in 1996. The FRY is still not permitted to participate 
in the United Nations (U.N.), the Organization for Security and Cooperation 
in Europe, or other international organizations and financial 
organizations. The United States and the international community do not 
recognize Serbia-Montenegro as the successor state to the former 
Yugoslavia.
As a key element of his hold on power, President Milosevic effectively 
controls the Serbian police, a heavily armed force of over 100,000 that is 
responsible for internal security. After his move to the Federal 
presidency, Milosevic precipitated a crisis when he tried to wrest control 
of the Montenegrin police from Montenegrin Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic. 
Serbian police committed extensive and systematic human rights abuses.
Despite the suspension of U.N. sanctions, economic performance has been 
anemic. Unemployment and underemployment remained high as the Government 
was unable or unwilling to introduce necessary restructuring measures. The 
Government has not implemented sweeping economic reforms, including 
privatization, which could undermine the regime's crony system. Largely as 
a result of the central bank's tight monetary policy and the partial sell 
off of the state telecommunications entity, inflationary pressures were 
kept relatively in check.
The Government's human rights record continued to be poor. The police 
committed numerous, serious abuses including extrajudicial killings, 
torture, brutal beatings, and arbitrary arrests. Police repression 
continued to be directed against ethnic minorities, and police committed 
the most widespread and worst abuses against Kosovo's 90-percent ethnic 
Albanian population. Police repression was also directed against the 
Muslims of Sandzak and detainees and citizens who protested against the 
Government. While under the Constitution citizens have a right to stage 
peaceful demonstrations, the police seriously beat scores of protesters 
throughout the country, sending many to hospitals. The Government used its 
continued domination of Parliament and the media to enact legislation to 
manipulate the electoral process. In practice citizens cannot exercise the 
right to change their government. The judicial system is not independent of 
the Government and does not ensure fair trials. The authorities infringe on 
citizens' right to privacy. The Government used police and economic 
pressure against the independent press and media and restricted freedom of 
assembly and association. The Government infringed on freedom to worship by 
minority religions and on freedom of movement. The Government continues to 
hinder international and local human rights groups and reject their 
findings. Discrimination and violence against women remained serious 
problems. Discrimination against ethnic Albanian, Muslim, and Romani 
minorities continues. The regime limits unions not affiliated with the 
Government in their attempts to advance worker rights.
Montenegro was the only relatively bright spot, although Milosevic's 
influence threatens to complicate the republic's as yet unproven efforts at 
democratization. In July Montenegro's increasingly reformist Prime 
Minister, Milo Djukanovic, successfully fought off an attempt by Milosevic 
to change the Federal Constitution and boost the powers of the Federal 
presidency. Djukanovic appears to be resisting attempts by Milosevic to 
consolidate Montenegro's security apparatus-with its relatively clean human 
rights record since 1995-under the Belgrade regime. The results of the 
October presidential election, in which Milo Djukanovic defeated the 
incumbent, Momir Bulatovic, were questioned by the central authorities 
despite being endorsed as free and fair by the Organization for Security 
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
As a signatory of the Dayton Accords, Serbia-Montenegro is obliged to 
cooperate fully with the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former 
Yugoslavia by turning over to the Tribunal the five persons on its 
territory who were indicted for war crimes. The Government has so far been 
uncooperative. According to credible reports, some of those indicted live 
in Serbia, and others freely travel in and out of Serbia. Over the summer, 
suspected war criminal Ratko Mladic vacationed in Montenegro and earlier, 
according to press reports, attended his son's well-publicized wedding 
ceremony in Belgrade.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom from:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
Political violence, including killings by police, resulted mostly from 
efforts by Serbian authorities to suppress and intimidate ethnic minority 
groups. Xhafer Hajdari of Mitrovica died in January, apparently from 
injuries sustained during police torture several weeks earlier. The victim 
had committed no crime, but police alleged that his son had killed a 
Serbian hunter in 1992.
On June 20, along the FRY border with the Republika Srpska at Priboj, the 
police killed one Muslim Bosniak and seriously mistreated another. Serbian 
security forces shot and killed several ethnic Albanians, identified by 
police as terrorists, including Adrian Krasniqi, a 21-year-old ethnic 
Albanian shot and killed by Serbian police on October 14.
At least two ethnic Albanians died while in jail awaiting trials. On 
February 23, Serbian police revealed that Besnik Restelica, an engineer 
from Podujevo, was killed while in police custody. Police claim that 
Restelica committed suicide, but according to reports of the Council for 
the Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms, a monitoring organization based 
in Pristina, Kosovo, he had bruises on his legs, hands, and fingers and 
showed signs of having been strangled. He was abducted by police in late 
January. On October 17, another ethnic Albanian, Junus Zeneli, died while 
in police custody in Belgrade under suspicious circumstances. In both 
cases, legal requirements that family and legal counsel of the detainee 
contacted immediately were ignored.
Several violent clashes in Kosovo in late November between the police and 
Kosovar ethnic Albanians apparently resulted in fatalities on both sides.
