Nobelist tells Serbs in Belgrade: Your nationalism has made Kosovo very bad, except for bombs...

The most famous guest of the 62nd Belgrade International Book Fair was the German writer and Nobel Prize for Literature winner Herta Muller. Besides presenting its translations of books, she also participated in the debate, where the central topic was the outbreak of nationalism in the former Yugoslavia and the revival of dictatorship in Europe. [...]
Besides presenting its translations of books, she also participated in the debate, where the central topic was the outbreak of nationalism in the former Yugoslavia and the revival of dictatorship in Europe. But the things he said did not like Serbs, for which there were reactions.
“Mylosheqi could have kneeled with only the” bomb, she said, broadcast Telegragraphy. Serbia brought evil to itself and residents must live with the truth that they brought suffering to themselves”.
Serbs reminded her of the stance she expressed in 1999 during NATO bombings. Muller in an essay then wrote that he does not understand Serbia's arrogant attitude towards NATO and Slobodan Milosevic must stop forever.
He who for nine years leads four wars, and who realistically builds tombs like cities, cannot be defeated by words”, has then written, but the same is true today.
Kosovo and Bosnia have become so bad with that terrible nationalism”, the noted writer says. I have not expected this from a state like Yugoslavia that for us was half Paradise (Meller is German from Romania, where under Nicolae Ceaucescu's regime lived until 1987)”.
In the replica that Milosevic was not overthrown by NATO, but by Serbs on the streets of Belgrade, she added that his family lives in Russia, where Vladimir Putin is well received.
This is a fraudulent position. Putin's policy is expansionist”, she has said, sparking other reactions. “Putin's getting mixed up and will turn things around. This is the principle of the secret service”.
Nobelist said she is not pacifist, so she adds that military intervention is a moral and human attitude.
Herta Muller was born in 1953 in the Romanian part of Banati. He lives in Berlin in 1987. The Nobel Prize for Literature won it in 2009. In many of its works, it has described rural life and brutal oppression in Romania under dictator Causescu. Her father during World War II was a member of the Nazi SS unit. Although “is not like her father” and that “does not agree with what he was”, it says it should always be explained to her.












