PODGORICA
--- Russia is pouring money into Montenegro's election campaign in an
attempt to derail the country's progress towards joining NATO, the
country's Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic said on Thursday, three days
ahead of an election.
Djukanovic,
who has led the tiny Balkan country as president or prime minister
for more than 25 years, is facing his toughest ever electoral
challenge from opposition parties that accuse him of cronyism and of
treating Montenegro as a personal fiefdom.
In
an interview with Reuters, he said opposition parties were being
financed by Moscow, which saw Sunday's parliamentary vote as a final
opportunity to stop the Balkan region's rush to integrate with the
European Union and the Atlantic alliance.
"Russia
has engaged a serious financial potential, which is I assume, made
possible through its oligarchs and funneled through secret channels
through Serbia and Republika Srpska," Djukanovic said, referring
to the Serbian part of Bosnia, Montenegro's northern neighbour.
"Traditional
opposition, pro-Serb parties are now proponents of Russian interests
in the Balkans," he added.
"These
elections are the last chance for opponents of Montenegro and the
Balkans adopting European values," he said.
Russia
and opposition parties have denied allegations that Moscow has
intervened in the election campaign, though Russia's foreign minister
has dubbed as "irresponsible" NATO's planned admission of
Montenegro.
Sunday's
vote pits Djukanovic's Democratic Party of Socialists against two
major opposition alliances, containing a mixture of pro-Serb and
pro-Western parties.
They
accuse Djukanovic of using scare tactics to stay in power.
"He
labels every opponent a danger to Montenegro and its state
interests," Nebojsa Medojevic, a senior figure in the opposition
Democratic Front alliance, said on Thursday.
He
also accused Djukanovic of being the one most closely aligned with
Moscow's interests.
"Russian
interests and influence entered Montenegro during Djukanovic's
(rule). In 2005, Djukanovic communicated closely with Russian
official politics, informal centers of power, the Russian mafia and
intelligence structures," Medojevic said.
He
pledged to hold Djukanovic to account for alleged corruption if he
took power.
Croatia
and Slovenia have already joined NATO and the EU, while Serbia and
Bosnia are both pursuing EU membership.
NATO
membership is a sensitive issue in Montenegro, which was bombed by
NATO in 1999 when it and Serbia were all that remained of Yugoslavia.
Nonetheless, it is nearing the end of the accession process. Ten
countries have already ratified its accession treaty.
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