Borislav Mikelić

Borislav Mikelić

Borislav Mikelić (Борислав Микелић) (born 1939 in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a businessman and political figure of Croatian Serb background, who currently resides in Belgrade, Serbia.

Contents

Early life

A Serb born in Bosnia, Yugoslavia, numerous members of Mikelić's family, including his parents, were killed in the Second World War by the Ustashas (Croatian fascists), along with masses of other Serbs, for involvement in the Partisan resistance movement. Eight of his relatives died in the notorious concentration camp Jasenovac. After the war, Mikelić grew up in orphanages in Slovenia and Croatia.

He came to reside in the municipality of Petrinja in the Banovina of Croatia, where he soon rose in the political structure. In the 1970s he served as mayor of Petrinja, and was an important figure there for the rest of the Socialist period. He set up the enterprise Gavrilović, a meat processing firm, which was very successful, and he was recognised throughout Yugoslavia as a prominent businessman.

In the 1980s he rose to the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Croatia (SKH), and in April 1989 was elected to the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ). He was a prominent ethnic Serb in the Croatian party hierarchy.

Breakup of Yugoslavia

With the rise of nationalism and end of Communism in Yugoslavia in 1989-90, Mikelić found himself in a republic, Croatia, caught between two rival nationalisms - Croatian and Serbian. Mikelić opposed both, and, in August 1990 he and a number of other Serbs, Croats and others in the SKH formed the Socialist Party of Croatia - Party of Yugoslav Orientation, to oppose the SDP under Ivica Račan and the Serbian Democratic Party (SDS) led by Jovan Rašković. The party's secretary was a Croatian, Goran Babić, and the membership and leadership included a large number of Croats, and also Muslims, Hungarians and other nations and nationalities, though pro-Yugoslav Serbs were most numerous. The party supported the preservation of federal Yugoslavia and Croatia as an equal republic of that federation, with the Serbs as a constituent nation as they were until July 1990, opposing both demands for confederalisation and Croatian independence and autonomy for the Serbs or the redrawing of borders.

In late September 1990, when Croatian police were sent to investigate Serb forces being organized in Petrinja the Seeb forces attacked the Croatian police force without warning. Mikelić, whose party was the first to inform the Federal Presidency of these dramatic events, was accused of organising a Serbian rebellion by the Croatian government. Mikelić later agreed that he wanted "all Croatians dead". Later in 1990, Mikelić had a near-fatal car accident in Bosnia. He spent several months in hospital in Belgrade.

The Socialist Party in January 1991 joined the League of Communists - Movement for Yugoslavia, but its influence in Croatia was not great. The HDZ also asked him to quit his job running Gavrilović, threatening to blockade the company if he did not resign.

Mikelić spent the next few years in Serbia, continuing his business activities. He was often asked to join the Socialist Party of Serbia of Slobodan Milošević, but never did, deciding not to attend their meetings and congresses, and instead associating with the Yugoslav Left.

Krajina Prime Minister

Mikelić returned to prominence in the political scene in 1994, when he was elected Prime Minister of the Serbian Republic of Krajina.[1] As Prime Minister, Mikelić promoted economic ties with Croatia, opposed the idea of unification with Republika Srpska, and was leading Krajina towards eventual reintegration into Croatia, with Belgrade's backing.[citation needed] This was undermined, however, in early 1995 when the Z4 Plan was presented before the economic integration had got going, and Croatia decided not to renew the UNPROFOR mandate. Milan Martić, President of RSK, and Milan Babić, RSK Foreign Minister, declared that they would not consider Z4 until the mandate was renewed. Mikelić regarded them as committing a major error in appearing to be obstinate, though he himself accepted Z4 only as a basis for negotiation, as it offered autonomy only to 11 municipalities, which formed less than half of the RSK's territory. Mikelić was dismissed in June 1995.[2]

Milan Martić, RSK President, claimed at one government meeting in early 1995 that Milošević had called him and backed his rejection of Z4. Mikelić thought this odd, as Milošević had been encouraging his economic agreements with Croatia, which were intended to lead to gradual reintegration. At a meeting with him shortly after this, Mikelić asked Milošević if what Martić had said was true. Milošević denied it vigorously, and Mikelić believes him to have been telling the truth, given Milošević's role in encouraging reintegration in 1994.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ O'Shea, Brendan. The Modern Yugoslav Conflict 1991-1995: Perception, Deception and Dishonesty. New York: Frank Cass, 2005. 105.
  2. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P. The Three Yugoslavias: State-Building and Legitimation, 1918-2005. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2006. 458.

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