Jump to content

Nataša Kandić: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Ganseki (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 9: Line 9:


In her native [[Serbia]], she is a highly controversial figure, often accused of ignoring the plight of hundreds of thousands of [[Serbs|Serb]] refugees and [[internally displaced person]]s (IDP) from the [[Yugoslav wars]], while campaigning energetically for the rights of refugees and war victims of other ethnicities.
In her native [[Serbia]], she is a highly controversial figure, often accused of ignoring the plight of hundreds of thousands of [[Serbs|Serb]] refugees and [[internally displaced person]]s (IDP) from the [[Yugoslav wars]], while campaigning energetically for the rights of refugees and war victims of other ethnicities.

In many towns throughout Serbia, she has been declared [[Persona Non Grata]].


In 2003, she publicly slapped Nikola Popović, an elderly Serbian refugee from Kosovo at [[Republic Square]] in [[Belgrade]], at a protest against the lack of information about the many thousands of [[Serbs in Kosovo|Kosovo Serbs]] missing since being driven out by Albanian separatists. After having slapped the elderly refugee, she justified her act of violence by asserting she had to "defend [myself] from Serbian patriotism". She was charged for refusing to obey police, as she refused to leave the protest even when informed by police that they are not able to guarantee her safety and she must leave. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01Z-549wQqw]
In 2003, she publicly slapped Nikola Popović, an elderly Serbian refugee from Kosovo at [[Republic Square]] in [[Belgrade]], at a protest against the lack of information about the many thousands of [[Serbs in Kosovo|Kosovo Serbs]] missing since being driven out by Albanian separatists. After having slapped the elderly refugee, she justified her act of violence by asserting she had to "defend [myself] from Serbian patriotism". She was charged for refusing to obey police, as she refused to leave the protest even when informed by police that they are not able to guarantee her safety and she must leave. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01Z-549wQqw]

Revision as of 21:01, 9 April 2008

Nataša Kandić
Nataša Kandić

Nataša Kandić (Serbian Cyrillic: Наташа Кандић) (born 1946, Kragujevac) is a Serbian human rights activist.

Kandić is the executive director of Belgrade's Humanitarian Law Center which she formed in 1992. She organized the Candles for Peace campaign in 1991 and the Black Ribbon March in 1992, satirised by the film Lepa Sela Lepo Gore.[1]


Controversy

In her native Serbia, she is a highly controversial figure, often accused of ignoring the plight of hundreds of thousands of Serb refugees and internally displaced persons (IDP) from the Yugoslav wars, while campaigning energetically for the rights of refugees and war victims of other ethnicities.

In many towns throughout Serbia, she has been declared Persona Non Grata.

In 2003, she publicly slapped Nikola Popović, an elderly Serbian refugee from Kosovo at Republic Square in Belgrade, at a protest against the lack of information about the many thousands of Kosovo Serbs missing since being driven out by Albanian separatists. After having slapped the elderly refugee, she justified her act of violence by asserting she had to "defend [myself] from Serbian patriotism". She was charged for refusing to obey police, as she refused to leave the protest even when informed by police that they are not able to guarantee her safety and she must leave. [2]

In June 2003, she attempted to tell the relatives of the murdered Stolić family, Serbian residents of Obilić, that "the crime was not committed by Albanian extremists, but by extremists on both sides", and was ejected from their property.[3][4]

In an opinion piece in The Guardian on May 9, 2007, she blamed the departure of the Krajina Serbs from Croatia on orders from their leaders on the territorial designs of the Serbian political elite rather than on the Croat military's Operation Storm. [5] Another reason of her controversy is her support of Croatian President Stjepan Mesić and her entitling of him as a "proven anti-fascist in both word and act", despite his many inflammatory nationalist comments in support of the fascist Ustashi during the 1990s agitation for war.

Vojislav Šešelj, incarcerated at the Hague's ICTY, has written a book concerning Kandić's support for Ustashi forces in Croatia during the 1990s war entitled Afera Hrtkovici i Ustaška Kurva Nataša Kandić (Афера Хртковици и Усташла Курва Наташа Кандић) (translated in English: The Hrtkovoci Affair and the Ustasha Whore Nataša Kandić).[6]

She has further been the target of criticism in Serbia for her attendance of Kosovo's unilateral declaration of secession from Serbia in February 2008.

Awards and Recognitions

International Awards

She is a recipient of over 20 international, regional and national human rights awards. In 2000 she was a recipient of the Martin Ennals Award, a prestigious recognition for human rights defenders. Natasa Kandic was also listed by Time magazine as one of 36 European heroes in 2003, and again featured as a hero in 2006. In 2004 the People in Need Foundation awarded Kandić and the HLC their Homo Homini Award, presented by Václav Havel. In 2005 she was proclaimed an honorary citizen of Sarajevo, and Slobodna Bosna magazine named her Person of the Year in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In September 2006, Kandić became a member of the Order of the Croatian Morning Star of Katarina Zrinska, awarded by the President of Croatia to individuals who have made a significant contribution to the advancement of moral values.