Mafia and the State
LA PIOVRA (THE OCTOPUS)
By Zoran Janic
Nebojsa Covic’s name has been popping up every now and
then over years – either in the context of allegations of crime and
plunder, under-the-counter dealings or complicity in Zoran Djindjic’s
assassination. This was the case not long ago when an episode of the TV
B92 series “Patriotic Plunder” reported colossal misconduct that had
literally swallowed billions of tax-payers’ Euros meant as assistance to
Kosovo Serbs at the time Covic was in charge of distribution of these
moneys. What marks all these affairs is that Covic’s name is regularly
connected not only with the names of some disputable businessmen and
high-ranking officials of the State Security, but also hit men and
criminals – hardly a public servant’s acquaintances, let alone business
associates. Indicatively and as a rule, these affairs are being hushed
up although all the traces lead toward a “para-state” criminal zone with
apparent tentacles of the octopus the Italians call “La Piovra,” meaning
the mafia.
Covic’s name does not pop up by chance only: just a
brief overview of some of the latest affairs placing him in the public
eye testifies of his connections with “The Octopus.” So, for instance,
in the summer of 2011 the media broke the news that Milos Simovic of the
Zemun Clan had given the Special Prosecution the names of high
governmental officials supporting Zoran Djindjic’s assassins. Nebojsa
Covic was on the top of this list. Then, when it came to the
investigation in the “Agrobanka” affair this October the media reported
that Covic’s company, “FMP,” had taken a 25-million-Euro loan from the
said bank. Covic confirmed the information about the loan but denied the
amount. Finally, Covic appeared in the “Insider” show, trying to answer
some embarrassing questions about the way his Coordination Center had
spent the money from the budget for Kosovo. He claimed he was innocent,
worked by the book and that nothing had been disputable in this matter.
However, only the day later when papers run the breaking news about his
upcoming arrest, he turned up at TV Pink, all out of breath (despite
some problems he had with his neck bones and should have rested as
advised by his doctors) to tell the anchor the story he had learned by
heart: he said he knew everything about the plunder, who was stealing
and when, he claimed the had informed about it the government, argued
that the actual thieves wanted him arrested now, and so on and so on.
Vice-Premier Aleksandar Vucic responded immediately saying that “the
arrest of Nebojsa Covic was not on the agenda.”
What frightened Vucic so much that he gave the
statement actually confirming that Covic was untouchable? Who’s the
person that is untouchable to the law and who stands behind him? Who’s
the man the media under the control of Democratic Party accuse of
complicity in the party leader’s assassination but who is shortly after,
with the helping hand from the presidential candidate from the same
party, appointed the chairman of management board of the Red Star
basketball club – an act that practically put an end to the story of his
complicity in the murder? Who’s the man who had officially left politics
and only a couple of years later got a 25-million-Euro loan from a
state-run bank, which he never paid back, while the new regime is
arresting people who owe 5,000 Euros? Who’s the man who had been the
director of a state-run enterprise at the time people were paid salaries
of 10-20 German marks but who had managed to buy off the same
tens-of-million-Euro-worth enterprise out of his own pocket and no one
questioned his about it?
Before trying to answer these questions let’s take a
look at the past, more precisely at March 12, 2003, the day of Premier
Djindjic’s assassination.
West and Zemun Clan
On that very day and only a couple of hours after the
assassination, British Ambassador Charles Crawford and US Ambassador
William Montgomery initiated a meeting with Serbian governmental
officials to discuss the new, dramatic circumstances. The beheaded
Serbian government badly needed the assistance of the West in those
moments. But things these officials learned from Western diplomats at
the meeting could hardly be labeled welcome and well-intentioned:
namely, as it turned out, the British and the Americans wanted to see
Nebojsa Covic as the new premier! Their choice was strange the more so
since we know now that heads of the Zemun Clan (Spasojevic, Legija et
al.) had the same in mind. What they also had in mind was a
concentration government with Nebojsa Covic at its helm. So, let’s
return to the question posed above: who’s, after all, that politician
who so ideally combines diplomatic aspirations of the West and criminal
plans of the Zemun Clan?
