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Yugoslav Daily Survey, 97-08-29Yugoslav Daily Survey Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Yugoslavia <http://www.yugoslavia.com>Yugoslav Daily SurveyCONTENTS
[01] MILOSEVIC RECEIVES FROWICKTanjug, 1997-08-26Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic received on Tuesday Ambassador Robert Frowick, OSCE Mission Chief in Bosnia and Herzegovina, with associates. Ambassador Frowick informed President Milosevic that all preparations for the upcoming local elections in Bosnia and Herzegovina had been carried out in an appropriate manner. In the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 75,000 Republika Srpska citizens have registered to take part in the elections. Special attention was devoted in the talks to the need for overcoming the political crisis in Republika Srpska. In regard to the confrontations and divisions which have arisen in Republika Srpska, President Milosevic said that free, democratic and complete elections represent the best way and a democratic step for overcoming the existing crisis. In the existing political circumstances in Republika Srpska, in the view of President Milosevic, it is indispensable that this step be complete and not partial. Than means that both parliamentary and presidential elections should be held at the same time in Republika Srpska. Whoever claims to have the support of the people, must be ready to confirm this confidence at elections, President Milosevic said. President Milosevic considers that political factors outside Republika Srpska should not opt for one or the other party to the conflict in Republika Stpska, but for the stabilization of the situation in it and for the interests of all its citizens, who are the only ones who can resolve the political crisis in a democratic manner, through elections. Taking part in the talks was Yugoslav Deputy Foreign Minister Nikola Cicanovic. [02] MEASURES AGAINST SERB MINISTERS IN BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA GOVERNMENTTanjug, 1997-08-26The international community will not recognize passports or issue visas to Republika Srpska ministers in the Ministerial Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina, as a punitive measure announced by High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina Carlos Westendorp, after Serb ministers in the Council refused to adopt laws on citizenship and passports. Westendorp said, at a press conference in Sarajevo on Monday evening, this was only a symbolic measure and concerned directly co-president Boro Bosic and the ministers, specifying that it will not directly concern Momcilo Krajisnic as he is not responsible for the behaviour of Serb ministers in the Ministerial Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Westendorp has announced the possibility of further measures in order to overcome the blockade of the work of the Presidency. He specified that he would propose that in cases when one of the Presidency members is unable to attend a session that he must name a deputy or cooperate by telephone. At the same time, he said, if such cases become common practice, new elections should be held. Westendorp said the situation was complex and that he will warn Krajisnik that he was not fulfilling his obligations when asked by reporters about the situation in Republika Srpska, adding that the international community will not allow the division of Republika Srpska. [03] MILUTINOVIC CONTINUES VISIT TO CHINATanjug, 1997-08-26Yugoslav Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic, currently visiting China, talked on Tuesday in Shangai with the leadership of that important industrial and trade center. Milutinovic talked with Shangai Deputy Mayor Zuo Huang She about concrete possibilities of cooperation of Yugoslav firms with firms in Shangai, which account for one fourth of China's total foreign trade. Milutionic arrives in Beijing Wednesday where he will hold talks with Chinese officials. The Yugoslav Foreign Minister is on an official visit to China at the invitation of Chinese Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Qian Qichen. [04] SYRIAN DELEGATION VISITS YUGOSLAVIATanjug, 1997-08-26A delegation of the Syrian Foreign Ministry headed by the First Deputy Foreign Minister Rislan Alush arrived in Yugoslavia on Tuesday. The delegation and Yugoslav Deputy Foreign Minister Radoslav Bulajic will discuss key international issues, including the peace processes in the Balkans and the Middle East, as well as the development of bilateral relations and especially economic cooperation. [05] YUGOSLAV VICE PREMIER SAINOVIC RECEIVES SYRIAN STATE DELEGATIONTanjug, 1997-08-26Yugoslav Vice Premier Nikola Sainovic received on Tuesday a Syrian state delegation, headed