Montenegro holds a referendum on remaining in …

Years: 1992 - 1992
April

Montenegro holds a referendum on remaining in Yugoslavia in 1992, in which all but four-tenths of a percent of the votes are cast for remaining in the federation with Serbia, although the turnout is only sixty-six percent because of a boycott by the Muslim, Albanian and Catholic minorities as well as of pro-independence Montenegrins.

The opposition claims that the poll had been organized under undemocratic conditions, during war time in the former Yugoslavia, with widespread propaganda from the state-controlled media in favor of a pro-federation vote.

There is no impartial report on the fairness of the referendum, as it had not been nicmonitored.

Montenegro thus accedes in 1992 to the “third Yugoslavia,” a federal republic comprising only it and Serbia.

On the other hand, in 1989, the remains of King Nicholas and other members of the former royal family had been returned to Montenegro to be reinterred with great ceremony in Cetinje.

This sign of the continuing strength of a sense of distinctive Montenegrin identity is matched by lively criticism of the conduct of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In addition, UN sanctions against Yugoslavia seriously harm Montenegro, especially by undermining its lucrative tourist trade; their impact, however, is somewhat softened by the opportunities created for smuggling, in collaboration with interests in Albania.

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