Ana Brnabic will be SECOND GAY PRIME MINISTER in the history of Serbia (PHOTO)
Because the newly-elected President of the Republic Aleksandar Vucic appointed the woman and the first publicly declared person of gay orientation as the mandate for the composition of the new government, the Serbian, Balkan and world public were stirred up. It's a little known, however, that we already had one gay prime minister
The Serbian, Balkan and world public was stirred by the decision of the newly elected President of the Republic of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, to appoint former Minister of State Administration and Local Government Anu Brnabic, the first publicly declared gay person in the top executive power of our country, as the mandate for the composition of the new Government.
It is precisely because of this that a storm has arisen, not because she is also the first woman to become the Prime Minister. However, it is little known that she will not be the first gay in this position. The first one, however, was not public, and perhaps he was not technically homosexual (but only in the sense that he might have been bisexual); it is indicative that he has never been married.
Who are we talking about? Not to beat around the bush, we are talking about the general Petar Zivkovic, close associate of King Aleksandar I Karadjordjevic who places as a president of Ministry council after 6. January Dictatorship in 1929, and he will remain in that position till April 1932.
In short, he was born in Negotin on January 1, 1879. He graduated from the military academy in Belgrade, after which he was one of the conspirators in May's uprising as a guard at the court.
As a major he participated in the Liberation Wars that Serbia led between 1912-1918. It was precisely at that time that something happened that was later covered up and only in the book "Prince Pavle: Truth of March 27" (written on the basis of the private registry of the regents) came to the surface.
The part relating to what we are currently talking about will be transmitted entirely:
"ORGIES OF DRUNK MAJOR
Petar Zivkovic (1879-1947) was born in Negotin and died in Paris. In May's upheaval, he played a minor role (he should unlock the gate of the court, which he hardly succeeded), but later he was accepted as a conspirator. He had a number of compromising documents about (the future king) Alexander, and thus bound him to himself, becoming the leader of Alexander's chamber, later called the "White Hand".
Towards the end of the Serbian-Bulgarian war against Turkey, Major Zivkovic was appointed to command the cavalry of the Timok Division. After the victory of the Serbian army near Kumanovo, his unit was sent to assist the Bulgarians with the Second Army to conquer Jadrene. As the cavalry is unusable in the siege, Zivkovic and his officers conducted hours and hours in drunkenness and orgies. One day, a well-built horseman told his superiors that Major Zivkovic forced him to be "an active partner in a homosexual relationship with him." Second Army Commander Stepa Stepanovic requested Zivkovic to be brought before a military court. Zivkovic addressed Apis, and he generously helped him "not to spoil the honor of the Serbian army". Zivkovic returned this very well to Apis, who, at the request of Regent Alexander, "fixed" the Thessaloniki process.
When on 6 January 1929, King Alexander suspended the so-called "The Vidovdan constitution", he set up his faithful Petar Zivkovic as prime minister. From 1931, Zivkovic, again at the request of the king, founded the court opposition Yugoslav National Party in which his assistant was Svetislav Hodjera. "
In fact, the party he founded for his time was called the Yugoslav Radical Peasant Democracy, but it was until later when it was changed.
We could add a few more details from his biography. He was so close to the Crown Prince Alexander (or had him in his hand) that he appointed him to this position of Commander of the Royal Guard in 1917, and six years later for a divisional general. In 1930 he became an army general.
Starting time of his ministry marked the implementation of long-delayed reforms. Infrastructure investments, aiding the economy, draining the wetlands, unifying the criminal law, the education and tax system that existed in different parts of the country, he began to establish a successful agrarian bank that replaced those inefficient regional ones.
During his tenure on October 3, 1929, the state officially became the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Later, however, his strict regime proved incapable of solving the Great Depression problems and stagnation.
He fled from the country in 1941, as did all other statesmen. In the refugee government of Milos Trifunovic, he was the deputy minister of military Dragoljub Mihailovic. In this capacity, he submitted an extremely interesting proposal, which involved the formation of a new army from the Yugoslavs who had to fight for the Italians and were captured by the Allies and their boarding in Dalmatia; The idea was that the Chetniks gathered around it after that. The Allies did not even consider it at all.
Immediately after the liberation of the country, he began to counterrevolutionary action in the hope that he would overthrow the KPJ from power, which Communists did not like. Basically, he was trialed in absentia in 1946 and was sentenced to death. He died on the 3rd of February, in exile.
(Telegraf.co.uk / source: “Knez Pavle: Istina o 27. martu”)