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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 219, 9 November 1995

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

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] DOES STATE DEPARTMENT HOLD THE SERBIAN "SMOKING GUN"?

  • [2] MONTENEGRIN PRIME MINISTER OFFERS LOGISTICAL SUPPORT TO NATO.

  • [3] KOSOVO UPDATE.

  • [4] SATIRICAL WEEKLY LAUNCHED IN SERBIA.

  • [5] PRO-MONARCHY DEMONSTRATION IN BUCHAREST.

  • [6] MOLDOVAN PRIME MINISTER ON TREATY WITH ROMANIA.

  • [7] CHISINAU, TIRASPOL FAIL TO AGREE ON SUMMIT.

  • [8] WAR OF WORDS CONTINUES BETWEEN BULGARIAN PRESIDENT, SOCIALIST PARTY.

  • [9] ALBANIAN INTERIOR MINISTER PRESENTS LISTS OF BORDER VICTIMS.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 219, Part II, 9 November 1995

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] DOES STATE DEPARTMENT HOLD THE SERBIAN "SMOKING GUN"?

    The BBC on 9November reported on the ongoing public controversy between Justice Richard Goldstone of The Hague war crimes tribunal and the U.S. State Department. Goldstone earlier this week suggested that Washington was wary of providing or unwilling to provide his court with the information it needs to prosecute war criminals. U.S. officials said in reply only that there had been "glitches" in making highly secret materials available. A BBC analyst suggested that while nobody denies that Washington is the court's strongest supporter, the State Department might be withholding information that could prove counterproductive to American policy. One such possibility might be evidence clearly linking war crimes to Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, whom Washington regards as central to its current "peace process." In another development, Western agencies quoted a State Department spokesman as saying that all parties to the conflict will be expected to help the tribunal and that Washington regards justice as important as peace. -- Patrick Moore

    [2] MONTENEGRIN PRIME MINISTER OFFERS LOGISTICAL SUPPORT TO NATO.

    Milo Djukanovic, returning the visit by American congressmen who were in Montenegro earlier this year, said he wants to back the Dayton talks by offering logistical support for NATO troops at the port of Bar, Nasa Borba reported on 8 November. Bar could be used to ship weapons, equipment, and men to Bosnia, he suggested. While Washington acknowledged this proposal as a confirmation of the "recognizable foreign policy of Montenegro," a spokesman of the Serbian Radical Party in Montenegro said it was part of a plan for the secession of Montenegro from rump Yugoslavia, Montena-fax reported the same day. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [3] KOSOVO UPDATE.

    Kosova Daily Report on 8 November said that Serbian police raided 106 Albanian homes in Pec over the last nine months. At least 88 ethnic Albanians were beaten up and another 61 maltreated, while a total of 149 people were detained. During the same period, 17 Albanian party and trade unions activists were sentenced to long prison terms in the western Kosovar town. The report also says that "Serbian police have been continuously hunting down draft-age Albanians," adding that "dozens were delivered to military inductions, while two of them were forcefully drafted." Elsewhere, police reportedly cracked down on ethnic Albanian schools in Vucitrn near Mitrovica and maltreated school staff. Raids are also reported from around Pristine. Meanwhile, Kosovar shadow-state Prime Minister Bujar Bukoshi urged the U.S. to maintain sanctions against rump Yugoslavia until a solution to the conflict has been reached, Reuters reported on 8 November. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [4] SATIRICAL WEEKLY LAUNCHED IN SERBIA.

    Nasa Borba on 9 November reported that a satirical weekly--the first of its kind in the rump Yugoslavia-- has been launched. Smrklost is to be published in Kragujevac and is staffed by local journalists and cartoonists. The independent daily called the new publication the "first Serbian Feral," referring to Croatia's Feral Tribune, which is widely known for satirizing key political and social developments in Croatia. -- Stan Markotich

    [5] PRO-MONARCHY DEMONSTRATION IN BUCHAREST.

    Some 3,000 Romanians on 8 November gathered in Bucharest to mark the 50th anniversary of a brutally suppressed anti-communist rally, international agencies and Radio Bucharest reported. The demonstrators, waving flags with the insignia of the Romanian monarchy and portraits of exiled King Michael, shouted "Down with Iliescu." King Michael addressed the crowd live via a local radio station. "Even though Romania is not under Soviet occupation anymore, the struggle that we started in 1945 against communism has not finished," he said. Emil Constantinescu, leader of the Democratic Convention opposition bloc, and Ion Diaconescu, deputy chairman of the National Peasant Party-Christian Democratic (PNTCD), also addressed the crowd. The protest meeting was organized by the PNTCD's student organization. -- Matyas Szabo

    [6] MOLDOVAN PRIME MINISTER ON TREATY WITH ROMANIA.

    Andrei Sangheli, in an interview with Nezavisimaya gazeta carried by BASA-press and cited by Radio Bucharest on 8 November, said Romania's insistence that the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact is mentioned in the pending treaty with Chisinau is aimed at demonstrating that Moldova is an "artificial state." He stressed that this was not the case, since the Moldovan state was "set up over 500 years ago, long before the Romanian state was set up last century." Romanian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mircea Geona on 8 November responded by saying Sangheli's interview reflected conflicts within the Moldovan leadership in which Romania does not wish to become involved. Radio Bucharest reported that Geona reiterated the Romanian position that Bucharest is striving for a relationship of a "special character" with Chisinau. He noted that this must be also reflected in the treaty between the two countries. -- Michael Shafir

    [7] CHISINAU, TIRASPOL FAIL TO AGREE ON SUMMIT.

    Teams of experts meeting in Chisinau last week have failed to reach agreement on the next Moldovan- Transdniestrian summit, Infotag reported on 8 November. A Transdniestrian official told the agency that the sides disagree over the summit's agenda, with Chisinau insisting on discussing a draft law on autonomy for the breakaway region and Tiraspol wanting to discuss relations between two independent republics. The last summit meeting was held on 13 September. -- Michael Shafir

    [8] WAR OF WORDS CONTINUES BETWEEN BULGARIAN PRESIDENT, SOCIALIST PARTY. Z

    helyu Zhelev. addressing EU diplomats on 8 November, accused the Socialist-dominated parliament of poor performance due to division within the Bulgarian Socialist Party, Standart reported on 9 November. Meanwhile, BSP deputies are threatening to ask the Constitutional Court to rule on Zhelev's support for Stefan Sofiyanski, the Union of Democratic Forces' candidate for mayor of Sofia. The second round of local elections in the capital, a run-off between Sofyianski and BSP candidate Ventsislav Yosifov, is to take place over the weekend. According to the BSP, the president is constitutionally prohibited from taking sides in elections. -- Michael Wyzan

    [9] ALBANIAN INTERIOR MINISTER PRESENTS LISTS OF BORDER VICTIMS.

    Agron Musaraj on 8 November presented the Parliamentary Commission on Defense, Public Order, and the Secret Service with the first lists of Albanians killed at the border between 1990 and 1992 and the chief border guards responsible for the killings. The head of the commission, Azem Hajdari, said the first indictments against border guards could be made when the commission received the complete documentation, ATSH reported the same day. After May 1990, the penal code ceased to specify leaving the country as "high treason" and to justify the killing of illegal emigrants. Hajdari estimates the number of victims to be more than 100. Investigations have already begun against former President Ramiz Alia and Interior Minister Hekuran Isai. -- Fabian Schmidt

    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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