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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 2, No. 111, 98-06-11Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 2, No. 111, 11 June 1998CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIA DENIES INTERFERENCE IN KARABAKH DOMESTIC POLITICSInterviewed by RFE/RL on 10 June, a spokeswoman for Armenian President Robert Kocharian said that accusations made the previous day by a senior member of the parliament of the undeclared Nagorno- Karabakh Republic are "nonsense." That official had charged that Yerevan is interfering in the enclave's political affairs in order to gain full control over Karabakh. Similarly, Armenian presidential adviser Aram Sarkisian told RFE/RL the same day that Petrosian's accusations are "groundless," but he added that Armenia is concerned about the ongoing leadership crisis in Karabakh and cannot remain "indifferent." Armenian Defense Minister Vazgen Sarkisian traveled to Stepanakert on 10 June for talks aimed at overcoming differences within the enclave's leadership, ITAR-TASS reported. LF[02] ARMENIA TO STORE FRENCH NUCLEAR WASTE?Union of Greens chairman Hakob Sanasarian told a human rights seminar in Yerevan on 9 June that radioactive waste from French nuclear power stations will soon be transferred to Armenia and stored in a special facility at the Medzamor nuclear station, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. Sanasarian said the construction of a special storage facility for nuclear waste, due to be completed this month, is part of a "secret deal" between the French and Armenian governments, whereby France's Framatome company participated in the reactivation of the Medzamor facility in exchange for storing nuclear waste there. LF[03] GEORGIAN, RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS MEETIrakli Menagharishvili met with his Russian counterpart, Yevgenii Primakov, in Moscow on 10 June to discuss the situation in Abkhazia. No details of the meeting were made public, but Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze said that the Georgian National Security Council had instructed Menagharishvili earlier the same day to demand the immediate implementation of articles of the 25 May protocol that deal with the repatriation of ethnic Georgians forced to flee Abkhazia's Gali Raion during last month's fighting, Caucasus Press reported. Abkhazia wants repatriation pegged to the relaxing of restrictions on its border with Russia. It also insists that fugitives may return to Gali only if they accept Abkhaz citizenship, which is not internationally recognized, "Vremya MN" reported on 10 June. Georgia argues that the border restrictions should not be lifted until all fugitives have returned and joint local administrative bodies have been established in Gali. LF[04] UN EXPRESSES CONCERN OVER ABKHAZ SITUATIONSome two weeks after 35,000-40,000 ethnic Georgians were forced to flee from Abkhazia, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has expressed concern at persisting tensions in Abkhazia, Reuters reported on 10 June. Annan called on both sides "to settle their dispute at the negotiating table and not through armed confrontation." Caucasus Press reported on 11 June that the unarmed UN observer force in western Georgia has refused to continue monitoring the situation in Gali because of inadequate measures to ensure its members' safety. LF[05] CONTROVERSIAL GEORGIAN ELECTION RESULTS TO BE REVIEWED?The Lagodekhi local election commission has applied to the Georgian Central Electoral Commission to review the voting results in two districts where the Socialist Party candidate far outpolled his rival from the majority Union of Citizens of Georgia in the 7 June by- election, Caucasus Press reported on 10 June. Leading Georgian politicians have charged that "every conceivable sort of violation" was committed during the voting (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 10 June 1998). LF[06] KYRGYZ PRESIDENT SAYS NO MORE DANGER FROM TOXIC SPILL...Askar Akayev said on 10 June there are no longer any dangers posed by spill of sodium cyanide near Lake Issyk-Kul, Interfax and RFE/RL correspondents reported. According to Akayev, who was speaking in Astana, Kazakhstan, "the lake is alive and well and is looking forward to tourists." He added that Issyk-Kul is "absolutely not contaminated" as the chemical "dissolves into harmless components" when mixed with water. The same day, officials from the Kumtor gold mining project told a news conference in Bishkek that experts from Canada's Department of Foreign Affairs and the World Health Organization have reached the same conclusion. BP[07] ...BUT LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES NOW AT ISSUEAt same the news conference, the new president of Kumtor, Len Homeniuk, and the head of Kyrgyzstan's state gold