Crimes against citizens of ethnic minority groups appear to have been 
rarely investigated, nor were police generally held accountable for their 
excesses.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances. An ethnic 
Albanian, Nait Hasani, of Pristina was seized by police on January 28, 
brutally beaten, and then disappeared for 32 days before police 
acknowledged that he was in their custody and charged him with 
terrorist-related activities.
The trial of Dusan Ranisavljevic began in April; he is an admitted 
participant in the 1993 Strpci incident, in which 19 Muslims and 1 Croat 
were taken off a train as it passed through Bosnian territory and 
disappeared (see Section 4). The fate of the men remains a mystery, and the 
Government is clearly reluctant to investigate fully the incident, as well 
as other disappearances. The trial started in April but was interrupted for 
procedural reasons when Montenegrin authorities sought to move the venue to 
a Serbian court in Jagodina, the defendant's hometown.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
Torture and other cruel forms of punishment, which are prohibited by law, 
continue to be a problem, particularly in Kosovo directed against ethnic 
Albanians. Police routinely beat people severely when holding them in 
detention. There were several police roundups in Kosovo during the early 
part of the year of ethnic Albanians charged with supporting a separatist 
agenda and terrorist-related activities. Police beat and tortured many of 
over 60 male and female suspects held in custody. It is during the 3 to 4 
day period of incommunicado detention allowed by law that the worst police 
brutality takes place. These excesses are now primarily concentrated in 
Kosovo, and to a lesser extent in Sandzak. Serbian police inflicted some 
abuse on
prodemocracy demonstrators early in the year and again in the fall (see 
Section 2.b.).
Ethnic Albanians continue to suffer at the hands of security forces 
conducting searches for weapons and explosives. The police, without 
following proper legal procedures, frequently extract "confessions" during 
interrogations that routinely include the beating of suspects' feet, hands, 
genital areas, and sometimes heads. The police use their fists, 
nightsticks, and occasionally electric shocks. Apparently confident that 
there would be no reprisals, and, in an attempt to intimidate the wider 
community, police often beat persons in front of their families. According 
to various sources, ethnic Albanians are frequently too terrified to ask 
police to follow proper legal procedures--such as having the police provide 
written notification of witness interrogation.
According to Human Rights Watch, police beat at least 24 journalists during 
prodemocracy demonstrations over the winter of 1996-97 in Belgrade alone. 
Human Rights Watch cited an incident in which police using truncheons 
brutally beat the head of a 21-year-old student journalist, Rastko Kostic. 
The police stopped only when another passerby became involved, and they 
started beating him. In February the Humanitarian Law Center filed criminal 
charges on behalf of 21 journalists who had been beaten, but no action had 
been taken by the state prosecutor by year's end.
Police also used threats and violence against family members of suspects 
and have held them as hostages. According to Albanian and foreign 
observers, the worst abuses against ethnic Albanians took place not in big 
towns but in rural enclaves. Continuing a longstanding practice, the 
military conducted exercises using live ammunition next to an inhabited 
village in Sandzak during the summer on the Pester plain. No one was 
killed, but the practice showed insensitivity and served to intimidate the 
local Muslim population and encourage residents to leave.
Prison conditions meet minimum international standards. There were no 
confirmed reports of the abuse of prisoners, once they were sentenced and 
serving time.
The Government generally permits prison visits by human rights monitors. An 
important exception was the case of the ethnic Albanians arrested in a 
police sweep over the winter. The International Committee for the Red Cross 
was, except for one visit, denied access to the prisoners prior to the 
beginning of their trials in May.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
Police use of arbitrary arrest and detention was concentrated primarily in 
Kosovo and, to a lesser degree, in Sandzak. Police often apply certain laws 
only against ethnic minorities, using force with relative impunity. During 
Belgrade student protests in late September and early October, police 
arbitrarily arrested dozens of citizens, including some who were not even 
participating in the protests. Police also beat several journalists, 
photographers, and television camera people. Laws regarding conspiracy, 
threats to the integrity of the government, and state secrets are so vague 
as to allow easy abuse by the regime.
Federal statutes permit police to detain criminal suspects without a 
warrant and hold them incommunicado for up to 3 days without charging them 
or granting them access to an attorney. Serbian law separately provides for 
a 24-hour detention period. Police often combine the two for a total 4-day 
detention period. After this period, police must turn a suspect over to an 
investigative judge, who may order a 30-day extension and, under certain 
legal procedures, subsequent extensions of investigative detention up to 6 
months. In Kosovo police often beat people without ever officially charging 
them and routinely hold suspects well beyond the 3-day statutory period. 
However, observers report that the problem is not as pronounced in the rest 
of Serbia-Montenegro as in the past.
