Montenegro opposition leaders arrested after chaos in parliament

Parliament approves controversial law on religious communities despite street protests and last-minute attempt in chamber by deputies of pro-Serb opposition to prevent vote going ahead.

Security scuffle at the door of the parliamentary hall after the opposition tried to prevent the vote on a bill on religious freedoms and legal rights of religious organizations in Montenegro's parliament in Podgorica, Montenegro December 27, 2019.
Reuters

Security scuffle at the door of the parliamentary hall after the opposition tried to prevent the vote on a bill on religious freedoms and legal rights of religious organizations in Montenegro's parliament in Podgorica, Montenegro December 27, 2019.

Montenegro's opposition leaders were arrested on Friday after a dramatic night in parliament when their deputies violently protested the passing of a controversial law on religious freedom.

A total of 22 people including 17 MPs were initially detained and escorted out of the assembly, police said in a statement early Friday.

All but three were released Friday morning, with opposition leaders Milan Knezevic, Andrija Mandic and another MP held on accusations of "assaulting an official in the performance of his duties and preventing a policeman from carrying out his duties", police said.

Flashpoint law

The law has become a flashpoint for tensions between the government and the pro-Serb opposition which is close to the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC), Montenegro's main religious body.

The Church is particularly incensed over a clause requiring religious communities to prove ownership of properties from before 1918, when Montenegro lost its independence and joined a Serb-led kingdom, in order to keep them.

During the tense parliamentary debate that started on Thursday and stretched into the night, opposition MPs from the Democratic Front threatened to stoke unrest if the law was passed.

When amendments they proposed were rejected, opposition members attempted to set off a firecracker in the parliament hall, destroy microphones and physically attack other politicians, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.

After the melee, however, the law was passed.

'Difficult Christmas'

The Serbian Orthodox Church, which runs hundreds of medieval monasteries and churches on tracts of valuable land throughout the tiny country, has accused the government of using the law to appropriate church heritage and purloin its assets.

The ruling party denies this, saying it only wants to sort out ownership rights.

Church authorities in Montenegro on Friday blamed the government for the incidents which it said caused "unimaginable divisions and hatred".

"Orthodox believers are now expecting one of the hardest Christmases in Montenegro's recent history," the church said of a holiday that most followers celebrate on January 7.

It added that police beat a priest and two supporters in northern Montenegro when they joined a protest over the law, which police denied as "untrue".

On Thursday, Orthodox priests took part in a demonstration against the legislation in the capital Podgorica, where a heavy police presence was deployed as the parliamentary debate began.

There were also attempts to block roads in other parts of the country by the opposition's supporters, local media reported.

In its statement, the Church accused Montenegro's President Milo Djukanovic of wielding the law as part of his effort to revive the country's independent Orthodox Church.

'Renewal' of church

The Montenegrin Orthodox Church declared its separation from the Serbian one in the mid-1990s, but it is still not recognised by most major churches.

President Djukanovic has, however, openly called for the "renewal" of the Montenegrin church, setting off tensions with Belgrade and with pro-Serb opposition groups.

Montenegro was part of the former Yugoslavia as was Serbia for nearly 90 years until its independence in 2006, and relations between the neighbours remain complicated.

Nearly 72 percent of Montenegro's population of 620,000 follow the Orthodox faith, mostly the Serbian branch.

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