by First Deputy Foreign Minister Rislan Alush. The two sides discussed ways and means of promoting the traditionally good and friendly relations existing between the two states and of intensifying their economic cooperation. Sainovic and Alush exchanged views also on the current situation in the Balkans and the Middle East and the efforts of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Syria to act as factors of stabilisation in their regions. [06] REPUBLIKA SRPSKA GOVERNMENT RESHUFFLEDTanjug, 1997-08-26The Republika Srpska Parliament reshuffled the Government of the Bosnian Serb state on Mt Jahorina late on Tuesday. Parliament elected Dragan Kijac Vice Premier in charge of internal policy. Slavko Paleksic became Interior Minister, Slobodan Ecimovic Minister for Refugees and displaced persons, Dragan Simic Finance Minister, and Vojislav Topalovic Minister of Religious Affairs. Stevo Stevic, outgoing Education Minister, was appointed Minister of Foreign Trade, but will discharge both offices until the election of a new education minister. Before the elections, Parliament dismissed Ostoja Kremenovic as Vice Premier in charge of internal policy, Dragan Davidovic as Minister of Religious Affairs, and Ljubisa Vladusic as Minister for Refugees and displaced persons. Rajko Travar was dismissed as Finance Minister and Dragan Kijac as Interior Minister. The Government reshuffle ended the 11th session of the Parliament of the Republika Srpska. [07] FRY, AUSTRIA EXCHANGE NOTESTanjug, 1997-08-26Representatives of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) and of the Republic of Austria exchanged at the Federal Foreign Ministry notes recognizing the validity of eighteen bilateral accords. The Federal Ministry Chief Legal Adviser, Rodoljub Etinski, and the Ambassador of Austria, Michael Weninger, have confirmed the finding of legal experts of the two parties who have concluded, after examinig bilateral accords in force between the FRY and the Republic of Austria, that 18 of these accords remain in force between the FRY and the Republic of Austria and that they will be applied by competent organs. On the list of bilateral accords remaining in force are also those concerning consular relations and investment protection. [08] MINISTER BULATOVIC RECEIVES ITALIAN AMBASSADORTanjug, 1997-08-26Yugoslav Defense Minister Pavle Bulatovic received newly-appointed Italian Ambassador to Yugoslavia Ricardo Sessa here on Tuesday. In lengthy cordial and open talks, views were exchanged on the military-security situation in the region, and general Yugoslav-Italian cooperation, which they agreed was on the upward trend. The two sides also discussed the need to promote military-economic and scientific-technical cooperation in the area of defense between the two states. Minister Bulatovic and Ambassador Sessa agreed it was necessary to continue building confidence among countries and peoples, and develop democratic processes in all countries. [09] PERISIC RECEIVES ITALIAN AMBASSADOR SESSATanjug, 1997-08-26Yugoslav Army Chief of Staff Gen.Momcilo Perisic received on Tuesday the newly-appointed Ambassador of the Republic of Italy to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ricardo Sessa. Aspects of cooperation between the Italian Army and the Yugoslav Army were discussed, as well as possibilities of their further promotion. [10] HUMAN RIGHTS MINISTER RULES OUT RESTORING A STATE WITHIN A STATETanjug, 1997-08-26Serbian Minister in charge of human rights and minorities Ivan Sedlak told the Politika Ekspres daily that state bodies favored better autonomy for Serbia's southern Province of Kosovo-Metohija, but opposed attempts at re- creating a state within a state as was the case of the 1974 Constitution of the former Yugoslavia. "We favor any form of improving the situation of ethnic Albanians in Kosmet, including autonomy, but not as it used to be in 1974", Sedlak said. The status of Kosmet as was defined by the 1974 Constitution is unacceptable, as Kosmet was then a state within a state, Sedlak underlined. The international community sees Kosmet as an integral part of Serbia and Yugoslavia and has proposed the re-establishment of autonomy to some extent as a minimum improvement of the situation of the Albanian minority in the Province. Some proposals that have been put foward are being discussed, and some hints have come from abroad, but the majority of Albanian hardliners in Kosmet reject them, Sedlak said. Referring to the situation of ethnic Albanians in Kosmet, Sedlak said that 26 nations live in Serbia, and that only the majority of ethnic Albanians, those who live in Kosmet, refuse to exercise the rights guaranteed by the Constitution and the law, due to the separatist policy of their leaders. Those