MAK-NEWS 27/04/95 (M.I.L.S.)
From: "Demetrios E. Paneras" <dep@bu.edu>
CONTENTS
[01] GLIGOROV RECEIVES BRITISH UNDERSECRETARY
[02] MACEDONIA SLOWLY INCLUDED IN PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE
[03] STEFKOV MET CRETTIEN
[04] CONFERENCE ON CULTURAL FEATURES AND DIFFERENCES
[05] GOVERNMENT BRIEFS
[06] STRIKE WILL CERTAINLY BE HELD
[07] POLICE WILL INTERVENE IF NECESSARY
[08] WORKERS IN INSOLVENT FIRMS AND PENSIONERS AGAINST STRIKE
[09] HEARING IN TETOVO BEGUN YESTERDAY
[10] MACEDONIAN HELSINKI COMMITTEE APPEALS FOR FAIR TRIAL
[11] TRADE UNION ASSOCIATION CELEBRATES 50TH ANNIVERSARY
[12] MILS SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT: DISSATISFACTION AND PROFITEERING (Nova Makedonija, 27 April 1995)
M I L S N E W S
Skopje, 27 April 1995
[01] GLIGOROV RECEIVES BRITISH UNDERSECRETARY
Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov yesterday received John
Coules, permanent under-secretary in the British Foreign
Office, accompanied by the British ambassador to Macedonia,
Tony Milson. They discussed bilateral relations, positively
evaluating their development, and also conferred about
Macedonia's relations with neighboring countries. Coules
again stressed his country's interest in Macedonia, stating
the British official standpoint on the embargo as an
unacceptable and illegal act.
[02] MACEDONIA SLOWLY INCLUDED IN PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE
Macedonian Defense Minister Blagoj Handziski yesterday
received Colonel Lee Alloway, Director of US joint teams for
implementation of the "Bridge to America" program, comprised
of all member countries of the Partnership for Peace
Initiative. The meeting was attended by Dragoljub Botsinov,
Chief-of-staff of the Macedonian Army and Victor Comras,
Head of the US Liaison Office in Skopje. The talks
underlined the successful bilateral cooperation in the field
of defense and the possibilities for their further
development.
[03] STEFKOV MET CRETTIEN
Macedonian Minister Sasho Stefkov took part in the
Conference of Political Internationals held in Ottawa,
Canada, April 23 - 26, as a representative of the Liberal
Party of Macedonia. Stefkov met with Jean Crettien, Prime
Minister of Canada and leader of the Liberal Party there,
delivering a message from the Macedonian Prime Minister
Branko Crvenkovski. They exchanged opinions on the bilateral
relations and ways to develop them further.
[04] CONFERENCE ON CULTURAL FEATURES AND DIFFERENCES
In Sydney yesterday, UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-
Ghali opened the Conference on Cultural Specific Features
and Differences. The conference is being attended by a
delegation from the Macedonian community in Australia, led
by Macedonian Minister of Education Emilija Simoska. She
gave an introductory speech on ethnic relations in
Macedonia. Yesterday, Simoska met with Australian Foreign
Minister Garret Evans and Minister on Ethnic Relations Nick
Bolcus.
Macedonians living in Sydney took the opportunity to
organize a peaceful demonstration in front of the building,
protesting against the Australian Federal Government's
decision to rename Macedonians on the continent "Slav-
Macedonians".
[05] GOVERNMENT BRIEFS
At a press-conference yesterday, spokesman for the
Macedonian Government Djuner Ismail briefed reporters on the
government session of two days ago. The cabinet, he said,
wrote the text for the Expropriation Act and the draft-law
on an IMF $85 million for Macedonia, decided to form a
public enterprise in charge of natural gas, and accepted
proposed changes in the Law on Chance Games. Djuner said
Prime Minister Branko Crvenkovski and representatives of the
Independent Trade Union met yesterday when the Union
repeated its demands.
Djuner stated the viewpoints of the Government regarding the
public meeting scheduled for noon today. A portion of the
Independent Union's demands are probably a result of a lack
of information (those requiring free education, health and
social security), and some of them are highly political, as
shown by the fact that several political parties out of the
main stream have joined the Union in its demands in the past
few days.
