OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 168, 29 August 1995
From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>
CONTENTS
[01] BOSNIAN GOVERNMENT DEMANDS ACTION.
[02] SERBS DENY INVOLVEMENT IN SHELLING . . .
[03] . . . BUT UN DOES NOT BELIEVE THEM.
[04] BOSNIAN SERBS WELCOME U.S. PEACE PLAN.
[05] WHAT DID THE DUTCH KNOW IN SREBRENICA?
[06] MORE REFUGEES EXPECTED IN VOJVODINA . . .
[07] . . . BUT MINISTER FOR MINORITIES SEES NO DIFFICULTIES.
[08] ALBANIA OPPOSES LIFTING OF SANCTIONS AGAINST RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
[09] SENIOR U.S. OFFICIAL IN ATHENS FOR BALKAN TALKS.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 168, Part II, 29 August 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] BOSNIAN GOVERNMENT DEMANDS ACTION.
The attack on Sarajevo's Markale
market on 28 August left at least 37 dead and 87 wounded, international
media reported the following day. Soon after the shelling, Prime
Minister Haris Silajdzic said that Bosnia's participation in the peace
process should be suspended until NATO clarified its role in protecting
Sarajevo as a UN-designated "safe area." Foreign Minister Muhamed
Sacirbey stressed that "there must be some credibility restored by the
international community in not allowing terrorism to undermine their own
peace process [or] their own credibility." President Alija Izetbegovic
promised revenge against the Serbs, adding that "as far as the killers
are concerned, my message to them is we shall strike back . . . and very
soon too." -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[02] SERBS DENY INVOLVEMENT IN SHELLING . . .
Nasa Borba on 29 August said
the entire Bosnian Serb leadership has denied any connection with the
Sarajevo attack. As was the case with the previous shelling of the
market on 5 February 1994, the Serbs suggested that the government
bombarded its own people for devious ends. The Serbian civilian leader,
Radovan Karadzic, told SRNA that "the Muslim side, as usual, on the eve
of important moments in the negotiations, staged a massacre of its own
population to sabotage the peace process." His information minister
called it "a classic act of Islamic terrorism." The military commander,
General Ratko Mladic, said his men were not responsible. Bosnian Serb
Radio claimed that soon after the Markale incident, government forces
shelled a Serbian Orthodox church near Sarajevo and killed a member of a
wedding party. There has generally been a pattern of the Serbs denying
war crimes and accusing the Muslims or Croats of similar things each
time the Serbs have done something particularly condemnable. -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] . . . BUT UN DOES NOT BELIEVE THEM.
Few people outside Serbian circles
seemed to believe Karadzic and his fellows, however. The UN on 29 August
announced that it had "concluded beyond all reasonable doubt" that
Bosnian Serb forces fired the 120mm mortar round into an area packed
with innocent civilians. It was not immediately clear what action, if
any, would follow. Air strikes or use of the Rapid Reaction Force nearby
were the two most likely options. The UN statement added that "all
options are being reviewed, including the use of air power." Even the
usually mild-mannered special envoy, Yasushi Akashi, said there would be
"very strong action." -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] BOSNIAN SERBS WELCOME U.S. PEACE PLAN.
The International Herald Tribune
on 29 August said U.S. mediator Richard Holbrooke was somewhat cautious
in his recommendations as to what should be done. Holbrooke, the
"architect" of the short-lived policy of direct talks with Pale last
winter, is now promoting Washington's latest effort to secure peace by
effectively partitioning Bosnia. The Sarajevo government rejects any
attempt to destroy the unity of the country. But the Bosnian Serb
"legislature," meeting on Mt. Jahorina in the early hours of 29 August,
welcomed Holbrooke's efforts for "a durable and just peace." Karadzic
applauded the plan, saying earlier on Bosnian Serb Radio that "the
American initiative, as far as we know, takes into account a maximum of
Serb interests, and I hope our parliament will welcome this offer
favorably." -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] WHAT DID THE DUTCH KNOW IN SREBRENICA?
