BOSNEWS digest 456 - 05/11/95
From: Nermin Zukic <n6zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
From: Nermin Zukic <n6zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
BOSNEWS Digest 456
CONTENTS
[01] Senior U.S. official said: ``Karadzic is finito...''
[02] US DEMAND: REPLACE KARADJIC AND MLADIC
[03] KARADJIC AND MLADIC WILL BE REPLACED
[04] Akashi: ``In the absence of an overall strategy for the settlement of the conflict, I don't think U.N. peackeepers could have done much better...''
[05] SANDZAK AND ROHDE SHOULD BE A PART OF THE DAYTON AGENDA
[06] OWEN - A BUSINESSMAN, R. SMITH - DISAPPOINTED LONDON
[07] NUMEROUS ACTIVITIES OF THE TRIBUNAL IN THE HAGUE
[01] Senior U.S. official said: ``Karadzic is finito...''
``Getting rid of Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic would surely suit
Milosevic, but it is a tall order especially as far as Mladic is concerned,''
said a Western diplomat at the Bosnia peace talks in Dayton, OH. ``He
[Karadzic] aspired to be an all-Serb hero. It was the ultimate mistake
because Milosevic cannot stand anyone sharing the celestial throne...''
``There was a letter from (tribunal president Antonio) Cassese to Mrs.
(Madeleine) Albright in which he is wondering out loud whether a peace
agreement could compel in any way the parties to cooperate with the
tribunal,'' a tribunal spokesman said Friday.
The spokesman said Cassese's confidential letter to Albright ``was not
putting any condition to any peace accord.''
The War Crimes tribunal, according to the New York Times, has asked the
U.S. government, the summit's principal sponsor, to make the surrender of
Karadzic, Mladic and other indicted suspects a condition of any peace accord.
``Milosevic will have no trouble ousting Karadzic now but Mladic is a bigger
problem since many Bosnian Serbs see him as their sole defender,'' a Western
diplomat said.
``That is the problem. Where would they go? Any country harboring them would
be liable to sanctions and ostracism... Another problem Milosevic is facing
is the hardliners within his own camp who will not take too kindly to his
taking out symbols of Serb nationalism,'' the diplomat said.
Authoritative sources in Belgrade said Mladic was likely to retire in the
city's residential district of Dedinje where he has a home.
``We are committed to return our ethnic territories,'' nationalist Bosnian
Serb leader Momcilo Krajisnik said, hours before a scheduled meeting
between presidents Alija Izetbegovic of Bosnia and Slobodan Milosevic of
Serbia. Sources familiar with the talks said Izetbegovic and Milosevic will
meet face to face Thursday instead of chief U.S. negotiator Richard Holbrooke
shuttling between the two.
``We will not accept the actual state which has drastically changed in the
past three, four months. Serbs do not have the right to hand over and trade
with cities such as Sanski Most, Mrkonjic Grad, Kljuc and others... Sanctions
cannot be more important than freedom,'' Krajisnik claimed, adding that he
believed that Milosevic, as the head of the ``all-Serbian delegation,'' will
fully represent the interests of the entire Serbian nation.
[02] US DEMAND: REPLACE KARADJIC AND MLADIC
Dayton, November 3,1995 (Press TWRA) - US demands that Bosnian
Serbs leaders R. Karadjic and Gen. R. Mladic be replaced from
leading positions to avoid their participation in future B-H
Goverment after the signing of peace agreement, said Nicholas
Burns, State Department spokesman. "We consider that Karadjic and
Mladic should not hold high positions in a new state. They can be
removed from their position in several ways, but only Serbs can
decide on that", said Nicholas Burns. "The peace agreement on B-H
should ask from all sides to cooperate with War Crimes Tribunal
concerning the crimes committed on territory of former Yugoslavia
in full. However, the US soldiers who will be deployed in B-H
will not have duty to look for war criminals, but they will have
to arrest war criminal if they come across one. The US State
Secretary Christopher said in an interview for ABC that it is
possible that NATO peace forces do not deploy in B-H if Karadjic
and Mladic against whom the charges for war crimes have been
raised in The Hague stay in power "Really, it can not be expected
that NATO forces will be on the ground while those two are in
power", said Christopher. "I think that it is just correct to say
that we would not feel good in case US forces deploy while they
still hold powerful commanding posts", said Christopher.
