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OMRI: Daily Digest, Vol. 2, No. 242, 96-12-17

Open Media Research Institute: Daily Digest Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Open Media Research Institute <http://www.omri.cz>

Vol. 2, No. 242, 17 December 1996


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] ANOTHER POLITICAL CASUALTY IN UZBEKISTAN.
  • [02] STATE ENTERPRISES TO BE AUCTIONED IN TURKMENISTAN.
  • [03] DEMIREL IN KAZAKSTAN.
  • [04] CONCERN OVER PKK ACTIVITIES IN KAZAKSTAN.

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [05] BULGARIAN PRIME MINISTER REJECTS OPPOSITION'S CONSENSUS FORMULA.
  • [06] SERBIAN OPPOSITION TAKES A SECOND TOWN . . .
  • [07] . . . AND VOWS TO CONTINUE WITH MASS DEMONSTRATIONS.
  • [08] PLAVSIC WARNS OF WAR OVER BRCKO.
  • [09] OPPOSITION PARTIES FROM BOTH BOSNIAN ENTITIES TO FORM SHADOW- GOVERNMENT?
  • [10] CROAT REFUGEES FROM SERBIA RESETTLE FORMER SERB-HELD AREA IN CROATIA .. .
  • [11] . . . WHILE SERBS RETURN TO MUSLIM-CROAT FEDERATION.
  • [12] SHALIKASHVILI CALLS FOR NEW FORCE TO ARREST WAR CRIMINALS.
  • [13] SERBIAN AUTHORITIES DETAIN RETURNING KOSOVO ALBANIANS.
  • [14] CONSTANTINESCU VOWS TO FIND 1989 REVOLT TRUTH.
  • [15] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT DISMISSES STATE TELEVISION HEAD.
  • [16] MOLDOVAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT RULES IN SNEGUR'S FAVOR.

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] ANOTHER POLITICAL CASUALTY IN UZBEKISTAN.

    The regional governor of the Bukhara region, Mavlon Rahmonov, asked to be relieved of his duties on 14 December, Uzbek Radio reported. Current Deputy Finance Minister Samoiddin Husinov, has been nominated by President Islam Karimov to replace Rahmonov, who is the fourth regional governor to lose his job this year. Poor harvest figures were cited as the reason for Rahmonov's departure. While still incomplete, figures on Uzbekistan's grain harvest reveal that, on average, less than 80% of the expected quota was attained. Poor weather and mismanagement at the regional level have been blamed for the shortfall. And, as in 1995, the result has been a reshuffling of key positions in the government. -- Roger Kangas

    [02] STATE ENTERPRISES TO BE AUCTIONED IN TURKMENISTAN.

    Foreign and domestic investors will be offered an equal opportunity to buy 100 state enterprises specializing in sales before the end of the year, Finansovye izvestiya reported on 17 December. According to unnamed sources in Turkmenistan's ministries of economics and finance, more than 2, 000 enterprises involved in public catering and the retail trade are to be privatized over the next two years. Meanwhile, the Turkish firm Artpaper has won a tender to build a cellulose plant in Turkmenistan, ITAR-TASS reported on 16 December. The plant is to begin production in 1998 and will produce 32,000 tons of various cellulose products. The project is worth $110 million and is being financed by the Turkish side. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [03] DEMIREL IN KAZAKSTAN.

    Turkish President Suleyman Demirel completed a two-day visit to Almaty on 17 December, Western and Russian agencies reported. The visit coincided with celebrations of the country's fifth year of independence and was designed to highlight Turkish-Kazakstani relations, which Demirel described as "eternal." Demirel and his Kazakstani counterpart, Nursultan Nazarbayev, discussed expanding bilateral trade and utilization of a $300 million line of credit from Turkey. According to the Turkish Daily News, Demirel also presented a list of complaints from Turkish investors operating in Kazakstan. Over 200 Turkish firms have invested an estimated $1.2 billion in the country. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [04] CONCERN OVER PKK ACTIVITIES IN KAZAKSTAN.

    The Turkish daily Yeni Yuzyil on 17 December used Demirel's visit to focus attention on the activities of the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) in Almaty. The paper claimed that the group was causing distress to Turkish students and businessmen in Almaty because of its alleged involvement in protection rackets. One business was reportedly bombed and a businessmen kidnapped. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [05] BULGARIAN PRIME MINISTER REJECTS OPPOSITION'S CONSENSUS FORMULA.

