Milanović: You Won’t Hear Me Say That HDZ Is a Criminal Organisation

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Igor Kralj / PIXSELL
Igor Kralj / PIXSELL

“I think that it is irresponsible to link the ruling, whereby the Supreme Court actually upheld a lower court’s ruling, with my statements. The idea that my rhetoric had influence on the Supreme Court’s decision is silly,” he told reporters during a visit to Samobor, a town west of Zagreb, where he attended a ceremony marking the town’s day.

The Supreme Court last Wednesday partly upheld the verdict following the retrial in the Fimi Media corruption case, under which the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) was fined HRK 3.5 million while the former PM and HDZ chief Ivo Sanader had his prison sentence cut from eight to seven years.

Sanader and his co-defendants were charged with siphoning around HRK 70 million (€9.3 million) from state-owned companies and institutions through the Fimi Media marketing agency into the HDZ’s slush funds from 2004 to 2009.

Commenting on Plenković’s statement of Friday, Milanović said that he had indeed criticised the Supreme Court but that Plenković had confused the cause with the consequence.

Plenković on Friday said, among other things, that he did not know if some judges worked under the pressure of Milanović’s rhetoric.

“And then the Supreme Court does what? It takes revenge on the HDZ by listening to me, who had criticised it. I think such statements are for the Logic Olympiad,” Milanović said.

He noted that he did not consider Plenković responsible for crime in the HDZ and did not claim that today’s HDZ was a criminal organisation.

“You won’t hear me say that the HDZ is a criminal organisation. Not all people there are clean today, but today’s HDZ has that, too, in its past. Just as the SDP has in its past the fact that it is the successor to the Communist Party,” he said, adding that those things should be left to the past and that new people were emerging and answering to voters.

He said that he had been the first in the country to raise the issue of criminal liability of legal entities.

“There was a law from 2003 which envisaged for the first time that kind of legal responsibility. I raised that issue in the parliament, I was not Prime Minister at the time, and, to my surprise, the Public State Attorney launched the procedure and the (Fimi Media) ruling is a result of that. So in a way, I am responsible for the ruling,” he said.

Protesters should not rally outside office-holders’ homes

Asked to comment on protests held outside the homes of members of the national coronavirus management team, Milanović said that protesters should not do that.

“They are free to disagree with what those people do, but to protest now, after a year and half? They could have done it earlier if they had objections, and they should especially not be doing it outside (COVID-19 response team’s members’) homes because that way they disturb their neighbours,” Milanović said, calling on the protesters to end the protests.

Speaking about the prosecution of crimes committed in the 1991-95 Homeland War, Milanović said that the Croatian judiciary had done its best, notably with regard to the prosecution of members of the aggressor forces.

“Evidently some things are no longer possible due to the passage of time. I am sure the Croatian judiciary does not have an agenda to help the enemy. There are real limitations regarding time, place and facts. I am not satisfied, but on the other hand, a lot has been done so I can say that I am also satisfied,” he said.

We have no relations with Belgrade and Serbia

As for people gone missing in the war, Milanović said that Belgrade was familiar with the destiny of close to 2,000 missing persons.

“We will insist on that, we won’t let the matter rest just like that,” he said, adding that Croatia currently has no relations with Belgrade.

“Relations with all the others are good or very good, they are not good only with Belgrade and those currently in power there,” he said.

Milanović announced that he would attend this year’s commemoration of the fall of the eastern city of Vukovar.

“This year is different, last year the way things were organised was wrong,” he said.

He welcomed the government’s decision to limit fuel prices but noted that it would cost.

“The government has the instruments, naturally all of that costs, and one should be aware that producers and distributors who have fixed costs will have to be compensated somehow,” he said, estimating that prices of energy products should go down in a few months.

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