rights are in line with international standards, but they refuse to exercise them, Sedlak said and added that the fact that ethnic Albanians in Kosovo do not exercise the rights to education, culture and information financed by the state was due to the hardline stance of their leaders whose final goal is Kosmet's secession from Yugoslavia and the creation of a greater Albanian state in the Balkans. "Our basic principle is to talk with all minorities and to find a common language for all issues, except as concerns threats to territorial integrity and sovereignty and due abidance by the Constitution and the law", Sedlak said. [11] COMMISSION OPEN TO COOPERATION WITH ALL FOREIGN OBSERVERSTanjug, 1997-08-26The Serbian Republican Elections Commission, in keeping with the democratic tradition present in the preparation and realization of the upcoming elections, said their monitoring by foreign observers was already in practice, commission sources said on Tuesday. The instructions on the implementation of the Law on the election of people's deputies and the Law on the election of republican president specify that authorized representatives of international organizations or foreign states can attend the work of organs in charge of realizing the elections. Such representatives apply to the Serbian Government, stating their full name, number and structure, as well as purpose and time of visit. One day following receipt of this application, the Serbian Government sends it through to the Republican Elections Commission, which issues official authorization to these persons to monitor the elections. The Commission also issues an identification tag with the basic data on the observer which he must carry on his person at all times. The Commission is open to cooperation with all foreign observers, and, in that sense, fully qualified to provide all the necessary help or any relevant information for the successful completion of their mission. The organs in charge of realizing the elections are obliged to make the necessary conditions for the unhindered following of the course of elections, when asked to do so by these monitors. They are obliged to act according to the rules on maintaining order at polling stations. The poll committee states in its report if foreign observers were present at the polling station. In order to ensure the efficient work of foreign observers at the parliamentary and presidential elections on Sept 21, the Republican Elections Commission has authorized a person in each election precinct in Serbia to provide expert and organizational assistance and provide conditions for the unhindered work of foreign observers, the commission statement said. [12] BOSNIAN SERB PARLIAMENT URGES PRESIDENT TO HONOUR CONSTITUTIONTanjug, 1997-08-26The Republika Srpska Parliament invited on Tuesday President Biljana Plavsic to return to honouring the Constitution and laws of the Bosnian Serb state. At its session on Mt Jahorina, Parliament took the position that this would enable the necessary full cooperation between the President and Parliament within their mandate given them by the people in last year's elections. No documents adopted by President Plavsic without regard for the Constitution and the law would be considered or approved by Parliament and by the legally elected Government of the Republika Srpska, Parliament said in its conclusions. Parliament discussed also the political and security situation in the light of the August 15 ruling of the Constitutional Court dismissing the President's decision to dissolve Parliament as unconstitutional, and endorsed the Court's ruling. Parliament took the view that the situation was deteriorating dramatically in various areas, especially the security situation, and that this could lead to divisions in the people and bodies of power and to secession of parts of the Republika Srpska's territory. This could also seriously jeopardise the implementation of the Dayton Accord, Parliament said. It further said it believed that international factors in charge of implementing the Accord, viz. parts of the SFOR, the IPTF and the OSCE had altered their original mandate over the past few months. "This could lead to the international community's protectorate over the Republika Srpska, with elements of military occupation," Parliament said. This also seriously jeopardised the peace process, Parliament said. It added that it was instructing the Government and all bodies of power in the Republika Srpska to take firm legitimate steps to defend the autonomy, constitutional order and institutions of the Republika Srpska as recognised under the Dayton Peace Accord. It also instructed the Government and, specifically, the Interior Ministry and its state security service to work out within the next 