    Zhan Videnov on 16 December said at a meeting with local Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) leaders in Vratsa that the currency board--proposed by the IMF as a "key element" in Bulgaria's economic stabilization--should be introduced by his government and passed by the present parliament, Duma and Standart reported. Videnov's statement amounts to a rejection of the United Democratic Forces' (ODS) proposal that the board be created only if a consensus is reached in parliament on early elections and the resignation of the Bulgarian National Bank's current executive board. Videnov said the cabinet will publish a document on the country's financial stabilization--including stringent financial discipline and a fixed exchange rate--before the 21-22 December extraordinary BSP congress. Videnov apparently aims to use the document to shore up his leadership before the congress, at which many observers believe he will either lose his position as BSP leader or prime minister. -- Maria Koinova in Sofia

    [06] SERBIAN OPPOSITION TAKES A SECOND TOWN . . .

    A court in the Serbian town of Smederovska Palanka on 16 December ruled that the local electoral commission must turn over the municipal council to the opposition Zajedno coalition, thereby recognizing the opposition's victory in the 17 November municipal elections. It was the second such ruling in two days (see OMRI Daily Digest, 16 December 1996). For his part, Montenegrin Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic said that "recognition of second round [17 November] elections is the best solution," Nasa Borba reported on 17 December. Finally, in another sign that Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic may be willing to make concessions and amid growing trade union support for the daily mass demonstrations across Serbia, the Serbian government announced it would not debate an unpopular labor bill that could throw as many as 800,000 people out of work, Reuters reported on 17 December. -- Stan Markotich

    [07] . . . AND VOWS TO CONTINUE WITH MASS DEMONSTRATIONS.

    Opposition leaders have pledged to continue with peaceful mass rallies at least until Milosevic recognizes opposition victories in all 12 of Serbia's largest municipalities, where the Zajedno coalition scored second-round victories. On 16 December, the 27th consecutive day of peaceful rallies in Belgrade, an estimated 100,000 people demonstrated, Nasa Borba reported. Zoran Djindjic, leader of the opposition Democratic Party, told the crowd that the opposition coalition would continue to back nationwide protests and encourage groups from all across Serbia to trek to Belgrade in solidarity with protesters in the capital. Reuters quoted him saying: "One thousand people from each of 30 towns in Serbia will walk to join us here in Belgrade in the new year, we will be world champions in protest marathons." -- Stan Markotich

    [08] PLAVSIC WARNS OF WAR OVER BRCKO.

    Republika Srpska President Biljana Plavsic said on 16 December that the contested strategic town of Brcko is and will remain Serb. She warned that there will be war if international arbitration takes it away from the Serbs, VOA reported. "Through its force and its good organization, the army must show that Brcko is a territory which is inviolable and dangerous for all enemies," Plavsic told the local military contingent. The formerly mainly Muslim town controls the key land corridor that links the eastern and western halves of Republika Srpska. It is the only territorial issue that was not resolved at Dayton. Mediation was to have settled the matter by 14 December, but the deadline was moved to 15 February after the Serbs refused to attend meetings. Plavsic may be trying to repair links to the army, whose leadership she purged in November. -- Patrick Moore

    [09] OPPOSITION PARTIES FROM BOTH BOSNIAN ENTITIES TO FORM SHADOW- GOVERNMENT?

    The Sarajevo-based Union of Bosnian-Herzegovinian Social-Democrats (UBSD) and the Banja Luka-based Liberal Socialist Party on 15 December proposed the formation of an alliance of non-nationalist parties to try to resolve various disputed issues and prevent the country from falling apart, Onasa reported. The Democratic Alternative Forum (FDA) alliance would stand against nationalists who are working for Bosnia's division. Miodrag Zivanovic, head of the Liberal Socialist Party, said the opposition in both entities is long overdue in creating a reconstruction project to improve living conditions in all of Bosnia. He added that the situation in Republika Srpska is critical because no foreign aid is coming in. "The isolating policy of the current Bosnian Serb leadership jeopardizes the population," international agencies quoted him as saying. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [10] CROAT REFUGEES FROM SERBIA RESETTLE FORMER SERB-HELD AREA IN CROATIA . . .

    Croats from Serbia's province of Kosovo, forced to leave Serbia in 1991, are resettling in the small town of Kistanje located in the Krajina area, which was held by Croatian Serbs for four years, AFP reported on 16 December. Kistanje is at the heart of a pilot scheme designed to encourage the repopulation of a region that became a wasteland after some 180,000 Serbs fled into Serbia or Bosnia during the Croatian army offensive last year. Croatian authorities hope to move in more than 1,000 Croats from Kosovo by 1 January. Employment for several hundred people will be provided by the rehabilitation of a local metal works, AFP reported. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [11] . . . WHILE SERBS RETURN TO MUSLIM-CROAT FEDERATION.

