Dacic mourns Milosevic, says he was killed at The Hague

Slobodan Milosevic has lost his election on 24 September 2000, DOS came in, 17 years after the SPS leader. Ivica Dachqi says these elections have been a turning point for Serbia, while adding that history has to show that DOS has not even gone to Milosevic's knees, that on March 11, 2006 he [...]
Slobodan Milosevic has lost his election on 24 September 2000, DOS came in, 17 years after the SPS leader. Ivica Dachqi says these elections have been a turning point for Serbia, while adding that history has to show that DOS has not even gone to Milosevic's knees, that on 11 March 2006 he has been killed in The Hague and that he will testify and avenge it, Koha.net broadcast.
In a conversation about Kurir, Dacic insists that Milosevic then had not lost the election:
It is important to say that he has not been lost in the elections because Kostunica has not had more than 50 per cent of the vote, but after 5 October, the election commission with pressure cancelled the elections in Kosovo. Kostunica thus barely received a little over 50 per cent of the vote. They just didn't want or dare to go for the second lap. This has been a thought-out action before. If Sloba won the second lap, it remains a question, but the one on the first lap could not have lost”.
The chief of Serbian diplomacy and SPS chairman, once a very close associate Milosevic, says Serbia was not attacked because of its former chief:
I think that now it is clear that despite the mistakes he had made, Milosevic has not been a reason to attack Serbia. We have such themes and pressures. But then it was thought to be necessary to eliminate Milosevic and that everything would then be super. It proved to be a big fraud, the case was issued for Serbia's progress and the expectations of hundreds of thousands of young people who had believed in them” were betrayed, Dacic says.
It is a great tragedy that a country's chairman surrendered to The Hague's Tirbaunal, and this happened on Vidovdan Day. This will remain marked in our history. It is no tragedy why he was brought down by power, perhaps that is beneficial, but the judgment has been the judgment of Serbia and the Serbian people. And they can't judge it. That's more important. That's why they killed him with bad rags, that's why there's evidence”, says Dachic.
In the question of whether justice can be sought and whether there is evidence of his murder, Dacic says:
It's late now, but maybe it should... But not power, but its legal defenders. I've talked about this many times and I'm going to leave this case to lawyers about what can be done”.
Daciq claims that after Milosevic fell from power in 2000, he was offered refuge in Russia, but he did not want -- “representatives of DOS offered him to go to Russia, but he refused -- he did not want to flee from his homeland”, Dachic reveals.












