Ivo Sanader

Ivo Sanader
Sanader in 2009
Prime Minister of Croatia
In office
23 December 2003 – 6 July 2009
PresidentStjepan Mesić
Deputy
Preceded byIvica Račan
Succeeded byJadranka Kosor
Minister of Science and Technology
In office
12 August 1992 – 7 January 1993
Preceded byJure Radić
Succeeded byBranko Jeren
Further offices held
Leader of the Opposition
In office
30 April 2000 – 23 December 2003
Preceded byIvica Račan
Vladimir Šeks (Acting)
Succeeded byIvica Račan
President of the Croatian Democratic Union
In office
30 April 2000 – 4 July 2009
Preceded byFranjo Tuđman
Vladimir Šeks (Acting)
Succeeded byJadranka Kosor
Member of the Croatian Parliament
for 10th electoral district
In office
13 October 2010 – 22 December 2011
In office
2 February 2000 – 22 December 2003
Chief of Staff of the Office of the President of Croatia
In office
24 November 1995 – 5 November 1996
PresidentFranjo Tuđman
Preceded byHrvoje Šarinić
Succeeded byHrvoje Šarinić
Personal details
Born (1953-06-08) 8 June 1953 (age 70)
Split, PR Croatia, FPR Yugoslavia
Political partyCroatian Democratic Union (1989–2010)
Spouse
Mirjana Šarić
(m. 1978)
[1]
Children2
Alma materUniversity of Innsbruck
Occupation
  • Writer
  • historian
  • politician

Ivo Sanader (Croatian pronunciation: [ǐːʋo sanǎːder]; born 8 June 1953) is a Croatian former politician who served as Prime Minister of Croatia from 2003 to 2009. He is currently serving a prison sentence for corruption in Remetinec prison.

Sanader is to date the second longest-serving prime minister since independence, holding the office for over five and a half years before resigning in July 2009. He is one of only two Croatian prime ministers (along with Andrej Plenković) who have served more than one term, winning general elections in 2003 and 2007. He is also, along with Ivica Račan and Plenković, one of the three prime ministers who have been at the head of more than one government cabinet, chairing his first cabinet from 23 December 2003 until 12 January 2008, and his second cabinet from 12 January 2008 until his resignation on 6 July 2009.

Sanader obtained his education in comparative literature in Austria, where he also worked as a journalist, in marketing, publishing, and as an entrepreneur. In the 1990s, he was briefly the intendant of the Croatian National Theatre in Split before becoming Minister for Science and Technology as a member of the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) in the cabinet of Hrvoje Šarinić in 1992. In 1993, he moved into diplomacy and served two terms as Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs.

Following the death of Franjo Tuđman, Sanader was elected president of the HDZ in 2000, and again in 2002, and led the party to victory in the 2003, and 2007 elections, becoming Croatia's Prime Minister. In June 2009, he abruptly resigned his post, leaving scarce explanation for his actions and disappearing from public life for a while. In January 2010, he tried to stage a political comeback within the HDZ, but was ejected from party membership.

In December 2010, Croatian authorities indicted Sanader in two high-profile corruption cases. He fled the country but was apprehended in Austria and then extradited to Croatia in July 2011. In November 2012, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison in a first instance verdict, later reduced to 8+12 years, for funneling 10.4 million euros in public money to the Fimi Media company. However, his sentence was annulled by Croatia's Constitutional Court in 2015. With the exception of numerous Croatian officials who were sentenced to imprisonment during the existence of the socialist Yugoslavia, he is the first Croatian head of government and highest ranking state official to be tried and sentenced to a jail term. In October 2018, Sanader was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for war profiteering and must return $570,000 in kickbacks from Hypo Bank. In November 2020, he was sentenced to eight years in jail for his role in a retrial of the Fimi Media case.[2] Some Croatian journalists evaluate Sanader's leadership of Croatia as a "kleptocratic-clientelistic era".[3]

  1. ^ Cvitić, Plamenko; Gaura, Orhidea (10 December 2010). "Kako se kućio odbjegli premijer" [How the runaway prime minister built his estate]. Nacional (in Croatian). Zagreb. Archived from the original on 20 November 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Croatian Ex-Premier Sanader Convicted in Slush Fund Case Retrial". Balkan Insight. 13 November 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Jutarnji list - Ljudi su zaboravili što smo sve trebali proći, samo se prisjetite što je 2011. rekao poznati njemački političar". novac.jutarnji.hr (in Croatian). 12 July 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2022.

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