Defense lawyers and human rights workers complained of excessive delays in 
filing formal charges and opening investigations. The ability of defense 
attorneys to challenge the legal basis of their clients' detention often 
was further hampered by difficulties in gaining access to detainees or 
acquiring copies of official indictments and decisions to remand defendants 
into custody. In some cases, judges prevented defense attorneys from 
reading the court file. The investigative judges often delegated 
responsibility to the police or state security service and rarely 
questioned their accounts of the investigation even when it was obvious 
that confessions were coerced. According to human rights observers, many of 
these problems were in evidence with respect to the ethnic Albanians 
arrested over the winter and convicted in the late spring in Pristina.
In a country where many if not most of the adult males in the Serbian 
population are armed, the police, according to some members of minorities, 
selectively enforced the laws regulating the possession and registration of 
firearms so as to harass and intimidate ethnic minorities, particularly 
Albanian Kosovars and Bosniak Muslims. The most frequent justification 
given for searches of homes and arrests was illegal possession of weapons. 
Observers allege that in Kosovo the police are known to use the pretext of 
searching for weapons when in fact they are also searching for hard 
currency. Local police authorities more easily approve the registration of 
legal weapons for Kosovo Serbs and frequently turn a blind eye to Serbs' 
possession of illegal weapons.
Exile is not legally permitted, and no instances of its use are known to 
have occurred. However, the practical effect of police repression in Kosovo 
and Sandzak has been to accentuate political instability, which in turn has 
limited economic opportunity. As a result, many ethnic Albanians and 
Bosniak Muslims go abroad to escape persecution, although only in a few 
cases could direct links to police actions be identified.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary, but in practice the 
courts are largely controlled by the Government and rarely challenge the 
will of the state security apparatus. While judges are elected for fixed 
terms, they may be subjected to governmental pressure. The authorities 
frequently deny fair public trial to non-Serbs and to persons they believe 
oppose the regime. The fraud that followed the November 1996 municipal 
elections was perpetrated mainly through the regime's misuse of the 
judicial system.
The court system comprises local, district, and supreme courts at the 
republic level, as well as a Federal Court and Federal Constitutional Court 
to which republic supreme court decisions, depending on the subject, may be 
appealed. There is also a military court system. According to the Federal 
Constitution, the Federal Constitutional Court rules on the 
constitutionality of laws and regulations, relying on republic authorities 
to enforce its rulings.
The Federal Criminal Code of the former Socialist Federal Republic of 
Yugoslavia still remains in force. Considerable confusion and room for 
abuse remain in the legal system because the 1990 Constitution of Serbia 
has not yet been brought into conformity with the 1992 Constitution of the 
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Under Federal law, defendants have the 
right to be present at their trial and to have an attorney, at public 
expense if needed. The courts must also provide interpreters. The presiding 
judge decides what is read into the record of the proceedings. Either the 
defendant or the prosecutor may appeal the verdict.
Although generally respected in form, defense lawyers in Kosovo and Sandzak 
have filed numerous complaints about flagrant breaches of standard 
procedure which they believed undermined their clients' rights. Even when 
individual judges have admitted that the lawyers are correct, courts have 
ignored or dismissed the complaints.
The Government continues to pursue cases brought previously against 
targeted minority groups under the Yugoslav Criminal Code for jeopardizing 
the territorial integrity of the country and for conspiring or forming a 
group with intent to commit subversive activities--that is, undermining the 
"constitutional order."
Three questionable trials took place in Pristina over the summer and fall 
involving 60 ethnic Albanians. In the first trial, 20 individuals, 
including one woman, were charged mainly with preparing to conspire to 
participate in activities endangering the territorial integrity of the FRY. 
The evidence was inadequate and the defendants were largely denied timely 
access to their attorneys. U.N. Special Rapporteur Rehn noted that several 
defendants met their defense attorneys for the first time only after the 
investigative judge had already concluded the crucial stage of 
investigation, while other defendants had defense counsel assigned after 
they entered the courtroom.
Much evidence appeared to have been obtained by authorities through forced 
confessions of defendants under duress. Other evidence was kept from 
defense attorneys until right before the trial. Similar problems prevailed 
during the second and third trials, in which suspects were either accused 
of forming a terrorist organization with the aim of endangering the 
constitutional order or of killing police officers. A total of 52 
defendants received prison sentences of up to 20 years.
Another aspect of the FRY'S ineffective judicial system is the impunity 
that exists for certain criminal behavior. For example, the bodyguard for 
Vojislav Seselj, the Serbian radical party leader and candidate for Serbian 
president, beat up a respected human rights lawyer, Nikola Barovic, after a 
television interview debate in which Seselj and Barovic disagreed 
vehemently. Barovic received serious injuries to the face, which Seselj 
dismissed glibly as being the result of the human rights lawyer having 
"slipped on a banana peel." The courts ignored the case for several weeks 
until after Serbian elections. When the case did go to trial, the judge 
accepted a banana peel into evidence. The case was suspended. In a case 
that demonstrated relative impunity, on October 13 the first municipal 
court of Belgrade found Zivko Sandic guilty only of criminal negligence for 
pulling out a gun and shooting a prodemocracy demonstrator in the head 
during a December 1996 protest. Sandic was sentenced to only 2 years in 
prison, close to the legal minimum. In one case with a rare just ending, 
Zlatibor Jovanovic, an ethnic Serb from Kosovo, was sentenced to 11 years 
in prison for murdering an ethnic Albanian student in 1996.