24 hours a plan of action for the protection of the constitutional order and institutions of the Republika Srpska. It ordered the Government to draft a memorandum on the harmful effects of changing the mandate of these international factors and to submit it to the world's High Representative, governments of the Peace Implementation Council states and other relevant bodies. Parliament again stressed that no international organisation had the right to change its mandate unilaterally, without the approval of the Republika Srpska's Parliament. It again appealed to the international community to take a balanced and unbiased attitude to the internal political crisis in the Republika Srpska and to stop supporting the economic and political interests of and helping only one of its parts. In this way it would best help stabilise the internal situation in the Republika Srpska, which would serve the purpose of still better implementing the Dayton accord, Parliament said. Parliament further asked that the premises and transmitters of radio and television stations be returned to their rightful owners within three days, failing which the interior ministry and the public prosecutor should take appropriate action. Parliament agreed that all questions in dispute concerning the freedom of and relations bewteen independent and state media be discussed in the presence of authorised international representatives. Parliament rescinded President Plavsic's consent given to the OSCE to organise and monitor municipal elections. The body took this decision because rules for municipal elections had been adopted against the will of the Serb members of the Provisional Electoral Commission and were not so defined in the Dayton accord. [13] SREM-BARANYA REGION LEADER MET NEWLY-APPOINTED UN ADMINISTRATORTanjug, 1997-08-26Serb leaders of the Srem-Baranya region met for the first time with the region's newly-appointed UNTAES Administrator William Walker in Vukovar on Tuesday. Head of the Serb delegation Vojislav Stanimirovic said it was very important that Walker should inform Croatian President Franjo Tudjman of the fact that few things were functioning well in the Srem-Baranya region, ranging from local self-rule, which four months after the elections had not yet been established, to issues of education, health care and payment of pensions. Stanimirovic said he was satisfied with Walker's interest in all the problems in the region and with his promise to call for an equality of all the citizens before the law, which, Walker said, had not been the case in Croatia so far. [14] YUGOSLAV DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER RECEIVES ITALIAN AMBASSADORTanjug, 1997-08-25Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Vojin Djukanovic on Monday received Italian Ambassador to Yugoslavia Ricardo Sesso and discussed with him the bilateral economic cooperation, the Yugoslav Information Secretariat said in a statement. Both sides agreed there were realistic prospects of conducting and upgrading comprehensive cooperation. They focused on upgrading cooperation in all areas of transport (maritime, air and overland) and, at this stage, especially on bilateral exchange of overland transport permits, assessing that the upgrading of bilateral cooperation in this domain was one of the major preconditions for increasing overall commodity exchange. The meeting also focused on cooperation in tourism and joint economic investments and in the domain of stimulating and developing private entrepreneurship. [15] INTERNATIONAL FACTORS INTERESTED IN HIGHWAYS, RAILWAY IN SERBIATanjug, 1997-08-25Serbian Ministers Branislav Ivkovic, Svetolik Kostadinovic and Dejan Kovacevic held talks in the Serbian Government seat with representatives of the Greek economic group Eurodinamiks and the Vice-President of the U.S. group Parson Transportation, Zigmund Kobes, the Information Ministry said. Guests were interested in taking part in the building and financing of transportation infrastructure in Serbia, primarily highways and the railway. It was said that the adoption of the Spatial Plan, the Law on Concessions, regulations in the field of foreign investments and of the Law on Ownership Transformation, at the initiative of the Serbian Government, has created an attractive economic and legal environment for the participation of foreign partners in infastructure development programs. [16] YUGOSLAV FOREIGN MINISTER MILUTINOVIC ARRIVES IN CHINATanjug, 1997-08-25Yugoslav Foreign Minister Milan Milutionovic arrived on Monday on an official visit to People's Republic of China at the invitation of Chinese Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Qian Qichen. During the five-day visit, Milutinovic will convey to the Chinese leadership a message from Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to President Jiang Zemin. Milutinovic started the visit to China in the southern city of Shenzhen were he talked with the Mayor about Chinese experiences in carrying out the policy of reforms and opening up to the world as well as about possibilities of expanding contacts and cooperation between Yugoslav firms and successful firms in that city. On Monday, Milutinovic visited the corporation Hua Wei which develops and produces telecommunication equipment and other equipment at the cutting edge of technology. This firm has already established contacts with competent institutions here and is interested both in scientific research and production cooperation and in the creation of joint firms in Yugoslavia. The Hua Wei corporation is exporting its products to East European countries, South America and has a joint firm in Russia for the production of telecommunicaiton equipment, while in Hong Kong it recently won a tender in competition with Siemens. Milutinovic will visit on Tuesday the largest Chinese industrial center of Shangai and hold talks with the city's leadership. [17] PLAVSIC INVITES ARMY GENERAL STAFF TO MEETING IN BANJALUKA ON TUESDAYTanjug, 1997-08-25Republika Srpska President Biljana Plavsic told a press conference in Banjaluka on Tuesday that she had invited the Republika Srpska Army General Staff to a meeting on Tuesday and that she expected them to accept the invitation. Plavsic said that in the General Staff's August 22 letter, the Collegium of the Republika Srpska generals accused her of the current grave political crisis. She said, however, that the contents of the letter differed from what had been agreed with Chief of General Staff Gen. Pero Colic following the outbreak of the constitutional crisis. She said she had read in the Glas Srpski paper that the Republika Srpska Government had decided to sever contacts with her, which she described as anti-constitutional. The Government is responsible to the President for its actions, Plavsic said. She said that, as a Supreme Commander, she had the right to dismiss those in charge of the armed forces, including Interior Minister Dragan Kijac, and that it was "her conditional right" to call Government sessions, but that the Government had failed to accept the invitations twice already. Plavsic said that newly-appointed Interior Minister Marko Pavic was performing his duty. Plavsic said that Pale leaders were allegedly pressuring the Srpska Radio Television (SRT) Banjaluka studio and that this had prompted all its employees to a public rally late on Sunday where they called for a united information system in the Republika Srpska, without the Serb Democratic Party (SDS) domination of the SRT or SRT's being in the service of this party. [18] GERMAN DEFENSE MINISTER ON BOSNIA'S FATETanjug, 1997-08-25The fate of Bosnia-Herzegovina will be decided in September, German Defense Minister Volker Ruehe said on Monday in Sarajevo. That month will be decisive for Bosnia's future due to the local elections scheduled for September 14, Ruehe said. German news agency DPA reports that Ruehe, who is on his seventh visit to Sarajevo, discussed the conditions for a more massive repatriation of refugees to Bosnia, including the 285,000 hosted by Germany. Visiting the Sarajevo suburb Hadzici, Ruehe promised more aid as the suburb is inhabited by Muslims, Croats and Serbs together, DPA reports. Hadzici is the location of the German civilian and military Headquarters whose principal task is to gather information on safe areas for the repatriation of refugees. Its civilian experts are in charge of technical assistance, while military experts study the situation in the field and report to their central Headquarters in Bonn on available accommodation and on the readiness of local population to accept repatriates. [19] MONTENEGRIN OFFICIALS SUPPORT OSCE MISSIONTanjug, 1997-08-25Nikolai Vulkanov of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) visited Montenegro on Monday to discuss upcoming presidential and early parliamentary elections in this Yugoslav republic. Vulkanov had talks at the Montenegrin foreign and interior Ministries, election commission and radio and television on preparations for the elections. A Foreign Ministry statement quoted him as expressing "satisfaction with actions taken to date in all segments of the process leading up to the elections for creating the necessary conditions for democratic and fair elections." The Montenegrin partners in talks expressed the readiness of state bodies and institutions to cooperate fully with and give every support to the OSCE monitors in order that their mission should be discharged in line with the OSCE procedure, the statement added. [20] GERMAN DEFENSE MINISTER