A Brief Political Biography
Formerly a member of the communist nomenklatura and
then Milosevic’s protégé, Covic’s career rocketed in wartime from a
member of the City Council to the Mayor of Belgrade and member of the
Executive Board of the Socialist Party of Serbia /SPS/. He was the head
of the December 1992 election campaign in Belgrade that will be
remembered by the slogan “We are all Socialists this way or another.” He
was at the peak of his power at the time: seen as the “second best” and
Milosevic’s heir. However, he walked out of SPS later on and founded his
own political party, Democratic Alternative /DA/. After the change of
the regime in 2000 he became the Vice-Premier and the Head of the
Coordination Center for Kosovo and Metohija. For Srpska Rec magazine,
Covic is “a unique phenomenon at the Serbian political scene” being a
“turncoat who had been in highest offices of as many as three regimes.”
Reporters of Danas daily perceive Covic as “a political technocrat freed
of ideological dogmas, Serbia is chronically short of.” As for a
columnist for Vreme weekly, Covic mostly resembles Djilas in the
positive sense by “the manner in which he deals in politics…and connects
business with politics.” As the man in charge and one of major actors of
the so-called pacification of the crisis in South Serbia in Djidjic’s
cabinet in 2001, Covic was assigned a similar post by the cabinet of
Vojislav Kostunica in 2005. When his presidential candidacy in 2004
failed, Covic began to move gradually toward political margins: in 2010
he closed down his party, withdrew from political life and completely
turned to management of his “FMP” company and, as of last year, to
chairmanship of the Red Star basketball club.
History Repeats Itself
The same as in May 2003 he complained to the media
that his enemies in the government were preparing his arrest in the
Saber operation staged in the aftermath of Premier Djindjic’s
assassination, now, after initial episodes of the “Insider” show at TV
B92 he complains of being “framed.” He even speaks of a possible date
for his arrest. The same as in May 2003, the general public is being
consequently alarmed that some innocent people may be arrested for
political reasons. In the aftermath of Zoran Djindjic’s assassination
such statements were coming from exactly the same people whose names
were, later on, referred to in the charge pressed by lawyer Srdja
Popovic and the Djindjic family: Vojislav Kostunica, Velimir Ilic and,
like today, Nebojsa Covic. There are clear indications of Covic’s
involvement in the assassination of Zoran Djindjic. However, the court
simply refused to consider the. Though this is a common knowledge, let’s
take a look at these indications once again:
1) In November 2006, Dejan /Bugsy/ Milenkovic, the
fourth cooperating witness in the trial for the Djindjic assassination,
told the Special Court that Vojislav Seselj, leader of Serb Radical
Party, and Nebojsa Covic, former vice-premier, had been informed about
the plan. “Ulemek /Legija/ told Dusan /Spasojevic/ that Covic supported
them and to try to win over Seselj as well. This is what Dusan told
Milos Simovic and me sometime on February 1-10, 2003 in the apartment in
the Vojvoda Stepa Street,” said Bugsy.
2) The statement fugitive Milos Simovic gave to the
Prosecution for Organized Crime when arrested in the summer of 2011 only
confirms Bugsy’s testimony. The murder was ordered by “Coki,” as they
nicknamed Covic. “He /Legija/ blotted the Premier’s picture in the
papers. He said Coki asked him to do this at a meeting…He called his the
Blind Man /Covic wears glasses/ but wrote down his full name by the
picture,” said Simovic. To this Covic responded in the media saying, “If
that’s really what lawyer Srdja Popovic claims, he surely must have
ordered Milos Simovic to give such a statement.”
