TIRANA, October 29 – The outgoing Prime Minister of Montenegro, Dritan Abazovic, unveiled in the parliamentary plenary session on October 28 that the same scenario was planned to be applied to him as the one on Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, who was killed in 2003.
While talking about the smuggling of goods into the country, mainly that of cigarettes, for which Montenegrin politicians often accuse each other, Abazovic said that he knew about the plan from information received by a foreign diplomat.
“A foreign diplomat told me that what is being prepared is the same scenario as with Zoran Djindjic… Cigarette smuggling is clinically dead. I am ready to answer and go to jail, but that won’t solve the smuggling problem. Some have built empires out of smuggling. Four people lost their lives due to cigarette smuggling,” he said, quoted by the BalkanWeb portal.
Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic was killed on March 12, 2003 in the courtyard of the Serbian government building. Djindjic was the first prime minister of Serbia after the fall of late Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic and his regime in 2000. After those events Serb democratic opposition came to power. /Argumentum.al