This 
  morning, most of the Western world woke up to the news that the Swedish 
  Academy had awarded their countryman Tomas Tranströmer (again, not Bob 
  Dylan) the Nobel Prize for Literature. Minutes earlier, however, Serbian 
  newspaper readers were informed that their very own Dobrica Cosic had won the 
  prize. As Jacket Copy reports, the culprit turns out to be a fake 
  website (www.nobelprizeliterature.org) that was just purchased 
  yesterday and mimicked the design of the real Nobel Prize homepage. 
  The pranksters behind the site also emailed the announcement of his victory to 
  news outlets. Now that nobelprizeliterature.org has been outed as a hoax, the group 
  that created it — which bills itself as a “non-profit, self-organized group of 
  web activists” — has posted a different message, in both Croatian and 
  (somewhat broken) English. Read what they have to say for themselves after the 
  jump.
  
  
    We 
    are a non-profit, self-organized group of web activists.
    The 
    purpose of our activity is to bring to the attention of the Serbian public 
    dangerous influence of the writer Dobrica Cosic, who has been, again this 
    year, proclaimed by some as a serious contender for the Nobel Prize in 
    Literature.
    Dobrica 
    Cosic, author and public political figure, active for decades, always close 
    to the highest political power and those who exercise it, from the Communist 
    Party of former SFRY, inspirators of their manifest of Serbian nationalism, 
    infamous Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of sciences, former president of 
    the Milosevic’s wartime SR Yugoslavia, to present alliance with reactionary 
    and most dangerous Serbian pseudo-democratic circles in the new era.
    We 
    have registered the domain of this obviously hoax site on the 5th October 
    2011, as a symbolic reminder of that day eleven years ago, when Serbia 
    missed a historic opportunity to create a different and better world. Today 
    again, Serbia turns to war, terror and deadly kitsch of the nineties, 
    violence towards diversity, nationalist conservatism and dishonest 
    orthodoxy. We believe the political activity of Dobrica Cosic is still 
    deeply intertwined with this hazardous value system, which does not cease to 
    threaten us all.
    Terrible 
    consequences of decades of Mr. Cosic’s political, literary and public 
    activity are felt to this day, both by his own country and throughout the 
    region.
    Dobrica 
    Cosic is not a recipient of the Nobel Prize, although the general public in 
    Serbia, and he himself, believed he is for 15 full minutes.
    We 
    find some solace in that fact.