in
Belgrade electoral rally, 2012 Nowadays, the salute is used in wide variety of events: from street demonstrations and celebrations, rallies during election campaigns (used by members and supporters of almost all Serbian political parties), to sporting events and personal celebrations (wedding and birthday parties).
2007 Eurovision winner
Marija Šerifović used the salute when celebrating points; controversially, she used the salute when receiving the maximum of 12 points from Bosnian viewers, after which Bosnian media reported it as being used as a direct provocation. The Swedish-Serbian National Association called it 'ridiculous', saying that the salute is not to be mistaken in that way, but viewed as nothing more than 'a modified
V sign', even though the three finger salute is older than the V sign.
Usage in sports team photo after semifinal victory displaying the three-finger salute Usage by Serbian athletes is particularly visible. Serbian tennis player
Novak Djokovic often raises three fingers after his victories. In a famous photograph of the
Red Star Belgrade team celebrating their victory at the
1990–91 European Cup, eight players are seen using the Serb salute, while a Croatian player,
Robert Prosinečki, is not. After winning the
1995 European basketball championship, the entire
Serbia and Montenegro's team displayed the three fingers.
Aleksandar Đorđević says he flashed the three fingers "not to be provocative. Just: that's Serbia, that's us, that's me – nothing else. It's my pride." In 2001, Australian football team
Perth Glory's
Bobby Despotovski (of Macedonian parentage) was sanctioned by the Australian Soccer Federation for giving the salute to the predominantly
Croatian-community crowd at a
Melbourne Knights home game and inciting a fight; Despotovski and coach Bernd Stange were subsequently assaulted by Knights fans, forcing the next fixture between the sides to be moved to Launceston. Serbian water polo player
Aleksandar Šapić said in 2007 that "I know that it was used by soldiers in war, but I do not raise three fingers because I hate someone. I respect all peoples, and know what is in my heart." The salute was met with disapproval in
Turkey after
Duško Tošić, playing for
Beşiktaş, used the salute after Serbia won over Albania in the guest match in the
UEFA 2016 qualifiers; Beşiktaş fans threatened him through social media. In the
2022 World Cup, FIFA opened a disciplinary case against Croatian fans following their taunting of the Canadian goalkeeper
Milan Borjan, born in an ethnic Serb region of Croatia that was part of the conflict in the 1990s. Fans chanted 'Borjan is an
Ustaša', referring to the pro-Nazi regime which exterminated Serbs, Roma people, and Jews in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina during World War II. In response to the taunting, he showed the three-finger salute.
Wartime usage and controversies Croats,
Bosniaks, and
Kosovar Albanians, who have been at war with Serbs in the past, find the salute provocative. During the
Yugoslav Wars, the salute was widely used as a Serb symbol. In the prelude of the
Bosnian War, Bosnian Serbs were encouraged to vote in the
1991 referendum through posters which displayed the three fingers. During the wars, Serb soldiers raised the three fingers as a sign of victory. When Russian peacekeeping troops entered war-torn Sarajevo in 1994, they used the salute when greeting the Serb troops, and because of this, they were considered pro-Serb; the
UNPROFOR used the Serb salute when greeting the Serbs, and the
V sign when greeting the Bosniaks, showing
impartiality. In 2006, the United Nations published the case titled IT-00-39-T from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, describing several atrocities committed by Serb military and police forces on Bosniak and Croatian civilians on 20 July 1992, in concentration camps Keratem, Omarska, and Trnopolje. Detaines were executed, humiliated, and were forced to spit on the Bosnian flag and do the three-finger sign. There were instances when non-Serb captives were forced to use the salute. According to a BBC documentary about the Srebrenica massacre, Bosnian Serb forces transported Bosnian civilians in buses to the village of Tisca. During the travel the civilians saw
Chetniks (Serbs) showed the three-finger symbol and when they arrived, Serb police forces forced them to surrender them to hand over gold and jewellery and threatening to chop off the women's breasts. In 1999,
Human Rights Watch obtained photographs from the
KLA administration in
Peć depicting Serb soldiers carrying assault rifle, doing the three-finger salute and standing in front of burning houses. KLA officials told the Human Rights Watch that the photographs had been found in the homes of ethnic Serb citizens in the Peć area after Serbian forces withdrew from Kosovo earlier that year. In 1999, after the
NATO bombing of Serbia,
Colin Woodard wrote about thousands of
Serbian Americans who filled the park opposite the
White House on
Pennsylvania Avenue, shouting "Kosovo is Serbia" and "Stop the bombing", while wearing military caps and making the three-finger salute. In 2001, after the end of the Kosovo war, the
UCPMB forces were to hand over themselves to the
KFOR, however, an incident occurred when Serb forces shot dead a UCPMB senior commander (who was not keen on the agreement with the KFOR) as he accidentally drove into a village where Serb generals led a parade giving the Serbian three fingered salute. == See also ==