    In a rare experiment, Serbs from the village of Krtova, located in a demilitarized zone near Tuzla, have returned to their homes in the Bosnian Federation, international agencies reported on 16 December. About half of the 1,150 people who fled in September 1995, when the Bosnian army recaptured the area, have returned. While attempts by Muslims to move back to their homes in a demilitarized zone of the Bosnian Serb entity have encountered resistance, these Serbs have had no problems with Muslim-Croat federation officials. Meanwhile, the Bosnian Federation is demanding the release of 40 people arrested by Serbs this year while practicing their right to freedom of movement, which is guaranteed under the Dayton peace accords, Oslobodjenje reported on 16 December. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [12] SHALIKASHVILI CALLS FOR NEW FORCE TO ARREST WAR CRIMINALS.

    The head of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff, Gen. John Shalikashvili, visited Bosnia and praised IFOR, international and regional media reported on 16 December. The peacekeepers' mandate ends on 20 December, but the smaller SFOR will then take over IFOR's duties and facilities. The U.S. general said that IFOR could be proud of its work but regretted that more was not done to arrest indicted war criminals, which IFOR and the general call "police work." NATO claims that responsibility for arresting war criminals lies with the various former Yugoslav civilian authorities, but critics charge that IFOR has deliberately turned a blind eye toward war criminals in order to avoid violence. Shalikashvili said that "a way must be found for an international police force to be constituted" and arrest suspects. The UN's International Police Task Force has long been in place but, like IFOR, it also keeps away from touchy situations involving war criminals. -- Patrick Moore

    [13] SERBIAN AUTHORITIES DETAIN RETURNING KOSOVO ALBANIANS.

    Serb police on 7 and 14 December detained 14 Kosovo Albanians, including a mother with two children, at the Pristina Airport as they returned from Switzerland, ATSH reported on 16 December. The Pristina based Council for the Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms said all of the detained Albanians had valid travel documents. Meanwhile, shadow-state President Ibrahim Rugova left the U.S. for Paris on 14 December, after meeting with U.S. senior officials, including Secretary of State Warren Christopher. The official announcements after the meeting gave no indication, however, that any concrete steps or substantial diplomatic efforts would be undertaken on the Kosovo issue. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [14] CONSTANTINESCU VOWS TO FIND 1989 REVOLT TRUTH.

    President Emil Constantinescu has pledged to uncover and reveal the truth about the events of December 1989, which toppled dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, RFE/RL and Radio Bucharest reported on 16 December. Speaking in Timisoara, at ceremonies marking the beginning of the 1989 events, Constantinescu said it is the duty of the country's new leaders to investigate allegations that hundreds died as a result of confusion purposely sowed by those who succeeded Ceausescu and his team to leadership positions. The crowd, estimated at some 15,000, cheered and chanted "the truth, the truth," and waved flags with the center torn out--the symbol of the 1989 revolt. His predecessor, Ion Iliescu, who had never participated in ceremonies marking the revolt in Timisoara, sent a message to the gathering. -- Michael Shafir

    [15] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT DISMISSES STATE TELEVISION HEAD.

    Prime Minister Victor Ciorbea's government on 16 December announced the dismissal of Dumitru Popa, widely regarded as a partisan of the previous executive, as head of Romanian state television. The decision was, however, explained in legalistic terms. The communique said that since Popa was not a member of the television administration's board, he was legally barred from staying in the position. Popa was "temporarily" replaced by film director Stere Gulea. The head of the Free Trade Unions in Radio and Television, Dumitru Iuga, protested against the dismissal and said he is disappointed that the new government behaves just as its predecessor did, Radio Bucharest reported on 17 December. -- Michael Shafir

    [16] MOLDOVAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT RULES IN SNEGUR'S FAVOR.

    Moldova's Constitutional Court on 16 December ruled against an appeal launched by the country's prosecutor general, who had contested outgoing President Mircea Snegur's assumption of direct control over the Defense Ministry last April. Snegur's decision followed fruitless attempts to dismiss Defense Minister Gen. Pavel Creanga, whom Snegur had accused of corruption. The parliament and government did not back the attempt to dismiss Creanga, and the Constitutional Court then ruled that Snegur could not dismiss him without the legislature's consent. In response, Snegur assumed direct control over the ministry and the court has now confirmed that the measure was in line with the constitution, which defines the president as commander in chief and grants him the right to directly command the armed forces, Infotag and BASA-press reported on 16 December. -- Michael Shafir

    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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