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'''Andrej Nikolaidis''' (born 1974, [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is a [[Montenegro|Montenegrin]]-[[Bosnians|Bosnian]] [[writer]], [[columnist]], and current adviser to [[Ranko Krivokapić]], speaker of the [[Parliament of Montenegro|Montenegrin Parliament]].
'''Andrej Nikolaidis''' (born 1974, [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is a Serbian [[writer]], [[columnist]], and current adviser to [[Ranko Krivokapić]], speaker of the [[Parliament of Montenegro|Montenegrin Parliament]].


Nikolaidis was born and raised in [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]] to a mixed Montenegrin-Greek family. In 1992, following the breakout of ethnic strife in Bosnia that soon evolved into an all out war, Nikolaidis' family moved to the Montenegrin town of [[Ulcinj]], his father's hometown where he owns a summer home. An ardent supporter of Montenegrin independence,{{Fact|date=December 2009}} Nikolaidis initially became known for his political views and public feuds, appearing on local television and in newspapers with his razor-sharp political commentaries. His writings for ''Monitor'' and ''[[Slobodna Bosna]]'' aroused controversy and he ''"received threats, including death threats, after publishing several articles about “facing the past.” During a talk show on Radio Antena M, one of the listeners, while he was on air, said that he would kill Nikolaidis."'' <ref> Extract from the IHF report: "Human Rights in the OSCE Region: Europe, Central Asia and North America" - Report 2005 [http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache:HTNN4_xjBd4J:www.ihf-hr.org/viewbinary/viewdocument.php%3Fdoc_id%3D6456+andrej+nikolaidis&hl=en&gl=ca&ct=clnk&cd=38&lr=lang_en]</ref>
Nikolaidis was born and raised in [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]] to a mixed Montenegrin-Greek family. In 1992, following the breakout of ethnic strife in Bosnia that soon evolved into an all out war, Nikolaidis' family moved to the Montenegrin town of [[Ulcinj]], his father's hometown where he owns a summer home. An ardent supporter of Montenegrin independence,{{Fact|date=December 2009}} Nikolaidis initially became known for his political views and public feuds, appearing on local television and in newspapers with his razor-sharp political commentaries. His writings for ''Monitor'' and ''[[Slobodna Bosna]]'' aroused controversy and he ''"received threats, including death threats, after publishing several articles about “facing the past.” During a talk show on Radio Antena M, one of the listeners, while he was on air, said that he would kill Nikolaidis."'' <ref> Extract from the IHF report: "Human Rights in the OSCE Region: Europe, Central Asia and North America" - Report 2005 [http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache:HTNN4_xjBd4J:www.ihf-hr.org/viewbinary/viewdocument.php%3Fdoc_id%3D6456+andrej+nikolaidis&hl=en&gl=ca&ct=clnk&cd=38&lr=lang_en]</ref>

Revision as of 18:22, 4 October 2010

Andrej Nikolaidis

Andrej Nikolaidis (born 1974, Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian writer, columnist, and current adviser to Ranko Krivokapić, speaker of the Montenegrin Parliament.

Nikolaidis was born and raised in Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia to a mixed Montenegrin-Greek family. In 1992, following the breakout of ethnic strife in Bosnia that soon evolved into an all out war, Nikolaidis' family moved to the Montenegrin town of Ulcinj, his father's hometown where he owns a summer home. An ardent supporter of Montenegrin independence,[citation needed] Nikolaidis initially became known for his political views and public feuds, appearing on local television and in newspapers with his razor-sharp political commentaries. His writings for Monitor and Slobodna Bosna aroused controversy and he "received threats, including death threats, after publishing several articles about “facing the past.” During a talk show on Radio Antena M, one of the listeners, while he was on air, said that he would kill Nikolaidis." [1]

Nikolaidis published three novels: They! (Plima,2001), Mimesis (Durieux, OKF, 2003) and Son (Durieux, 2006), as well as several collections of short stories, of which "The Cathedral in Seattle" (published by Plima, Montenegro, 1999) stands out the most. His first critically-acclaimed novel "Mimesis" was very well received in Croatia, Bosnia and among liberal Montenegrin intellectuals,[citation needed] where local independent media compares his expression and attitude to the one of Thomas Bernhard.[citation needed] He wrote columns for pro-independence Montenegrin publications such as Vijesti daily newspaper, Monitor weekly newsmagazine (from 2002 until 2009), and Crnogorski književni list weekly newspaper, as well as Bosnian weekly newsmagazine Slobodna Bosna. He now resides in Ulcinj, Montenegro.

On October 15, 2009, it was announced that Nikolaidis accepted a job as the adviser to politician Ranko Krivokapić who has been the speaker of the house in Montenegrin Parliament since 2003 and is the president of SDP CG party - ruling coalition's junior partner. The announcement came couple of weeks after Krivokapić publicly supported Nikolaidis while criticizing the Montenegrin Supreme Court's final ruling in Kusturica vs. Nikolaidis case.[2][3]

Controversy

Emir Kusturica

On May 28, 2004, Nikolaidis' highly charged piece titled "Dželatov šegrt" (Executioner's Apprentice) was published as part of his regular column in Monitor weekly magazine. In it, he targeted film director Emir Kusturica, denouncing him, among other things, as one of the "biggest media stars of the time when Milošević's war propaganda propped people who had something stupid but patriotic to say and made news for people who were "insensitive to human suffering, blind to their own guilt, and finally stupid enough to believe in their own righteousness".

He was subsequently sued by Kusturica for libel. After the trial in November 2004, primary court (Osnovni sud) in Podgorica under presiding judge Evica Durutović awarded Kusturica 5,000 in damages. However, on appeal, the verdict against Nikolaidis had been overruled by the higher court (Viši sud) in December 2005[4] and the case was returned to the lower court for a re-trial.

In late November 2007 the primary court (Osnovni sud) confirmed the previous verdict following a re-trial. Nikoladis again appealed the primary court verdict and the case was heard for the second time by the higher court (Viši sud) in April 2008 and this time it upheld the primary court verdict, ordering Nikolaids to pay the damages.[5][6]

City of Herceg Novi

In February 2005, Nikolaidis' text titled "Why Bosnians and Herzegovinians should stay away from Herceg Novi" was published in Slobodna Bosna in which he describes Herceg Novi as a "Chetnik stronghold" and a "demonic city of murderers and insane individuals".[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Extract from the IHF report: "Human Rights in the OSCE Region: Europe, Central Asia and North America" - Report 2005 [1]
  2. ^ Nezavisni intelektualac, kolumnista Monitora i Vijesti, književnik Andrej Nikolaidis savjetnik Ranka Krivokapića, DNMN, October 15, 2009
  3. ^ Andrej Nikolaidis postao savjetnik Ranka Krivokapića, SEEbiz.eu, October 17, 2009
  4. ^ NIJE NAPLATIO DUŠEVNI BOL, Kurir, December 16, 2005
  5. ^ Kusturici 12.000 evra za duševni bol, MTS Mondo, April 5, 2008
  6. ^ "Kusturici 12.000 eura". Dan. 2008-04-05. Retrieved 2010-06-07.