The Government continues to hold some ethnic Albanians as political 
prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
Federal law gives republic ministries of the interior sole control over the 
decision to monitor potential criminal activities, a power that is 
routinely abused. It is widely believed that authorities monitor opposition 
and dissident activity, eavesdrop on conversations, read mail, and wiretap 
telephones. Although illegal under provisions of Federal and Serbian law, 
the Federal post office registers all mail from abroad, ostensibly to 
protect mail carriers from charges of theft.
Although the law includes restrictions on searches, officials often ignored 
them. In Kosovo and Sandzak, police have systematically subjected ethnic 
Albanians and Bosniak Muslims to random searches of their homes, vehicles, 
shops, and offices, asserting that they were searching for weapons. 
According to the Council for the Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms, the 
police carried out scores of raids on homes. Police also used threats and 
violence against family members of suspects and have held them as hostages 
(see Section 1.c.).
Ultranationalist local officials in Zemun encouraged the illegal eviction 
of ethnic Croats from their apartments, after which they were replaced by 
ethnic Serb refugees (see Section 5).
The Government's law requiring universal military service is enforced only 
sporadically. It was not vigorously enforced in 1997. The informal practice 
of the military has been not to call up ethnic Albanians. Of approximately 
100,000 draft evaders living abroad to avoid punishment, 40 percent were 
estimated to be ethnic Albanian. This number in part reflects the large 
number of conscription-age men in the FRY's Albanian community. The climate 
appears to be moderating, due to the cessation of hostilities in Bosnia. 
Nevertheless, leaders of Kosovo's Albanian and Sandzak's Muslim communities 
have maintained that forced compliance of these ethnic groups with 
universal military service was an attempt to induce young men to flee the 
country. According to an amnesty bill passed in 1996, young men for whom 
criminal prosecution for draft evasion had already started were granted 
amnesty.
In a related development, under a 1996 agreement with Germany, ethnic 
Albanian refugees repatriated to the FRY were not supposed to be prosecuted 
for fleeing the draft. According to the Humanitarian Law Center (HLC), 
however, many returning ethnic Albanians have faced irregular procedures on 
returning to the FRY. The HLC reported many violations by authorities 
against returned asylum seekers, including physical abuse, threats of 
imprisonment, deportation, confiscation of ID cards, and obliging persons 
to report to their local police stations on a daily basis. Returning ethnic 
Albanians and Sandzak Muslims are routinely detained on their arrival at 
local airports. In many cases FRY officials have refused to issue proper 
travel documents to children born to asylum seekers.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and the Press
Federal law provides for freedom of speech and of the press, but in 
practice the Government strongly influences much of the media. In July 
several weeks before the Serbian elections, the Milosevic regime 
temporarily closed scores of private radio and television stations 
throughout Serbia. The FRY Ministry of Transport and Telecommunications, 
which controls broadcast frequencies, worked in concert with the criminal 
and financial police to pressure independent media outlets that had not 
been able to regularize their legal status. Many broadcasters applied for 
frequencies but were left in a state of limbo by the regime. Serbia's 
broadcast laws remain murky, and licenses are not issued in any fashion 
that can remotely be described as transparent.
While the regime harassed the independent media, an HLC study showed that 
the Government violated the agreement on the presentation of political 
parties, signed before the election season. During the campaign season in 
August, state-controlled Radio and Television Serbia (RTS) openly 
campaigned for Milosevic's ruling coalition. According to HLC monitoring, 
all the other political parties received only one-quarter of the broadcast 
time allocated for political parties, while the RTS regularly opened the 
evening news broadcasts with campaign promotion pieces for the regime.
The regime lost one of its most important media outlets when it was forced 
to reverse the theft of the Belgrade municipal elections in February and 
consent to the naming of Democratic Party Leader Zoran Djindic as the 
city's mayor. Control of Belgrade's Studio B radio went from the regime to 
the opposition, and the management immediately started broadcasting 
generally balanced news programming. The regime, however, reversed the 
setback when the Zajedno coalition of the political opposition fell apart. 
Studio B's independent management was dismissed a week after the first 
round of Serbian elections on September 21, and the news board's commitment 
to journalistic independence is suspect at best. In effect, Studio B is now 
under SPO censorship.
The most striking example of media bias came in reaction to the mass 
demonstrations from November 1996 to February 1997 that followed widespread 
government theft of the municipal elections. The government-controlled 
media downplayed the size of crowds, sometimes ignoring demonstrations 
altogether--despite numbers of demonstrators in the tens of thousands. When 
state-run television did cover demonstrations, it was in an effort to label 
protesters as "hooligans" and "traitors" determined to destroy Serbia.
