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Thursday, October 5, 2000 |

Protesters Charge Parliament in Belgrade
From Associated Press

Tear gas rises outside the federal
parliament building during clashes between riot police and
opposition supporters in Belgrade. Photo
Gallery
Reuters
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BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -- Mobs seeking to
topple Slobodan Milosevic turned their fury on his centers of power today,
leaving parliament and other key Belgrade sites in shambles and flames.
The 13-year rule of the Yugoslav president appeared near collapse.
Hundreds of thousands of people swarmed the
capital to demand that Milosevic accept his apparent electoral defeat by
Vojislav Kostunica in the Sept. 24 election. As demonstrators charged and
riot police cowered behind helmets and shields, the federal parliament
building, the state broadcasting center and police stations fell in quick
succession.
Protesters tossed documents and portraits of
Milosevic through the broken windows of the parliament complex. Smoke
billowed from the building and from the state television headquarters
nearby.
Dozens of people were injured, according to
witnesses. Some police who fired on demonstrators were beaten.
"What we are doing today is making
history," Kostunica proclaimed during an evening speech in front of
Belgrade city hall, across from parliament. "We call on the military
and police to do everything to ensure a peaceful transition of
power."
Independent B-92 radio said Kostunica called
an inaugural session of the new parliament for late today.
The crowd chanted for Milosevic's arrest.
Kostunica answered: "He doesn't need to be arrested. He arrested
himself a long time ago."
At the White House, President Clinton said:
"The people are trying to get their country back." British Prime
Minister Tony Blair said of Milosevic: "Your time is up. Go
now."
Clashes spread through the capital, which
echoed with the sound of stun grenades and tear gas fired to break up the
crowds. Later, both state television channels went off the air before
coming back on under opposition control, and the state-run Tanjug news
agency-- one of chief pillars of Milosevic's rule-- announced it is no
longer loyal to him.

A police officer walks past a burning
police vehicle in front of the federal parliament building. Photo
Gallery
AP
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"From this moment, Tanjug informs the
Yugoslav public that it is with the people of this country," a
statement carried by the agency said. Another Tanjug report referred to
Kostunica as "President-elect of the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia."
The conquest of the parliament was highly
symbolic. But the loss of the state media and the government-run newspaper
Politika was a bigger blow to Milosevic, denying him his biggest
propaganda tools.
The uprising swelled as security forces
showed little willingness to battle the largest-ever anti-Milosevic
protest. Many police joined the flag-waving crowds as they surged across
central Belgrade. Thousands more people joined smaller rallies in towns
throughout the country.
There was no immediate reaction from
Milosevic, and his whereabouts were not clear. "No one knows where
Milosevic is," Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said en route to
Washington from Mideast peace talks.
A statement from Milosevic's Socialist Party
of Serbia said it would "fight against violence and destruction"
with "all its force and in all state institutions," Tanjug
reported.
There were fears the mayhem could allow
Milosevic to declare a state of emergency and come down hard on his foes.
But his security forces appeared to be disintegrating, with protesters
seizing police precincts without a fight. The level of defiance was
unprecedented in Yugoslavia's 55-year communist history.
"They're giving up," said a
demonstrator who identified himself only as Sasha.
The government acknowledges that Kostunica
outpolled Milosevic in the Sept. 24 election but says he fell short of a
majority in the five-candidate race. A runoff had been set for Sunday.
The president has already countered in the
courts in an apparent bid to cling to power: The Milosevic-controlled
Yugoslav Constitutional Court issued a decision Wednesday that Tanjug said
nullified "parts" of the election. The ruling outraged
opposition supporters, who had brought the case in hopes Kostunica would
be declared the winner.
Hundreds of thousands of people broke
through police convoys and streamed into Belgrade for today's opposition
rally, and the melees erupted as the rally was beginning.
One attempt to storm parliament was repulsed
by tear gas, but following waves of protesters broke through. By late
afternoon, opposition supporters who had been inside the parliament
building were climbing through the windows and onto the complex's
balconies, waving flags as the crowd roared below.
Inside the building, chaos reigned. Gangs of
young people, many of them intoxicated, roamed the building, smashing
furniture and computers and looting what valuables they could carry.
But police offered little resistance and the
clashes ebbed. Afterward, as night fell, thousands of demonstrators walked
the streets in a relatively relaxed atmosphere. Some were drunk and
brandishing handguns.
Many protesters wore paper caps with the
slogan, "We'll Endure." They moved past shops, some shut down
with signs stating, "Closed because of Robbery"-- an allusion to
opposition claims that Milosevic stole the elections.
Several shop windows were shattered, and by
evening orange flames still billowed from part of the parliament building.
Big trucks with loudspeakers drove through Belgrade blasting folk and rock
music. The downtown headquarters of the Yugoslav Left, the neo-communist
party run by Milosevic's wife, was demolished, with the graffiti
"People's Revolution" sprayed on inside walls.
More than 100,000 people gathered in front
of parliament before Kostunica's evening speech. Protesters-- from burly
farmers to black-robed Serbian Orthodox priests-- waved Yugoslav flags
outside the building.
The crowd chanted "Kill him! Kill
him!" as opposition leaders claimed victory over Milosevic.
"At this moment, terror rules in
Belgrade," state television said in a commentary earlier, before a
bulldozer broke into its headquarters and the opposition took it over.
"They are attacking everyone they see on the streets and there is
chaos."
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