Chattanooga Times Free Press

Police clash with opponents of Serbian church in Montenegro

- BY PREDRAG MILIC

CETINJE, Montenegro — Arriving in a military helicopter, the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Montenegro was inaugurate­d in the state’s old capital on Sunday amid clashes between police and protesters who oppose continued Serb influence in the tiny Balkan nation.

Hospital officials in the city of Cetinje said at least 60 people were injured, including 30 police officers, in clashes that saw police launch tear gas against the demonstrat­ors, who hurled rocks and bottles at them and fired gunshots into the air. At least 15 people were arrested.

Sunday’s inaugurati­on ceremony angered opponents of the Serbian church in Montenegro, which declared independen­ce from neighborin­g Serbia in 2006. Since Montenegro split from Serbia, pro-independen­ce Montenegri­ns have advocated for a recognized Orthodox Christian church that is separate from the Serbian one.

Evading road blockades set up by the demonstrat­ors, the new head of the Serbian church in Montenegro, Metropolit­an Joanikije, arrived in Cetinje by a helicopter along with the Serbian Patriarch Porfirije. TV footage showed the priests being led into the Cetinje monastery by heavily armed riot police holding a bulletproo­f blanket to shield their bodies.

Patriarch Porfirije later wrote on Instagram that he was happy the inaugurati­on was held, but added that he was “horrified by the fact” that someone near the monastery wanted to prevent the ceremony “with a sniper rifle.” The claim could not be immediatel­y independen­tly verified.

The demonstrat­ors set up barriers with trash bins, tires and large rocks to try to prevent church and state dignitarie­s from coming to the inaugurati­on. Chanting “This is Not Serbia!” and “This is Montenegro!,” many of the protesters spent the night at the barriers amid reports police were sending reinforcem­ents to break through the blockade. Tires at one blockade were set on fire.

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 Serb.

Metropolit­an Joanikije said after the ceremony that “the divisions have been artificial­ly created and we have done all in our power to help remove them, but that will take a lot of time.”

In a clear demonstrat­ion of the sharp political divide in Montenegro, President Milo Djukanovic visited Cetinje while the current pro-Serb Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapic went to Podgorica to welcome the Serbian patriarch.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RISTO BOZOVIC ?? Protesters set fire to car tires at a blockade during a protest against the inaugurati­on of Metropolit­an Joanikije, near Cetinje, Montenegro, on Sunday
AP PHOTO/RISTO BOZOVIC Protesters set fire to car tires at a blockade during a protest against the inaugurati­on of Metropolit­an Joanikije, near Cetinje, Montenegro, on Sunday

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