The same media tack was used when ethnic Albanian students staged a 
peaceful protest march in Pristina on October 1 only to be accused by the 
state-controlled media of instigating violence in a clash that saw police 
move in with truncheons, tear gas, and water cannons. The state-controlled 
media, moreover, took advantage of the protests to accuse the Belgrade 
opposition of being in league with "Albanian separatists."
Economic pressure was the usual weapon of the regime against the free 
press. For example, state-owned enterprises were dissuaded from advertising 
in independent media. One of Serbia's leading opposition papers, Nasa 
Borba, had its bank accounts blocked by the regime. Although no longer the 
persistent problem it was during the period of sanctions, the availability 
of newsprint continued to pose difficulties, especially for the independent 
media. Also, while the state-controlled press obtained newsprint at 
subsidized prices, independent publications paid substantially higher 
market prices.
Academic freedom exists in a limited fashion. Many leading academicians are 
active members of the political opposition and human rights groups, and the 
espousal of anti regime positions would likely limit their advancement. At 
the prestigious University of Belgrade, half the membership of the 
governing council that controls the university is appointed by the regime 
and half by the various faculties.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Federal and republic-level Constitutions provide for freedom of 
peaceful assembly and association; however, the Government restricted this 
right. During the early part of 1997, citizens were prevented from staging 
protest marches on numerous occasions before the regime finally restored 
the opposition's victories in several Serbian municipalities. In Kosovo the 
regime cracked down on peaceful demonstrators during their October 1 and 
late December protests, when police used tear gas and clubs, injuring 
several passersby. The regime cited the student protesters' unwillingness 
to apply for a permit from Serbian authorities. In Sandzak the Milosevic 
regime banned all outdoor rallies, even for election campaigning.
The federal and republic level Constitutions provide for freedom of 
association, but the Government restricted this right. Prior to the Serbian 
elections in the fall, officials blocked the coalition Sandzak-Dr. Rasim 
Ljajic from forming an alliance with the Kosovo-based Democratic Reform 
Party of Muslims, a move that protected regime candidates from extra 
competition.
c. Freedom of Religion
There is no state religion, but the Government gives preferential 
treatment, including access to state-run television for major religious 
events, to the Serbian Orthodox Church to which the majority of Serbs 
belong. The regime has subjected religious communities in Kosovo to 
harassment. For example, a Roman Catholic parish in Klina has the money, 
property, and permission (including up to the Supreme Court of Serbia) to 
build a church for its 6,000 member parish. However, the local chapter of 
Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia has continued to block construction. 
Other Catholic and Muslim communities in the province had similar 
experiences.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and 
Repatriation
The Constitution provides for freedom of movement, and the Government makes 
passports available to most citizens. However, many inhabitants of 
Serbia-Montenegro who were born in other parts of the former Yugoslavia, as 
well as large numbers of refugees, have not been able to establish their 
citizenship in the FRY, leaving them in a stateless limbo.
According to a report by the Humanitarian Law Center, authorities on 
several different occasions barred FRY citizens from reentering the 
country. The regime also continues to restrict the right of Albanian 
Kosovars and Sandzak Muslims to travel by holding up issuance or renewal of 
passports for an unusually long period of time and has reserved the option 
of prosecuting individuals charged previously with violating exit visa 
requirements.
FRY citizens reported difficulties at borders and occasional confiscation 
of their passports. Ethnic Albanians, Sandzak Muslims, and Vojvodina Croats 
frequently complained of harassment at border crossings. There were 
numerous reports that border guards confiscated foreign currency or 
passports from travelers as well as occasional complaints of physical 
mistreatment. The authorities generally allowed political opposition 
leaders to leave the country and return.
The Government has been very slow to issue passports to refugees. Albanian 
Kosovars also have problems with the issuance and renewal of passports and 
are sometimes called in for interrogation by state security officers before 
passports are issued. In January a new citizenship law entered into force, 
which, when fully implemented, is expected to affect adversely the rights 
of many inhabitants, including those born in other parts of the former 
Yugoslavia, refugees, and citizens who had migrated to other countries to 
work or seek asylum. The U.N. Special Rapporteur for the former Yugoslavia 
noted that the new law would give the Ministry of Interior almost complete 
control over the granting of citizenship. The Government served notice that 
it plans to limit severely the granting of citizenship to refugees from the 
conflicts in Bosnia and Croatia. The Government also plans to revise the 
eligibility status of a large number of people; refugees who have been 
granted citizenship since 1992 may stand to lose their FRY citizenship if 
they have acquired the citizenship of an ex-Yugoslav republic.
Observers in the Sandzak region also note that Muslim residents who were 
forced to flee to Bosnia from Sandzak in 1992 and 1993 may not be permitted 
to return to Serbia, particularly if they have obtained Bosnian passports 
in the interim. In violation of the Dayton Accords, Bosniak Muslims and 
Muslims from Sandzak frequently have been harassed on attempting to reenter 
Serbia after visits to Sarajevo or the federation.
Government policy toward refugee and asylum seekers continued to be uneven. 
