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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 2, No. 154, 98-08-13Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 2, No. 154, 13 August 1998CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] GEORGIA SEEKS TO AVERT ANOTHER PRESIDENTIAL ASSASSINATION BIDSpeaking at a press conference in Tbilisi on 12 August, Security Minister Djemal Gakhokidze confirmed media reports that a third attempt is being planned to kill Eduard Shevardnadze but said that Georgia's security services are doing their best to avert it, Interfax and Caucasus Press reported. Gakhokidze added that "serious destabilization" is anticipated in September and October. "Kommersant-Daily" on 6 August quoted presidential press spokesman Vakhtang Abashidze as confirming information that the head of the Georgian parliamentary sub-committee for penal reform, Elene Tevdoradze, had received information from a prisoner about another possible attempt on Shevardnadze's life. Abashidze said that attempt is being prepared outside Georgia. LF[02] GEORGIAN SECURITY MINISTRY REJECTS CHARGES OF TERRORISM, DRUG-RUNNINGAt the same 12 August press conference, Gakhokidze rejected repeated claims by the Abkhaz leadership that the Georgian security services are coordinating the activities of the Georgian White Legion and Forest Brothers guerrilla organizations, which are operating in Abkhazia, Interfax reported. Gakhokidze similarly refuted claims published on 3 August in the Georgian newspaper "Alia" that his ministry is engaged in international drug-trafficking, according to Caucasus Press. LF[03] GEORGIA WANTS NEW APPROACH TO ABKHAZ PEACE PROCESSGeorgian Presidential Foreign Policy Adviser Archil Gegeshidze told Interfax on 12 August that under present circumstances, Tbilisi will not request an extension of the mandate of the Russian peacekeeping force currently deployed under the CIS aegis along the border between Abkhazia and the rest of Georgian. That mandate expired on 31 July. Gegeshidze argued that its extension would not contribute to resolving the conflict, given that the whole approach to the peace process needs to be "thoroughly revised." He advocated minimizing Russia's role as a mediator and resuming direct talks between Tbilisi and the Abkhaz leadership in Sukhumi. Also on 12 August, the Georgian special parliamentary commission on Abkhazia issued a statement condemning repeated cross-border raids by Abkhaz militants on villages in Georgia's Zugdidi and Tsalendjikha Raions, Caucasus Press and ITAR-TASS reported. LF[04] IRANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN BAKUKamal Kharrazi met with his Azerbaijani counterpart, Tofik Zulfugarov, in Baku on 12 August to discuss bilateral relations, the legal status of the Caspian Sea, and the Karabakh peace process, IRNA and Turan reported. Both ministers expressed the hope that the visit will mark the beginning of "a new phase" in bilateral relations, which cooled after Azerbaijan's ambassador was expelled from Iran (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 March 1998). Kharrazi called for a swift agreement among all five Caspian littoral states on the sea's legal status, adding that until such an agreement is signed, the existing international treaties should remain in force. Those treaties stipulate that the sea's resources can be exploited only with the consent of all five littoral states. The two ministers agreed, nonetheless, that the Caspian should become a demilitarized zone. LF[05] AZERBAIJANI POLICE, OPPOSITION PREPARE FOR MASS RALLIESInterior Minister Ramil Usubov told journalists in Baku on 12 August that his men will resolutely prevent any violations of public order or attempt to foment unrest during the opposition demonstrations planned for 15 August, Turan reported. Opposition parties are planning mass rallies nationwide to protest the authorities' failure to ensure democratic conditions for the 11 October presidential elections. Usubov claimed that opposition activists wearing police uniforms intend to provoke riots during the demonstrations in order to discredit the police. He also claimed that protesters intend to use petrol bombs. The opposition said on 11 August that Interior Ministry special forces have been sent from Baku to Nakhichevan to prevent opposition rallies there. Baku Mayor Rafael Allakhverdiev has rejected the opposition's request to hold a rally on Freedom Square but has given permission to use a motor sport stadium in the suburbs. LF[06] TALIBAN CAPTURE TOWN NEAR UZBEK BORDERUzbek Deputy Foreign Minister Ismatilla Irgashev on 12 August said