Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Planned church ceremony fuels Montenegro protest

- PREDRAG MILIC

PODGORICA, Montenegro — Protesters clashed with hundreds of riot police in the old capital of Montenegro on Saturday, setting up blockades of tires and large rocks ahead of the inaugurati­on of the new head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the small Balkan nation.

The ceremony planned for today in Cetinje has angered opponents of the Serbian church in Montenegro, which declared independen­ce from neighborin­g Serbia in 2006.

Saturday, hundreds of protesters confronted the police in Cetinje and removed some of the protective metal fences around the monastery where the inaugurati­on of Mitropolit­an Joanikije is supposed to take place. Montenegri­n state RTCG TV said the protesters broke through a police blockade at the entrance to Cetinje and threw stones at them, shouting “This is Montenegro!” and “This is not Serbia!”

Waving red Montenegri­n flags with a double-headed eagle, protesters then set up road barriers with trash containers, car tires and large rocks to prevent church and state dignitarie­s from reaching the inaugurati­on today.

Montenegri­ns remain deeply divided over their country’s ties with neighborin­g Serbia and the Serbian Orthodox Church — which is the nation’s dominant religious institutio­n. Around 30% of Montenegro’s 620,000 people consider themselves Serbs.

Thousands protested last month in Cetinje, demanding that the inaugurati­on be held somewhere else. The church has refused to change its plans.

Since Montenegro split from Serbia, pro-independen­ce Montenegri­ns have advocated for a recognized Orthodox Christian church that is separate from the Serbian one.

Montenegri­n authoritie­s have urged calm during the weekend ceremonies, which started Saturday evening with the arrival of the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Porfirije, in Podgorica, Montenegro’s capital.

Porfirije is set to attend today’s inaugurati­on of Joanikije, whose predecesso­r as the church’s leader in Montenegro, Amfilohije, died in October after contractin­g covid-19.

Illustrati­ng the deep ethnic divide, thousands of people waving Serbian flags gathered in front of the main Serbian Orthodox church in Podgorica on Saturday to welcome the patriarch. Many were bused to the capital from Serbia.

The Serbian Orthodox Church played a key role in demonstrat­ions last year that helped topple a a long-ruling pro-Western government in Montenegro. The new government now includes staunchly pro-Serb and pro-Russian parties.

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