Refugees, mostly ethnic Serbs who fled Bosnia and Croatia, are often 
treated as citizens of Serbia-Montenegro for labor and military purposes 
but are denied other rights such as employment and travel (see Section 
l.f.). Refugees were not allowed to vote in the 1997 elections in Serbia, 
although they did vote in some previous elections. The Government has 
cooperated with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to provide help for 
the more than 500,000 refugees in Serbia-Montenegro.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change 
Their Government
The three constitutions--Federal, Serbian, and Montenegrin 
Republic--provide for this right, but in practice citizens are prevented 
from exercising it by the Government's domination of the mass media and 
manipulation of the electoral process. Only Montenegro's electoral system 
has shown marked improvement, with the Government of Prime Minister 
Djukanovic holding a roundtable with the political opposition, including 
ethnic minorities, in September and welcoming observers from the OSCE well 
ahead of Milosevic's grudging invitation to outside monitors shortly before 
Serbian presidential and parliamentary elections in September.
Serbian elections were seriously flawed. In July the regime repeated its 
machinations before 1996 Federal elections and gerrymandered electoral 
districts to smooth the way for candidates in the ruling coalition, 
expanding the number of districts in Serbia from 9 to 29. Most opposition 
politicians charged that changes in the election law implemented since the 
last election, including the redrawing of districts, were designed 
specifically to favor the ruling party. The redistricting was one factor 
that compelled a number of opposition parties to boycott the elections.
Slobodan Milosevic dominates the country's political system and is 
attempting to reconsolidate institutional power at the Federal level as a 
result of his move to the Federal presidency. This precipitated a clash 
with authorities in Montenegro who are intent on protecting that republic's 
autonomy. Manipulating power within the federation based on the comparative 
size of the Serbian and Montenegrin populations and economies, Milosevic 
has been able to circumscribe the Montenegrin Government's capacity for 
independent action. As a result of Serbia's political crisis during the 
winter of 1996-97, Montenegro's then Prime Minister, Milo Djukanovic, began 
to take a steadily more assertive, reformist course. His victory in October 
presidential elections over incumbent Montenegrin president and Milosevic 
crony, Momir Bulatovic, threatened Milosevic's complete control over 
institutions of power and prompted a standoff as the internationally 
endorsed results were not validated.
No legal restrictions exist on women's participation in government and 
politics, and women are active in political organizations. However, they 
are greatly underrepresented in party and government offices, holding less 
than 10 percent of ministerial-level positions in the Serbian and Federal 
governments. An exception is the controversial Mira Markovic, wife of 
Serbian President Milosevic. She is the leading force in the neo-Communist 
United Yugoslav Left Party, through which she exerts considerable influence 
on policymakers.
No legal restrictions affect the role of minorities in government and 
politics, but ethnic Serbs and Montenegrins dominate the country's 
political leadership. Few members of other ethnic groups play any role at 
the top levels of government or the state-run economy. Ethnic Albanians in 
Serbia's Kosovo province have refused to take part in the electoral 
process, including Serbian elections in the fall. They have virtually no 
representation.
Ethnic Albanians' refusal to participate in FRY Federal and Serbian 
elections has the practical effect of increasing the political influence of 
President Milosevic and his supporters. Ultranationalist parties, which in 
the past were occasional Milosevic allies, have also taken advantage of the 
ethnic Albanian boycott to garner representation beyond their numbers. 
Ethnic Albanians in Montenegro do participate in the political process, and 
several towns in Montenegro have Albanian mayors.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental 
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
The Governments of Serbia and Montenegro formally maintain that they have 
no objection to international organizations conducting human rights 
investigations on their territories. It was the report of the OSCE on the 
fraud that characterized the municipal elections that the regime cited in 
reversing the results and ultimately recognizing the final results in 
February, some 3 months after the vote. The Serbian regime sporadically 
hindered activities and regularly rejected the findings of human rights 
groups. The Montenegrin Government's record toward outside investigations 
was much better, with the Prime Minister taking the initiative to invite 
OSCE observers well in advance of the October presidential election in the 
Republic.
A number of independent human rights organizations exist in 
Serbia-Montenegro, researching and gathering information on abuses, and 
publicizing such cases. The Belgrade-based Humanitarian Law Center and 
Center for Antiwar Action researches human rights abuses throughout 
Serbia-Montenegro and, on occasion, elsewhere in the former Yugoslavia. The 
Belgrade-based Helsinki Committee publishes studies on human rights issues 
and cooperates with the Pristina-based Helsinki Committee in monitoring 
human rights abuses in Kosovo. In Kosovo the Council for the Defense of 
Human Rights and Freedoms collects and collates data on human rights abuses 
and publishes newsletters. In the Sandzak region, two similar committees 
monitor abuses against the local Muslim population and produce 
comprehensive reports. Most of these organizations offer advice and help to 
victims of abuse.