IN SARAJEVOTanjug, 1997-08-25German Defense Minister Volker Ruehe arrived in Sarajevo on Monday. During the day, Ruehe confered with High Representative of the international community for Bosnia-Herzegovina Carlos Westendorp on civilian and military matters concerning the repatriation of about 320,000 Bosnian war refugees from Germany. Ruehe also visited German troops on the international force who are stationed in Kiseljak near Sarajevo. [21] OSCE OFFICIAL PRAISES YUGOSLAVIA'S ARMS CONTROL RESULTSTanjug, 1997-08-22Spokesman for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe chairman Vigleik Eide on Friday praised Yugoslavia's results in the implementation of an Agreement on subregional arms control. Speaking after a several-day visit to Yugoslavia, Eide told Tanjug that the Yugoslav side had carried out its obligations in a highly professional way which guaranteed that the second phase of the Agreement would be realised by the end of October as planned. Eide said that the other signatories to the agreement - Croatia, and Bosnia- Herzegovina and its entities, the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Republika Srpska - consistently fulfilled their obligations. According to him, the implementation of the agreement would help restore confidence and improve understanding both among the signatories and in the region. Eide headed a delegation of the OSCE consultative commission for the subregional arms control, which visited Yugoslavia at the invitation of the Yugoslav Government's Commission for the implementation of the Agreement. The delegation held separate meetings with Yugoslav Defence Minister Pavle Bulatovic, Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic and Chief of General Staff Gen. Momcilo Perisic. The Commission also visited the centre where the agreement is being carried out in practice. [22] GOVERNMENT SUSPENDS DECREE, COOPERATION WITH RS PRESIDENTTanjug, 1997-08-23The Republika Srpska (RS) Government suspended on Saturday the decree issued by RS President Biljana Plavsic on the appointment of Acting Interior Minister Marko Pavic, pending a Constitutional Court ruling, RS news agency SRNA reported. Pavic, Srna said, has refused to accept the post, if it is not in the context of the activities of the RS Government and of the Serbian Democratic party, of which he is a member. The RS Government has announced that it was no longer under the obligation to cooperate with Biljana Plavsic, since she had refused to comply with the decision of the Constitional Court and, by her latest decisions, was continuing to violate the RS constitution and laws. Under the Government's decision to suspend relations with the RS President, all future decisions, acts and doings of President Biljana Plavsic will be considered irregular, illegitimate and non-binding for the Government, and "will remain so until Mrs Plavsic complies with the constitution and laws of Republika Srpska and returns to the seat of the organs of the republic." [23] REPUBLIKA SRPSKA ARMY ON POLITICAL, SECURITY SITUATIONTanjug, 1997-08-22The Republika Srpska chiefs of General Staff said here late on Thursday that the political and security situation in the Republika Srpska was very serious and that it was directly linked with the unconstitutional actions and decisions by President Biljana Plavsic, the Bosnian Serb news agency SRNA said on Friday. "Our estimates have come true set out in the letter sent to the Republika Srpska President on July 5, where we warned, among other things, about the intentions by part of the international community to use the internal constitutional and political crisis in the Republic for the realisation of their goals," the chiefs of General Staff said in a statement. The statement said that by openly interfering in the Republika Srpska problems and supporting one side to the political conflict, part of the international community had violated the Dayton Accords and, under a well- known scenario, opened a new phase in the the crisis in the Republika Srpska aimed at its disintegration and creation of Bosnia-Herzegovina as a unitary state. "In the realisation of the set goal, misunderstandings and divisions among the Serbs are skilfully used," the statement said and added that the latest developments in the Republic were part of this scenario directed against all state institutions and the Republika Srpska Army. The General Staff believes that it is necessary to ensure a professional, efficacious and responsible carrying out of the roles of all state organs, especially the Republika Srpska Government and Defence Ministry. "Starting with the army's constitutional role, the collegiate body of the chiefs of General Staff is determined to defend the Republika Srpska and its people with all