that the situation along the Uzbek-Afghan border is "quiet," ITAR-TASS reported. Afghanistan's Taliban movement captured the city of Hairaton, while lies on the southern bank of the River Amu-Darya across from Uzbekistan, earlier the same day. Irgashev said military forces in the area "continue to work according to the usual schedule," but Kyrgyz Radio reported that special measures have been taken for crossing the bridge that connects the Uzbek city of Termez and Hairaton. BP[07] TAJIKS DENY INVOLVEMENT IN AFGHAN CONFLICTThe Tajik Foreign Affairs Ministry issued a statement on 12 August denying charges that Tajik military units are participating in the fighting in Afghanistan, ITAR-TASS and Tajik Television reported. Earlier that day, Russian Television had broadcast reports to that effect. The broadcasts claimed Tajik units are helping Afghan warlord General Abdul Rashid Dostum to fight Taliban forces in northern Afghanistan. The ministry statement said "certain information agencies...in pursuit of sensational stories, incorrectly interpret and inaccurately present the Afghan issue." The statement said such charges "cause not only surprise and indignation but also lead to regrets over the extreme non-professionalism of employees" of Russian Television. However, the ministry statement did note that a renegade former Tajik army colonel, Mahmud Khudaberdiyev, may be active in northern Afghanistan. Khudaberdiyev is wanted by Tajik authorities on criminal charges. BP[08] MURDERS SOLVED IN TAJIKISTANTajik Deputy Prime Minister Abdurakhmon Azimov has told a Japanese newspaper that the Tajik government has identified who was responsible for the murder last month of four UN employees and plans to arrest the perpetrators soon, ITAR-TASS and Interfax reported. Azimov told Japan's "Sankei Shimbun" that the whereabouts of the murderers is known. He added that because it is in territory occupied by forces of the United Tajik Opposition, the UTO leader is making arrangements to apprehend and hand over the criminals within one week. Meanwhile, three men suspected of planting a bomb in the car of deputy customs chief Ali Imomnazarov have been arrested. One of the detained is Imomnazarov's body guard, Kurbon Davlatov, who has confessed to planning the bombing, which killed the deputy customs chief. Davlatov said he was paid $6,000 by Imomnazarov's wife, who herself was killed while visiting her husband's grave two days after he was killed. BP[09] UZBEK PRESIDENT ASKED TO RELEASE POLITICAL PRISONERSThe Uzbek Human Rights Society has appealed to Islam Karimov to free all political prisoners detained in the last eight to 10 months, Interfax reported on 12 August. The organization called on Karimov to time their release to coincide with seventh anniversary of independence. The statement said that "having political prisoners in a country building a law-abiding democratic society reduces the rating of the country and its government." BP[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[10] SERBS STEP UP 'MASSIVE ASSAULT'Serbian forces took Gllogjan, located near the Decan-Gjakova road, from the Kosova Liberation Army (UCK) on 12 August. The Serbian paramilitary police and Yugoslav army troops subjected Junik, near the Albanian border, to what Austrian Radio the next day called a "massive frontal assault" with artillery. The Kosova shadow-state authorities in Prishtina appealed for the establishment of a humanitarian aid corridor for the benefit of the civilian population of the beleaguered village. "The Guardian" wrote that Serbian forces set fire to forests along the Albanian frontier and burned abandoned villages in the central Kijeva area. Journalists subsequently "found dozens of empty bottles of barbecue lighter fuel on the ground" in the villages. The satellite broadcaster Euronews reported that the Serbs have begun to use land mines in areas other than along the Albanian border, which they mined several weeks ago. PM[11] EU CONDEMNS ATTACK ON JUNIKFollowing the launching of the assault on Junik on 12 August, Austrian Foreign Minister Wolfgang Schuessel, speaking in his capacity as current EU chair, called on the Yugoslav authorities to stop the violence, which, he said, could worsen an "already unbearable humanitarian situation." Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic recently promised EU envoys that his forces would not attack Junik, where some 1,000 UCK fighters and 1,000 civilians are trapped, an RFE/RL correspondent reported from Prishtina on 12 August. In London, a spokesman for the Kosovar shadow- state government told CNN that if the Western powers do not intervene soon in Kosova "we will very shortly see the whole region ablaze." In Prishtina, unnamed Western diplomats told Reuters and Euronews that time is running out for starting peace talks because winter is approaching and many crops have either been destroyed or are in need of harvesting. PM[12] BELGRADE REJECTS CRITICISMThe state-run Tanjug news agency on 12 August slammed the UN Security Council's statement the previous day, which said that the Serbs have used "excessive force" in Kosova and conducted a "scorched-earth policy" (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 12 August 1998). Tanjug wrote that the statement "does not help at all to give an objective and true picture" of the situation in Kosova. The news agency added that the text ignores the role of the Kosovar leadership in the conflict and does not mention that Serbian forces are "forced to react to terrorist attacks and provocations." Tanjug also accused Slovenia, which currently holds the Security Council chair, of being "true to its anti-Yugoslav and anti- Serbian policy." Elsewhere, the Foreign Ministry in Belgrade "most energetically rejected" recent Albanian charges that Yugoslav helicopters violated Albanian airspace, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 August 1998). PM[13] JOURNALIST STICKS TO STORY OF MASS GRAVESErich Rathfelder, who is a veteran Balkan correspondent for Berlin's "taz" and Vienna's "Die Presse," told an RFE/RL correspondent in a telephone interview on 12 August that he stands by his recent report of mass graves of Kosovar civilians in Rahovec (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 12 August 1998). He stressed that international forensics experts should visit the area as soon as possible. Rathfelder is in Croatia and has been barred by the Serbian authorities from returning to Kosova. FS[14] DUTCH LAUNCH NEW INVESTIGATION INTO SREBRENICAFrank de Grave, who is the recently appointed Dutch defense minister, announced in The Hague on 11 August that his Ministry will investigate the role of Dutch UNPROFOR peacekeepers in the fall of Srebrenica three years ago and the subsequent massacre by Bosnian Serb troops of up to 8,000 Muslim males. The announcement comes in response to repeated charges by legislators and UNPROFOR veterans that the Defense Ministry deliberately destroyed films and other evidence that allegedly reveals that Dutch troops helped the Serbs round up their victims. Some veterans also said that the Ministry "systematically" sought to block any investigation into what happened at Srebrenica and into the Ministry's role in any subsequent cover-up, the "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" wrote on 13 August. PM[15] BOSNIAN SERBS SHUT DOWN NEWS AGENCYRepublika Srpska Information Minister Rajko Vasic said in Banja Luka on 12 August that the government has ordered the closure of the Pale-based Bosnian Serb news agency, SRNA. Vasic added that the authorities made their decision because of SRNA's "fabrications, tendentious reporting, and manipulating of the speeches of top state officials." He also criticized SRNA's "apparent imbalance" in the length of the reports about officials loyal to the Banja Luka-based government and about the government's hard- line opponents in Pale. SRNA was the mouthpiece of the leadership headed by Radovan Karadzic during the 1992- 1995 war. PM[16] AFRICAN BOMBINGS LINKED TO ARREST OF FUNDAMENTALISTS IN ALBANIA?The "International Herald Tribune" on 12 August reported that U.S. investigators are looking into a possible link between the recent embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya and the earlier arrest in Albania of four Islamic fundamentalists from Egypt, who may have been employees of the wealthy Saudi expatriate Osama bin Laden. Albanian police made the arrests in late June in close cooperation with the CIA, according to the daily. Several Arabic newspapers wrote before the bombings that the CIA took the suspects out of Albania and subsequently turned them over to authorities in Egypt. The "International Herald Tribune" also quotes unidentified Western security experts as saying that Osama bin Laden may have struck an alliance with the Egyptian-based Jihad group, which had faxed a statement to news organizations before the bombings threatening retaliation for the four arrests. FS[17] ALBANIAN SECRET SERVICE CHIEF DENIES AFRICAN BOMBINGS LINKSecret service chief Fatos Klosi told "Koha Jone" of 12 August that he has no evidence that the embassy bombings in east Africa are connected to the expulsion from Albania of the four fundamentalists. Klosi admitted that some