TV & Film

Serbia gripped by TV series about murder of prime minister

The show includes archive footage and dramatizes the aftermath, including the mass arrests in "Operation Sabre"

Serbia gripped by TV series about murder of prime minister

Operation Sabre

IMDb

  • Over a million Serbians watched the first episode which dramatized Djindjic’s assassination
  • Djindjic, a reformist leader, was killed for extraditing former President Milosevic to The Hague

More than a million Serbians tuned in to watch reformist Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic killed by a sniper in the first episode of a dramatic television mini-series that has had the country on the edge of its seats over the last month.

The political-crime thriller "Operation Sabre" has been a smash hit, with bitter memories of the 2003 assassination still close to the surface for many who had pinned their hopes on the dynamic new leader after the dark years of Slobodan Milosevic.

"I remember the incredible silence... you could feel the fear," actor Dragan Micanovic, who plays Djindjic in the series made by Serbia's public broadcaster, told AFP of his memories of the murder's aftermath.

Djindjic -- the first democratically elected leader of post-communist Serbia -- was killed in broad daylight on March 12, 2003 in front of a government building in the heart of the capital Belgrade.

'Watershed moment'

His supporters saw him as a leader set on transforming the pariah nation, tainted by war crimes committed during the 1990s Balkan wars, into a prosperous one headed for EU membership.

But to his enemies, he was a turncoat who oversaw the extradition of war-time leader Milosevic to The Hague, where a UN tribunal tried him for genocide and war crimes.

That was the ultimate motive for his killer, Zvezdan Jovanovic -- his tense interrogation recreated in the eight-part series, which is also showing on HBO Max for international audiences.

Jovanovic was a member of the so-called "Red Berets" -- a special unit formed by the State Security Service under Milosevic's regime. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison for his role in Djindjic's murder.

Series co-writer Vladimir Tagic, who was just 16 when Djindjic was killed, described the assassination as a watershed moment in his own life.

"From that moment on, I began to think about the world around me, realizing that I was a part of it and couldn't live outside of it," Tagic told AFP.

The series features archive footage of the dizzying events along with dramatic renderings of the murder and its aftermath when more than 11,000 people, including militia leaders, crime bosses, and police officers, were rounded up during the frantic dragnet codenamed "Operation Sabre".

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