Crack unit of Serbian dictator slayers?
I first heard about Otpor (“Resistance”) and Center for Applied NonViolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS) in a superb Reason article from 2006 called “The 50 Habits of Highly Effective Revolutionaries“.
Last week I read that Stratfor (the civilian CIA) thinks that Hugo Chavez’s recent political reverse may be due to the CANVAS activity in Venezuela.
From Stratfor.com (registration required)
The Venezuelan government lost its constitutional amendment referendum in a national vote Dec. 2, emboldening the opposition and dealing President Hugo Chavez his first electoral defeat since he took office a decade ago. This is hardly the end of the line for Chavez, but something new is taking shape in the country: a competent and capable opposition.
…The opposition campaign against the constitutional changes that would have enshrined Chavez in power for a generation was organized, unified and even a little slick…A reason for this newfound effectiveness is the entrance into the Venezuelan equation of a new group from the most unlikely of places: Serbia.
Roughly three months ago, a group calling itself the Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS) began operating in Venezuela. CANVAS’ raison d’etre is simple: to teach local forces how to most effectively oppose the authoritarian regimes who rule them. Courtesy of CANVAS, the dustbin of history boasts a few pieces of geopolitical roadkill: former Georgian President Edward Shevardnadze (Rose Revolution, 2003), former Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev (Tulip Revolution, 2005), nearly President Viktor Yanukovich (Orange Revolution, 2004-05) and CANVAS’ first-ever foe, former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic (2000).
CANVAS, originally known in Serbia as Otpor (loosely translated as “Resistance”), excels at bridging the gaps between disparate factions, mobilizing popular support, coordinating protest actions and hitting authoritarian governments where it most hurts. It shines at carrying out the sort of activities at which the Venezuelan opposition fails miserably, and it has now contributed to Chavez’s first real defeat.
The article above is a follow up to a previous article in Stratfor predicting that another “color revolution” may be forming, this time in Venezuela.
I love the idea of a band of well organised veteran Serbian freedom fighters waging peaceful regime change across the unfree world. It is probably the best thing to come out of the Milosevic era.
A billion Euros for Serbia until 2011
From Blic Online:
“In the following five years Serbia shall have the opportunity to use a billion Euros from the EU Fund for pre-accession support on the basis of a frame agreement that Serbia Deputy Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic and director for the West Balkans at the EC Directorate for enlargement Pierre Mirel initialed yesterday. These are nor-returnable assets from the Union’s budget. ”
FDI in Serbia at EUR 11bn since 2000
From B92:
“BELGRADE — Foreign direct investment in Serbia has in the past seven years reached EUR 11bn, a report says.The Center for Liberal Democratic Studies (CLDS) has published a report on Greenfield investment in Serbian industry, showing that foreign investment has hit new highs this year and last, totaling some EUR 7bn.
According to 2007 projections, Serbia will attract EUR 471 per citizen of direct investment, which is above the average of EUR 365 for eastern European countries, but less than half of the EUR 1,031 per citizen that Montenegro is expected to attract
In terms of investment, Montenegro is the leader in the region, with Croatia in second place with EUR 639 per citizen, and Serbia third.”