Local human rights monitors (Serbs as well as members of ethnic minorities) 
and nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) worked under difficult 
circumstances. Sefko Alomerovic, chairman of the Helsinki Committee for 
Human Rights in Sandzak, was formally charged with libel by former FRY 
President Dobrica Cosic and his advisor Vladimir Matovic. Alomerovic had 
publicly accused Cosic and Matovic of direct complicity in the 1993 Strpci 
incident, in which some 20 men, including 19 Muslims, disappeared (see 
Section 1.f.). Alomerovic believes that the Government, and Cosic, were 
responsible for their disappearance. The case continued at year's end.
Overall, however, most observers say that the situation improved in 1997, 
with slightly less overt obstruction by the Government of human rights 
NGO's. One problem continues to be government foot-dragging in issuing 
visas to people coming to Yugoslavia on human rights matters. After past 
problems obtaining a visa, the U.N. Special Rapporteur for the former 
Yugoslavia visited Serbia-Montenegro, including Pristina, twice in 1997. 
During the year, the International Committee of the Red Cross was allowed 
to conduct prison visits in Kosovo, but its work was seriously obstructed 
with respect to visiting the ethnic Albanians charged with 
terrorist-related activities who went on trial beginning in the spring.
However, the authorities also refused numerous approaches by OSCE 
representatives to allow the reintroduction of the OSCE long-duration 
missions into Kosovo, Vojvodina, and Sandzak, maintaining that the FRY must 
first be "reinstated" in the OSCE.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability, 
Language, or Social Status
While Federal and republic laws provide for equal rights for all citizens, 
regardless of ethnic group, religion, language, or social status, and 
prohibit discrimination against women, in reality the legal system provides 
little protection to such groups.
Women
The traditionally high level of domestic violence persisted. The few 
official agencies dedicated to coping with family violence have inadequate 
resources and are limited in their options by social pressure to keep 
families together at all costs. Few victims of spousal abuse ever file 
complaints with authorities. The Center for Autonomous Women's Rights 
offers a rape crisis and spousal abuse hot line, as well as sponsoring a 
number of self-help groups. The Center also offered help to refugee women, 
many of whom experienced extreme abuse or rape during the conflict in the 
former Yugoslavia.
Women do not enjoy status equal to men in the FRY, and relatively few women 
obtain upper level management positions in commerce.
Traditional patriarchal ideas of gender roles, which hold that women should 
be subservient to the male members of their family, have long subjected 
women to discrimination. In some rural areas, particularly among minority 
communities, women are little more than serfs without the ability to 
exercise their right to control property and children. Women in the FRY, 
however, legally are entitled to equal pay for equal work and are granted 
maternity leave for 1 year, with an additional 6 months available. Women 
are active in political and human rights organizations. Women's rights 
groups continue to operate with little or no official acknowledgment.
Children
The state attempts to meet the health and educational needs of children. 
The educational system provides 8 years of mandatory schooling.
The current division of Kosovo into parallel administrative systems has 
resulted in Serb and Albanian Kosovar elementary age children being taught 
in separate areas of divided schools, or attending classes in shifts. Older 
Albanian Kosovar children attend school in private homes. The quality of 
the education is thus uneven, and the tension and division of society in 
general has been replicated to the detriment of the children.
An agreement negotiated under the auspices of the Rome-based Sant-Egidio 
community and signed in 1996 by President Milosevic and Dr. Ibrahim Rugova, 
the leader of the Democratic League of Kosovo, seeks to resolve the 
division of the educational system and lend impetus to efforts to normalize 
the situation within Kosovo. No progress was apparent on implementation of 
the accord over a year later, however, prompting a student protest movement 
in Kosovo (see Section 2.b.). Intransigence in implementing the agreement 
was detected on both sides.
Economic distress, due primarily to the Government's total mismanagement, 
has spilled over into the health care system, adversely affecting children. 
In Kosovo the health situation for children remained particularly poor. 
Humanitarian aid officials blamed the high rate of infant and childhood 
mortality, as well as increasing epidemics of preventable diseases, 
primarily on poverty that led to malnutrition and poor hygiene and to the 
deterioration of public sanitation. Ethnic minorities in some cases fear 
Serb state-run medical facilities, which results in a low rate of 
immunization and a reluctance to seek timely medical attention. Significant 
cooperation between Serbian medical authorities and ethnic Albanian-run 
clinics in Kosovo on a polio vaccination campaign represented a hopeful 
development. A similar drive took place in Sandzak for Muslim children.
There is no societal pattern of abuse against children.
People With Disabilities
Facilities for people with disabilities are inadequate, but the Government 
has made some effort to address the problem. The law prohibits 
discrimination against persons with disabilities in employment, education, 
or in the provision of other state services. The law mandates access to new 
official buildings, and the Government enforces these provisions in 
practice.
Religious Minorities
Religion and ethnicity are so closely intertwined as to be inseparable. 
