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Milic: Parliament sitting on Friday to be like the one held on 12 July 1941

President of the Socialist People’s Party (SNP) Srdjan Milic said yesterday that he and his party would not be bound by the Parliament’s decision on NATO, which is scheduled for 28 April. Milic compared the Parliament sitting with the one held on 12 July 1941 in Cetinje.

“What is important for everyone to know – neither I personally nor SNP will accept or be bounded by any decision of this Parliament composed of MPs who have not been elected based on voters’ free will. As for myself, I don’t care about the decision,” Milic wrote on his Facebook profile.

He sees the Parliament sitting scheduled for 28 April in Cetinje as “the same as the one scheduled by Macolini and Montenegrin federalists for St. Peter’s Day, on 12 July 1941”.

Then they also spoke about the “necessity of turning to civilised West and values cherished by the most developed countries of that time”. History teaches us how the former generations responded to the decision of the St. Peter’s Day’s assembly, Milic said.

The St. Peter’s Day’s assembly was the Parliament’s sitting held on 12 July 1941 in Cetinje by supporters of independent Montenegro occupied by Italian fascist government. The Parliament declared the annulment of the Podgorica Assembly’s decisions and proclaimed the restoration of the Kingdom of Montenegro. However, its decisions were never implemented due to the 13 July uprising that broke out the next day.

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