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Marko Milošević : ウィキペディア英語版 | Marko Milošević
Marko Milošević (; 1974) is the son of former Serbian President Slobodan Milošević. He was allegedly involved in organized crime in Serbia during the Yugoslav Wars until he fled the country following his father's removal from power on 15 October 2000.〔Stevanovic, Vidosav. Milosevic: The People's Tyrant. I.B. Tauris: London. 2004. p.195.〕〔LeBor, Adam. Milosevic: A Biography. Yale University Press. 2002. p.314.〕 Milošević was later granted refugee status by Russia, and is likely living in Moscow with his wife Milica Gajić and son Marko.〔Edwardes, Charlotte & Julius Strauss. "Gangland Bosses Vie for Marko's Crime Empire," The Telegraph: U.K. 15 October 2000.〕 ==Early life== Marko Milošević was born in 1974 in downtown Belgrade. At the time, his mother, Mirjana Marković, was a professor of sociology at the University of Belgrade and his father Slobodan Milošević was beginning to develop status in national politics.〔Doder, Dusko & Louise Branson. Milosevic: Portrait of a Tyrant. The Free Press: New York. 1999. p.25.〕 Marko was named after a legendary family ancestor of the Milošević family, a Serbian chieftain who fought against Turks in the 18th century and is recorded in Serbian folk poems. The household of Milošević's early years was described as host to numerous high-level political visits, with the young Milošević apparently holding a familial, paternal relationship with Serbian President Ivan Stambolić. Milošević was raised atheist, although his father promoted the sociopolitical and nationalist connections of the family with the Serbian Orthodox Church. Milošević's mother taught astrology to Marko and his ten-year-older sister Marija. Milošević was widely reported a spoilt teenager, manipulative, uninterested in schooling, and self conscious about his skinniness. While at private school in Belgrade, he lived with Marković's extended family in Požarevac, having more personal exposure to bodyguards than to his parents. He also began collecting guns and cars, and dropped out of high school.〔Harden, Blaine. "A Milosevic Field of Dreams: Bambipark," The New York Times, Section A, Page 6, Column 1. 6 July 1999.〕
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