The Bosnian Serb legislators alsoagreed that they and rump Yugoslavia would be represented at future
international conferences by a joint delegation. The measure had been
suggested by EU mediator Carl Bildt, SRNA said. Meanwhile, Bosnian and
Serbian media continued to speculate on persistent but unconfirmed
reports that Mladic has tried to arrest Karadzic. The two
internationally wanted war criminals have been publicly at odds over a
variety of issues related to tactics and power. In Gorazde, British
forces completed their withdrawal ahead of schedule, leaving behind only
two military observers and a political analyst. The Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung on 28 August reported on the continued row in the
Netherlands over the behavior of Dutch peacekeepers following the fall
of Srebrenica in July. They have been charged with turning a blind eye
to massacres of Muslims and other war crimes in order to avoid clashing
with the Serbs. The latest reports suggested that the Dutch virtually
had to stumble over mounds of corpses as they were leaving the area. AFP
said that the Serbs still refuse to allow an independent investigation .
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[06] MORE REFUGEES EXPECTED IN VOJVODINA . . .
A peace conference in the
Hungarian town of Szeged, attended by nongovernmental representatives
from 15 countries, has expressed fears that another 70,000 Krajina Serbs
will be settled in Vojvodina, which has large Hungarian, Croatian, and
other Central European minorities, Hungarian TV1 reported on 27 August.
Meanwhile, Hina on 28 August said that 565 ethnic Croatian refugees
arrived in Croatia from Vojvodina on 28 August. The mass expulsion of
Croats and Muslims from Banja Luka and other areas in northwestern
Bosnia continued on 28 August, Croatian Radio reported. Some 300 people
crossed the River Sava from Srbac to Davor, and more refugees are
expected to arrive. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[07] . . . BUT MINISTER FOR MINORITIES SEES NO DIFFICULTIES.
Margit Savovic,
rump Yugoslav minister without portfolio in charge of civil liberties
and minority rights, has denied that Serbian refugees in Kosovo and
Vojvodina will disturb the ethnic balance there, Tanjug reported on 27
August. Savovic charged "certain countries" with using the refugee
crisis to "interfere in Yugoslavia's internal affairs." Vjesnik on 29
August said that paramilitary troops under internationally wanted war-
criminal Zeljko Raznjatovic, alias "Arkan," have begun press-ganging
refugees in Serbia for deployment in eastern Slavonia. -- Fabian
Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[08] ALBANIA OPPOSES LIFTING OF SANCTIONS AGAINST RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
Albanian
Foreign Minister Alfred Serreqi, during the visit to Tirana of his
Egyptian counterpart, Amr Moussa, has stressed again that sanctions
against the rump Yugoslavia should not be lifted unless the Kosovo
conflict is resolved. Moussa and Serreqi said their countries have
identical views on the crisis in the former Yugoslavia. Moussa added
that Egypt considers the settling of Serbian refugees in Kosovo to be an
"attempt to alter the demographic structure in Kosovo, [which is]
unacceptable," Reuters reported on 28 August. According to BETA, Moussa
also met with President Sali Berisha and Prime Minister Aleksander Meksi
to discuss Egyptian investments in Albania and other forms of
cooperation. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[09] SENIOR U.S. OFFICIAL IN ATHENS FOR BALKAN TALKS.
White House
communication manager George Stephanopoulos arrived in Athens on 28
August, Reuters reported the same day. Stephanopoulos will meet with
Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou, Foreign Minister Karolos Papoulias,
and the main conservative opposition party leader, Miltiades Evert, on
29 August to discuss the situation in the Balkans. The talks will focus
on Greece's differences with neighboring Turkey, the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, and the war in Bosnia. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI,
Inc.
This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a nonprofit organization with research offices in Prague, Czech Republic.
For more information on OMRI publications please write to info@omri.cz
[Home]
[HR-Net]
[Hellenic Recources Institute]
[Information Sources
- Latest News!]
[News Searches]
[Organizations]
[Feedback]
[Usage Statistics]
HTML by the HR-Net Group / Hellenic Resources Institute
news2html v2.11 run on Tuesday, 29 August 1995 - 16:03:15