The Rule of the Fan Clubs-Political Mafia
The majority terrorizes common sense
By Bojan Tončić
It’s hard to believe that highest officials’ infantile
devotion to their favorite clubs in the only reason why these
ball-playing firms are so privileged over here. Even if the hookup
between high governmental officials and the masked crime of football
clubs cannot be proved beyond doubt, everyone is witness to their brutal
assaults at the state budget, their murky plans for freeing robbers from
tax paying, the Premier and the Vice-Premier doing what they shouldn’t
be doing and what they are not paid for. Everyone sees them boasting
about their writing skills and unbiased attitudes towards the two
biggest companies of thieves, Red Star and Partizan football clubs.
The scenes that deeply humiliated citizens of Serbia
associated the atmosphere of the rise of fascism in Mann’s Mario and the
Magician. As if it was not enough to broadcast live a notorious criminal
demonstrating violence before the eyes of the regime – only a day later
decent people had to swallow up an extra serving of insults and listen
to a hooligan’s lecture in ethics – his side of the story supposed to
prove that what everyone saw actually never happened.
The main character here is ex-convict Miloš
Radisavljević Kimi, the leader of the organized crime fan club of
Partizan, Alcatraz. By snatching the captain’s band from the arm of
football player Marko Šćepović when Serbia’s champions suffered defeat
from the Bulgarian team, Ludogorec, in Belgrade (August 6) he
demonstrated in a live broadcast who the real boss of the club and power
in Serbia was. Millions watched the obscure show of a press conference
when the football player, shivering and obviously blackmailed, said that
he had voluntarily given over his captain’s band, which, he claimed, had
nothing to do with last year’s slapping in the face of his colleague
Lazar Marković.
This evidenced once again how powerful was the
organized crime that banked on its close ties with circles in politics,
judiciary and the government. This evidenced again how unrestrained its
violence could be, how governmental institutions withdrew when faced
with its arrogance and how deep its hatred for those different was.
These gangs’ racism and homophobia – which are far from being naïve –
are nevertheless just ornamental in large-scale criminal dealings.
“People are left under the impression that has nothing
to do with what actually happened. I was not aggressive for a single
moment. True, I did jump a fence – as I usually do after matches – to
collect flags and other choreography, but I did not take off his band.
We are pals and that was not an act of violence. Everybody saw what
happened. Why papers raise a hue and cry about this, why don’t they
write about other things? I am telling you once again – I did not take
off his band, he handed it over to me,” Radisavljević told the press.
Dimension of a Frightened Tyson
Šćepović just managed to stammer that he had felt
obliged to give over his band to fans. “A stink about this case was
created without any reason at all. This had nothing to do with the case
of Lazar Marković, that’s quite a different dimension. I never felt
threatened,” said Partisan’s lineman shivering. What gave everything
even more grotesque proportions was bully Šćepović in a T-shirt with the
picture of legendary boxing champion Mike Tyson.
Radisavljević and Šćepović were interrogated in the
police station. According to unofficial sources, they repeated
everything they had told the press conference.
Branko Ružić, the vice-president of Partizan and the
vice-president of the Socialist Party of Serbia (in charge of the
Ministry of the Interior) said spookily, “Of course it’s not normal when
fans rush into the terrain or jump the fence. However, as some of them
are flirting with certain politicians they feel free to do anything. I
am on good terms with ‘gravediggers’ /a nickname for Partisan’s fans/
but one should differentiate true fans from those earning their living
at stadiums. I think that Kimi truly loves Partizan and can be talked
into avoiding such situations. But I will never be tolerant to those who
would not realize that the interest of the club is something far beyond
their personal goals.”
Well, the man can talk to the bully; after all, they
say human communication is a great healer. And the bully could advise
him how to get into a reconstructed government.
Hoodlums are the Bosses in Serbia
In fact, Radisavljević’s act of violence kind of
conformed the law to the actual state of affairs since the so-called
football fans have been for year a part of the untouchable governmental
apparatus that counts on their services, mostly in drug trafficking, and
regardless of a party in power. Last time the state promised a showdown
with organized crime operating under the auspices of Red Star and
Partizan clubs was a promise given by ex-president Boris Tadic in
February 2011 after the mafia clash in downtown Belgrade leaving the
then leader of the Alcatraz gang, Aleksandar Vavić, wounded with nine
bullets. Nothing came out of it – either then or later. Vavić has a long
criminal record with nine charges for illegal possession of arms,
brutality, robbery and theft. But not a single charge against him has
been raised by the prosecution, let alone has he been sentenced for
anything.
