“We still don’t know on what basis the measures are being adopted. Is it based on the number of new infections or those hospitalised? Or those who end up on ventilators? Or based on the number of deaths?” Glasovac said in parliament.
Euro referendum
Hrvoje Zekanović of the Croatian Sovereignists called on MPs to sign today a petition for a referendum on the introduction of the euro.
“It’s time we say that we stand by the people, that we are not politicians but activists,” he said, adding that the will of the people was more important than protecting the national currency and that “the people must decide on key matters.”
Jeckov: Fight against Serbs is the basis of politics in Vukovar
Dragana Jeckov of the Independent Democratic Serb Party criticized a conclusion of the Vukovar City Council on the need to expand the rights of ethnic Serbs.
She said that every year the conclusion stated that the degree of tolerance between Croats and Serbs “has not progressed and that conditions have not been created for expanding the rights.”
“This year, that justification sounds bad, which is that we must wait for the data of the population census to see exactly how many Serbs live in Vukovar,” Jeckov added.
As long as the current city administration remains in power, the conditions to expand Serbs’ rights will not be met because collective guilt is ascribed also to those born in 1997, 2007, and 2017, she said.
“The fight against Serbs and presenting Serbs as scapegoats are the basis of politics in Vukovar,” Jeckov said, adding that Serbs only wanted what they were entitled to under the law and the constitution.
She said the city leaders continue to stigmatize Serbs. “They make the treatment of Serbs a measure of their own patriotism in order to be recognized as the only true patriots because they are always and strictly against anything Serb. Serbs are a threat to all in Vukovar, except during local elections when good and suitable Serbs are put on slates and then those same Serbs vote that there are no conditions to expand Serb rights in Vukovar.”
Jeckov said it was not only about Cyrillic signs on public buildings but also proportionate representation and the rights to education and housing. “I am much more worried that the climate was better in 1997,” she added.
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