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Serbia Today 96-02-01

Serbia Today Directory

From: ddc@nyquist.bellcore.com (D.D. Chukurov)

Serbia Today

1 February 1996

In This Edition

SIPOVO AND MRKONJIC-GRAD RAZED TO THE GROUND

LACK OF CIVILIAN "RECONSTRUCTION" OF BOSNIA


CONTENTS

[01] THE RIGHTS IN YUGOSLAVIA PRAISED

[02] SERBIA WILL EXPEL NOBODY

[02] KARADZIC: WE WILL COOPERATE WITH THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL

[03] IMMINENT VISIT OF THE BRITISH DELEGATION

[04] SIPOVO AND MRKONJIC-GRAD RAZED TO THE GROUND

[05] TENSION IS RISING IN KULEN VAKUF

[06] HEGEMONISM OF THE ISLAMIC PARTY

[07] LACK OF CIVILIAN "RECONSTRUCTION" OF BOSNIA

[08] UNPUNISHED CRIMES

[09] BALKAN CONFERENCE ON LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT


[01] THE RIGHTS IN YUGOSLAVIA PRAISED

The refugees in FR Yugoslavia enjoy the identical rights as all the other citizens - concluded the authors of the monthly bulletin published by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees circulated yesterday at the Palace of Nations in Geneva. In a broad analysis concerning the refugee issue, UNHCR reminds that there are currently some 650.000 refugees in Yugoslavia. "At the present moment, the main concern of the UNHCR and of the Yugoslav authorities, is to find a lasting solution for the refugees from Krajina and Bosnia that will certainly never return there", states the UNHCR analysis. (Borba, January 2, 1996)

[02] SERBIA WILL EXPEL NOBODY

"The return of the refugees and expatriates should be voluntary and well organized, with all conditions for a normal life previously ensured", said Serbian Commissioner for Refugees - Ms. Bratislava Morina in an interview for Borba daily. The current talks have revealed that most of them wants to return. Still - as Ms. Morina stressed - our state policy is to animate the return of the refugees without coercion. "It is in the best interest of the refugees to massively return to their homesteads, since far greater international aid will be directed to the renewal and reconstruction of the war-stricken zones, and a much lesser part to their re-integration in FR Yugoslavia." - Ms. Morina stressed. (Borba, January 2, 1996)

[02] KARADZIC: WE WILL COOPERATE WITH THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL

Mr. Radovan Karadzic - President of the Republic of Srpska stated that he is quite certain that neither the RS Army nor the police ever committed crimes of war. "If any crimes did take place at all, they were not the result of a given policy, but civil war incidents, or cases of revenge for something that occurred during World War II." said Mr. Karadzic in an interview for VTN TV. We are prepared to cooperate with the Hague Tribunal and we are investigating to investigate all the imputations presented by this tribunal concerning crimes of war committed in the zones under our jurisdiction." Mr. Karadzic said and added that the Republic of Srpska is particularly interested in cooperating with the Tribunal because more than 50 mass graves with the remains of massacred Serbs have been discovered in Srebrenica in 1993". (Politika, January 2, 1996)

[03] IMMINENT VISIT OF THE BRITISH DELEGATION

"For the first time since the sanctions, Yugoslavia will be visited by a British state-political delegation." - said Mr. Ivor Roberts - Charge d'Affaires of the British Embassy in Belgrade during his meting with the President of the Yugoslav Chamber of Economy - Mr. Mihailo Milojevic. The British diplomat announced the visit of a delegation comprising representatives of the building, energy, pharmaceutical, automobile and chemical sector, as well as businessmen representing financial, trade and distribution firms. The delegation will meet with high Yugoslav state officials and business figures. (Borba, January 2, 1996)

[04] SIPOVO AND MRKONJIC-GRAD RAZED TO THE GROUND

A joint delegation comprising local officials from Mrkonjic-Grad and Sipovo, visited the two towns and established that they have been practically razed to the ground and most of the buildings burned - said Mr. Slavko Kopuz - chairman of the Mrkonjic-Grad Municipal Council Executive Board. "Combined units of the Croatian Army and Croatian Defense Council (HVO), that are supposed to withdraw from Mrkonjic-Grad and Sipovo on February 2 according to the Dayton Agreement, plundered all private and public property in the two towns." - Mr. Kopuz said. He stressed that extensive damage has been inflicted to the waterworks and sewage system adding that most of the plants have been burned, and that in the remaining ones the machinery has been dismantled and taken away. Mr. Brano Jovanic - manager of the "Elektro Krajina" power company and member of the expert team that entered Mrkonjic-Grad with the help of IFOR troops, revealed that the Croats plundered power network very systematically. There are practically no transformer station left in the region. Not a single screw is left in the local screw factory and there isn't a single window left in the entire town. (Borba, January 2, 1996)