The explanation for this leaves one sick and tired: by
the Cosa Nostra scenario, the police collect evidence, the prosecution
starts working on it but there is no political will for an actual trial.
Kimi Radisavljević whom the media find more attractive
is a true personification of fans’ value system: on several occasions
he’s been suspected of drug trafficking and interrogated by the police
but became known by a larger audience when he openly threatened Brankica
Stanković, journalist for the B92 TV and author of the Insider serial
digging into the state’s attitude toward hooligans and the outbreak of
violence at the football match between Partizan and Schachtjor in
December 2009. He had staged a gruesome performance with fans throwing a
plastic mannequin representing the journalist and chanting, “You are
poisonous like a snake, you will meet Ćuruvija’s fate.”
For two years round the clock Brankica Stanković has
been having a police escort. Radisavljević was firstly sentenced to
16-month imprisonment and then, in mid-July 2013, to another four months
for physically assaulting policemen on March 2004 when the mob torched
the Belgrade Mosque. No one was sentence for torching the mosques: the
indictment had been shamelessly revised. Mufti of Belgrade Muhamed
Jusufspahić testified that Kimi and his farther, Rade, had not set fire
on the mosque but actually putting it out and helping the injured.
Šćepović was trembling, but not Jusufspahić. Maybe on that Walpurgis
Night in downtown Belgrade he really saw a bandit helping the injured
and putting out a fire in the mosque in the backyard of which, according
to his own testimony, someone had left piles of canisters for Zippo
lighters.
A Creepy Relict and Arkan’s Model
More than two years ago the Prosecution demanded a ban
on 14 fan groups: Alcatraz, Belgrade Boys, Lunatics-Padinska Skela,
Ultra Boys, Ultras, Anti-Roma, South Family, Headhunters, NBG, Shadows,
Extreme Boys, Honor Guardians, Brain Damage and United Force 1987. None
was banned despite their numerous racist and violent actions. They all
operate by the same hierarchy; their leaders are grey eminences in touch
with the police and politicians, go on tours with players and club
leadership and give the green light to the trades of players.
“These extremely closed groups demonstrated that they
were more powerful even than tycoons and that their influence on sports
was bigger. In the Milosevic era those people were used for manipulation
and closely connected with crime but with political parties as well –
nothing has changed to this very day. Big money is in play here. The
problems is that the agencies supposed to fight against this organized
crime are partisan plots,” says lawyer Marko Nicović, former head of the
Belgrade police force and high official of Interpol.
The state has no answer to the recruitment centers for
bandits, tailored by the model of war criminal Željko Ražnatović Arkan
who had turned Red Star fans into a genocidal-drug dealing horde. At the
same time it fanatically assists professional clubs that have only in
Serbia survived as a creepy relict of the communist era, those citizens’
associations that should have bankrupted long ago by all standards.
Vice-Premier Aleksandar Vučić, a recidivist Red Star fan, formed a work
group that totally unjustified – and especially unjustified by national
interests or those of citizens – keeps Red Star, with an over 60-million
debt, alive. Premier Ivica Dačić, who indirectly runs Partizan,
announced privatization of the two clubs but still dares not to make a
radical cut in those national institutions with far better standings
than ruined hospitals and schools.
It’s hard to believe that highest officials’ infantile
devotion to their favorite clubs in the only reason why these
ball-playing firms are so privileged over here. Even if the hookup
between high governmental officials and the masked crime of football
clubs cannot be proved beyond doubt, everyone is witness to their brutal
assaults at the state budget, their murky plans for freeing robbers from
tax paying, the Premier and the Vice-Premier doing what they shouldn’t
be doing and what they are not paid for. Everyone sees them boasting
about their writing skills and unbiased attitudes towards the two
biggest companies of thieves, Red Star and Partizan football clubs.
Mayor of Belgrade Dragan Đilas is not an exception; not long ago he
subsidized the two mafia club with one-hundred-thousand Euros each. This
is simply not normal. This is the more so dangerous since the masses,
impoverished but in love with football and players, have understanding
for Dačić and Vučić’s hobby. Permanent “petitioning” by sport lovers
certainly encourages the practice of helping the rich at the detriment
of the poor.
All this has nothing to do with coincidence or wrong
assessment. This is merely about a masochistic, suicidal consensus, a
demonstration of the majority terrorizing common sense. |