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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 2, No. 104, 98-06-02

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>

RFE/RL NEWSLINE

Vol. 2, No. 104, 2 June 1998


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT ASSESSES ABKHAZ CRISIS
  • [02] REPATRIATION IS KEY TO SHEVARDNADZE-ARDZINBA MEETING
  • [03] SUKHUMI CONSIDERS STATUS ISSUE IRRELEVANT
  • [04] GEORGIAN GUERRILLAS PLEDGE TO CONTINUE FIGHTING
  • [05] TWENTY CONVICTED IN AZERBAIJAN COUP TRIAL
  • [06] TAJIKISTAN FLOODED AGAIN
  • [07] WAHHABIS TO BE SENTENCED IN TASHKENT
  • [08] U.S. EXIMBANK SIGNS DEAL WITH UZBEKISTAN

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [09] KOSOVAR REFUGEES STREAM INTO ALBANIA
  • [10] ALBANIA WANTS ACTION ON KOSOVA
  • [11] VIOLENCE INTENSIFIES IN KOSOVA
  • [12] BELGRADE SAYS TALKS ARE ON
  • [13] U.S. HAILS DJUKANOVIC VICTORY...
  • [14] ...AS DOES SERBIAN OPPOSITION
  • [15] SEVEN SENTENCED IN MACEDONIAN PYRAMID TRIAL
  • [16] CROATIAN OPPOSITION POLITICIANS TO WASHINGTON
  • [17] BOSNIAN CROATS TO FORM OWN PARTY
  • [18] HUNGARIAN DEMAND FOR UNIVERSITY MEETS WITH HOSTILITY IN ROMANIA
  • [19] ROMANIA'S LIBERAL LEADER DENIES INTENTION TO LEAVE ALLIANCE
  • [20] MOLDOVAN COMMUNISTS URGE UNITY OF LEFT

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [21] TRANSDNIESTER 'REFERENDUM' APPROVES JOINING

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT ASSESSES ABKHAZ CRISIS

    In his weekly radio address on 1 June, Eduard Shevardnadze deplored the CIS's failure to implement the document on resolving the Abkhaz conflict endorsed at its April summit. Shevardnadze also criticized the CIS peacekeeping force for failing to prevent additional Abkhaz forces infiltrating into the conflict zone. But he said the Abkhaz leadership takes part of the credit for ensuring that the fighting in Gali did not escalate into a broader conflict. Shevardnadze said that Georgia's top priority is now to expedite the repatriation to Gali Raion of the estimated 30,000-40,000 ethnic Georgians forced to flee during the fighting. He termed this process the "touchstone" for the future development of Georgia's relations with both Abkhazia and Russia. LF

    [02] REPATRIATION IS KEY TO SHEVARDNADZE-ARDZINBA MEETING

    Georgian Ambassador to Russia Vazha Lortkipanidze told journalists in Moscow on 1 June that the repatriation of the ethnic Georgian fugitives to Gali is a precondition for the proposed meeting between the presidents of Georgia and Abkhazia, Interfax reported. Lortkipanidze estimated the number of civilians killed during the fighting last month at "several hundred." He also suggested that the repatriation of those fugitives must be completed before Tbilisi agrees to discuss with the Abkhaz leadership the region's future political status vis- a-vis the central government. He again rejected Sukhumi's demand for equal status for Abkhazia within a confederation as the "only thing we cannot concede." LF

    [03] SUKHUMI CONSIDERS STATUS ISSUE IRRELEVANT

    Meanwhile, Ardzinba's personal envoy, Anri Djergenia, has claimed that Abkhazia is already an independent country and cannot accept "deferred political status" within Georgia, Interfax reported. Djergenia also criticized the CIS peacekeeping force in Gali, which he claimed failed to intervene to preclude Georgian guerrilla activities. At the same time, he stressed that Abkhazia "has never supported and does not support" their withdrawal from Gali. (The Abkhaz parliament adopted a resolution on 14 May calling on Ardzinba to raise that issue with Moscow.) Djergenia said Abkhazia has "special relations" with Russia and is "firmly oriented toward cooperation with the Russian Federation." Speaking on Abkhaz television, he noted that the Abkhaz leadership will try to persuade international organizations to extract guarantees from Tbilisi that it will not resort to force against Abkhazia, Caucasus Press reported. Djergenia is to meet with Lortkipanidze in Moscow on 2 June to discuss the prospects for a meeting between the two presidents later this month. LF

    [04] GEORGIAN GUERRILLAS PLEDGE TO CONTINUE FIGHTING

    In an appeal summarized by Caucasus Press on 2 June, leaders of the guerrilla movement warn that "our motherland is again in danger" and call on the Georgian people not to "yield to attempts by provocateurs" to sow discord between the people and the government, on the one hand, and the guerrillas and the "refugees" on the other. The statement said "there is no force today that could make us stop while we can still breathe. Georgians must not lay down their weapons.... Our strength is in our unity. We are right, and we will win. The Lord help us!" LF