company, Dastan Sarygulov, admitted that the spill of sodium cyanide was Kumtor's fault and that the company was negligent in informing the population of the area as to the possible danger, RFE/RL correspondents reported. However, opinions differ over who should pay for the cleanup and compensate residents of the area. Kyrgyz officials, including Akayev, say the Canadian company that is a partner in the joint venture, CAMECO Corp., will pay all compensation. CAMECO officials, however, say that since the company has only a one-third share in the project, it will pay only one-third of the costs. BP[08] ANNAN WANTS BAN LIFTED ON TAJIK POLITICAL PARTIESUN Secretary-General Annan, meeting with Tajik President Imomali Rakhmonov in New York on 9 June, expressed the hope that the Tajik parliament's ban on religious parties will be lifted, ITAR-TASS and Reuters reported. Annan noted that the ban violates the "spirit" of the peace accord, signed in Moscow last year, which calls for all banned political parties to be legalized following their disarmament. The UN acting special envoy to Tajikistan, Paolo Lembo, told the Tajik National Reconciliation Commission on 10 June that credit worth $515 million promised by an international donors conference in Paris last month, will be delivered only if there is progress in the peace process. BP[09] KAZAKHSTAN CELEBRATES NEW CAPITALA large ceremony in Astana on 10 June marked the transfer of the Kazakh capital to that city. Attending the festivities were the heads of state from Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkey, and Ukraine, as well as Russian Deputy Premier and special envoy to the CIS Ivan Rybkin, CIS Executive Secretary Boris Berezovskii. and officials from the Economic Cooperation Organization and the Organization of the Islamic Conference. Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev said the decision to move the capital from Almaty, in southeastern Kazakhstan, to Astana, which lies in the approximate geographical center of the country, was "the result of a centuries-long search, lengthy contemplation, and heated debates." BP[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[10] CONTACT GROUP AGREES ON PROPOSALSOfficials from the six-country Contact Group on the former Yugoslavia, meeting in Paris on 10 June, have agreed on a package of proposals to deal with the crisis in Kosova, Reuters reported. The officials met ahead of the Contact Group's foreign ministers, due to meet in London on 12 June. AFP reports that the package includes the threat of force if Yugoslav officials fail to implement the measures outlined in the package by a stipulated date. British Defense Secretary George Robertson said in Brussels that "days rather than weeks is the timetable" because, he added, lessons from Bosnia have been learned. No other details are available. In Rome, U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen and his Italian counterpart, Beniamino Andreatta, agreed that when NATO defense ministers meet in Brussels on 11 June, force will not be ruled out as a way to help bring an end to the violence in Kosova. Cohen said the ministers will seek a "unified political position." PB[11] U.S. SEEKS TO SECURE "CONFIDENCE BUILDING MEASURES"State Department spokesman James Rubin said the U.S. is trying to ensure some guarantees that will allow Yugoslav officials and ethnic Albanian Kosovar leaders to resume talks, Reuters reported on 10 June. Rubin said such measures could include security guarantees for ethnic Albanians, the return of refugees, and an agreement to deploy observers in Kosova. Also on 10 June, Canada announced that it will join the EU and the U.S. in freezing Yugoslav assets on its territory and banning investments in Serbia. PB[12] HOLBROOKE SAYS KOSOVA NOT ANOTHER BOSNIAU.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said in New York on 10 June that the violence in Kosova is serious but not yet at a "general war level," as was the case in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Reuters reported. Holbrooke added that the situation in Kosova is different because while the components of former Yugoslavia became independent countries, Kosova is a Serbian province and the international community does not back independence for it. PB[13] NATO GENERAL SAYS AIR POWER CAN END KOSOVA FIGHTINGGeneral Klaus Naumann, NATO's top military officer, said in Brussels on 10 June that air power could be used in Kosova to bring a halt to the fighting, Reuters reported. Naumann, who is in Brussels to advise NATO defense ministers about military options in Kosova, said the deployment of troops in Albania and Macedonia would not stop the fighting and that air strikes would have to be used against Serbian forces and the Kosova Liberation Army to achieve that end. Naumann added that if NATO takes the first step of using force, it "must