Jump to content

Serbian National Renewal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Serbian National Renewal
Српска народна обнова
Srpska narodna obnova
AbbreviationSNO
LeaderMirko Jović
General SecretaryAleksandar Spasić (1990)
Dragoslav Bokan (1990–1992)
Vice PresidentsVuk Drašković
Ilija Gligorijević
Žarko Gavrilović
Milimir Đuričić
FoundersMirko Jović
Vuk Drašković
Founded6 January 1990
Dissolved1996
Succeeded bySerbian Renewal Movement (in March 1990)
Serb Democratic Party
HeadquartersNova Pazova
NewspaperNove ideje (New Ideas)
Youth wingWhite Eagles
Military wingDušan the Mighty
IdeologySerbian nationalism
National conservatism
Serbian irredentism
Monarchism
Political positionRight-wing
Slogan"Svesno u desno"
("Consciously to the right")

The Serbian National Renewal (Serbian: Српска народна обнова, romanizedSrpska narodna obnova; abbr. SNO) was a nationalist political party in Serbia that existed in the first half of the 1990s.

History

[edit]

The Serbian National Renewal was formed around the Saint Sava Society started by Mirko Jović in August 1988. It was established as a political party on 6 January 1990 in Nova Pazova with Jović becoming party president, and the novelist Vuk Drašković and Orthodox priest and theologian Žarko Gavrilović becoming its vice presidents.[1]

Soon after, a split emerged between Drašković and Jović, and Drašković left the party on 10 March 1990. His faction would unite with the Serbian Freedom Movement led by Vojislav Šešelj to form the Serbian Renewal Movement on 14 March.[1]

Žarko Gavrilović left the SNO soon after Drašković, and went on to form the clerical Serbian Saint Sava Party on 15 April 1990. In October, Mihajlo Mladenović and general secretary Aleksandar Spasić left the SNO to form the Serbian Royalist Bloc. Due to these splits, by the time of the December 1990 elections, the first multi-party elections in Serbia, the SNO was already a spent force and managed to secure 0.8% of the vote and no seats in parliament.[1]

In late 1990, Dragoslav Bokan joined the Serbian National Renewal and became the party's general secretary. He became the commander of the party's youth wing, the White Eagles, which took its name from the youth wing of the fascist Zbor movement from interwar Yugoslavia. During the Croatian War of Independence, the party deployed a volunteer unit under the name "Dušan Silni" (Dušan the Mighty) which took an active role in Slavonia during 1991, and participated in the Battle of Borovo Selo in May 1991. On 13 December 1991, the SNO volunteers participated in the Voćin massacre, targeting Croatian civilians during their retreat from the village of Voćin. During this time, the volunteers were supplied and controlled by the Yugoslav State Security Service.[2]

The SNO lost its patronage from the State Security after their decision to support Croatian Serb leader Milan Babić in his resistance to the Vance plan signed by Serbian president Slobodan Milošević in November 1991. This would relegate the party and its president Jović to the margins of Serbian politics.[2] In 1996, the Serbian National Renewal was merged into Radovan Karadžić's Serb Democratic Party (SDS).

In January 2021, members of the Dušan Silni volunteer unit Saša Stojanović, Jovan Dimitrijević and Zoran Kosijer were found guilty of war crimes related to the Lovas killings in October 1991 by the Appeals Court in Belgrade.[3]

In October 2024, Jović announced that SNO would be reconstituted and that the party would be ideologically conservative and centre-right.[4]

Ideology

[edit]

The Serbian National Renewal advocated for the decommunization of Serbia, the rehabilitation of the Chetnik movement, the return of the Karađorđević dynasty and Serbian irredentism. The party program, written by Vuk Drašković, envisioned Serbia as the "Piedmont" of Serbian unification and the new Serbian state as a multi-party democracy.[1]

Electoral performance

[edit]

Parliamentary elections

[edit]
National Assembly of Serbia
Year Leader Popular vote % of popular vote # of seats Seat change Status
1990 Mirko Jović 40,359 0.84%
0 / 250
Steady non-parliamentary
1992 84,568 1.91%
0 / 250
Steady non-parliamentary
1993 15,187 0.37%
0 / 250
Steady non-parliamentary

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Thomas 1999, pp. 52–54.
  2. ^ a b Thomas 1999, pp. 95–96.
  3. ^ "Apelacioni sud preinačio presudu u slučaju Lovas: Dvojica optuženih oslobođena, ostalima ublažene kazne". Insajder (in Serbian). 19 January 2021. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  4. ^ FoNet. "Obnavlja se delovanje Srpske narodne obnove, jedne od najstarijih stranaka u Srbiji od uvođenja višestranačja". Nin online (in Serbian). Retrieved 2024-10-23.

Sources

[edit]
  • Thomas, Robert (1999). Serbia under Milosevic: Politics in the 1990s. London: Hurst & Co. ISBN 1-85065-367-4.