    [05] TWENTY CONVICTED IN AZERBAIJAN COUP TRIAL

    The Supreme Court on 1 June handed down sentences ranging from four to 14 years in prison to 20 people found guilty of planning a coup in December, 1996, Interfax and Turan reported. Those sentenced include several associates of former President Ayaz Mutalibov and former Prime Minister Suret Huseinov, including their press secretaries, Rasim Agaev and Anvar Gafarli. The Supreme Court also opened criminal proceedings against Yakub Mamedov, who was acting president of Azerbaijan from March-May 1992, on charges of failing to notify the authorities of preparations to stage a coup. LF

    [06] TAJIKISTAN FLOODED AGAIN

    Heavy rains on 30 and 31 May have left areas in northern, southern and western Tajikistan flooded, ITAR-TASS reported. The southern area of Kulyab was especially hard hit, with damage reported to hundreds of homes and other buildings and with at least 2,000 hectares of cultivated land under water. President Imomali Rakhmonov has visited the site to assess damage. Meanwhile, the Kulyab airport is being used for refueling by aircraft carrying humanitarian aid to areas in Afghanistan struck by the recent earthquakes. BP

    [07] WAHHABIS TO BE SENTENCED IN TASHKENT

    The Uzbek prosecutor-general on 1 June demanded that the seven men found guilty of involvement in the violence in the eastern of Namangan last December receive between 13- 20 years in jail, Reuters reported. He said all seven were Wahhabis and that police had found pistol cartridges and marijuana in their homes. He also suggested they had been in contact with Islamists in Tajikistan and Pakistan. One of the convicted declared his innocence and said he had been beaten and kept in a straight-jacket while awaiting trial. Another eight men are due to appear in court this week on similar charges. Their trial follows the sentencing of 12 men in Namangan last month on charges of crimes connected with the events last December. BP

    [08] U.S. EXIMBANK SIGNS DEAL WITH UZBEKISTAN

    The U.S. Export-Import Bank on 1 June reached an agreement with the Uzbek National Bank whereby Uzbekistan will receive credits without government guarantees to develop small and medium-size businesses, ITAR-TASS reported. Eximbank chairman James Harmon, who is on a three-day visit to Uzbekistan, said the Central Asian state has promptly repaid its loans and that the agreement provides the "possibility to expand activities in this dynamic and stable country." ITAR-TASS estimated that the U.S. bank has lent Uzbekistan $800 million since 1995. BP

    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [09] KOSOVAR REFUGEES STREAM INTO ALBANIA

    Albanian government spokesmen on 1 June said that more than 2,000 refugees arrived in Tropoja that day. The office of the UN High Commission for Refugees in Tirana announced that it will send 20 tons of food, clothes, and kitchen utensils to northeastern Albania to help the refugees and to prepare for a further influx. That region, which borders Kosova, is the poorest and least accessible of the country. FS

    [10] ALBANIA WANTS ACTION ON KOSOVA

    The Albanian government issued a statement on 1 June saying the arrival of refugees is the result of Belgrade's "consistent policy aimed at the ethnic cleansing of Kosova." The text added that Serbia's policy of attacking villages, burning houses, and killing people is likely to result in a "massive massacre." Consequently, "the Albanian government appeals to the governments of the U.S., EU, the Contact Group countries, and to all international bodies involved in resolving the Kosova crisis to forcefully and immediately intervene to stop the ethnic cleansing in Kosova, because this ethnic cleansing [will likely lead to] a bloody war." A government spokesman told an RFE/RL correspondent in Tirana on 2 June that by referring to "intervention," the government means diplomatic pressure on Belgrade and the stationing of NATO troops along Albania's border with Serbia. The spokesman added that Tirana has not requested international military intervention in Kosova. PM

    [11] VIOLENCE INTENSIFIES IN KOSOVA

    Serbian forces shelled the region of Kosova along the Albanian border on 1 June, and fighting continued in the Decan area, an RFE/RL correspondent reported from Prishtina. The fighting and destruction since 29 May appear to be the worst since the Serbian paramilitary police began their crackdown at the end of February. At least 37 persons, including two Serbian policemen, have been killed in various parts of Kosova since 29 May. The Serbian forces have subjected entire ethnic Albanian villages to "systematic expulsions of the population and destruction," the BBC reported. Kosovar sources reported the massacre of five men in the village of Poklek i Ri, near Gllogovc. In Prishtina, several thousand children joined students and older people in the daily march for independence and an end to the crackdown. PM

    [12] BELGRADE SAYS TALKS ARE ON

    A spokesman for Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Ratko Markovic said in Belgrade on 30 May that the next talks between the Serbian and Kosovar authorities will take place in Prishtina on 5 June, an RFE/RL correspondent reported from the Serbian capital. The Kosovars postponed the session that had been slated for 29 May, ostensibly because of Rugova's visit to Washington (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 May 1998). PM

    [13] U.S. HAILS DJUKANOVIC VICTORY...

