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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 203, 18 October 1995

From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] BOSNIAN SERBS REOPEN CONCENTRATION CAMP--FOR THEIR OWN PEOPLE.

  • [2] GANIC SAYS SERBS WILL RECEIVE LESS TERRITORY.

  • [3] BOSNIAN SERB "PATRIOTIC FRONT" DEMANDS PURGE.

  • [4] INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATORS IN BELGRADE.

  • [5] TUDJMAN REELECTED PARTY LEADER.

  • [6] MONTENEGRIN-ALBANIAN FLOUR SMUGGLING.

  • [7] STUDENTS PROTEST IN BUCHAREST.

  • [8] ROMANIA MARE ATTACKS SECRET SERVICE CHIEF.

  • [9] MOLDOVAN GOVERNMENT BACKS INITIATIVE FOR POLITICAL FORUM.

  • [10] BULGARIA TO PROMOTE SILKWORM INDUSTRY.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 203, Part II, 18 October 1995

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] BOSNIAN SERBS REOPEN CONCENTRATION CAMP--FOR THEIR OWN PEOPLE.

    The Guardian on 17 October reported that the notorious Omarska prison camp complex is full again, this time with Serbian refugees. As when Muslim and Croat inmates were held in 1992, there is little food or shelter, the guards are abusive, and men are beaten and taken away--this time to be press-ganged. Refugees said they were robbed by paramilitaries commanded by the internationally wanted war criminal Zeljko Raznatovic "Arkan." The British daily echoed the refugees' sentiments in noting that "the Arkanovci have proved themselves to be far more efficient looters than fighters." -- Patrick Moore

    [2] GANIC SAYS SERBS WILL RECEIVE LESS TERRITORY.

    Slobodna Dalmacija on 18 October reported that Prijedor is half empty as its Serbian inhabitants flee before advancing allied forces. It added that Croatian soldiers in Mrkonjic Grad have discovered the corpses of six Muslims whom Serbian soldiers used as human shields. Nasa Borba quoted Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic as saying that the Serbs will no longer be able to claim 49% of the republic's territory in view of their recent losses on the battlefield. Reuters on 17 October noted that the U.S. has selected the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base outside Dayton, Ohio, as the site for the planned peace talks involving the presidents of Serbia, Bosnia, and Croatia. American officials claimed it was difficult to find equal accommodations elsewhere for three heads of state. -- Patrick Moore

    [3] BOSNIAN SERB "PATRIOTIC FRONT" DEMANDS PURGE.

    Bosnian Serb opposition parties have joined to form the Patriotic Front, Nasa Borba reported on 18 October. Calling the recent sacking of four generals and the prime minister "cosmetic," they demanded that "the main guilty parties" be fired and that there be "radical changes" in the leadership. In a letter to civilian leader Radovan Karadzic, they did not specify exactly whom they meant. Reuters said the Bosnian Serb military leadership has rejected the firing of the four generals and blamed the civilian authorities for the recent monumental losses. A statement issued in Belgrade pointed to "the failures of state policy and especially [the civilians'] incapability to assert the results of our struggle at the international level, [including] determining the borders of the Republika Srpska." SRNA noted that Bosnian Serbs have appealed to Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic to "protect the Republika Srpska and its people." -- Patrick Moore

    [4] INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATORS IN BELGRADE.

    International media on 18 October report that U.S. representative Richard Holbrooke, EU envoy Carl Bildt, and Russian negotiator Igor Ivanov are in Belgrade. According to Reuters, the purpose of their visit is "to brief Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic on the accelerating Bosnia peace process." -- Stan Markotich

    [5] TUDJMAN REELECTED PARTY LEADER.

    Hina on 15 October said Croatian President Franjo Tudjman was reelected president of the governing Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) at the party's third congress. He ran unopposed and took 1,199 out of 1,247 votes. Mate Granic, Gojko Susak, Jadranka Kosor, Ivic Pasalic, and Franjo Greguric were elected vice presidents. Tudjman stressed that the party must shun extremes, but the common denominator among his deputies appears to be personal loyalty rather than any ideological position. The Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) also held its convention, which was addressed by leaders of some other opposition parties, including the Liberals and the Independent Democrats. They stressed that Croatia must not become a one-party state. The HSS is challenging the HDZ for the 12 seats reserved for Croats living abroad. -- Patrick Moore

    [6] MONTENEGRIN-ALBANIAN FLOUR SMUGGLING.

    Shkoder police and customs officials on 16 October confiscated 200 tons of flour from Montenegro bound for Albania, Gazeta Shqiptare reported. The smugglers were arrested in a village near the checkpoint between Shkoder and Ulcinj. The Albanian daily said smuggling flour from the rump Yugoslavia has begun because of the low price of flour in Vojvodina and on the Kosovo plains. Elsewhere, Montena-fax on 16 October ran a report alleging that Montenegrin authorities initially failed to disclose information on, and later tried to play down, the sinking of a tanker carrying 30 tons of bitumen in the Bay of Hoti in Lake Shkoder on 24 September. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [7] STUDENTS PROTEST IN BUCHAREST.

    Thousands of students on 17 October marched in downtown Bucharest to protest plans to implement new university fees, Radio Bucharest reported the same day. The rally followed strikes over the past few days at universities in the provinces protesting the new charges, which range from $100 to $2,300, depending on which courses are taken. The students are also calling for amendments to a controversial education law recently adopted by the parliament and demanding that the internal affairs minister be summoned to the parliament to account for the actions of policemen at previous student demonstrations. Several opposition parties, including the Liberal Party '93, have expressed support for the students. -- Dan Ionescu

    [8] ROMANIA MARE ATTACKS SECRET SERVICE CHIEF.

    In its latest issue, the weekly of the chauvinistic Greater Romania Party (PRM) has published a letter, allegedly written by a group of senior SRI officers, accusing Virgil Magureanu, head of the Romanian Intelligence service (SRI), of "gross interference in politics" and of appointing his close associates to top positions within the service, Mediafax reported on 17 October. The accusations were made in the form of 15 questions to Magureanu. The anonymous authors of the letter threatened to published "irrefutable proof" supporting their charges should the SRI chose to ignore the criticism and leave the questions unanswered. Romania Mare in June published a similar letter from 300 army officers accusing President Ion Iliescu of having "liquidated" the Romanian army under pressure from NATO. -- Dan Ionescu

    [9] MOLDOVAN GOVERNMENT BACKS INITIATIVE FOR POLITICAL FORUM.

    The Moldovan government on 17 October said it supported an initiative by the Social Progress Party (PPS) to hold a round-table conference of all political forces in the country, Infotag reported. The president, prime minister, and parliamentary chairman are also invited to attend the conference, whose aim is to overcome Moldova's current political crisis. The PPS was founded this summer by a splinter group from the ruling Agrarian Democratic Party of Moldova. It is considered the brainchild of parliamentary chairman Petru Lucinschi, a former Central Committee secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. -- Dan Ionescu

    [10] BULGARIA TO PROMOTE SILKWORM INDUSTRY.

    Reuters on 17 October reported that Bulgarian officials plan to deal in part with the problems of unemployment and economic demands imposed by the "needy and landless" by encouraging such people to take part in the revival of the country's ancient silkworm industry. The idea is to revive a tradition that can be "a major means of earning a livelihood in various regions," Social Minister Mincho Koralski said. Meanwhile, Bulgarian media on 17 October reported that the first six-kilometer-long section of Sofia's underground rail system made a trial run on 17 October. This part of the system is slated to begin operating in early 1996. -- Stan Markotich

    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

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