Miami Herald

In pro-Putin Serbia, liberal-minded Russians seek home

- BY JOVANA GEC AND DUSAN STOJANOVIC

At a central square in Serbia’s capital of Belgrade, dozens of Russians gathered recently to denounce President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine, holding up photos of political prisoners from their homeland.

Across the plaza, a billboard touts the Russian propaganda outlet RT, which has launched an online news portal in the country but is banned elsewhere in Europe. Heroic portraits of a bare-chested Putin adorn souvenir Tshirts and coffee mugs and are painted on city walls.

These conflictin­g images reflect the complex and delicate relationsh­ip these days between Russia and Serbia.

The Slavic country is Moscow’s closest ally in Europe, with historic, religious and cultural ties that are bolstered by Kremlin political-influence campaigns. Russia backs Serbia’s claim over its former province of Kosovo, which declared independen­ce in 2008 with Western support. And Serbia has refused to impose sanctions on Moscow over the invasion.

At the same time, Serbia wants to join the European Union. Populist President Aleksandar Vucic has denounced the invasion, and about 200,000 Russians have flooded into the country in the past year, with many seeking a new life in a brotherly land free of

Kremlin oppression.

“Here in Belgrade, we are not perceived with hostility, and that means a lot,” said Anastasia Demidova, who arrived in the Balkan nation from Moscow three months ago.

“I’ve been talking to a lot of Serbian people here and other foreigners. When they ask me, ‘What are you doing here?’ I say: ‘We are against Putin and for a democratic Russia and we are against the war in Ukraine, obviously,’ ” she told The Associated Press.

Others say they fled to avoid being drafted or because Western sanctions crippled their businesses or took away their jobs.

As a result, Russian can be heard spoken everywhere in Belgrade, a city of about 2 million. Russianown­ed restaurant­s and bars have sprouted. Private Russian enterprise­s have mushroomed, especially in the IT sector. The influx has sent the price of real estate soaring.

This reminds some here of the wave of Russians fleeing the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, and many of those who stayed in Serbia left their mark on its culture and art.

These modern Russians, however, are maintainin­g financial ties and other links to their homeland, said historian Aleksej Timofejev. Unlike their predecesso­rs, he said, they can’t go onward to the West because of the sanctions and still need visas to travel to richer countries in Europe.

“They did not choose this country but came here because it is the only one that would have them,” Timofejev added.

The newcomers say they can still feel Moscow’s heavy-handed influence, especially when it comes to Serbians’ approval for Putin via media outlets such as RT.

Russian activist Petar Nikitin calls it a “coordinate­d propaganda effort.”

Nikitin first came to Serbia in the early 2000s. Back then, “this admiration for the Russian government was a lot more marginal … and I saw it grow exponentia­lly,” he said.

Russians “who recently arrived, who didn’t know much about Serbia before, yes, many of them told me they were completely shocked to see this idolizatio­n specifical­ly of Putin, and this picture of Russia that is completely divorced from reality,” Nikitin said.

Moscow has boosted this sentiment in the pro-Russia media by feeding Serbian anger with the West over Kosovo following the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The dispute between Serbia and Kosovo has been a source of tension since the 1998-99 war that ended when a NATO bombing campaign forced Serbia to pull out of the former Serbian province after a bloody crackdown against Kosovo Albanian separatist­s and civilians

Serbia’s rejection of Kosovo’s declaratio­n of independen­ce has Moscow’s support — one of the reasons why Belgrade maintains

friendly relations with Putin and has refused to join Western sanctions.

While Vucic has criticized the invasion of Ukraine, he puts a uniquely Balkan spin on it.

“We do support territoria­l integrity of Ukraine, as we do support territoria­l integrity of Serbia,” he told the World Economic Forum in Davos last month. “So … they ask me, ‘Is Crimea part of Ukraine or Russia?’ Yes, it’s part of Ukraine. Donbas is part of Ukraine. If you ask us.”

His country “will stick to that, and we will be more loyal to territoria­l integrity of U.N. member states than many others that changed their stance on territoria­l integrity of Serbia,” Vucic added, referring to the support for Kosovo’s independen­ce from Washington and other countries.

Western officials have stepped up pressure on Vucic to make a decisive turn away from Moscow if Serbia wants to join the EU. They fear that Russia could stir trouble in the Balkans through its Serbian proxies to avert some of the internatio­nal attention from Ukraine.

Recently, the Russian private military contractor Wagner Group ran advertisem­ents on RT’s Serbian-language outlet recruiting Serbs to fight in Ukraine. It is illegal for Serbs to fight outside the country, although about a dozen joined Russia-backed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine after battles broke out there in 2014.

Owned by Putin-linked oligarch Yevgeny Prigozhin, Wagner has taken a prominent role in Ukraine and also has sent its mercenarie­s to several African countries. Last month, U.S. State Department Counselor Derek Chollet held talks with Vucic to voice concerns about Wagner’s activities in Serbia.

 ?? DARKO VOJINOVIC AP | Jan. 21, 2023 ?? People attend a rally in Belgrade, Serbia, in support of Russia’s political prisoners. Serbia has welcomed Russians who need visas to travel to much richer Western European states. But in Serbia, they have not escaped Putin’s regime influence.
DARKO VOJINOVIC AP | Jan. 21, 2023 People attend a rally in Belgrade, Serbia, in support of Russia’s political prisoners. Serbia has welcomed Russians who need visas to travel to much richer Western European states. But in Serbia, they have not escaped Putin’s regime influence.

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