    The Montenegrin Election Commission reported on 1 June that the For A Better Life coalition led by reformist President Milo Djukanovic won 49.5 percent of the vote in the 31 May parliamentary elections (see "End Note" below). The Socialist People's Party of Yugoslav Prime Minister Momir Bulatovic, who supports President Slobodan Milosevic, took 36 percent and the Liberal Alliance 6 percent. Djukanovic's backers will have an outright majority of seats in the parliament. A spokesman for OSCE monitors said that the fairness of the election was a "significant improvement" over previous polls. In Washington, a State Department spokesman praised the vote "as a positive step forward in building democracy in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Serbia and Montenegro. The elections appear to have proceeded peacefully and in accordance with international standards." PM

    [14] ...AS DOES SERBIAN OPPOSITION

    Vesna Pesic, who is president of the Citizens' League of Serbia, said in Belgrade on 1 June that Djukanovic's victory "marks the first step toward freeing Yugoslavia from an undemocratic regime. This is the first time that forces that offer a real way out of the 10-year crisis [of Milosevic's rule] and destruction of the country have won in free elections," RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. PM

    [15] SEVEN SENTENCED IN MACEDONIAN PYRAMID TRIAL

    A court in Skopje on 1 June sentenced Sonja Nikolovska, the owner of the failed Bitola-based TAT pyramid scheme company, to eight years in prison. Prison terms also went to four government finance officials and three TAT employees. Siljan Micevski, the former mayor of Bitola, received a one-year suspended sentence, and his wife was fined. Some 23,000 Macedonians in 1996 lost a combined total of $65 million in pyramid schemes, of which TAT was the largest. PM

    [16] CROATIAN OPPOSITION POLITICIANS TO WASHINGTON

    William Montgomery, who is U.S. ambassador to Croatia, announced in Zagreb on 1 June that the State Department has invited the representatives of several opposition parties to Washington in July. He added that the governments of many countries invite opposition leaders to visit and that officials of the governing Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) went to Washington in 1990, when Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger invited leaders of 15 Yugoslav opposition parties to the U.S. Spokesmen for the HDZ protested the decision to invite the opposition leaders when news of the invitation appeared in the press last month. PM

    [17] BOSNIAN CROATS TO FORM OWN PARTY

    Kresimir Zubak and other prominent Bosnian Croats have decided to break with the Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ), which recently elected hard- line Herzegovinian Croat Ante Jelavic as chairman, "Slobodna Dalmacija" wrote on 2 June. Zubak will shortly announce the formation of a new party, which, he said, will adhere to the founding principles of the HDZ and pledge loyalty to Franjo Tudjman. The Croatian president had favored another candidate over Jelavic. Bosnian Croats live in scattered, often centuries-old settlements together with Serbs and Muslims. Bosnian Croats tend to be politically more moderate than the Herzegovinians, who live in compact areas contiguous to Croatia. PM

    [18] HUNGARIAN DEMAND FOR UNIVERSITY MEETS WITH HOSTILITY IN ROMANIA

    Minister of Education Andrei Marga on 1 June rejected the Hungarian Democratic Federation in Romania's (UDMR) demand for a Hungarian- language university in Cluj, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. Marga said universities "established on ethnic criteria" are likely to provoke an increase in ethnic tensions. Democratic Convention of Romania chairman Ion Diaconescu said he is "surprised" by the demand of the UDMR because coalition members have agreed that a Hungarian-language university will be set up in another Transylvanian town. He pointed out that a Hungarian section is already functioning at the Babes-Bolyai university in Cluj. Democratic Party leader Petre Roman also rejected the demand, saying he supports "multicultural" universities instead. The opposition Party of Social Democracy in Romania called on the government to reject the "UDMR ultimatum." MS

    [19] ROMANIA'S LIBERAL LEADER DENIES INTENTION TO LEAVE ALLIANCE

    National Liberal Party (PNL) chairman Mircea Ionescu-Quintus on 1 June denied that his party intends to leave the Democratic Convention of Romania (CDR). Deputy chairman Calin Popescu-Tariceanu said at a congress of the PNL's youth organization last weekend that the PNL must "forge its own separate identity" and "follow the example of the Democratic Party," whose popularity grew after the most recent coalition crisis. Popescu- Tariceanu denied that he intended to signal the party's departure from the CDR, saying he had only "a long-term process" in mind. Diaconescu said he was "surprised" by Popescu-Tariceanu's statement but added that "if they want to leave, I cannot stop them." MS

    [20] MOLDOVAN COMMUNISTS URGE UNITY OF LEFT

    Addressing a plenum of the Party of Moldovan Communists (PCM) on 30 May, chairman Vladimir Voronin called for the unification of leftist political forces "in the face of the threat posed by national radicals and [pro- Romanian] unionist forces" in order to defend the "sovereignty of Moldova," Infotag reported on 1 June. The gathering was attended by delegates from the Agrarian Democratic Party (PDAM), the Socialist Unity Bloc, and the Socialist Party, none of which gained parliamentary representation at the March elections. Voronin said that by allying itself with the Democratic Convention of Romania, the pro-presidential For a Democratic and Prosperous Moldova Bloc has "signed its own death warrant." Citing PCM sources, BASA-press reported that negotiations for a merger of the PCM , the PDAM, and the two socialist formations are now under way. MS

    [C] END NOTE

    [21] TRANSDNIESTER 'REFERENDUM' APPROVES JOINING


    Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
    URL: http://www.rferl.org


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