The Daily Telegraph

Oliver Ivanovic

Kosovo Serb politician regarded as a moderate who neverthele­ss stood trial for war crimes

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OLIVER IVANOVIC, who has been killed in a drive-by shooting aged 64, was the first senior Kosovo Serb official tried by the EU’S Rule of Law Mission (Eulex) in Kosovo; in 2016 he was sentenced to nine years in jail for war crimes, but the sentence was annulled last year by the Appeals Court in Pristina, which ordered a new trial.

Despite the question marks over his role in Kosovo’s war of independen­ce, it says much about the tense situation that still prevails that Ivanovic was regarded as a democrat and a moderate. He had been one of the chief Kosovo Serb negotiator­s with Nato, EU and UN officials based in Kosovo after the war.

Ivanovic was born on April 1 1953 in a village in western Kosovo, at the time part of Yugoslavia, into an academic family. His father was a history professor, his mother a professor of Serbian language and literature. The cosmopolit­an education, including a knowledge of French, which his parents gave him was unusual in provincial Kosovo but would serve him well as an interlocut­or with the French contingent of Nato when it occupied the town.

Ivanovic enrolled in the Zagreb Military Academy to train as a pilot, but left after being diagnosed with a congenital eyesight problem. He then studied engineerin­g and economics at the University of Pristina. Before Kosovo’s 1998-99 war, he had been a manager at the Trepca mines in the northern town of Mitrovica, where he lived.

During the conflict, which began when ethnic Albanians rebelled against Belgrade, prompting a brutal crackdown, Ivanovic became a leader of a paramilita­ry police unit and in June 1999 was appointed founding president of the Serbian National Council of North Kosovo and Metohija. He held the post until 2001, then became a member of the Coordinati­on Centre for Kosovo and Metohija.

After the November 2001 parliament­ary elections, he was appointed a minister in the Assembly of Kosovo. As a member of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) he was a leader of the Serb List for Kosovo and Metohija in the parliament­ary elections in October 2004.

Kosovo, the majority of whose inhabitant­s are ethnic Albanians, declared independen­ce from Serbia in 2008, and was subsequent­ly recognised by more than 100 countries, including the US and most EU states. However, Serbia and the 40,000 or so Kosovo Serbs living in the north refused recognitio­n.

Between 2008 and 2012 Ivanovic was State Secretary of the Ministry for Kosovo and Metohija in the Government of Serbia and a member of the Coordinati­ng Centre for Kosovo and Metohija. In 2009 he launched a new SDP Civic Initiative party, of which he served as president, but in 2013 he narrowly lost to a hardline Kosovo Serb in an election to be mayor of the Serb part of Mitrovica.

Ivanovic was arrested in January 2014 and in 2016 was found guilty of encouragin­g the killing of ethnic Albanians by Serb paramilita­ry forces. The Eulex tribunal ruled that he had known that “an operation of expulsions and killings of [ethnic] Albanians was under way” in Mitrovica in 1999 amid Nato bombing and had “encouraged paramilita­ries to commit this crime”. Ivanovic insisted he was innocent and claimed the allegation­s were politicall­y motivated.

In the meantime, Kosovo and Serbia had agreed to participat­e in Eusponsore­d negotiatio­ns aimed at overcoming their difference­s, as part of which Serbia allowed its minority in four northern municipali­ties to vote in Kosovo elections despite rejecting its secession. After his release from prison, Ivanovic’s party ran candidates in local elections in 2017. In the event the Serb List of Serbian parties won in all Serb-majority municipali­ties.

Ivanovic had been subject to death threats before. In 2005 a bomb detonated under his official car and last year another car was set on fire. He died of wounds sustained after he was shot while entering his office in North Mitrovica.

He and his wife Milena had three sons.

Oliver Ivanovic, born April 1 1953, died January 16 2018

 ??  ?? Ivanovic (left) shakes hands with Nato Commander George Johnson in the Serbian part of Mitrovica in 2004
Ivanovic (left) shakes hands with Nato Commander George Johnson in the Serbian part of Mitrovica in 2004

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