Energy Deal Rift Shakes Serb Coalition

Serbia’s deputy prime minister said yesterday that a government crisis over a Russian energy deal could force a coalition reshuffle involving a partnership with a newly formed moderate nationalist party. “If there is a need for the government to survive for national interests, I am sure some (opposition) parties would understand this,” Deputy Prime Minister Ivica Dacic said in an interview published in the daily Vecernje Novosti.
Energia.gr
Πεμ, 18 Δεκεμβρίου 2008 - 17:28

Serbia’s deputy prime minister said yesterday that a government crisis over a Russian energy deal could force a coalition reshuffle involving a partnership with a newly formed moderate nationalist party. “If there is a need for the government to survive for national interests, I am sure some (opposition) parties would understand this,” Deputy Prime Minister Ivica Dacic said in an interview published in the daily Vecernje Novosti.

Dacic directly alluded to possible support from the Progress Party (SNS) of Tomislav Nikolic, who formed the new political grouping in October from a breakaway faction of his former party, the ultra-nationalist Radicals.

“Mr Nikolic is now more open in his relations with the Democratic Party,” Dacic said of the strongest party in the ruling coalition, which is led by pro-Western President Boris Tadic.

Dacic said, however, that he felt government divisions that emerged over the finalization of an energy agreement with Russia would “not affect the stability of government.” However, Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac, a senior Democratic Party official, later insisted there was “nothing alarming” about the rift. “I expect neither a reshuffle nor the government to fall,” the Beta news agency quoted Sutanovac as saying.

Serbia’s government, an unwieldy coalition of 10 parties, pledged speedy integration with the European Union when it was formed in July. One of the new parliament’s first acts was to endorse the Russian energy deal on the same day as an EU rapprochement accord in September.

The government rift worsened last week when the G17-Plus party of Economy Minister Mladjan Dinkic voted against a draft on the energy agreement at a cabinet meeting.

At the time, Dinkic demanded that the sale of a majority stake in Serbian oil monopoly NIS to Russian energy giant Gazprom carry “full legal guarantees” that the South Stream gas pipeline will pass through Serbia.

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