Not dead yet
A ghostly relic marks its birth in a vanished country
WHEN an ageing rock star goes on tour decades after his final hit, people remark cruelly that they thought he died some time ago. The same fate has befallen the Non-Aligned Movement, a 120-member outfit that this week celebrated its 50th anniversary in its birthplace, Belgrade. The city was then the capital of Yugoslavia, a country that epitomised the group's uneasy balance between East and West in the cold war. It is now the capital of Serbia, a country that has not joined the body.
This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Not dead yet”
International September 10th 2011
Discover more
Vladimir Putin’s spies are plotting global chaos
Russia is enacting a revolutionary plan of sabotage, arson and assassination
Over a billion have voted in 2024: has democracy won?
Half the world has had elections so far this year
A new “quartet of chaos” threatens America
The rulers of China, Iran, North Korea and Russia are growing worryingly close
A UN vote on Palestine underlines America’s weakening clout
Russia and China are riding a surge of support for the Palestinians since the Gaza war started
Sport is getting hotter, harder and deadlier
As players vomit and boil, even John McEnroe reckons “it is not humane”
How encrypted messaging apps conquered the world
And why governments want to wrest back control