be prepared to go all the way to the very end." PB[14] HAGUE TRIBUNAL TO LOOK INTO POSSIBLE WAR CRIMES IN KOSOVAThe International Criminal Tribunal at The Hague announced on 10 June that the court has begun investigations to determine if war crimes have been committed in Kosova, Reuters reported. Deputy Prosecutor Graham Blewitt said the court will "examine the ethnic cleansing" that occurred during the recent armed conflict to see if any crimes against humanity were committed. PB[15] LULL IN FIGHTING, REFUGEE EXODUSReports from Kosova and neighboring Albania on 10 June spoke of reduced fighting in western Kosova and a decrease in the number of refugees crossing the border into Albania. The Albanian government said the refugee situation has improved and that only 100 or so refugees arrived on 10 June. The UN High Commission for Refugees said that on the same day, less than the recent flow of 250-300 refugees per day arrived in Albania. The UNHCR estimates a total of 15,000 Kosovar refugees are in northern Albania. In Prishtina, organizers of daily protests there said they are calling off future protests for the time being. Some 20,000 people marched in the capital on 10 June chanting support for the Kosova Liberation Army as well as for Kosova shadow state President Ibrahim Rugova. PB[16] BOSNIAN PRESIDENT SAID HE MAY SEEK REVISION OF DAYTONAlija Izetbegovic, the chairman of the Bosnian joint presidency, said on 10 June that he will request a revision of the Dayton peace agreements if "obstructive forces" come to power after the September parliamentary elections. Izetbegovic, speaking in Luxembourg at a session of officials overseeing the Bosnian peace accords, said there must be either "full implementation" or a revision of those accords. Izetbegovic said he fears that if nationalist parties win the elections, they will not abide by Dayton. Carlos Westendorp, the international community's high representative in Bosnia, called the peace process a "success" but said there have also been several disappointments. In Sarajevo, the Bosnian Central Bank said it will delay the introduction of the new Bosnian currency for one week because of a printing problem. PB[17] ARGENTINA REJECTS YUGOSLAV EXTRADITION BIDArgetinian President Carlos Menem on 10 June published a decree refusing Belgrade's extradition order for Croatian concentration camp chief Dinko Sakic, Reuters reported. Menem refused the request because he said it "is based on the same events for which he will be tried in Croatia." Croatia's extradition order has been granted. Zagreb officials have until the end of June to return Sakic to Croatia. He is currently being detained in Buenos Aires. PB[18] MORE RAIDS ON TIRANA MILITARY DEPOTSIn two separate incidents, groups of armed gunmen attacked military depots in Mezez and Sauk, near Tirana, on 10 June, "Shekulli" reported. A Defense Ministry spokesman said both groups withdrew after short exchanges of fire with guards. Nobody was injured. Since the beginning of this year, there have been 35 attempts of armed robbery at military depots, all of which have failed. FS[19] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT TO EXAMINE WAYS TO SET UP HUNGARIAN UNIVERSITYPrime Minister Radu Vasile, Education Minister Andrei Marga, and the leaders of the Hungarian Democratic Federation of Romania (UDMR) have agreed to set up a government commission to examine establishing an independent Hungarian-language university, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported on 10 June. They also agreed to set up a Hungarian language and literature department within the Babes-Bolyai Cluj university. The new commission is to present its report by the end of next month, while the government will draw up by 25 June a document on how to modify the education law in line with the government program and the protocols signed by the coalition partners. This month, the executive is also to draft legislation on the return of Church property confiscated from the Hungarian community by the Communists. MS[20] ROMANIAN "SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC POLE" IN OFFING?Traian Basescu, deputy chairman of the ruling Democratic Party, and Adrian Nastase, first deputy chairman of the opposition Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR), have agreed that their formations will cooperate in the parliament on pending legislation, Romanian state radio reported on 11 June. Nastase said that the agreement could mark the beginning of a process leading to the setting up of a "social democratic pole" in Romania. Basescu stressed that cooperation between the two parties is a departure from past practices, adding that such cooperation is both "possible and necessary." He added that in a democracy "today's opposition is tomorrow's government." MS[C] END NOTE[21] VATICAN'S "OSTPOLITIK" ARCHITECT DIESby