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  1. Svetozar Milošević, father of Slobodan Milošević was born in Ljevorecki Tuzi, a small, remote village in northern Montenegro. He had become a highschool teacher of religion, Russian and Serbo-Croatian in Titograd (Now known as Podgorica) Montenegro's capital. Svetozar was also a deacon in the Serbian Orthodox Church....

  2. v. t. e. Slobodan Milošević ( Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Слободан Милошевић, pronounced [slobǒdan milǒːʃevitɕ] ⓘ; 20 August 1941 – 11 March 2006) was a Yugoslav and Serbian politician who was the President of Serbia between 1989–1997 and President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from 1997 until his оverthrow ...

  3. Mar 13, 2006 · After the war his parents separated: his father, Svetozar, returned to his native Montenegro and committed suicide in 1962; his mother, Stanislava, killed herself in 1974. Another of...

  4. Mar 11, 2006 · The former Serbian leader, Slobodan Milosevic, was found dead in his prison cell at The Hague today, apparently of natural causes. He was 65 years old and had been on trial for war crimes before...

    • Sylvia Poggioli
  5. Slobodan MILOSEVIC, son of Svetozar Milosevic, was born on 20 August 1941 in Pozarevac, in the present-day Republic of Serbia, one of the constituent republics of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ("FRY"). In 1964, he graduated from the Law Faculty of the University of Belgrade and began a career in management and banking.

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  7. Slobodan Milošević (born August 29, 1941, Požarevac, Yugoslavia [now in Serbia]—found dead March 11, 2006, The Hague, Netherlands) was a politician and administrator, who, as Serbia’s party leader and president (1989–97), pursued Serbian nationalist policies that contributed to the breakup of the socialist Yugoslav federation.

  8. Slobodan Milošević is likely the most famous person tried by the ICTY in The Hague. He was the President of Serbia and oversaw much of the Bosnian War. He was a driving force behind Serbian nationalism at the time and hoped to establish a Serbian state out of the collapse of the Yugoslavia.