Islamic fundamentalists are active in Albania but stressed that Albania is "not a center of international terrorism." He added that in recent years, Albania has been a "very convenient place" for people fleeing prosecution in their own countries. He added that Albania "is poor and ready to accept assistance, and its borders are easy to cross." Meanwhile, the governing Socialist Party has requested a special parliamentary session to discuss the issue of Islamic fundamentalism. FS[18] EUROPEAN TROIKA SHOWS SUPPORT FOR ALBANIAN GOVERNMENTThe European Troika, which consists of representatives from the European Parliament and from the parliamentary assemblies of the Council of Europe and the OSCE, visited the northern Albanian city of Bajram Curri on 12 August. Delegation leader and Austrian senior diplomat Gerhard Jandl praised Albania's Kosova policy and assured the Albanian government officials of EU support, adding that the EU will keep up diplomatic pressure on Belgrade. He stressed that Albania has improved its internal security and made progress in its fight against corruption and smuggling. The previous day, Jandl told Albanian officials that the EU will promote cooperation with Albania in trade and fishing, help attract foreign investment in the country, and encourage high-ranking international participation in a donors' conference slated for October, ATSH reported. FS[19] ROMANIA, HUNGARY FAIL TO REACH AGREEMENT ON WHEAT TAXTwo Hungarian officials on 12 August failed to reach an agreement with their Romanian counterparts in Bucharest on the import duties recently imposed on wheat and flour from Hungary (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 August 1998). Romania says the duties--15-25 percent on wheat imports and 45 percent on flour--are in line with Article 14 of the CEFTA agreements and will be in force until 31 December 1998. Hungary argues that the CEFTA agreements call for consultations before such measures are imposed, a condition that Bucharest failed to meet. Both sides agreed to continue negotiations at the next CEFTA meeting of agricultural ministers in Prague on 24-25 August. Mihaly Gyorgy of the Hungarian Ministry of Economy said it is "premature" to discuss Hungarian countermeasures ahead of the Prague talks, Romanian and Hungarian media reported. MS[20] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT DENIES KNOWLEDGE OF SRI FILE ON FORMER MINISTERThe presidential office on 12 August denied allegations earlier this week by a former employee of the Romanian Intelligence Service (SRI) that the presidential office has received information about the SRI file of former Health Minister Francisc Barany. Barany resigned after former SRI official Constantin Alexa leaked to the press Barany's pledge to act as a communist secret police informer in the 1950s. Alexa, who was dismissed for having acted unlawfully, claimed in an interview with the daily "Cotidianul" on 10 August that Baranyi's SRI file shows him as having acted against Romania's "national interest and security" after the overthrow of the communist regime and of having had links to Hungarian "separatists" in Transylvania and Hungarian intelligence. Alexa says he passed on this information to his superiors, who, he claims, must have forwarded it to the presidential office. MS[21] PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE EXERCISE IN MOLDOVAA Partnership for Peace exercise began on 10 August at an airfield in Chisinau and will last 10 days. Taking part in the exercise are U.S. and Moldovan military medical corps, RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau reported. The participants are simulating an airlift of civilians under natural disaster conditions. MS[22] TIRASPOL WANTS SHARE OF BULGARIAN NUCLEAR WASTE TRANSITThe separatist authorities in the Transdniester say they will not allow the transit of Bulgarian nuclear waste from the Kozloduy plant to Russia unless they receive a share of the transit tax paid to Chisinau, Radio Bucharest reported on 12 August. In related news, the Moldovan government the same day discussed a proposal to ask the Russian contingent stationed in the Transdniester to safeguard the transit. MS[23] BULGARIAN RULING PARTY SLAMS 'NATIONAL SOCIALIST SLOGANS' AT ZHIVKOV FUNERALThe ruling Union of Democratic Forces (SDS) on 11 August issued a statement criticizing the opposition Bulgarian Socialist Party for the speeches at the rally staged before of the funeral of former President Todor Zhivkov on 10 August. The SDS said the speeches reflected "communist nostalgia and rather explicit national socialist slogans directed against