Montenegro’s farmers & environmental protesters ruin army’s plans for mortar shelling exercises

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Montenegro's farmers & environmental protesters ruin army's plans for mortar shelling exercises

Montenegro’s Defense Ministry has postponed military training exercises after local shepherds and activists staged a protest over environmental concerns.

The mountain region of Sinjajevina was selected to host military drills including mortar shelling by the Montenegro army. However, the plan didn’t sit well with local farmers and environmental activists, who set up camps in the area and staged non-stop protests to oppose the drills.

The exercise was scheduled for this week, but the army had to retreat. Colonel Aleksandar Pantović, the Chief of Staff of the General Staff, announced that the drills have to be delayed. “We conducted a reconnaissance… the conditions for shooting were not met and that this is not possible,” Pantović told local media. “When all the conditions are met, we will continue with the realization of the exercise.”

Environmental activists and local farmers camp in protest on the mountain Sinjajevina where the Montenegrin army planned a live-fire exercise on October 18, 2020 in Krnja Jela, Montenegro.


© Getty Images / Filip Filipovic

A local MP from the URA party supporting the protest, Dritan Abazovic, called the decision a “significant victory” for Montenegro’s citizens and ecology.

The region in question, Mount Sinjajevina, consists of the largest stretch of grassland in the Balkans and makes up part of a location designated a UNESCO biosphere reserve. It was chosen as a place for a military polygon last year – something that triggered public discontent. Farmers and activists argued that explosives risk damaging the delicate environment and would contaminate the water supply.

Environmental activists and local farmers camp in protest on the mountain Sinjajevina where the Montenegrin army planned a live-fire exercise on October 18, 2020 in Krnja Jela, Montenegro.


© Getty Images / Filip Filipovic

“We will certainly not clash with the citizens,” the country’s Defense Minister Predrag Boskovic said in an interview. However, he noted that it is impossible to have an army unable to train on its own territory.

Montenegro is a NATO member state currently possessing an armed force of 2,400 active duty soldiers.

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