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Boris Tadic
President of Serbia
Posted 19.09.2004
Boris Tadic, leader of the Democratic Party (DS), was elected
president of Serbia on 27 June 2004, in a runoff election
against Serbian Radical Party candidate Tomislav Nikolic.
Tadic was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
on 15 January 1958. He finished his secondary education
in Belgrade, and graduated with a degree in psychology from
Belgrade University.
A member of the DS since 1990, Tadic became
telecommunications minister in the coalition government
of democratic forces from November 2000 to June 2001. Tadic
took over the presidency of the DS in February 2004.
Tadic served as defense minister of Serbia-Montenegro
from March 2003 to April 2004. He became known for his army
reforms and his idea to send a Serbian contingent on a mission
to Afghanistan in a bid to warm his country's relations
with NATO.
He made the General Staff directly accountable
to the defence ministry for the first time since World War
II, and launched a modernization plan aimed at readying
the armed forces for membership in NATO's Partnership for
Peace programme.
A supporter of assassinated Serbian Prime
Minister Zoran Djindjic, Tadic has pledged to follow in
his predecessor's footsteps in charting a democratic, pro-European,
free-market course for Serbia.
He has also urged Serbs to "forget
the nationalist policies" of former President Slobodan
Milosevic, which left the country isolated internationally.
During the election campaign, Tadic promised
to take his country closer to the EU, telling voters that
this was only way to secure a better life for Serbs.
Tadic advocated co-operation with the West,
a peaceful solution to the Kosovo problem, the continuation
of reforms, and EU accession in as short a time as possible.
His presidency is expected to help Serbia continue its journey
towards association with the EU, the Partnership for Peace
programme, and other European and NATO organisations.
EU representatives welcomed Tadic's victory.
The head of the EU mission in Belgrade, Geoffrey Barrett,
said the Union is "very satisfied" with the election
of Tadic.
Tadic is married and has four children.
He speaks English and French.
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