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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 231, 29 November 1995

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

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] KARADZIC SAYS HE BACKS DAYTON AGREEMENT.

  • [2] GERMAN CABINET DECIDES TO SEND TROOPS TO BOSNIA.

  • [3] PRO-PALE SERBS TO LEAVE SARAJEVO?

  • [4] TURKISH PREMIER IN BOSNIAN CAPITAL.

  • [5] SERBIAN PRESIDENT PURGES PARTY OF "HARDLINERS."

  • [6] CROATIAN UPDATE.

  • [7] DID TUDJMAN SELL OUT POSAVINA CROATS?

  • [8] SLOVENIA OPPOSES BELGRADE'S ATTEMPTS TO ASSERT JURISDICTION OVER ASSETS.

  • [9] ROMANIAN PREMIER IN RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.

  • [10] STUDENTS, TEACHERS DEMONSTRATE IN BUCHAREST.

  • [11] MOLDOVAN-DNIESTER SUMMIT CALLED OFF.

  • [12] BULGARIAN ETHNIC TURKISH PARTY ASKS PRESIDENT FOR HELP.

  • [13] TURKISH POLICY SHIFT ON CFE?

  • [14] BLACK SEA ECONOMIC COOPERATION.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 231, Part II, 29 November 1995

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] KARADZIC SAYS HE BACKS DAYTON AGREEMENT.

    Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic told CNN on 28 November that he supports the peace pact. He added, however, that time would be needed for its implementation and that his government would have to build new housing for Serbs from Sarajevo and other areas assigned to the Croat-Muslim federation. He used a conciliatory tone and avoided the bluster and references to bloodbaths that characterized his spate of interviews in recent days. Karadzic said that U.S. troops did not have to worry about "incidents" if they "came as friends." -- Patrick Moore

    [2] GERMAN CABINET DECIDES TO SEND TROOPS TO BOSNIA.

    The German cabinet on 28 November decided to send 4,000 troops to the former Yugoslavia, Western agencies reported the next day. The troops will consist largely of auxiliary personnel, including medical and transport units, and for the first time will be guarded by their own troops. To date, Germany has avoided sending combat troops to the former Yugoslavia because of sensitivities over World War II. The troops will be based in Croatia. The Bundestag is expected to endorse the cabinet's decision next week. The opposition Social Democrats have said they will vote for the deployment. -- Michael Mihalka

    [3] PRO-PALE SERBS TO LEAVE SARAJEVO?

    UN officials in Sarajevo said tens ofthousands of Bosnian Serbs would rather leave than live in the Muslim- Croat Federation, Nasa Borba reported on 28 November. A UNHCR spokesman estimated that 40,000-60,000 Serbs live in the Serb-controlled part of the city (Bosnian Serb leaders put the figure at 120,000-150,000). He added that they do not trust the Bosnian government, despite its call for Serbian civilians to stay in their homes. It is unclear how the Bosnian government intends to differentiate between those who actively participated in the war and those who did not. Meanwhile, pro-government Serbs in Sarajevo have urged fellow Serbs in the Pale-controlled parts of Sarajevo to accept the Dayton agreement and not be manipulated by Pale, the BBC reported, quoting Radio Sarajevo. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [4] TURKISH PREMIER IN BOSNIAN CAPITAL.

    Tansu Ciller on 28 November paid a one-day working visit to Sarajevo aimed at investigating how Turkey can contribute to Bosnia's postwar reconstruction, international media reported. She noted that Turkey was prepared to help train Bosnian soldiers, and she opened a branch office of the Turkish Foreign Ministry, to be run by the Turkish Cooperation and Development Agency. Her visit is part of an effort to highlight Turkey's ties to Bosnian Muslims in the run-up to parliamentary elections scheduled for 24 December. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [5] SERBIAN PRESIDENT PURGES PARTY OF "HARDLINERS."

    Tanjug on 28 Novemberreported that a number of top-level nationalist leaders of the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) were removed from their posts on the eve of the rump Yugoslavia's national holiday. According to the news agency, three prominent hardliners were sacked from executive ranks to be replaced by purported moderates. Mihailo Markovic and Borisav Jovic, long-time aides of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic who helped found the party, were removed as vice presidents, while Milorad Vucelic was ousted as leader of the SPS in the parliament. Replacing them are Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic, former Premier Nikola Sainovic, and federal President Zoran Lilic. AFP reported that Jovic said in an interview with Radio B 92 that he had no idea what prompted the dismissals. -- Stan Markotich

    [6] CROATIAN UPDATE.

    The Croatian Sabor (the lower house of the parliament) on 28 November unanimously elected Vlatko Pavletic as its speaker, Vjesnik reported. The new government won a vote of confidence by 77 to five with 39 abstentions. Hina reported that opposition parties criticized the government for failing to present its economic program and demanded that the Sabor discuss the Dayton peace agreement. Also on 28 November, Pavletic received a delegation of Bosnian Posavina expellees, who staged a protest rally outside Zagreb's town hall. Some 170,000 Croats lived in Bosnian Posavina before the war; about 3,000 Muslims and Croats are estimated to have lost their lives in its defense. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [7] DID TUDJMAN SELL OUT POSAVINA CROATS?