[06] STRIKE WILL CERTAINLY BE HELD
Regardless of the fact that representatives of the Union met
with Prime Minister Crvendovski, the general strike
organized by the Independent Trade Union Association,
scheduled for noon today at the Macedonia square in Skopje,
will most certainly be held, Union officials said at
yesterday's press-conference. The strike will continue as
long as it is necessary, that is until the 17 demands are
fully met by the Government. Reporters were told that the
Union met with Crvenkovski twice yesterday and that the
latter asked them to postpone the strike. President
Gligorov, it was said, also summoned Union officials to
accuse them of attempting to destroy the legal
establishment and of hiding political goals behind their
social demands.
[07] POLICE WILL INTERVENE IF NECESSARY
Wth regard to the announced public meeting due today, the
Macedonian Ministry of the Interior issued a statement
saying, "In order to provide safety during the public
meeting referred to as general strike, the Ministry, in
accordance with its authorities, will undertake all measures
necessary. Reminding the organizers of their obligation to
maintain peace during the demonstration, the Ministry points
to their responsibility for potential unwanted consequences,
such as violence by participants or blocking of major roads
as threatened. In such cases, the Ministry will undertake
all appropriate legal measures."
[08] WORKERS IN INSOLVENT FIRMS AND PENSIONERS AGAINST STRIKE
The Association of Workers in Insolvent Firms in Macedonia
said it does not endorse the general strike announced for
today by the Independent Union Association. Workers believe
the aim of the protest is not social, but political in
nature.
The Association of Pensioners in Macedonia also issued a
public statement to say it has had no contacts with the
Independent Union and stressed its disagreement with the
meeting.
[09] HEARING IN TETOVO BEGUN YESTERDAY
The Tetovo Municipal Court opened yesterday the hearing
against Fadil Suleimani, accused of inciting to resistance,
and Milaim Feiziu, charged with participation in crowds and
preventing police officers from executing Government orders,
all pertaining to the university in the Albanian language.
The hearing was attended by about 50 reporters from
Macedonia and abroad, OSCE officials, and representatives of
political parties of Albanians in Macedonia. The court has
summoned a dozen journalists who were at the scene during
the events in Mala Recica to act as witnesses. The defendant
Suleimani spoke in Albanian, Macedonian and Serbian, whereas
Feiziu spoke only in Macedonian in order to, as he said,
express his protest against his groundless imprisonment. At
a request of the Public Prosecutor, the hearing was
interrupted due to the protest meeting in front of the
courthouse, organized by parties of Albanians as a sign of
support for the accused. Following the meeting, the hearing
was resumed.
The protest march began exactly at noon with nearly 10,000
well organized citizens. Demonstrators demanded that all
accused be unconditionally released. The crowds were
addressed by leaders and representatives of the Association
of Albanian Women in Macedonia, PDPA, PDA-Islamic Road, PDP-
National Unity and NDP, all stating full support for the
university in Tetovo and the defendants. This, they said, is
not a process against Suleimani and Feiziu, but against the
Albanian idea of higher education, progress and the
perspective of generations to come. Arben Dzaferi, leader of
PDPA, said the proceedings are just another farce. The
meeting, monitored by OSCE and UNPREDEP officials and
numerous reporters, lasted for an hour.
[10] MACEDONIAN HELSINKI COMMITTEE APPEALS FOR FAIR TRIAL
The Helsinki Human Rights Committee in Macedonia said they
expect the trial of Suleimani and Feiziu will be fair and in
accordance with both current laws in the country and
international conventions. "We believe," the announcement
says, "that this hearing will confirm Macedonia's
determination to organize itself as a legal state and to
help transfer the issue of higher education for Albanians
from the political arena into the sphere of dialogue among
intellectuals who would discuss and resolve the problem
without national euphoria."
[11] TRADE UNION ASSOCIATION CELEBRATES 50TH ANNIVERSARY
In Skopje, yesterday, a celebration took place to mark the
50th anniversary of the Trade Union Association in
Macedonia. President Gligorov was among the many present,
along with Dushan Petrevski, Head of the Chamber of
Commerce, and Minister of Economy Risto Ivanov.
