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SRNA REVIEW OF DAILY NEWS, Aug. 7, 1996
From: Mirjana Petrovic <almirja@cotton.vislab.olemiss.edu>
SARAJEVO - A session of the Republika Srpska (RS) Govern
ment, presided over by RS prime minister Gojko Klickovic, began
at 12:30 by reviewing reports concerning the situation and prob
lems arising during the preparation for the defence of RS. This
item will be discussed in camera by the VRS chiefof-staff gener-
al Manojlo Milovanovic and his closest assistants. Other than
this, the agenda includes another 30 items.
BANJALUKA - The Serbian Peasant Party (SSS) candidate for
the RS National Assembly, Nemanja Ristic, stated that Party
members are committed to returning land forcibly confiscated in
1945. Member of the SSS Main Board Pero Sofrenovic, presented the
national programme, stressing that "RS must be a state of Serbian
people and citizens of other ationalities, as stands in the RS
Constitution".
BANJALUKA - The position of the RS National Party is that
the drafting of civic legislation should be worked on at once,
the Party confirmed at a press conference in Banjaluka. "The
legislation should regulate areas such as property, economic
relations, inheritance and family relations", stated the presi
dent of the Regulation Board Milorad Zivanovic.
BEOGRAD - We are striving for a strong, stable and democrat
ic RS and its opening towards the rest of the world, by way of
the creation of special links with FR Yugoslavia, stated the
leader of the Alliance for Progress and Peace, Zivko Radisic. He
expressed his belief that "linking with the world will bring the
Serbs back into Yugoslavia which they had left, mostly not of
their own will, because the Serbian people must he allowed to
live freely and implement their state interests".
BELI MANASTIR - Despite the Erdut and Dayton agreements, the
Croatian authorities are not letting up in their intention of
making the return of expelled Serbs impossible, says a protest by
the newlyformed Helsinki Board for Human Rights in Eastern
Slavonia, Baranja and Western Srem. "The pilot project serves
Croatia for resettling more than 1,000 Catholics from Janjevo in
the Kossovo into 165 Serb houses in Kistanje, thus continuing the
rough policy of swiftly changing the demographic picture of the
midDalmatian Serbian areas, says the protest of the Board.
/end/
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