available means and to oppose all attempts at dividing the Republika Srpska Army conducive to the division and disintegration of the Republika Srpska. "If some protagonists of the crisis continue destabilising and undermining the state, the Republika Srpska Army will no longer tolerate and warn, but will take measures aimed at defending the integrity, soverignty and constitutional organisation in keeping with the Constitution and moral obligation," the statement said. [24] OSCE OFFICIALS MEET WITH MEMBERS OF SERBIAN ELECTORAL COMMISSIONTanjug, 1997-08-22A working meeting of the Serbian Electoral Commission and officials of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) was held at the Serbian Parliament on Friday, the Serbian Electoral Commission said in a statement. The OSCE officials are visiting Serbia to make the necessary preparations for the presence of international monitors at republican presidential and parliamentary elections in September. Head of the Electoral Commission Balsa Govedarica and other commission members informed the OSCE officials about election laws and regulations and the organisation of elections in Serbia. The Commission informed the OSCE officials also about the readiness of all 29 Serbian constituencies to help them carry out their mission through daily contacts with them. International monitors will have access to all election documents and polling stations and will be allowed to monitor the activity of all electoral committees, the statement said. [25] BANK CREDITS AND CMC TO STEP-UP EFFECTS OF DEBT CLEARANCETanjug, 1997-08-22The introduction of Compulsory Multilateral Compenstaion (CMC) into the existing system of payments in the country is a preventive measure of the current economic policy introduced by the Federal Government to reduce insolvency in the economy, banking and public spending, and control growing financil non-discipline, Yugoslav Deputy Premier Danko Djunic said on Friday. Compulsory debt clearance was also necessary to give more weight to the effect of pumping new funds into the country's economy, Djunic told a press conference in Belgrade. In the first half of the year, more than 37,000 legal entities, with over a million employees, had blocked accounts with the Yugoslav National Bank because of arrears, with the dominant number of insolvents - 35,000 with 950,000 employees in the economy. A total of 80,179 legal entities have registered for the fist CMC cycle of the six planned for this year, and 5.8 billion dinars in debts have been cleared of the registered amount of 47.5 billion dinars (1 U.S. dollar = 6 dinars). Also, 12.3 percent of the total registered debts were compensated for, or 14.7 percent of debts that can be cleared without additional engagement of money, the domestic resource most in hard supply. Most of the compensated mass was in the economy - 3.1 billion dinars, or 10.8 percent of the registered debts, or 12.9 percent of the sum to be compensated. Public spending took part in compensation for the first time, so that budgets of state organs and organizations cleared 1.2 billion dinars, and funds about a billion dinars. Djunic said only debts and outstandings were being cleared, and not giro accounts, which means that no-one's funds can be blocked. The possibility of multiplied debt clearance in additional compensation is increased with additional bank funds, because this further increases the amount of cleared debts. The respective bank, provided it is solvent, decides about the engagement and amount of these funds independently, he said. [26] OSCE ACCEPTS INVITATION TO MONITOR ELECTIONSTanjug, 1997-08-22The Organization for security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on Friday said it was accepted an invitation to supervize the presidential elections in Montenegro on Oct. 5 this year. OSCE Chairman Niels Helveg Petersen informed Montenegrin parliament Speaker Svetozar Marovic about this in a letter which also said the Organization would immediately begin the necessary prepartions. The letter said the OSCE hoped its observers would be provided support. [27] KRAJISNIK: RS WANTS GOOD RELATIONS WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITYTanjug, 1997-08-23Republika Srpska President in the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina Momcilo Krajisnik accepted here on Friday the invitation of Swedish Ambassador in Sarajevo Nils Eliasson that RS representatives be present tomorrow in Tuzla at the welcoming ceremony for the King of Sweden, visiting the Swedish batallion within SFOR. Commenting on developments in RS, Krajisnik denied reports that he had invited SFOR to apply force in Banjaluka. Krajisnik said that it was now clear to everyone for whom the multinational forces had secured forcible