Union President Zhivko Tolevski spoke of the class awakening
of the Macedonian workers in the past, their inclusion in
progressive socialist movements and the activities of the
Union nowadays. He said the Union, which started as an
organization with 31,000 members, now has a membership of
over 360,000, organized in 15 trade unions. The Union, he
stressed, will continue to struggle for the social and
economic rights of the workers, dissociating itself from
both the Government and the opposition.
[12] MILS SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT: DISSATISFACTION AND PROFITEERING
(Nova Makedonija, 27 April 1995)
Several elements regarding the "meeting of the hungry", due
at noon today at the Macedonia square in Skopje and in a few
other cities not disclosed until yesterday confirms
suspicions that citizens who are united by social problems
may easily be manipulated and used in achieving certain
political goals. The Independent Trade Union Association has
called on all those dissatisfied with their social situation
to express their protest at today's "general strike",
refuting any political motivation of the demonstration until
the very last moment. Union leaders claimed the meeting is a
purely economic action, warmly welcoming at the same time
the support of opposition political parties.
Now, what does this indicate? The first thought that comes
to mind is that the Independent Union realizes it lacks
power, or even better, experience to bring the initiative to
an end in a successful and "clean" manner. Therefore, all
support is welcome, especially if it means more massive
crowds. A certain amateurism in the work of this Union could
have been noticed even before, primarily in the character of
the demands which were supposed to be only economic and not
political, as well as in their composition, especially after
the first version of the demands presented on February 21.
The second version with which the Union will go out in the
streets today consists of obvious corrections in the text.
For instance, the first demand in the initial version was to
have the Privatization Act appealed. Now, however, the issue
becomes a series of demands for a productive and
economically justified privatization, new employment and
without liquidating companies. The Union even requests a
referendum on models for the privatization process. The
second demand from the old version, to withdraw the Law on
Reconstruction of Highest Loss-producing Companies, is no
longer on the list. The list now does not include even the
previous demands for mechanisms for prosecution of
individuals involved in organized economic crimes, nor an
abolishment of the Law on Purchase of Social Apartments.
Furthermore, the Union now insists on payment of the two
delayed pensions and regular pensions in the future with
smaller differences between pensions. However, this time the
demand has been placed at the end of the text. No longer
does the Union request that all bankruptcy proceedings be
stopped and all workers from insolvent firms be returned to
their jobs. Now, there is a new demand, to reduce the
number of jobs in the current governing administration and
in companies' management and to provide material and social
security for workers in insolvent firms. The initial 10 per
cent of the frozen foreign currency of citizens, demanded to
be paid out monthly, is now changed to a demand for
defreezing of the total frozen funds. The problems
concerning farmers are now classified in 4 points: stimulate
agricultural policy with premiums and regressive payments;
control over flow of goods, promote farmers' interests for
budgeted funds and guarantee their civil and human rights.
The Union also gave up its concrete demands for opening of
the REK Bitola case, which deals with the status of citizens
usurping social apartments and the basic conditions for work
of the Union's Coordinating Committee. Instead, they insist
on replacing the existing and guaranteed social welfare with
monthly compensation for every unemployed citizen, and the
state is asked to provide stable social funds. The demand to
have suspended Union activists regain their jobs has been
replaced with a demand for defined relations between the
Government and the Unions, based on a law on union
organizing. The demand for free health services and
education is also new.
The Union assures that today's strike will be under strict
control, without politics and with signs with controlled
slogans. If so and if everything remains within the
framework of the constitutional right to strike, everything
will be all right. But, will the politically inexperienced
independent union officials and the dissatisfied masses be
able to ignore all the potential political provocation? Let
us not forget that the Union said that the social part of
their initiative ended yesterday, and the political part
will come on the scene today. They will ask the
administration to resign and will demand a new, transition
government to act until new elections are held within 3
months. This is exactly where the opposition parties see
their chance, since they promised to use every opportunity
to bring down the current government.
It seems that the Union's economic demands will be difficult
to separate from the unavoidable political elements; the
interests are just too intermingled. The opposition parties
promised to provide large masses for the meeting and it is
only logical to expect them to try and profit from the
event, as they are deprived of the opportunity to publicly
present their viewpoints through Parliament or Government.
In addition, their agenda is to make it difficult for the
current government to carry out its program and, if
possible, overthrow the ruling administration.
(end)
mils-news 27 April '95
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