3) In May 2005, Goran Petrovic, former head of the
Department of State Security, testified in the case of Djindjic
assassination that Dragoljub Micunovic and Nebojsa Covic silently
supported the protest of the Red Berets in November 2001. “They were not
actually shaking their hands and hugging them on the bridge /blocked for
the purpose/ but were expressing their support through Goran /Guri/
Radosavljavic /commander of the Gendarmerie/ and so as to remain
anonymous,” said Petrovic.
4) Over the same trial, Zoran Mijatovic, another
former head of the Department of State Security /who had commanded the
operation for the arrest of Slobodan Milosevic/ testified that Covic had
taken “Legija with him to South Serbia claiming he needed him over
there” even though Milorad /Legija/ Lukovic had already been suspended
from the police as the main suspect of Djindjic’s assassination.
5) In his testimony before the Special Court, Vladimir
Popovic said, “Politicians who were in touch with the Unit for Special
Operations at the time are well-known. Some of them were in DOS
/Democratic Opposition of Serbia/ such as Dragoljub Micunovic and
Nebojsa Covic.”
6) In his memoirs “My Conflict with the Past,” Cedomir
Jovanovic, leader of Liberal Democratic Party and former vice-premier,
speaks of the beginning of the Saber operation. “Nebojsa Covic asked me
to meet him in the City Hall. He looked tense and nervous, but somehow
differently from the others present at the moment. I told him I could
meet with him only in the afternoon. We met the next morning. He was
sitting in a big office that made him look smaller. As if he wanted to
compensate his low stature with square meters. He went straight to the
point. ‘Are you going to arrest me?” he asked. There was no need for him
to explain his question. I knew he did not refer to the fact that back
in 2001 his name popped up in the police investigation into organized
crime. On the eve of the assassination when preparations for the arrest
of Legija and the Zemun Clan were almost over, Covic had contacts with
them we knew nothing about except that they were frequent. I replied
with a question myself, ‘And why are you asking me this?’.”
7) At the time the Saber operation was in full swing,
Velimir Ilic, leader of New Serbia, sent a message to Police Minister
Mihajlovic through Ljubodrag Grbic, MP, saying that he feared his family
was in danger. According to him, in late February (two weeks before the
assassination) three Legija’s men showed at his doorstep with a letter
from their commander (Legija was circulating this letter to other party
leaders, politicians and ambassadors). The tone of the letter clearly
indicated that Legija was after something dangerous. So Ilic turned to
Nebojsa Covic who told him not to worry given that “he /Covic/ controls
Legija and his people.” “Legija is my boy,” he said.
(Covic replied in the press, “Had Velja agreed to
testify, they would try to arrest me in the Saber operation and then go
after Kostunica too.”)
Seselj’s Testimony before ICTY
Seselj’s name was on the 37th place on the list of 45
persons the police and the District Prosecution charged with organizing
the assassination of Zoran Djindjic. Seselj was questioned by the end of
the investigation, on August 4-5, in the ICTY detention unit in
Scheveningen. Two weeks later, Special Prosecutor Jovan Prijic completed
the indictment – but Seselj’s name was not in it.
Asked about the accomplices in the escape of Zeljko
/Maka/ Maksimovic, charged with murder of Police General Bosko Buha,
Seselj said, “Zeljko /Maka/ Maksimovic was close to Covic and his
circle, and was also connected with some other politicians. I’ve
explained this in my book Nebojsa Covic, the Mafia Puddle. On some
300-odd pages I told all I knew about Covic’s mafia affairs and his
hookup with this mafia clan.” When an investigator asked him, “Is it
true that Nebojsa Covic talked to Zeljko Skrba to liquidate you?” Seselj
replied, “Yes, it is, and the police have tape-recorded everything. I
think this is why Skrba was executed – to cover up the traces. The
police have recorded that Skrba had suggested by execution to Covic and
that Covic told him to wait for a while, ‘the time was not ripe yet.’.”
In November 2002, Seselj accused Covic of helping Misa
Omega /Milomir Joksimovic/ and “his pals from Surcin to win the tender
for asphalting the roads in South Serbia.”
