Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2004-09-16-Speech-4-125"

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"en.20040916.6.4-125"2
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"Mr President after a string of violent conflicts in the states of former Yugoslavia between 1992 and 2001, everyone hoped that the survivors would co-exist peacefully. Unfortunately in Vojvodina, where citizens were subjected to bombing in what fell short of an ethnic war, non-Serbs are once again being tormented by those around them. Today, we will once again express our horror at the situation and call for peace and reconciliation. However, we will not solve this problem merely by committing our condemnations and moral indignation to paper. If that is the only thing we do, then I fear that we will have to repeat pertinent resolutions of this kind again and again, because they are not being heard by the people who matter. Violence and intimidation by ordinary citizens are evident wherever there is a predominant feeling that many of their own people are shut out by state borders, while many others who used to be considered to be the occupiers, are left behind in the people’s own country. In Serbian public opinion, the prevalent view is that, in terms of government, the Serbian inhabitants of the north and east of Bosnia and of the north of Kosovo are wrongfully cut off from the home country, and that for that reason, the areas that are recognised as Serbian territory should be made completely Serbian. Anyone who opposes this view is considered an enemy and is tarred with the same brush as the former Turkish and German occupiers. Political parties identifying with this feeling, shared by many members of the public, can count on a lot of votes, because they have the nerve to do what the public want. On the map of 1856, which is displayed on the second floor of this building, anyone can see how ethnically divided Vojvodina was between Hungarians, Croats, Germans, Slovaks, Romanians and Serbs at the time. Since the 1918 division, when it became part of Serbia, it has continually become more Serbian and other groups have moved away or have been driven out. Since 1989, the autonomy for the large Hungarian-speaking minority has also been driven back considerably. The recent riots are part and parcel of this long-term development. Without clear and broadly based agreements on linguistic rights, autonomy and administrative borders, it is difficult to avoid future outbursts of ethnic hatred in and around Serbia. We should therefore do more than merely adopt this resolution, although it is a step in the right direction."@en1
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