[05] TENSION IS RISING IN KULEN VAKUF

In the zone of Kulen Vakuf, some 30 kilometers south of Bihac, the situation is deteriorating dangerously, threatening to escalate into an armed conflict between Moslems and Croats - Moslem Radio Sarajevo reports. The deterioration of the situation started on January 24, when the Croatian Army pulled out from the zone according to the Dayton Agreement, and replaced by Croatian Defense Council (HVO) from central Bosnia and western Herzegovina. This is when the plundering and destruction of about a thousand Moslem homes in Kulen Vakuf started, and the Croats eventually stripped them of everything. Some 6.000 Moslem refugees currently in Bihac have nowhere to return now. Even if their homes were intact, they greatly fear the reprisals of the HVO. Even though the border between Croatia and Bosnia is only 6 kilometers away from Kulen Vakuf, IFOR forces have not reacted in any way to these events, affirming that this is an internal issue of the Moslem-Croatian Federation and a political matter. (Borba, January 2, 1996)

[06] HEGEMONISM OF THE ISLAMIC PARTY

The Paris newspaper "Le Monde" warns that the democratic choice of the Bosnian authorities should not be trusted at all, and raises the question of the growing despotism of Alija Izetbegovic and the spreading of the hegemonism of his party. The French daily affirms that "a handful of leaders" from Izetbegovic's party controls everything. The Moslem Democratic Action Party is "omnipresent, it builds schools, gives out the wages to the soldiers, distributes the humanitarian aid, purchases arms... The role of the government is very much limited by the omnipotent party." Le Monde also remarks that Mr. Izetbegovic's party "intends to create a Moslem state, separated from the Serbs and the Croats." France is openly showing its fear because of the violent crisis of the Moslem-Croatian relations, threatening to bring about the downfall of the twin federation crated artificially. The French headline indicates that the political events in the Moslem-Croatian "double", go against the fundamental principles formulated by the peace agreement. All Paris newspapers indicate that the prime threat stems from the secessionist ambitions of the Bosnian Croats and the radical stands of the Islamic fundamentalists. (Vecernje Novosti, January 2, 1996)

[07] LACK OF CIVILIAN "RECONSTRUCTION" OF BOSNIA

British diplomatic circles remark that the international community is still not fulfilling its commitments regarding the implementation of the peace plan in Bosnia and Herzegovina except for the military part. One of the most sensitive shortcomings concern the UN police forces which should generate confidence throughout Bosnia especially among those that fear "peace". The London newspaper The Guardian remarks that the most difficult situation is in the Serbian quarters of Sarajevo which are to pass under Moslem control. Although 500 policemen are supposed to be deployed, only 40 have arrived. For example, in the quarter of Ilidza only seven arrived, and three (including their sergeant) have already left on vacation. Consequently only four UN policemen are now patrolling in Ilidza together with the local Serb Police, but their rounds are being progressively reduced due to shortage f gasoline. Furthermore, the local Serb policemen plan to move out soon, and consequently the four UN policemen will be left alone. The Guardian indicates that numerous Serbs that planned to continue to live in Ilidza will be induced to leave Sarajevo due to this situation. (Vecernje Novosti, January 2, 1996)

[08] UNPUNISHED CRIMES

The recent Presidential Statement issued by the UN Security Council, strongly criticizing the Croatian authorities due to the poor state of human rights and the lack of their endorsement in Krajina after the offensive of the Croatian Army last summer, caused controversial reactions of the Croatian public and political circles. Whilst part of them (decisively a minority) displays abomination for the actions of the Croatian side revealed by the UN document, others - and especially the state officials - are trying to prove that authorities did everything they could to prevent the crimes (usually called incidents) and the culprits brought to justice. For example, Minister of Justice Miroslav Separovic stated in an interview published yesterday by the "Globus" magazine, that Croatian courts initiated procedure for 1.005 crimes committed in Krajina. Most of these indictments concern robbery and theft, whilst only 25 persons have been indicted for murdering Serbian civilians. However, the fact is that even though 6 months have passed since the Croatian military offensive on Krajina, no criminal procedures against those that committed crimes against Serb civilians or their property has been concluded, whilst several hundred Serbian prisoners have already been sentenced by Croatian military tribunals for alleged armed rebellion. (Politika, January 2, 1996)

[09] BALKAN CONFERENCE ON LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT

The first Balkan Conference "Local Self-Government in Theory and Practice" started today in Nis. More than 300 experts and scholars from Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece and FYRO Macedonia will exchange theoretical and practical experiences in the implementation of local self-government systems in Balkan countries. "The problem of local self-government is extremely pertinent in all Balkan countries, because the de-statization process of the government, along with an effective state and a state of law, requires adequate legal formulations." - said Dr. Vidoje Miladinovic, Dean of the Nis Law School - hosting the venue. Representatives of various law schools of Balkan states will sign a declaration on the founding of the Balkan Center for Local Self-Government Studies. (Politika, January 2, 1996)
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