According to the sources close to negotiations in Dayton
President of the B-H Presidency A. Izetbegovic emphasized the
demand for Serbian war criminal be extradited to International
Tribunal in Hague. Izetbegovic also demanded that Serbian
President Milosevic make commitment to end the war crimes.
According to the same sources Bosniak side thinks that Serbs in
Serbia and B-H has to respect their international obligations and
turn over the war criminals to The Hague's Tribunal. The message
of Bosniak side is that without such guarantees there is no peace
process.
[03] KARADJIC AND MLADIC WILL BE REPLACED
Belgrade, November 3,1995 (Press TWRA) - The independent
Belgrade's Agency "Beta" reported that "political leadership of
Bosnian Serbs started in late October the secret preparations to
overthrow the highest officials". According to this source the
Bosnian Serbs' political ruling circles agreed that Radovan
Karadjic and Ratko Mladic should start to prepare for
"dissociating from their positions". It is possible that besides
them some other politicians will leave their positions, too. The
so called "republic srpska's" vice-president N. Koljevic and
minister A. Buha who are at present part of Serbian negotiation's
team in Dayton will keep their positions. "Beta" reports that the
leaders of Bosnian Serbs in Belgrade agreed with Serbian
President Milosevic that neither Karadjic nor Mladic nor
President of so called"republic srpska" parliament M. Krajisnik.
run for central bodies of B-H union on the next elections but
only for the internal bodies of the Serbian entity in B-H.
According to the independent Belgrade's Radio B-92 Milosevic
did not insist on this replacement only because of international
pressure but because he can no longer count on any of these two
to follow his commands in full.
[04] Akashi: ``In the absence of an overall strategy for the settlement of the conflict, I don't think U.N. peackeepers could have done much better...''
Former U.N. envoy for Former Yugoslavia, Japanese Yasushi Akashi Friday
defended his mission: ``I'd like to stress that former Yugoslavia is not an
unmitigated failure on the part of the United Nations -- I think the United
Nations peace forces together with the UNHCR and others were instrumental
in saving the lives of innocent people... I think close to three million
people were fed and hundreds of thousands of lives were saved because of our
humanitarian activities which were carried out under extreme danger.''
``In the absence of an overall strategy for the settlement of the conflict,
I don't think U.N. peackeepers could have done much better... But we were
sent into the midst of a very violent, very inhuman civil war...This is not
typical peacekeeping in the most favourable circumstances. We were not
equipped, nor commanded, nor mandated to impose peace -- we were not peace
enforcers but peacekeepers in the absence of a peace to keep,'' Akashi claimed.
[05] SANDZAK AND ROHDE SHOULD BE A PART OF THE DAYTON AGENDA
Sarajevo, Nov 11, 1995 (Press TWRA) - National Council of
Bosniaks in Sandzak (NVBS) demanded its participation at the
peace talks in Dayton. In the letter sent to the international
mediators in ex-Yugoslavia, NVBS demands that, as the only legal
body of Bosniaks in Sandzak, discuss at the peace talks Sandzak's
status and Bosniaks who are still living there being majority
population despite a long Serb ethnic cleansing campaign going on
for 83 years, reinflamed in the last decade. NVBS stresses that
the delegates of the Bosniaks from Sandzak should participate at
the peace talks on B-H which is their mother country.
Dayton, Belgrade - Serb paper Telegraf writes that Milosevic
in the USA is accompanied by 3OO persons including government
officials, leading Serb economists, financiers and bodyguards. On
Oct 25 this year all regular Yugoslav air transport's (JAT) lines
were cancelled in order to focus attention to the visit of
Milosevic's delegations. A few days prior to Milosevic and his
associates' visit a JAT's "Boeing 737" with 144 seats, bringing
14O passengers, arrived at Dayton. Three JAT's mechanics whose
job is to maintain the jets also came with diplomatic passports.
Washington - Senate leader Robert Dole and senator Olympia
Snowe (influential member of powerful Greek lobby to the USA), in
the letter addressed to the US State Secr. Warren Christopher
demand from State Department to take all necessary measures to
release David Rohde immediately, the US journalist who was
captured by Karadzic's Serbs. As Milosevic speaks on behalf of
those Serbs, he should be demanded immediate release of Rohde and
warned that similar hijacking must not happen again.
