Against the Mafia
Serbia’s law on the confiscation of property deriving from crime, outlined in collaboration with the Italian anti-mafia Department and in force for about a year, has started to produce some results. But what does the term โorganized crimeโ mean in Serbia? Here’s what the experts say
On 21 January, Serbia’s Special Prosecution for Organized Crime and the Ministry of Justice took journalists to the special court on Ustanฤka Street where around 30 mostly luxury cars (Porsche, Audi, BMW) were parked out front. This was an effective way to show the media the results of the โLaw for Confiscation of Property Deriving from Criminal Activityโ in the first year of its enforcement.
According to Prosecutor Miljko Radisaljevฤ and Minister Sneลพana Maloviฤ, seized goods include tens of millions of Euros worth of cars, drug money, villas, and land. Since the enactment of the law in March 2009, 21 financial investigations focusing on 208 people have been launched.
โIn reality, only one lot of land went through all the stages and became government propertyโ, said Stevan Dojฤinoviฤ of CIN (the Center for Investigative Reporting, linked to NUNS journalist association).
โ(The seized lot comprised) 20 hectares of land on ล ilerova Street, worth 1.2 million Euros, and belonged to the two deceased leaders of the Zemun clan,โ Dojฤinoviฤ told Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso. The former owners are Duลกan Spasojeviฤ, known as ‘ล iptar’ [a disparaging term for an Albanian, translatorโs note], and Mile Lukoviฤ, called ‘Kum’ [Godfather], who were found guilty, together with Milorad Ulemek Legija, of contracting and organizing the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran ฤjinฤjiฤ on 12 March 2003. The two were killed in a shoot-out with the police during โOperation Sablja [Sword]โ which followed the murder of the prime minister. On 24 December, the seized land parcel on ล ilerova Street was given to the Zemun municipal police and the new police headquarters will be built on the site.
โThe most important thing in mafia investigations is to follow the money and the property,โ Dojฤinoviฤ emphasizes. โIn the same way, the prosecutor must prove that, in the income statements of the accused, there are no records of revenue sufficient for the procurement of the goods in question.โ
In June 2009, prosecutors determined that the first confiscation under the new law should be part of a house (178 square meters) owned by Milorad Ulemek Legija. Legija is the ex-chief of the Special Operations Unit (JSO), the armed guards of the secret services, and was convicted of ฤjinฤjiฤโs assassination. The confiscation has still not been carried out.
According to the prosecution, the villa was bought with the ransom from the kidnapping of Vuk Bajruseviฤ, brother of Bojan, a suspected cigarette smuggler. Ulemekโs wife, Aleksandra Ivanoviฤ, actually managed to prove that she had the economic means to buy her part of the house, saving it from being impounded by the court. According to the Ministry of Justice, if the confiscation is confirmed, the space will house a new kindergarten.
โBy now, we know that the aim of organized crime is to acquire money and to use this money to buy power. In this sense, hurting the criminalsโ finances is one of the most effective ways to fight mafias,โ said Marco Bonabello, a legal consultant on organized crime for the OSCE (the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe). The OSCE worked with the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Interior in 2004 to produce legislation on confiscation of the property of organized crime networks.
โItaly is a leader in this field with its RognoniโLa Torre Law, its investigative methods, and the work of the National Anti-Mafia Department (Direzione Nazionale Antimafia). There has been intensive cooperation between the Italian Anti-Mafia Department and the Serbian Ministry of Justice in recent years, and it has already started to yield results,โ Bonabello told Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso.
The fight against organized crime in Serbia is only in the beginning stages. Italy has offered Belgrade relevant know-how, including legislation on confiscation of property, a policy of strict imprisonment of mafia members (similar to Italy’s โ41 Bisโ prison restrictions for particular inmates, introduced in 1975), use of collaborators, coordination between prosecutor offices, as well as international and regional cooperation.
