Serbs Drop Draft-Dodge Charge Vs. Divac (AP) Updated: 2005-11-19 11:50
Former NBA star Vlade Divac was cleared Friday of draft dodging in his native
country.
Prosecutors dropped the charges a day after Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav
Kostunica came to the player's defense. Kostunica said Divac had "proven his
patriotism innumerable times during his long career" in basketball.
![](xin_5511021911455422893515.jpg) Former NBA star
Vlade Divac reacts during a Eubasketball match between his former team
Partizan Belgrade and Real Madrid, Thursday Nov. 17, 2005, in Belgrade.
Serbia-Montenegro's army says it has filed charges against former NBA star
Vlade Divac for evading the military draft. [AP] |
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"What hurt me the most was the negative way my country was presented (in the
U.S.) through this case," Divac said at a meeting with Serbia-Montenegro's
Defense Minister Zoran Sankovic.
Earlier this week, the Serbia-Montenegro army filed the charges, claiming
that the 37-year-old Divac was obliged by law to join the army for the
compulsory six-month military service by the age of 35. Draft dodging carries a
one-year prison sentence in Serbia.
The case drew much attention in Serbia, where Divac is revered as a national
hero for helping the former Yugoslavia to silver medals at the 1988 and 1996
Olympics, and leading the country now known as Serbia-Montenegro to a gold medal
at the 2002 world championships.
Divac, who voiced surprise over the charges, said in a statement he had filed
all of the necessary documents for postponing army duties on a regular basis
with the Serbia-Montenegro embassy in the United States.
Milovan Bozovic, a Belgrade district prosecutor, said the charges were
unfounded because all holders of dual nationality are not obliged to serve in
the military in Serbia-Montenegro.
Divac has had dual Serbian-American citizenship since living in the United
States for the past 16 years.
Divac ended his 16-year NBA career last month, taking a job with the Los
Angeles Lakers as a liaison and scout in Europe.
He was one of the first Europeans to have a major impact in the NBA, being
drafted by the Lakers in 1989 and later playing for the Charlotte Hornets and
Sacramento Kings
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