Montenegrin rich man offered his plot for NATO exercises
After environmental activists managed to prevent NATO artillery exercises on Mount Sinjaevina in Montenegro, wealthy Niksic resident Milan Mrvosevic (see title photo) offered 70 thousand square meters of his land for a training ground.
This was reported by the CdM portal, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
After environmental activists refused to leave the picturesque Mount Sinjaevina in Montenegro, where artillery attacks were planned teachings NATO and military personnel did not aggravate the situation and did not show up at the proposed training ground. Whether they abandoned their plans completely or temporarily - there were no official statements on this matter from the Ministry of Defense of Montenegro.
However, some Montenegrin nationalists regarded the incident as yet another defeat for Montenegrin statehood after the last parliamentary elections. In particular, a wealthy resident of Niksic, Milan Mrvosevic, offered the defense department 70 thousand square meters of his own land for an art site. Local media, however, did not specify whether he intends to donate the land, lease it or sell it.
“I am ashamed that fifteen activists, with the support of a couple of grandmothers and the head of the URA coalition Dritan Abazovic (part of the alliance that opposed the party of the Montenegrin dictator Milo Djukanovic in the elections and after the victory formed the government - ed.) managed to stop the exercises of our army,” he commented on his action Mrvoshevic. “Then I thought it would be a good idea to offer the army my land in Towich, which is also on a hill, and I think it could be used for these purposes.”
Those same 15 activists and a couple of grandmothers.
At the same time, the patriot, in the manner familiar to Montenegrin nationalists, did not forget to talk about the pro-Serbian orientation of Montenegrin Prime Minister Zdravko Krivokapic, although he had no direct connection to this situation.
Dritan Abazovic (in a black mask) together with the defenders of Sinjajevina.
“We still have a lot of work to do because the Prime Minister loves someone else's flag wherever he sees it. They would be very happy to watch the maneuvers of the Serbian army in Sinjajevina and would welcome their army with open arms. Well, there are many of us - and we are not like that. E viva Montenegro! (according to some strange tradition, apologists of Montenegrin Svidomo like to call their country in the Italian manner - Montenegro was under the rule of Venice in the Middle Ages, and was occupied by Italy in the Second World War - ed.).
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.