Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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Croatia's Ruling Party Loses Elections in Key Regions
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D7D123:3919ACA

Ruling party's fortunes declines from the days of late president
Franjo Tudjman, who founded the HDZ and led Croatia to independenceĀ 
First official results of local elections in Croatia show the
governing conservative party has lost in key areas. The results of
Sunday's ballot are seen as a sign of dissatisfaction with demands on
Croatia by the United Nations and the European Union.

Croatia's Electoral Commission said the opposition Social Democratic
Party retained control of the capital Zagreb, which it has ruled for
five years. Zagreb is home to a quarter of the country'sĀ 4.5 million
people.

The ruling Croatian Democratic Union, known as HDZ, also was defeated
in Croatia's second largest city, Split.

The party's fortunes have declined from the days of late president
Franjo Tudjman, who founded the HDZ and led Croatia to independence
from Yugoslavia during the Balkan wars of the 1990's.

The victories of the Social Democrats and their allies came as a major
boost for the recently ousted prime minister Ivica Racan. He said his
Social Democratic Party is now a force to be reckoned with ahead of
upcoming general elections.

Mr. Racan says his party did well in areas from Split to Slavonia in
eastern Croatia. However, he acknowledged that the picture remains
less clear in several other regions.

And since the Social Democrats were allied with the People's Party and
other groups in many parts of the country, Prime Minister Ivo Sanader
had reason to say that, of all Croatia's parties, the HDZ should be
considered the "winner" of the ballot.

Election observers have linked the poor showing of the HDZ in several
areas to the government's decision to increase cooperation with the
United Nations War Crimes Tribunal, which is a key EU condition for
Croatia's membership in the organization.

Prime Minister Sanader has said he intends to intensify the search for
one of the tribunals main Croatian suspects, General Ante Gotovina,
who is accused by the tribunal of atrocities against ethnic Serbs
during the Balkan wars.

The EU recently postponed membership talks with Croatia because of its
failure to extradite the general. But many Croats consider General
Gotovina as a hero. There is also growing discontent about the
government's economic policies in a country where almost one in five
people of working age is unemployed.

About four million Croats were eligible to vote in the local
elections. However most of them chose to stay home. Only 32 percent of
those eligible voted.