But what does the term organized crime mean in Serbia? โIt is a phenomenon which emerged in the โ90’s under Miloลกeviฤโ, said Miroljub Stanislavljeviฤ, OSCE consultant and expert on organized crime. โThere was war, sanctions; Serbia was isolated. This was fertile ground for organized crime. The only way to earn money was smuggling: cigarettes, gas, weapons, and so forth. The government was involved in this too. Miloลกeviฤ himself profited from smuggling. Political and mafia powers supported each other. It should be kept in mind that under the sanctions people did not perceive smuggling as a crime because it was the only way to trade.โ
With the fall of the regime in 2000, the government started to think about how to fight organized crime. The police made a list of active crime groups – the so-called โWhite Bookโ – with photos and names of bosses and the activities of the clans. This was an unofficial document produced in 2002 and the first step towards a more in-depth investigation. It identified the Zemun clan as the most powerful and most brutal clan. A law on โOrganization and jurisdiction of government institutions for fighting organized crimeโ was enacted in the same year. The mafia reaction came in March 2003. In response to the new government measures, the bosses of the Zemun clan, together with their associates, decided to strike the heart of government institutions by killing Prime Minister Zoran ฤjinฤjiฤ.
After ฤjinฤjiฤโs assassination, the government decided to settle scores with the Belgrade underground. To date, four of the most important trials initiated by the special prosecution have reached verdicts: Milorad Ulemek Legija and Zvezdan Jovanoviฤ (who fired the lethal bullet which killed the prime minister) were found guilty of the assassination of Prime Minister ฤjinฤjiฤ and have been sentenced to a maximum punishment of 40 years imprisonment each. Other cases include the murder of Ivan Stamboliฤ and the attempted assassination of Vuk Draskoviฤ (both in 2000), the prosecution of the members of the Zemun clan for crimes ranging from murders, robberies, and terrorist assassinations, and a second attempt to take the life of Draskoviฤ in which four other people were killed.
And now? โIn very brief summaryโ, says Dojฤinoviฤ, โthe phases can be divided up like this: in the first phase, the government, embodied by Miloลกeviฤ at the political level and ลฝeljko Raลพnatoviฤ Arkan as the executioner, represented the mafia in Serbia. Other high-profile actors were involved, including Stanko โCaneโ Subotic, who became one of the richest men in Eastern Europe thanks to cigarette smuggling. โCaneโ is in golden exile in Switzerland, which does not have extradition arrangements with Serbia. Arkanโs murder in 2000 marked the peak of this phase. Arkan was extorting from all other criminal groups and he was so convinced he was untouchable that he went around without bodyguardsโ. The Zemun clan came after him, Dojฤinoviฤ said. โUnder the excuse of โavengingโ Arkan, the Zemun clan, in the following years, eliminated all the competition and created the most rigid monopoly. Whatever business you wanted to do, you had to do it with them.โ
And now? โToday there is no longer a monopoly like in the time of Arkan or the Zemun clanโ, continued Dojฤinoviฤ. โLetโs say there are freelance outfielders who are connected in a transnational network.โ
As a matter of fact, crime in Serbia seems more internationally connected than ever, as recent police operations have revealed. The first operation, called โBalkan Warriorโ, resulted in the seizure of 2.8 tons of cocaine imported to Europe from Columbia by Serbian โcellsโ. According to journalist analyses, the Serbian-Montenegrin mafia apparently acts as a very effective middleman in international cocaine trafficking thanks to links between the Balkan and South American mafias.
On the other hand, there are the tycoons of the โdo not ask me how I made my first millionโ type (as the saying goes in Serbia) who are very difficult to get because of lack of evidence, either because over the years they have become legitimate or because of lack of political will. But it is exactly this kind of criminal that is the problem in Serbia, our sources say, because they have been taking part in privatizations and causing a lot of economic damage. Furthermore, entry into the European Union does not represent an advantage for them. On the contrary.
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14/12/2004, Risto Karajkov