Serious discrimination against, and harassment of, religious minorities 
continued, especially in the Kosovo and Sandzak regions. Violence against 
the Catholic minority in Vojvodina, largely made up of ethnic Hungarians 
and Croats, has also been reported.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
There were credible reports that Muslims and ethnic Albanians continued to 
be driven from their homes or fired from their jobs on the basis of 
religion or ethnicity. Other ethnic minorities, including ethnic Hungarians 
in Vojvodina, also allege discrimination. In Zemun the Belgrade Helsinki 
Committee office identified at least three instances where the city 
government, under ultranationalist mayor Vojislav Seselj, encouraged the 
illegal eviction of ethnic Croats from their apartments, after which they 
were replaced by ethnic Serb refugees.
The Romani population is generally tolerated, and there is no official 
discrimination. Roma have the right to vote, and there are two small Romani 
parties. However, prejudice against Roma is widespread. Skinheads murdered 
a Roma boy in Belgrade in October. Local authorities often ignore or 
condone societal intimidation of the Roma community.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
All workers except military and police personnel have the legal right to 
join or form unions. Unions are either official (government affiliated) or 
independent. The total labor force is approximately 2.3 million. The 
Government-controlled Alliance of Independent Labor Unions (Samostalnost) 
claims 1.8 million members but probably numbers closer to 1 million. The 
largest independent union is the United Branch Independent Labor Unions 
(Nezavisnost), which numbers 157,000 members. Most other independent unions 
are sector-specific, for example, the Independent Union of Bank Employees 
(12,000 members). Due to the poor state of the economy, over one-half of 
union workers are on long-term mandatory leave from their firms pending 
increases in production. The independent unions, while active in recruiting 
new members, have not yet reached the size needed to enable countrywide 
strikes that would force employers to provide concessions on workers' 
rights. The independent unions also claim that the Government has managed 
to prevent effective recruiting through a number of tactics, including 
preventing the busing of workers to strikes, threatening the job security 
of members, and failing to grant visas to foreign visitors supporting 
independent unions. Some foreign union organizers managed to secure visas 
during the year after long delays.
The largely splintered approach of the independent unions left them little 
to show in terms of increased wages or improved working conditions. The 
Nezavisnost union gained new members as a result of its well-organized and 
tough bargaining positions during strikes of teachers and health workers in 
the spring. The Samostalnost (official) union lost credibility with some of 
its members because it ultimately accommodated the Government position on 
these strikes.
The ability of unions to affiliate internationally remains constrained.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
While this right is provided for under law, collective bargaining remains 
at a rudimentary level of development. Individual unions tend to be very 
narrow and pragmatic in their aims, unable to join with unions in other 
sectors to bargain for common purposes. The history of trade unionism in 
the country has centered not on bargaining for the collective needs of all 
workers but rather for the specific needs of a given group of workers. 
Thus, coal workers, teachers, health workers, and electric power industry 
employees have been ineffective in finding common denominators (e.g., job 
security guarantees, minimum safety standards, universal workers' benefits, 
etc.) on which to negotiate. The overall result is a highly fragmented 
labor structure composed of workers who relate to the needs of their 
individual union but rarely to those of other workers. Additionally, job 
security fears, which stem from the high rate of unemployment, limited 
workers' militancy. The massive antigovernment demonstrations that followed 
the November 1996 elections appear to have helped embolden workers to stand 
up to the Government in strike situations.
The Government is still seeking to develop free trade zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
Forced labor, including that performed by children, is prohibited by law 
and is not known to occur.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The minimum age for employment is 16 years, although in villages and 
farming communities it is not unusual to find younger children at work 
assisting their families. With an actual unemployment rate (registered 
unemployed plus redundant workers who show up at the workplace but perform 
only minimal work) in excess of 60 percent, real employment opportunities 
for children are nonexistent. Forced and bonded labor by children is 
prohibited by law and is not known to occur (see Section 6.c). Children 
can, however, be found in a variety of unofficial "retail" jobs, typically 
washing car windows or selling small items such as cigarettes.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
Large government enterprises, including all the major banks, industrial, 
and trading companies generally observe minimum wage standards. The current 
monthly minimum wage is approximately $42 to $84 (250 to 500 Din). This 
figure, however, is roughly comparable to unemployment benefits and (at 
least theoretically) is paid to workers who have been placed in a mandatory 
leave status. The actual minimum wage is at the low end of the range of 
average net salaries, $92 to $108 (600 to 700 Din). The minimum wage is 
insufficient to meet basic needs. The cost of food and utilities alone for 
a family of four is estimated to be $231 (1,500 Din) per month. Private 
enterprises use the minimum wages as a guide but tend to pay somewhat 
higher average wages.
Reports of sweatshops operating in the country are rare, although some 
privately-owned textile factories operate in very poor conditions. The 
official workweek, listed as 40 hours, had little meaning in an economy 
with massive underemployment and unemployment. Neither employers nor 
employees tended to give high priority to enforcement of established 
occupational safety and health regulations, focusing their efforts instead 
on economic survival. In light of the competition for employment, and the 
high degree of government control over the economy, workers are not free to 
leave hazardous work situations without risking loss of employment.
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