Published 14:34 IST, August 30th 2020
Voters in Montenegro hope election brings stability
Voters in Montenegro went to the polls on Sunday in a tense election that is pitting the long-ruling pro-Western party against an opposition seeking closer ties with Serbia and Russia.
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Voters in Montenegro went to the polls on Sunday in a tense election that is pitting the long-ruling pro-Western party against an opposition seeking closer ties with Serbia and Russia.
The parliamentary vote is marked by a dispute over a law on religious rights that is staunchly opposed by the influential Serbian Orthodox Church.
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Months of church-led protests against the property bill have raised tensions and fears of potential incidents during and after the election on Sunday.
In October 2016, the authorities said they thwarted a planned election-day coup orchestrated by two Russian military intelligence officers.
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Some 540-thousand voters are choosing whether to keep in power the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) which has governed Montenegro for some 30 years.
The party led Montenegro to independence peacefully from much larger Serbia in 2006 and into NATO, despite strong opposition from Russia.
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However, the DPS and its leader, Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic, have faced accusations of an autocratic rule, widespread graft and criminal links.
Djukanovic has said Sunday's vote will determine whether Montenegro will continue toward membership in the European Union or allow Serbia and Russia to install their stooges.
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Opinion polls ahead of the election have predicted that the DPS will finish ahead of other groups, but might not garner enough votes to form the government on its own.
The main opposition group, the pro-Serb and pro-Russian "For the future of Montenegro" alliance, has backed the church-led protests against the religion bill, and it wants closer ties with Belgrade and Moscow.
The Serbian Orthodox Church has argued that the law allows the Montenegrin state to confiscate its property as a prelude to setting up a separate Montenegrin church. This has been denied by the government.
About one third of Montenegro's 620-thousand people declare themselves as Serbs, which makes relations with Serbia and the Serbian Orthodox Church a highly sensitive issue.
Placed third in pre-election polls, the "Peace is our nation" group comprises more moderate parties seeking middle ground.
Several other smaller parties and those run by ethnic minorities are also in the race that is being held amid the new coronavirus outbreak.
14:34 IST, August 30th 2020