Roma, Jews, and Turks." President Petar Stoyanov had said on 10 August said the statements against Roma and Jews at the rally were "overtly fascist." MS[C] END NOTE[24] DEVELOPMENT OF UKRAINIAN NAVY HINDERED BY LACK OF FUNDSby Stefan KorshakOn 1 August, the once mighty Black Sea Fleet, which was founded 302 years ago, celebrated Russian Navy Day. With overflights by helicopters and strike aircraft, a massive procession of cruisers and frigates thundered out salutes for guests assembled in Sevastopol, before heading out to sea for high-speed maneuvers. The same day, Ukraine's fledgling navy celebrated its second birthday. Undoubtedly, a naval tradition takes time to develop. "But without any question, our main problem is shortage of funding," Nikolai Savchenko, Ukraine Black Sea Naval Forces spokesman, told RFE/RL. "The government simply does not have the resources to support even a minimum of operations." Which was why on Ukrainian Navy Day none of Ukraine's 44 major combat vessels budged from their berths. Its 10,000 uniformed personnel and 10,000 civilians mostly in shore-side installations were paid in July on time, but June paychecks remain outstanding. Aside from NATO-funded maneuvers, most Ukrainian vessels have not moved from dock this year. "Jane's Navy International" said only a part of the Ukrainian Navy--44 fighting ships, 80 auxiliary vessels, and 60 helicopters and airplanes--is battle-ready. But it also said that even this is aimed more at showing the flag than serving military purposes. The Ukrainian naval command deploys maritime aviation, coastal rocket and artillery troops, marines, special assault units, and logistic support troops. Most are at cadre strength, with little more than personnel and rusting equipment to contribute to national maritime combat-readiness. Five hundred small vessels survive on the "patronage" of chronically cash- strapped riverside and seaside municipalities. Only two Ukrainian ships, the "Slavutych" and the escort ship "Hetman Sahaidachny," have regularly sailed the Black Sea this year. Although listed as combat- ready, both are configured and crewed not to defend Ukraine's shores but to show its blue- and-yellow banner abroad, especially when Ukrainian participation is required in the NATO Partnership for Peace exercises. Rear Admiral Mykhailo Yezhel, Ukrainian deputy defense minister and navy commander, listed the single firing of a cruise missile and the graduation of the country's first batch of naval cadets as Ukraine's biggest naval achievements this year. "We are establishing a strong foundation," he said. "We are making our first steps.... Our mission is control of our national shores and waters in economic terms." He went on to explain that in practical terms, that means "stopping smuggling...and illegal immigration.... We are neither prepared nor preparing for war." Corvettes and smaller vessels predominate. By 2005, the largest vessel in the fleet will be an anti-submarine frigate. Kyiv also plans deployment of some form of coastal submarine. But for that to happen, the Russian parliament has to approve a recent Ukraine-Russia treaty finalizing the division of the Black Sea Fleet. Signed with great fanfare over a year ago, the agreement has since moldered. "One cannot say that the Russian side has been in a hurry to implement the agreement," Savchenko said. "It seems that the policy has been to let the status quo dictate events." That has meant all the most powerful vessels like guided missile cruisers and attack submarines remaining in Russian possession. In a recently published book, "Anatomy of an Undeclared War," Savchenko argues that Russian Black Sea Fleet officers worked closely with Crimean nationalists and separatists over the last five years to return the strategic Crimean peninsula to Russian control and, at a minimum, keep the Black Sea Fleet and Sevastopol Russian. Last year the Kyiv government replaced separatist local Crimean officials with men supportive of Ukrainian control of the region. But until the status of Sevastopol is settled and the rent money from the Russian fleet begins entering Ukrainian state coffers, the Ukrainian navy appears likely to stay as it is: small and modest. "The government is in great part depending on rent money from Sevastopol to resolve financing for the Ukrainian fleet," Savchenko said. "And as long as the agreement hangs in the air, our navy will have very little money with which to operate." The author is a frequent contributor to RFE/RL based in Kyiv. 13-08-98 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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