    Evidence continues to mount thatthe Croats at the Dayton conference made little or no effort to regain the Posavina. Bosnian Croat leader Kresimir Zubak told Novi list on 29 November that the delegation split over the Posavina question. Zubak is from northern Bosnia and opposes the agreement. Hina quoted Bosnian Prime Minister Haris Silajdzic as saying that Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic got up at the opening session and "in front of everybody said that there existed an agreement with the Croats about the area and that there was nothing left to discuss." Silajdzic added that the Americans provided the Croat-Muslim federation with crucial support on the questions of Sarajevo, Gorazde, and the constitution, but "where there was no American support, we didn't get what we wanted." -- Patrick Moore

    [8] SLOVENIA OPPOSES BELGRADE'S ATTEMPTS TO ASSERT JURISDICTION OVER ASSETS. Hina on 28 November reported that representatives from Bosnia- Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, and Slovenia met in Ljubljana to discuss and coordinate strategies aimed at countering Belgrade's efforts to assert control over access to foreign assets once held by the former Y

    ugoslavia. With the recent suspension of sanctions, Belgrade is apparently attempting to gain control over foreign-currency and gold reserves. Slovenia's Foreign Minister Zoran Thaler said "the succession issue should be discussed apart from the peace process. It has nothing to with war in Bosnia." He also observed that all of the Yugoslav successor states should have an equal say over the contested assets. -- Stan Markotich

    [9] ROMANIAN PREMIER IN RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.

    Nicolae Vacaroiu on 27-28 November paid an official visit to Serbia and Montenegro, Radio Bucharest reported. He was accompanied by Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu and Trade Minister Petru Crisan. In a series of interviews, Vacaroiu stressed it was the first visit paid by a head of government to that country since the lifting of U.S. sanctions. He also said the talks focused on resuming traditionally close economic ties, and he expressed hopes that bilateral trade would reach $1 billion a year. Vacaroiu met with senior officials, including Yugoslav President Zoran Lilic and the presidents of Serbia and Montenegro, Slobodan Milosevic and Momcilo Bulatovic. The two sides signed a series of bilateral agreements, including one on promoting and protecting mutual investments. -- Dan Ionescu

    [10] STUDENTS, TEACHERS DEMONSTRATE IN BUCHAREST.

    Thousands of Romanian teachers protested in Bucharest on 28 November over low pay and the poor state of education, Radio Bucharest and international media reported. The teachers were joined by Bucharest University students, who have resumed earlier protest actions against a controversial education law (see OMRI Daily Digest, 18-20 October 1995). Representatives of teachers' trade unions handed over their demands to the Government, and agreed to start negotiations next week. Meanwhile, the Senate adopted a set of modifications to the education law, already passed by the Chamber of Deputies. According to a senate official, most of the students' claims were thus met. -- Matyas Szabo

    [11] MOLDOVAN-DNIESTER SUMMIT CALLED OFF.

    Moldovan President Mircea Snegur and the president of the self-styled Dniester republic, Igor Smirnov, have called off a meeting scheduled for 29 November, BASA-press reported. Dniester Vice President Aleksandr Karaman was quoted as blaming Chisinau for allegedly presenting Tiraspol with "unacceptable proposals and ultimatums." Chisinau repeatedly signaled its willingness to grant the breakaway region broad autonomy, but Tiraspol insists on full recognition of its independent statehood. -- Dan Ionescu

    [12] BULGARIAN ETHNIC TURKISH PARTY ASKS PRESIDENT FOR HELP.

    The Central Council of the Movement for Rights and Freedom (DPS) on 28 November asked President Zhelyu Zhelev to assist in the "normalization of the situation" in Kardzhali, Standart reported the following day. Rasim Musa of the DPS was elected mayor of that city, but the governing Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) demanded that the election be invalidated (see OMRI Daily Digest, 20 November 1995). The Municipal Electoral Commission declared the elections valid and the Regional Court in Kardzhali rejected the BSP's petition. Nonetheless, the government-appointed provincial governor has so far not confirmed Musa's election or called a meeting of the city council, Demokratsiya reported. -- Stefan Krause

    [13] TURKISH POLICY SHIFT ON CFE?

    Ankara has announced its willingness toaccept an unspecified modification in the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty, Turkish and Western media reported on 28 November. Turkey previously was adamantly opposed to any modification of the treaty. An unnamed official told AFP that Turkey may accept such changes as long as they meet its security needs. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [14] BLACK SEA ECONOMIC COOPERATION.

    Parliamentary delegations from 11 countries participating in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation organization met in Ankara on 28 November, international media reported. The meeting opened with an appeal for closer cooperation. Turkey's parliamentary chairman, Ismet Sezgin reproached Russia for hosting a session of the Kurdish parliament-in-exile, while Gennadii Seleznev, deputy chairman of the State Duma Committee on Information Policy and Communication, said the event was in keeping with pluralism and democracy in Russia, Yeni Yuzyil reported on 29 November. -- 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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