Fatić: Part of the Beran current government in continuity with the legacy of the defeated ideology

The president of the Beran DPS committee, Bogdan Fatić, said that the fact that representatives of the local government supported naming a street after Ratko Mladić, a convicted war criminal, and that they also supported the names of collaborators of the occupiers in the Second World War, clearly speaks of their ideological reflection

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Fatić, Photo: Screenshot
Fatić, Photo: Screenshot
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

The Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) assessed that part of the current government in Beran is continuing the legacy of the ideology that was defeated, stating that they will do everything to stop these plans in civil, multi-ethnic Beran.

The Serbian monarchist movement proposed that the convicted war criminal Ratko Mladić get a street in Berane, and the Council for Proposing Names of Settlements, Streets and Squares of the Municipality of Berane adopted that proposal and forwarded it for further decision-making.

The president of the Beran DPS committee, Bogdan Fatić, said that "the fact that representatives of the local government supported the naming of a street after Ratko Mladić, a convicted war criminal, and that they also supported the names of collaborators of the occupiers in World War II, clearly speaks of their ideological reflection."

"And to the desire to change the libertarian, anti-fascist and multi-ethnic image and harmony of Beran", Fatić added.

As he stated, such a move also legitimized which side all the fascist-chauvinist graffiti in Berane came from in the previous months, "because it is about the same ideology that was represented by Đujić and Mladić, and whose current bearers are the representatives of the local government in Berane. which they themselves confirmed".

"We will do everything to stop these plans in civil, multi-ethnic Berane," said Fatić.

He said that he would not be surprised if the current state government were to amend the Law on Monuments, bearing in mind the composition of the parliament.

"I believe that now the vast majority of citizens are clear about the political forces that want to govern Montenegro. "Their declarative support for a civil and European state fails every day in the practical field," concludes Fatić's response.

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