Sarajevo - The UN officials decided this week to send the UN
monitors on the Karadzic's Serb held part of B-H explaining it by
considerably changed situation in the past few months and removed
threat to the UN staff to become Serb hostages. The Sarajevo
authorities warn that the UN leadership will take responsibility,
should the UN staff be hijacked by Serbs.
[06] OWEN - A BUSINESSMAN, R. SMITH - DISAPPOINTED LONDON
London, Nov 3, 1995 (Press TWRA) - Lord David Owen, recent EU
peace mediator to ex-Yugoslavia and co-chairman of the ICFY
(International Conference on the former Yugoslavia), has become
director general and president of the British company "Middlesex
Holdings" dealing with metal in the ex-Soviet Union states. Owen
has already been director of the main British textile company
Coats Viyelle. Since Aug 1992 till June 1995, Owen conducted the
"peace process" in ex-Yugoslavia and received for that USD 1.8
million from the UN budget.
British govt. pleased with the work of D. Owen regards that
Sir R. Smith the UNPROFOR Commander, by demanding the NATO air
strikes against Serbs "destroyed the peace process improved by
Michael Rose" with good cooperation with Karadzic's terrorists.
R. Smith will be soon replaced.
[07] NUMEROUS ACTIVITIES OF THE TRIBUNAL IN THE HAGUE
The Hague, Oct 29, 1995 (Press TWRA) - International Tribunal for
crimes committed in ex-Yugoslavia accepted the demand of defence
of the suspected Serb war criminal D. Tadic for postponing the
trial till next year. Tadic's lawyers explained that by
collecting evidence to prove the innocence of their client.
Meanwhile, it is found that among the witnesses at the continued
trial will be an English writer of the book "Seasons In Hell", Ed
Vulliamy a journalist of the British papers "The Guardian" and
correspondent of the British "The Observer" and Italian "La
Stampa" who lives in Italy, Britain and the USA and has been
several times an the front lines and many other areas in ex -
Yugoslavia, particularly in B-H in the past few years. Three
years ago, he met Dusko Tadic in Serb death camp of Omarska and
witnessed his brutal treatment of the captured whose guard
commander was D. Tadic. R. Goldstone, the main prosecutor of the
Tribunal, announced an investigation and indictment against all
those who used media to spread hatred and encouraged crimes. The
Croatian independent daily "Novi list" commentator Jelena Lovric,
wonders in today's column if that might be the reason for absence
of the main Croatian TV correspondent from B-H Smiljko Sagolj who
has become notorious for his intolerance towards Bosniaks.
Undefined fate of two to three thousand of Bosniak and
Croatian civilians from the Banjaluka region who were taken from
their homes by Karadzic's Serbs and missing ever since, is in the
focus of the Hague Tribunal attention. Croatian Ambassador to the
UN Mario Nobilo demanded urgent measures of the Security Council
to be saved of the same fate as the people from Srebrenica.
"The Christian Science Monitor" and "The Washington Post"
write about the massacre of the people in Srebrenica as the most
severe crime in Europe after WW II. In a few days, Serbs killed
several thousand of people supervised by Ratko Mladic personally
and the "operation" was in collusion with Belgrade. Beside the
facts "the Washington Post" has some stories told by the
survivors from Srebrenica - Mevludin Oric, Smail Hodzic, Hurem
Suljic, Hasan Mustafic, Zulfo Salihovic, etc. The papers cites
defence secretary W. Perry who sees Srebrenica as a drop over a
full glass of the western patience. Yet, it seems that Serbs have
not learnt the lesson and after the NATO strikes again committed
crimes near Banjaluka, writes "The Washington Post".
Belgrade - Serb weekly "Nin" writes that Milosevic will be
demanded in Dayton extradition of Mladic and Karadzic first time
they step on the ground of Serbia and "Yugoslavia" while in the
meantime extradition of Zeljko Raznjatovic Arkan, the leader of
the paramilitary terrorist group "Serb Tigers" will be demanded.
Milosevic could claim that Mladic and Karadzic are out of his
reach but it cannot be said for Arkan who spends most of his time
in Serbia though he often visits the occupied part of Croatia and
B-H. Arkan does not often travel abroad as Interpol looks for him
due to crimes in western Europe. Goldstone is interested in Arkan
due to his open involvement in genocide in B-H & Croatia. /end/
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