President Zoran Milanović to Recall Ambassador to Serbia Over His Alleged Disregard For Ethnic Croats

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screenshot / Hrvatska radiotelevizija
screenshot / Hrvatska radiotelevizija

In the meantime media outlets have reported that Ambassador Biščević did not react to the developments in which ethnic Croats received death threats, and that he also failed to even telephone those members who received threats to express sympathy with them.

Žigmanov, who is the leader of the Democratic party of Croats in Vojvodina (DSHV), recently claimed that the Croatian ambassador had made a “tepid reaction” to attempts by Serbian authorities in Subotica to introduce the Bunjevci vernacular as an official language in that northern city and that the ambassador communicated with people whom Žigmanov described as persons “who are actively working on the destabilisation and dissolution of the (ethnic Croat) community.”

All that prompted President Milanović to say today that he did not know whose policy Biščević “is pursuing there.”

I cannot know whether all those headlines are true and I will summon him back to Zagreb for consultations, Milanović said in his address to the press at the Gašinci military range in eastern Croatia.

The Večernji List daily has reported that on 30 March, Žigmanov sent a letter to Croatian Foreign Minister Gordan Grlić Radman to inform him that Biščević was working against the interests of the ethnic Croat community in Serbia.

For more about politics in Croatia, follow TCN’s dedicated page.

 

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