Jan de WeydenthalCardinal Agostino Casaroli, who was widely considered an architect of the Holy See's policy of rapprochement with the communist East, died earlier this week in Rome. He was 83. In a commemorative message to the College of Cardinals, Pope John Paul II said that Casaroli was "a passionate builder of peaceful relations between individuals and nations and, by employing the utmost diplomatic sensitivity, made brave and significant steps, especially in improving the situation of the Church in Eastern Europe." Cardinal Achille Silvestrini, head of the Vatican's Congregation for Eastern Churches, said that Casaroli "managed to extract concrete, tangible results" in bilateral dealings with individual communist regimes. Casaroli came to prominence in the early 1960s, when Pope John XXIII initiated a policy of gradually expanding contacts with communist countries. In 1964, Casaroli achieved a partial accord between the Vatican and Hungary. Seven years later, this accord paved the way for anti-communist Cardinal Jozsef Mindszenty to leave his "voluntary exile" in the U.S Embassy, where he remained for 15 years following the Soviet suppression of the 1956 popular revolt against the communist rule. In the late 1960s, Casaroli was appointed head of the Council for the Public Affairs of the Church--or the Vatican's "foreign minister." In this capacity, Casaroli successfully negotiated in 1970 the restoration of relations with Yugoslavia. And in 1971, he visited Moscow to conduct religious talks with Soviet officials, becoming the first senior Vatican official to do so. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Casaroli frequently traveled to Poland to talk with communist rulers there. During those visits he became closely acquainted with the future pope, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla. Following his election as Pontiff in 1978, John Paul confirmed Casaroli as the Vatican's chief diplomat and a year later appointed him as secretary of state, the Church's top official after the pope. In 1988 Casaroli visited Moscow again. He was subsequently credited with successfully persuading the Soviet officials to allow greater religious freedom for Catholics in Lithuania, Latvia, Belarus, and Russia itself. A year later, in December 1989, the last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Pope John Paul met in the Vatican. Less than four months later the Vatican and Moscow exchanged ambassadors. In December 1990 Casaroli resigned as the Vatican's secretary of state and was replaced by his long-time associate, Monsignor (now Cardinal) Angelo Sodano. Casaroli was universally acknowledged as a consummate diplomat and skillful negotiator who was absolutely loyal to the Church. His role was essentially that of a facilitator--expanding the Church's work in the ideologically hostile communist environment, while negotiating a place for the Church under those difficult conditions. The election of Pope John Paul resulted in major changes to that approach. This became particularly noticeable during the papal visit to Poland in 1979, the first to a communist country. During his visit the pope presented an uncompromising critique of the authoritarian government, focusing his attention on moral issues and human rights rather than diplomatic exchanges with the leaders and appealing directly to the public. The impact of the visit on Poland was dramatic, undermining the authority of the established leadership and encouraging popular self-organization. Just one year earlier, the first popular social movement, Solidarity, rose to prominence through a popular rebellion against the power of the state. While that movement was subsequently crushed by force, the spirit of public independence and social autonomy from state control survived and spread to other countries and societies. The activist approach to "pastoral" issues, which originated in the Polish visit, has characterized the pope's subsequent visits to other communist and/or authoritarian states. Casaroli, once so dedicated to gradualism and caution, adjusted to the new situation. His appointment to the powerful position of Secretary of State confirms that. And Pope John Paul clearly appreciated the skill and devotion of the veteran Vatican diplomat. Following Casaroli's retirement, the pope was reported to have said that it was "providential" to have worked with him during the times of "historic" change in European and world politics. Speaking in Moscow on 9 June, Anatolii Krasikov, former head of Russian President Boris Yeltsin's press office, said Cardinal Casaroli was a statesman of international stature "who like few others left his own mark on the time in which we live." The author is an RFE/RL senior correspondent. 11-06-98 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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