Serbia Says Farewell to Democracy Campaigner and Former Dissident Dragoljub Micunovic
Dragoljub Micunovic, September 2003. Dragoljub Micunovic, one of the founders of the first Yugoslav opposition party, the Democratic Party, in the era of the autocratic leader Slobodan Milosevic, has
ManyPress Editorial Team
ManyPress Editorial

Dragoljub Micunovic, September 2003. Dragoljub Micunovic, one of the founders of the first Yugoslav opposition party, the Democratic Party, in the era of the autocratic leader Slobodan Milosevic, has died aged 95. He was one of the main actors during the democratic changes in the former Yugoslavia in 2000.
Micunovic was born in 1930 in the Serbian southern region of Toplica. During the conflict between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in 1948, he was among the members of the Yugoslav Communist Party who were suspected of being “pro-Stalinist”, and spent 20 months on Goli Otok, an infamous prison camp for political detainees. In 1960, he became an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade. He was among the organisers of the anti-government protests of June 1968. Although the protests lasted only seven days in Belgrade, they were important as the first popular revolt in the country since it became communist after World War II. The protesters criticised rising social inequality, bureaucratization, unemployment and demanded free speech and the abolition of privileges, as the academic work of Aleksandar Pavlovic and Mark Losoncz explains. Due to his opposition activity, he was removed from the Faculty of Philosophy together with seven colleagues by a special law passed in 1975, the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory wrote in Micunovic’s biography . He was a guest lecturer at universities in the US and Germany. In 1990, he returned to teaching at the Faculty of Philosophy. Micunovic was one of the founders of the Democratic Party, the first opposition party in Yugoslavia, in 1989, and was elected its first president. Ten years later, he was one of those who called on all opposition parties in Serbia to unite, which resulted in the formation of the Democratic Opposition of Serbia coalition. This coalition was crucial for the democratic changes and final overthrow of Milosevic’s regime on October 5, 2000.
Key points
- Micunovic was born in 1930 in the Serbian southern region of Toplica.
- During the conflict between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in 1948, he was among the members of the Yugoslav Communist Party who were suspected of being “pro-Stalinist”, and spent 20 months on Gol…
- In 1960, he became an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade.
- He was among the organisers of the anti-government protests of June 1968.
- Although the protests lasted only seven days in Belgrade, they were important as the first popular revolt in the country since it became communist after World War II.
This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by Balkan Insight (BIRN).



