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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 195, 6 October 1995

From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] BOSNIAN CEASE-FIRE SIGNED.

  • [2] CLINTON TO SPONSOR PEACE TALKS.

  • [3] UPBEAT REACTIONS TO CEASE-FIRE.

  • [4] OTHER BOSNIAN DEVELOPMENTS.

  • [5] CONTRADICTORY REPORTS ON GLIGOROV'S CONDITION.

  • [6] MACEDONIA CHANGES FLAG.

  • [7] OPPOSITION COALITION TO FIGHT FOR DEMOCRACY IN CROATIA.

  • [8] ROW CONTINUES OVER ILIESCU'S REMARKS IN U.S.

  • [9] ITALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS ROMANIA.

  • [10] ROMANIAN, HUNGARIAN NEWS AGENCIES TO COOPERATE.

  • [11] BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT PROTESTS INCLUSION ON EU BLACKLIST.

  • [12] BULGARIAN BUSINESS BLOC FALLS APART.

  • [13] ALBANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER ADDRESSES UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY.

  • [14] TURKISH PREMIER-DESIGNATE ANNOUNCES NEW CABINET.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 195, Part II, 6 October 1995

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] BOSNIAN CEASE-FIRE SIGNED.

    International media on 6 October reported that an American-mediated cease-fire was signed the previous day. The latest in a series of at least 35 truces was approved by Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic in Sarajevo and by Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic in Belgrade, with Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic as a witness. Croatia is not a party but accepted it. Fighting for last-minute advantages can continue until the pact comes into force, which will be at 12:01 a.m. on 10 October, or, if full gas and electricity supplies have not been restored to Sarajevo by then, at 12:01 a.m. on the day after their restoration. It remains in effect for 60 days or until a peace conference concludes, whichever is later. Clear orders for implementation must be given to men in the field, and civilians must be treated well and prisoners released. Roads connecting Gorazde with Sarajevo and Belgrade will be reopened. -- Patrick Moore

    [2] CLINTON TO SPONSOR PEACE TALKS.

    The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on 6 October reported that the Bosnian government made a key concession by abandoning its demand that Banja Luka be demilitarized. The International Herald Tribune said that President Bill Clinton announced "proximity talks" would begin in the U.S. on 25 October. Delegations of "the warring parties" will sit in separate rooms while American diplomats shuffle back and forth between them. The purpose will be to finalize a settlement, including what amounts to a partition of the ethnically mixed republic. A final treaty would then be signed in Paris. -- Patrick Moore

    [3] UPBEAT REACTIONS TO CEASE-FIRE.

    Clinton on 5 October said that pact marks "another solid step on the hard and hopeful road to peace," international media reported. Tanjug quoted Karadzic as saying it was "another big step toward peace" and that, if it holds, it is "the beginning of the end of the war." The International Herald Tribune cited Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic as commenting "we will respect it, and I also think the Serb side will respect it." Russian President Boris Yeltsin pledged "active support for efforts at reaching a peace settlement." -- Patrick Moore

    [4] OTHER BOSNIAN DEVELOPMENTS.

    Even before the cease-fire comes into effect, representatives of the Contact Group, plus Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Canada, meet in Rome on 6 October with delegates from Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia to discuss postwar reconstruction. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung noted that Canada intends to withdraw its peacekeeping contingent by the end of November. The UN Security Council on 5 October warned both Croatia and Bosnia to provide better treatment to Serbian civilians. And the Bosnian Serb news agency SRNA reported that Bosnian Serb troops have recaptured Kljuc, but there is no independent confirmation of the story. -- Patrick Moore

    [5] CONTRADICTORY REPORTS ON GLIGOROV'S CONDITION.

    Macedonian Radio on 5 October quoted the doctors attending Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov as saying his condition is stable, Reuters reported the same day. Vecher quoted one of the doctors as saying the results from the X-rays are good and no operations are planned for the moment. Meanwhile, Bulgarian Interior Minister Lyubomir Nachev said Gligorov's condition is "more serious than has been officially announced and it is getting worse," according to RFE/RL. He added that Gligorov "is already blind in one eye and his right arm has been amputated." "A tragic end is possible," Nachev commented following a meeting with Bulgarian intelligence chief Brigo Asparuhov. -- Stefan Krause

    [6] MACEDONIA CHANGES FLAG.

    The Macedonian parliament on 5 October voted to change the country's flag, international and Macedonian media reported. The new flag, which depicts a sun with eight broad rays instead of the 16-point Star of Vergina, was approved by 110 legislators, with one vote against and four abstentions. The nationalist Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization-Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity called the adoption of the new flag "illegal." Under the Greek- Macedonian accord signed on 13 September, Macedonia agreed to change its flag and clarify parts of its constitution. Greece, for its part, will lift its blockade on Macedonia. Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou expressed his satisfaction at Macedonia's decision, saying he hopes talks between Athens and Skopje will lead to closer ties. -- Stefan Krause

    [7] OPPOSITION COALITION TO FIGHT FOR DEMOCRACY IN CROATIA.