Covic’s Ties with the Mafia Part of “The Octopus”
A research conducted by the Civilian Institute for
Democracy and Security confirms Seselj’s allegations about Covic’s ties
with mafia. “Zeljko /Maka/ Maksimovic was in touch with Skrba, a
criminal from Serb Sarajevo. Whenever in Belgrade, Skrba went to FMP,
Covic’s company. He was in daily touch with Baja Zivanovic, called The
Blue, from the Cukarica neighborhood, a criminal close to Arkan, who was
Covic’s business associate,” quotes the report. “Beside Andrija
Draskovic, The Blue, was the only one left alive and at large after the
Arkan killing affair, and he was Covic’s best friend at the same time.
Just before October 5 The Blue sent Maka to watch over Covic, especially
after the abduction of Milija Babovic.”
Covic’s Malversations
Covic’s entire career as a businessman is marked by
plunder, malversation and all sorts of under-the-counter dealings and
suspicious transactions he had never been called to account for. Several
times when he neared the dangerous edge there was always someone or
something to save his neck at the eleventh hour: a tentacle of the
octopus that would pull out at a danger signal. Except for unusual
indifference of the media to dig deeper into the above-mentioned
question – how was it possible at all for Covic to take over the
state-run “Proleter” company and turn it into his private “FMP Trade?” –
the papers run a series of stories about his suspicious and illegal
dealings.
At the time the former YPA was fighting in the Vukovar
area, Covic, as an outstanding SPS official, transported the machinery
of the Vukovar tin can factory to his factory in Zeleznik. Apart from
these machines, tens of oil tanks from the Vukovar battlefield ended up
in the yard of his factory (“For our Serb brothers, would they need
them,” he used to explain to his workers).
Thanks to his close ties with the then President
Slobodan Milosevic, Covic signed contracts with the Army of Yugoslavia
/VJ/ according to which he was charging the Army five times the actual
price of white tine per ton in the period of three years. It was only
years later that the Army inspection decided that his company had thus
caused a three-million-dollar loss to their budget (besides, because of
poor quality of tin cans produced by his “FMP,” 700 tons of canned food
from war reserves had to be destroyed).
The very fact that despite having largely damaged the
military budget Covic won in the next tender the Army called in 1999
because Milosevic himself intervened on his behalf – moreover, demanding
the Army to directly deal with Covic’s company – is a circumstantial
evidence of his affiliation with “The Octopus.” Given that all this
happened after Covic’s expulsion from SPS it is obvious that “The
Octopus” had some other plans for him, including the possibility of
October 5. And, indeed, Covic’s party was represented in the new,
democratic government – and, indeed, as a tentacle of “The Octopus.”
(This is exactly why a court of law should carefully examine –
chronologically and genealogically – Covic’s connections. So far the
general public could have only guessed at bosses of the “Octopus” –
Branko Krga, Jovica Stanisic, Borislav Milosevic, etc. Given that in the
Covic case the evidence is at hand, investigators could easily learn the
names of the rest; it is high time to take the wraps off this
structure.).
In the same period and in his capacity as the
president of the City Council Covic took a 200,000-German mark loan from
the infamous banker Jezdimir Vasiljevic and his “Jugoskandik.” When the
scandal with the bank broke he promised to return the moneys to voters
but never did. In the Zeleznik settlement of the Cukarica municipality
Covic build a sports hall from the city budget – the sports hall that
was later on appropriated by his “FMP Zeleznik” basketball club.
Kosovo: A Closed Circle
In 2003 in his capacity as vice-premier of the
transitional government and coordinator of the governmental commission
for settlement of the situation in municipalities of Presevo, Bujanovac
and Medvedja, Covic crossed swords with Momcilo Trajkovic, president of
the Committee for Kosovo and Metohija. At the meeting of the Committee
Trajkovic demanded a discussion on financial dealings of the
Coordination Center (“That was the first through analysis of the
Coordination Center’s performance since its establishment,” he said
later on). In turn, Covic demanded that Trajkovic should be deposed.
