Serbia, Croatia clash diplomatically over migrants

Government representatives on both sides traded insults while the two Balkan nations established new embargoes against one another.

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Darko Vojinovic/AP
Cars with foreign license plates enter Serbia at the Batrovci border crossing between Serbia and Croatia, about 100 kilometers west from Belgrade, Serbia, Thursday, Sept. 24, 2015.

Former Yugoslav foes Serbia and Croatia turned back the clock on 15 years of reconciliation on Thursday, trading embargoes and insults as Europe’s migrant crisis damaged relations in the fragile Western Balkans.

With relations hitting their lowest ebb since Serbia came in from the cold with the ouster of late strongman Slobodan Milosevic in 2000, the Balkan neighbors exchanged tit-for-tat sanctions that saw Croatian goods and cargo vehicles banned from entering Serbia and Serbian-registered vehicles barred from entering Croatia from Serbia.

Croatia, which fought a 1991-95 war against Belgrade-backed Serb rebels to forge its independence from communist Yugoslavia, is demanding Serbia stop directing tens of thousands of migrants exclusively over their joint border, saying it cannot keep pace with the influx.

Amid conflicting information from both sides, Serbian citizens were also being turned back at the Croatian border, witnesses said, though Croatia’s interior minister blamed a glitch in the computer system.

Serbia was unconvinced, and in language that reached back to the collapse of their joint Yugoslav state two decades ago, the Foreign Ministry compared the Croatian measures to the racial laws enforced by its World War Two-era Nazi puppet regime.

"In their discriminatory character, they can only be compared with measures taken in the past, during the fascist Independent Croatia,” the ministry said in a statement.

Almost 50,000 migrants have flowed into European Union-member Croatia via Serbia in little over a week since Hungary, northern neighbor to both countries, barred their entry to the EU by sealing its border with Serbia with a metal fence.

Zagreb says Serbia should send them to Hungary and Romania too, and last week closed seven of eight border crossings with Serbia to vehicles before halting cargo traffic altogether in an attempt to exert pressure on Belgrade.

As a midnight deadline set by Serbia for Croatia to lift the blockade expired, Belgrade announced it was banning entry to all Croatian cargo vehicles and Croatian-made goods.

Croatia swiftly replied, halting all Serbian-registered vehicles. Serbian passport holders were also being turned back at the border, Reuters witnesses said.

Police gave conflicting information, but Croatian Interior Minister Ranko Ostojic said: "As far as people are concerned, they can enter Croatia." On Twitter, the Croatian government later said the vehicle ban applied to Serbian cars entering from Serbia, but not necessarily from Croatia’s other neighbors, such as Bosnia.

'LIVING LIKE DOGS'

The row risks setting back years of work in rebuilding relations between Serbia and Croatia since the overthrow of Milosevic, who backed ethnic Serb forces in Croatia and Bosnia with guns, men and money during the collapse of the Yugoslav federation in the 1990s.

Serbian Justice Minister Nikola Selakovic said Serbia had been "brutally attacked by Croatia."

Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic, whose center-left cabinet faces a fight for power with conservative opponents in a parliamentary election this year, said he would not allow Serbia "to make fools out of us."

"Citizens of Serbia, all your prime minister needs to do is to stop such an intense flow of migrants," he said in Zagreb on returning from an EU summit on the migrant crisis in Brussels. "We can function with 4,000 to 5,000 people a day. But more than that will not work, and I will not allow it."

Croatia is sending the migrants north across its border with Hungary, which passes them on to Austria, but Zagreb says it cannot cope with the pace, leading to desperate and sometime angry scenes at over-crowded camps and railway stations.

The situation threatens to worsen further as Hungary nears completion of a fence along the Croatian stretch of its southern border to keep them out.

On the main highway between Zagreb and Belgrade, long lines of trucks stretched back in either direction.

"(Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar) Vucic and Milanovic are trading fire over our heads, while we are living here like dogs," said Bojan Djukic, 32, a Serbian trucker. "No food, no water, no toilet, no shower. I‘ve been in this truck for 42 hours now."

Zeljko, a Croatian driver in the next truck, said: “What migrants? I haven’t seen a single migrant. This is just political tit-for-tat and we’re paying the price.”

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