entry into the public security center building in Banjaluka. He added that RS President Biljana Plavsic was ignoring the Constitution and laws of RS and that Baljaluka risked isolation "as there are indications that control points will be set up in that city." In regard to relations with SFOR, Krajisnik said that RS wanted good relations with the multinational forces and the international community, but that it will oppose the policy of drawing SFOR into the political dispute in RS. "Someone gave the order to SFOR to brutally expell legal police forces and to enter by force the Public Security Center in Banjaluka and set up paramilitary formations," Krajisnik said, pointing out that this was the the gravest violation of the Dayton Agreement so far. Krajisnik indicated consequences for RS would be unforeseeable if the Constitution and laws were continued to be stifled. [28] KLICKOVIC: PLAVSIC'S APPOINTMENT OF ACTING MINISTER IN VIOLATION OF CONSTITUTIONTanjug, 1997-08-22Republika Srpska (RS) Premier Gojko Klickovic has assessed that RS President Biljana Plavsic by appointing on Friday an acting Interior Minister had once again flagrantly violated the constitution and laws of RS. Biljana Plavsic's Cabinet in Banjaluka announced on Friday that she had appointed by decree as Acting Interior Minister Marko Pavic, instead of the suspended Dragan Kijac. In a statement to RS Radio Television, Klickovic explained that according to constitutional and legal procedure the Interior Minister can be appointed only by the premier, and then approved by Parliament. The RS president can only appoint the Premier designate who then appoints the cabinet, Klickovic said. Plavsic's decision is thus unconstitutional, he added. Klickovic said that the RS Government already had a Minister of internal affairs and did not intend to make any cabinet changes, "especially changes made under the pressure of those who wish to overthrow the RS Government." "All moves made at this moment are aimed at breaking up compeletly, or destroying Republika Srpska, and the Government will not allow that," Klickovic said and assessed that "by this move the President has that she has decided not to cooperate with the RS Government." [29] YUGOSLAVIA, AZERBAIDZHAN SIGN PROTOCOL ON SETTING UP DIPLOMATIC TIESTanjug, 1997-08-22Yugoslavia and Azerbaidzhan have signed a protocol on establishing diplomatic relations at the ambassadorial level. The protocol was signed by Yugoslav Ambassador to Turkey Darko Tanaskovic and Azerbaidzhan's Ambassador to Turkey Mehmed Aliyev, in Ankara on Thursday. [30] MONTENEGRIN PRESIDENT BULATOVIC RECEIVES ITALIAN AMBASSADORTanjug, 1997-08-22Montenegrin President Momir Bulatovic received in Podgorica on Friday Italian Ambassador to Yugoslavia Ricardo Sesso. The two sides described as positive a development of Yugoslav-Italian relations, and in this context, the overall relations between Montenegro and Italy. The Presidential Office said in a statement released after the meeting that the talks had focused also on the issues of further upgrading of cooperation between Montenegro and Italy within the development of overall relations and cooperation between Yugoslavia and Italy and especially on joint activities of importance and interest to both countries. Bulatovic again paid tribute to Italy's objective, principled and constructive position in the process of settling the crisis in the former Yugoslavia and in the domain of Yugoslavia's reintegration into the international community. As for the current political situation in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Montenegro, Bulatovic said this was the crucial stage in strengthening and stabilizing the democratic processes, which defracted through the issue of relations to the federal state and the functioning of constitutional and legal principles in Montenegro. Speaking of the constitutional concept of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the position of its member-republics, Bulatovic stressed that there were no legal or institutional mechanisms for any kind of Yugoslav Army's involvement in settling the political crisis in Montenegro or introducing the state of emergency. Bulatovic also said that there was no fact in the political life of Montenegro or Yugoslavia that could trigger such predictions. He said that such rumours, coming from well-known political circles, were merely an attempt to emphasize a claim that Montenegro allegedly enjoyed an unequal treatment and was threatened in Yugoslavia, and that they aimed to distract the citizens' attention from real problems, those who caused these problems and from the way of settling them. (only the first 30 articles are shown) Yugoslav Daily Survey Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |