Milosevic had been exposed to a secret before being sent to The Hague

Slobodan Milosevic kept Milan Milutinovic several months after the 1999 bombing in a kind of domestic prison. Apparently, the president of the Republic was sentenced to intensified supervisory “, as the Service called it, due to readiness to co-operate with The Hague Tribunal. Milan Milutinovici was authorized as a British queen. [...]
Milan Milutinovici was authorized as a British queen. It could not form a government or break up parliament... As Austria's first president once said, the only thing he could do was marriage.
There are serious indicators that Milan Milutinovici is in some sort of prison and isolation at home, that he is under continued control of the ruling family and that his life is also in danger in 1999.
Friendship with Slobodan Milosevic from the study days followed him to the end of his political career, which ended with his departure to The Hague tribunal. In the 70th year, as Minister of Education and Science, he participated in the group of eight distinguished professors from the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade after Milosevic came to power, became ambassador to Yugoslavia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and head of the Press, Culture and Information Directorate.
Since early September 1989, he became ambassador RSFJ in Athens to be appointed head of RFJ diplomacy in August 1995. In this quality, Milutinovic was a member of Milosevic's delegation to Dayton, where a peace agreement was signed.
This series was continued later, when in December 1997, as the SPS candidate, he was elected as president of Serbia. In the same function, he stayed until 2002. From the throne ended directly at The Hague. Although, according to the testimony of the contemporary and influential media writing, he tried to avoid that in all ways, the “Kurir” reported.
That is why he fell into a cold war with the most influential person of the time in Serbia. At the time, instead of President Milutinovic, several Serbian military generals were named “Supreme Commander”.
At a time when Serbia (or warned) led the fight with the strongest military alliance, Milutinovic led the war with Milosevic, who held it in a kind of domestic arrest.
It all started during the 1999 bombings, when Milutinovic left his command post only five days before the end of aggression. Apparently, Milosevic knew that Milutinovic, without his knowledge, organised co-operation with The Hague's Tribunal. And through his signature, otherwise he was a diplomat at The Hague. Everything is happening at the moment when The Hague charges are high, which The Hague prosecutor will soon come up against Milosevic.
The Kosovo war crimes Act against Milutinovic, Milosevic, Nikola Sainovic, Dragoljub Ojdanic and Vlajko Stojiljkovovic took place on 24 May 1999, but was made public only in September 2000, shortly before the crucial elections in Serbia. It is possible that the problem between the two presidents is due to the fact that Milutinovic failed to reach an agreement with Americans for Kosovo.
Milutinovic's co-operation with foreigners and the West has been discussed in Martti Ahtisaari's book, stating that Ahtisaari, Shredder, Chirac and Talbot, instead of Milosevic, wanted Milutinovic to negotiate the break of the bombing.
Milutinovic's house arrest story deteriorated the public scene. In September 1999, the leader of the New Democracy group, Zarko Jokanovic, publicly demanded the formation of an independent commission to determine whether President Milutinovic was able to carry out the envisioned post with the Constitution.
There are serious indicators that Serbian President Milan Milutinovic is in some kind of domestic arrest and isolation, which is under continued control of the ruling family and that his life is at stake”, Jokanovic said in this case at a press conference.
Somehow later, sources close to the presidency of Serbia told the Beta agency that Milutinovic “formally fulfilled his official duties”. And the whole story was publicly denied by SPS spokesman Ivica Dacic.
Shortly after, the municipal public prosecutor in Belgrade has proposed launching an investigation against Jokanovic to determine whether he has committed criminal acts to spread false news. However, this case has never received an epilogue of the court.
The difference between the two Milosevic presidents and Milutinovic is that the first has been at the helm of the largest party, and Milutinovic has had no political support. Therefore, they were not a central political figure, assessing Professor Ratko Markovic
Nenad Lj. Stefanovic in a weekly magazine wrote: “After the Socialists, Milutinovic's life at present is seriously threatened as a result of very high blood pressure and excessive weight that is still associated with the stubborn one.
Thus, a respected British newspaper “The Guardian” in September 1999 writes that there are rumours that the inner circle of Milosevic's associates is concerned about their future, as because of The Hague Tribunal, but also because they are placed on Europe's blacklist.
The European Union has halted entry into member states for about 300 Yugoslav officials. Milutinovic is on that list”. Ironically, his presidential campaign was carried out under the motto “Serbia and the world”, he wrote then, “The Guardian”, adding that Milutinovic went public for several weeks.












