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Serbia Today 96-05-23

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From: Yugoslavia <http://www.yugoslavia.com>

Serbia Today

23 May 1996


CONTENTS

  • [01] POSITIVE COURSE OF PREPARATIONS FOR FORTHCOMING ELECTIONS
  • [02] CORNBLOOM: ItM NOT HERE TO MAKE THREATS WITH SANCTIONS
  • [03] GREECE'S FULL SUPPORT TO FRY POLICY
  • [04] REAFFIRMED INTEREST IN COOPERATION WITH IMF
  • [05] SECURITY COUNCIL CALLS FOR GENERAL AMNESTY
  • [06] A CROATIA LIKE THIS IS NOT TO EUROPE'S LIKING
  • [07] FRANJO TUDJMAN'S MORBID IDEAS

  • [01] POSITIVE COURSE OF PREPARATIONS FOR FORTHCOMING ELECTIONS

    President of the Republic Slobodan Milo}evi} received yesterday American State Secretary's assistant John Cornbloom who arrived in Belgrade as the head of the American team working on the implementation of the Dayton accords. Attention was focused on the issues and the efforts put in by the iFR of Yugoslavia and the nternational community towards a successful implementation of the Bosnia peace plan. It was stated that the actions taken hereto are providing for a positive course of preparations for the forthcoming elections at which democratic institutions of the system will be established. It was found that it is necessary to speed-up the process of economic reconstruction of the area in which the civil war was waged, in which equal treatment of the both entities should be felt. The regular political dialogue between the FRY and the USA is undoubtedly making a contribution to the advancement of bilateral relations of the two countries, the full normalization of which should be achieved in the interest of the enhancement of peace and stability in the region and equality in the international relations. (Politika, 23 May).

    [02] CORNBLOOM: ItM NOT HERE TO MAKE THREATS WITH SANCTIONS

    Diplomatically speaking, the talks were open and sincere, said John Cornbloom, head of the American negotiating team, following the yesterday's meeting with President Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia. He told the news people that all aspects of the peace agreement were discussed in great detail and that consideration was given to some steps taken in the Serb Republic towards its being implemented fully. Cornbloom stressed that the USA is against Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic staying at the head of the Serb Republic and that twe are expecting of them to participate in no way in the implementation of the Dayton accordst. He said that the USA is not rejecting the people in the Serb Republic or the leaders who want to cooperate, and that it still wants the Serb Republic to show its intention to cooperate in the Dayton process. In conclusion, he stressed that there is a t possibility of sanctions being imposed and that the FRY must bear responsibility for the whole peace process, but.tha he did not come here in order to make any threats with sanctionst. (Politika, 23 May)

    [03] GREECE's FULL SUPPORT TO FRY POLICY

    Following his talks in Athens with Greek Prime Minister Kostas Simithis, Serbian Prime Minister Mirko Marjanovic said: t We have found once more that Greece and Yugoslavia and our peoples, are traditional, centuries old friends. We have also ascertained that it is possible and that there are still ways for us to develop relations in all areast. Since the economy of Serbia is of key importance to me, continued Marjanovic, we focused on the expansion of economic cooperation. Our relations are very good, said Prime Minister Simithis and expressed his hope that tpolitical and economic relations between our countries will be intensified soon and that we will achieve our objective, for the Balkans being turned into a zone of peace and cooperation for all of ust. The Greek Prime Minister stressed 'Greece's full support to the policy of Yugoslavia and President Milosevic geared to the full implementation of the Dayton agreement on the equality of the three entities'. (Politika, 23 May)

    [04] REAFFIRMED INTEREST IN COOPERATION WITH IMF

    At the yesterday's session of the Federal Government's Commission for monitoring the proceedings of the working groups of the Council for the Enforcement of Peace, consideration was given to a number of reports on the activity of individual delegations charged with the task of negotiating the regulation of the status of the FRY in international institutions and organizations. The report of the Yugoslav delegation at the Geneva meeting of the Working Group for Humanitarian Issues, at which it was pointed at the big contribution of the FRY to the achievement of peace and particularly to the accommodation of refugees, was accepted. The Commission adopted the Platform for regulating relations with the European Council's Social Development Fund. Support was given to the option for the processes concerning the delineation of debts and restoration of cooperation with the Fund to run parallel. The wish of the FRY for and its interest in the soonest possible normalization with international financial institutions, particularly with the International Monetary Fund, and that the two sides separate fully the economic and financial issues from the political ones in the future negotiations. (Borba, 23 May)

