Messiah: Vuciq as Milosevic, Great Serbia Will Not Happen

Croatia's former president, Stjepan Mesic, has removed memories from the time he was Yugoslavia's last president, which was going to the end. He, during Pristina's Grand Meeting for interAlbanian and inter-Balkan integrations, has held former Balkan captain Slobodan Milosevic responsible for all the victims caused in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. [...]
Croatia's former president, Stjepan Mesic, has removed memories from the time he was Yugoslavia's last president, which was going to the end.
He, during Pristina's Grand Meeting for interAlbanian and inter-Balkan integrations, has held former Balkan captain Slobodan Milosevic responsible for all the victims caused in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo.
Mesic has said that Serbian President Aleksandar Vuciq is continuing Slobodan Milosevic's policies on creating great Serbia, which, according to him, can never be done.
Thank you so much for the 25th anniversary of Kosovo's Independence I am here. When I came to Belgrade then, I was the chairman of Yugoslavia's Headship. I take the courage to tell you that I will be the last president of Yugoslavia. Milosevic couldn't win with what we proposed to make confederation. He refused to accept our advice and took another lead, my initiative then was that public affairs and the two provinces showed the state for their own sacrifices each in its own. The thought was for each country to take its own cock.
Milosevic and his men could not accept this model, which would be without war, without casualties and would benefit all people. We all saw how this work was done and how many victims it was. Unfortunately, there is still one of those who, like Milosevic, will become big Serbia here, but I tell you, it cannot be done. For all who think that Serbia can become a great state, I tell you Serbia is a small state in the Balkans”, Mesic said.
Pan Albanian- InterBalkan-Atlantic meeting with thematics: History-Identity-Integration, held within the 25th anniversary of the legendary KLA war NATO and Kosovo freedom in Pristina, with over 600 honourary guests.