Through the media Trajkovic insisted on the Center’s financial report,
accusing Covic of financial arbitrariness and even of buying apartments
to some people from the Center’s budget.
So Covic turned to Premier Zivkovic asking him not to
place the financial report of the Coordination Center on parliamentary
agenda. When Zivkovic turned him down, Covic withdrew his MPs (including
Nada Kolundzija, his time-tested associate). Since this happened at the
time when Kori Udovicki of DS was appointed the Governor of the Central
Bank, DOS had insufficient number of MPs, all of which culminated in the
so-called Bodrum scandal that would trigger off the collapse of the
Zivkovic cabinet.
Schizoid Public Opinion
Despite undisputable evidence and clear indications of
Covic’s involvement in the plan for Premier Djindjic’s assassination,
contrary to common sense and regardless of the charges pressed by the
Djindjic family and the fact that they are duty-bound to enforce the
law, state institutions have been behaving as if everything was in
perfect order. It never occurred either to Prosecutor Miljko
Radosavljevic or the ruling Democratic Party /DS/ to summon Covic for
investigation. Instead they were sending him invitations of sorts
through Blic and Press dailies (as in the case of Vojislav Kostunica).
State institutions were conspicuously silent about initial and revised
criminal charges pressed by lawyer Popovic, while Covic was obviously
under the wing of some circles in DS (Djilas and other high officials in
the management of the Red Star club). The rest – Boris Tadic and Miki
Rakic, head of his office – claimed they had prepared the terrain for
Covic’s arrest but had to wait till the elections were over before
arresting him (and since they lost the elections everything went down
the drain). At the same time, Nada Kolundzija, Covic’s right-hand woman
from DA and then the spokeswoman for DS, claimed she was after “having
all the facts about Djindjic’s murder revealed.” It was only logical,
however, that she would do everything to protect her chief and mentor.
All these unnatural ties – between the mafia and the
state, the media and security services – literally keep the public
opinion in Serbia in a schizoid state. The power of the state that
controls the public space is not manifested in brutal force but in an
all-inclusive control, which taboos the causes and relativizes the
consequences: therefore, though kept posted about everything and all and
sundry, citizens actually expect instructions from some higher level
that will decide what’s true and what’s not.
And what was true yesterday needs not be true today.
So induced schizophrenia locks society in the state of permanently
divided consciousness – the state in which everyone knows everything but
actually knows nothing. This is why, for instance, we still do not know
who killed soldiers in the Topcider barracks (although we know), how
come that documents on bombardment of RTS are not available at the
Ministry of Defense (although we know they are), who murdered
journalists Slavko Curuvija and Dada Vujasinovic (although the rumor has
it the contrary), or did Justice Simeunovic kill himself or was killed
(although we know that he was killed by security services). This is why
no one touches on the counter-intelligence service /KOS/ and the
military-security agency /VBA/ and this is why no one from the state
security agency /DB/ has not been called to account yet.
In the badly organized state with metastasized relicts
of Stalinist control of the society, the public opinion reasonably
perceives Aleksandar Vucic, vice-premier and coordinator of security
services, as the pivot of social power. He has a unique opportunity to
do things no one has done before – of course, should he dare open the
cases of Beko, Miskovic, Peconi, Lazarevic, Hamovic et al., confront the
biggest gang of drug dealers in Europe that lives and works in peace in
Jagodina, and should he manage to break hookups between security
services (hit men and their financiers) and tear apart this huge octopus
of death, which chokes Serbia and has Covic a major tentacle. Serbia is
a very sick society, a society at its deathbed: the question is whether
a chronically sick organ such as Vucic’s Serb Progressive Party /SNS/
could heal in any way an even sicker organism. By medical statistics
this is possible – but only minimally or as an exception to the rule. |