    [05] SECURITY COUNCIL CALLS FOR GENERAL AMNESTY

    The UN Security Council has called on the Zagreb government to amnesty all citizens who had served in military or police forces in the former UNPAt. The UN Secretary-General reported to the Security Council president about the implementation of the military component of the peace agreement affecting Eastern Slavonia, Western Srem and Baranja, stating that peace forces have been deployed and that everything is ready for demilitarization. In its presidential report, the Security Council called on the Croatian Government to proclaim a general demilitarization and amnesty. (Express, 23 May)

    The Croatian law concerning amnesty for the Serbs is full of deficiencies, it is complicating the UN mission and it has astonished the high officials of the transitional administration for Eastern Slavonic, Barring and Western SRAM, reports Reuters without naming its UN sources. They find that the amnesty is to restricted for the Serbs to be calmed down. tThat, in fact, is not an amnesty, but a hunting license, which could lead to a disaster subsequently. The law leaves quite vague the fate of all Serbs who had fled from other parts of Croatiat, said an unnamed UN official. Another official said that this law doesntt deal with the Serbst fundamental fears and that once the UN mandate expires, they would have to flee from these areas, which would frustrate the international community's plans for the establishment of a multi-ethnic community. Reuters quote that crimes must be punished, but that the Croatian police and courts, which are under political influence, are not defining the war crimes as accurately as is done in the West. tThey would probably arrest more people than we would want to be arrested. Amnesty is the biggest issue for the Serbs to date. It is such a big one, that its wrong management could disrupt the process of reintegration.t, said the unnamed UN official. (Vecernje novosti, 25 May)

    [06] A CROATIA LIKE THIS IS NOT TO EUROPE'S LIKING

    The decision of the EU Council of Ministers to defer Croatia's admission is still the chief political topic on Croatia, which is quite understandable, because it was precisely on the tEuropean orientationt that the Croatian establishment was building up its image in the face of domestic public, although in the end, it turned out that precisely because of such policy of the Croatian establishment, Europe's doors were slammed to them. The establishment is interpreting its failure in the eyes of Europe as the tfault of Europe, not its ownt. It is being explained to the public that Croatia has already practically fulfilled all conditions and that it has not violated the principles of the existing European civilization, but that some formal reasons for determent are involved. However, in the opposition ranks, views are quite different and it is claimed that Europe will open its doors only once the Croatian authorities change their behaviour. Chairman of IDS, Ivan Jakvocic, said: t Evidently, a Croatia like this is very much not to Europe's liking, so that Croatia's biggest friends, Germans and Austrians, are disgusted at what Tudjman is doing from one day to anothert. In his criticism aimed at Tudjman directly, the vice-chairman of HSLS, the strongest opposition party, Bozo Kovacevic, said: tEvidently, the leadership and President Tudjman most of all, have adopted an attitude which has nothing to do with democracy, since in democracies, citizens are allowed to appraise the suitability of the establishment, whereas in Croatia, the president is the person who appraises the suitability of his citizens for being electors, journalists and citizens in generalt. (Politika, 23 May)

    [07] FRANJO TUDJMAN'S MORBID IDEAS

    Dr Milan Bulajic, Director of the Genocide Victims Museum, said yesterday at a press conference in Belgrade that the idea of Croatia's President Franjo Tudjman, ro turn the Upstate death cam of Jasenovac into a common memorial centre of victims and their executioners, is a morbid one. Jasenovac stands for the essence of our tragedy. No one can understand the Yugoslav tragedy, the plight of the Serbian people, without getting an insight into the roots of Jasenovac.t Stressing that Tudjman is resorting to forgeries, Bulajic quoted as an example that Croatia's president revising the number of Jasenovac victims, reducing the number of slain Serbs, Jews and Gypsies to twenty or so thousand. According to the files of the Museum of the Victims of Genocide in Jasenovac. tAccruing to the Museum's files, that number is tantamount only to the number of killed children aged one day to 14 yearst, said Bulajic and added that the victims totaled about 700,000 people, which is corroborated by documents of the German and Croatian state commissions.

    What is also untrue is Franjo Tudjman's claim that after 1945, Jasenovac was the camp in which Croatian domobrans and Ustashe were put to death. This claim of Tudjman is not a new one, it was seen in his book published twenty or so years ago, The Dead-end of Historical Realities, which according to Bulajic, is the Croatian version of Hitler's 'Mein Kampf'. Milan Bulajic has moved for the formation of an intonation al commission of experts for establishing the truth about Jasenovac and for supporting the idea of placing Jasenovac under international protection. (Borba, 23 May)


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