Milošević's rule has been described by observers as
authoritarian or
autocratic, as well as
kleptocratic, with numerous accusations of
electoral fraud, political assassinations,
suppression of media freedom and
police brutality. He became the first sitting head of state to be charged with war crimes. His role in the
Yugoslav Wars led to international
sanctions against Yugoslavia, which had a devastating impact on the Yugoslav economy and society, while
NATO bombing significantly damaged the country's infrastructure. While the overthrow of Milošević was reported as a spontaneous revolution, there had been a year-long battle involving thousands of Serbs in a strategy to remove the leader's legitimacy, turn his security forces against him, and force him to call for elections, the result of which he would not acknowledge. In 1998, a dozen students met to form
Otpor! (Serbian for "resistance"). Analysing the
1996–97 protests, they realised they needed more effective organisation, strategy, planning, and recruiting for a sustained fight. Galvanised by outrage over new laws that imposed political control of their universities and harassment of independent media, the Otpor students called for the removal of Milošević and the establishment of democracy and the rule of law. Prior to this, Milošević was cracking down on opposition, non-government organisations and independent media. From 1991 onwards there were campaigns of
civil resistance against his administration that were to culminate in the largely non-violent revolution of October 2000. As the end of his first term in office of the
president of Yugoslavia approached (previously, he had been elected
president of Serbia, in two terms, from 1989 to 1997), on 6 July 2000, the rules of the election of the president were changed. Whilst the president of Yugoslavia had previously been chosen for one term only by the legislature, in the Yugoslav parliament, it was now to be directly elected via the
two-round voting system of presidential elections with a maximum of two terms. Many onlookers believed that Milošević's intentions for supporting such reforms had more to do with holding power than with improving democracy. On 27 July 2000, the authorities announced that the
early elections were to be held 24 September 2000, although Milošević's term wouldn't expire until 23 July 2001. The elections for the upper house of the federal parliament, Council of Citizens (
Veće građana), as well as the local elections were also scheduled to be held on the same date. On 25 August 2000,
Ivan Stambolić, a former mentor and political ally of Milošević, was mysteriously kidnapped and detained from his home and was summarily executed in
Fruška Gora. The hit was believed to have been initiated by Milošević so he could prevent Stambolić from being a potential electoral opponent. His decomposed body was found three years later in March 2003. The four officers who had kidnapped him were sentenced. Milošević was charged for initiating the assassination. ==Elections==