    Croatian media have been reporting extensively on the election coalition of five opposition parties, described by their leaders as "purely centist." The coalition aims at protecting political pluralism and preventing only one party--the ruling Croatian Democratic Unity (HDZ)--from running the country (see OMRI Daily Digest, 29 September 1995). The coalition has to receive at least 11% of votes to win seats in the parliament but its leaders believe it will win at least 20%, Vjesnik reported on 4 October. It is the first time that a key regional party, the Istrian Democratic Union (IDS), has joined a national coalition. The IDS, which is highly popular in Istria, previously rejected forming a coalition with the HDZ. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [8] ROW CONTINUES OVER ILIESCU'S REMARKS IN U.S.

    Presidential spokesman Traian Chebeleu has rejected as "disqualifying, absurd, and trivial" the attacks launched by Greater Romania Party (PRM) Chairman Corneliu Vadim Tudor against Ion Iliescu (see OMRI Daily Digest, 5 October 1995). Radio Bucharest quoted Chebeleu as saying that Tudor's overreaction was based on misinterpreted and unverified reports in the U.S. press. He also said that the president could not demean himself to respond to Tudor's attacks. But he added that Romania's judicial organs have the duty to defend the presidential institution. Also on 5 October, Tudor's party expressed "stupefaction over the ultimatum" sent by the ruling Party of Social Democracy in Romania that the PRM clarify its position. It also threatened to denounce the alliance protocols with the ruling party. -- Dan Ionescu

    [9] ITALIAN FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS ROMANIA.

    Susanna Agnelli, on an official visit to Romania on 4-5 October, discussed bilateral cooperation with her Romanian counterpart, Teodor Melescanu, and met with President Ion Iliescu, Premier Nicolae Vacaroiu, and the chairmen of the two houses of the parliament, Radio Bucharest reported. The Romanian officials praised Italy's support for Romania's admission into European structures. But they raised the question of visa requirements for Romanian citizens visiting Italy. Agnelli and Melescanu exchanged the instruments of ratification for a Friendship and Cooperation Treaty between their countries. -- Dan Ionescu

    [10] ROMANIAN, HUNGARIAN NEWS AGENCIES TO COOPERATE.

    The state-run new agencies Rompres and MTI have signed in Bucharest a cooperation agreement, Radio Bucharest reported on 5 October. The agreement provides for the exchange of news and services as well as professional assistance to correspondents. MTI director-general Karoly Alexa said the Hungarian public is interested in all news about Romania, not just that concerning the Hungarian minority. He stressed that for this reason, it is important to have a Hungarian correspondent in Bucharest and a Romanian one in Budapest. The two news agencies are not allowed to interfere in each other's reporting and, where necessary, will cite each other as primary sources. -- Matyas Szabo

    [11] BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT PROTESTS INCLUSION ON EU BLACKLIST.

    Bulgarian deputies on 5 October protested the EU's decision to include Bulgaria on the so-called "blacklist" of 101 countries for which visas are required, RFE/RL and Reuters reported the same day. In an official declaration, they said the decision was "discriminatory." Former Prime Minister Filip Dimitrov of the Union of Democratic Forces said introducing such requirements "is unfair and penalizes ordinary Bulgarians." He added that including Bulgaria on the blacklist "only plays into the hand of those skeptical about our integration into the EU." Bulgaria and Romania are the only two East European countries with associate EU membership that are on the list. -- Stefan Krause

    [12] BULGARIAN BUSINESS BLOC FALLS APART.

    Three parliamentary deputies from the Bulgarian Business Bloc on 5 October officially left the party and its parliamentary caucus, Standart reported the following day. The BBB has thus lost the status of parliamentary faction, since, with only nine deputies, it is one short of the required minimum of 10 legislators. The three deputies said they disagreed with the politics of the party's leadership and accused their colleagues of "infantilism and immorality." Over the past few months, BBB deputies had repeatedly threatened to leave the caucus. -- Stefan Krause

    [13] ALBANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER ADDRESSES UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY.

    Alfred Serreqi, speaking at the 50th session of the UN General Assembly on 3 October, focused most of his remarks on the conflicts in the Balkan region, ATA reported the same day. "The tragedy of the people of Bosnia-Herzegovina is due to Belgrade's desire for the creation of a greater Serbia," he said. Serreqi also condemned Serbian police terrorism against the majority Albanian population of Kosovo. "A tragedy of unprecedented scale will erupt in Kosova unless Belgrade authorities are subjected to international pressure to halt their policy of confrontation," he noted. He praised Kosovar Albanian leaders, saying it was their policy of peaceful resistance that had largely succeeded in so far averting conflict in the province. -- Stan Markotich

    [14] TURKISH PREMIER-DESIGNATE ANNOUNCES NEW CABINET.

    Tansu Ciller on 5 October won presidential approval for a minority government conditionally supported by two small right-wing parties, the Nationalist Action Party (MHP) and Democratic Left Party (DSP), international and Turkish media reported the same day. In order to win a vote of confidence, Ciller is counting on the support of nine independent deputies and 14 renegades from the Motherland Party and Republican Peoples Party, Milliyet reported the next day. The new cabinet is drawn entirely from the ranks of Ciller's True Path Party. Both the MHP and DSP have made their support conditional on Ciller's successful resolution of an ongoing strike by 350,000 public sector workers. -- Lowell Bezanis

    This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a nonprofit organization with research offices in Prague, Czech Republic.
    For more information on OMRI publications please write to info@omri.cz

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