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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 3, No. 184, 99-09-21Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 3, No. 184, 21 September 1999CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] NEW LEFT-WING ALLIANCE FORMED IN ARMENIANine politicalparties that failed to win representation in the parliament elected last May announced on 20 September their plans to form a bloc named Artarutyun (Justice), which is intended to fight for "social justice," RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. The parties in question include the Democratic Party of Armenia, the Scientific-Industrial and Civic Union, and the social- democrat Hnchakian Party, one of the three oldest Armenian political groups represented both in Armenia and within the diaspora. The bloc will hold its founding congress in October, but it is not known whether it will field candidates in local elections later this fall. LF [02] BUDGET COMMITTEE LAMBASTES ARMENIAN CENTRAL BANKIn a 20September statement, the Armenian parliament's office on budgetary oversight claimed that the Central Bank's 1998 report to the National Assembly is flawed and full of statistical discrepancies, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. The Oversight Chamber also said that the Central Bank last year exceeded some quotas set by the legislature: in particular, it spent 454 million drams ($857 million) on its employees' salaries instead of the planned 394 million drams. Central Bank chairman Tigran Sarkisian rejected that criticism, explaining that the extra payments to the staff were made after the bank slashed other expenditures. LF [03] AZERBAIJAN MARKS FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF 'DEAL OF THE CENTURY'Representatives of 10 governments and 24 international oilcompanies congregated in Baku on 20 September to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the signing of a $10 billion contract, the first of 18 Azerbaijan has concluded with international consortia, to extract off-shore Caspian oil, AFP and Reuters reported. After numerous delays, that first consortium, the Azerbaijan International Operating Company (AIOC), began exporting crude via Russia in late 1997 and via Georgia in spring 1999 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 10 November 1997 and 19 April 1999). Addressing participants in the celebrations, Azerbaijan's President Heidar Aliev said that a cornerstone of future oil strategy is construction of the planned Baku-Ceyhan export pipeline. The AIOC is not convinced of the viability of that project. LF [04] AZERBAIJANI POLICE PREVENT THIRD DEMONSTRATIONPolice in Bakuon 20 September prevented members of the opposition Azerbaijan Popular Front Party from picketing the Mayor's Office to demand a response to their request for permission to hold a demonstration on 25 September, Turan reported. It was the third time within five days that police have thwarted an opposition action (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 20 September 1999). LF [05] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT SLAMS UN APPROACH TO ABKHAZ CONFLICTAddressing the UN General Assembly on 20 September, EduardShevardnadze slammed what he termed the world community's "gross indifference" to the plight of displaced persons forced to flee Abkhazia during the 1992-1993 war, Caucasus Press reported. Last March, Abkhaz President Vladislav Ardzinba declared that those displaced persons may return to Abkhazia if they wish to do so. Shevardnadze expressed disappointment that UN resolutions on the Abkhaz conflict fail to condemn explicitly what he termed genocide and ethnic cleansing by the Abkhaz. Stressing his support for the NATO intervention in Kosova, Shevardnadze suggested that the UN should condone a similar peace enforcement operation in Abkhazia. A NATO official said in Tbilisi last week that NATO is unlikely to do so as Abkhazia does not constitute a threat to European security (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 15 September 1999). LF [06] IS GEORGIAN AGRICULTURE MINISTRY TO BLAME FOR ANTHRAXEPIDEMIC?Speaking at a press conference in Tbilisi on 16 September, city council member Djondo Baghaturia accused the Agriculture Minister Bakur Gulua and the head of the veterinary department within the Ministry of Agriculture of embezzling funds allocated for vaccinating cattle against anthrax over the past two years, Caucasus Press reported two days later. Baghaturia said he will ask the prosecutor-general to open criminal proceedings against the two men. Dozens of people have been hospitalized with anthrax in Tbilisi after eating contaminated beef (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 9 and 16 September 1999). LF [07] KAZAKHSTAN AGAIN HOPING TO SELL ARMS ABROADForeign MinisterQasymzhomart Toqaev, who accompanied President Nursultan Nazarbaev to Bulgaria and Ukraine last week, told Interfax in Kyiv on 17 September that Astana hopes to sell with Ukraine's help almost 1,500 pieces of heavy military equipment formerly deployed by the Soviet Army in East Germany. Those vehicles are primarily tanks, which would be sent to Ukraine for repairs. Ukraine would keep three or four and sell the rest to foreign buyers, Toqaev explained. He added that Ukraine could also help to find a market for the output of the Uralsk Small Arms Plant. At an arms fair in Almaty in April 1998, Kazakhstan exhibited former Soviet military hardware, including MiG-21 fighters, for which the asking price was $150,000-$180,000 each. Kazakh government officials have denied any knowledge of the sale of those aircraft to North Korea (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 23 August and 13 September 1999). LF [08] KAZAKHSTAN SUSPENDS EXPORTS OF FUEL OILPrime Minister NurlanBalghymbaev signed a decree on 18 September halting exports of fuel oil for three months beginning 25 September, Interfax and AP reported. That measure is intended to ensure that the country has adequate supplies of fuel for domestic heating. The city authorities in Astana and Almaty will be required to report at 10-day intervals on the level of fuel oil reserves. LF [09] MILITANTS KILL MORE KYRGYZ TROOPS...Five government troopswere killed and another five wounded on 20 September when guerrillas opened fire on their truck in Osh Oblast, dpa reported. The previous day, one officer was killed and two servicemen wounded when their armored personnel carrier hit a land mine laid by the militants, according to ITAR-TASS. In Bishkek, Security Council Secretary Bolot Djanuzakov told journalists on 20 September that the 13 hostages, including four Japanese geologists, who are currently being held by the guerrillas are alive and well. But he added that the guerillas are constantly moving the hostages from one location to another. Meanwhile, the number of fugitives from the fighting gathered in the raion center of Batken has reached 4,200, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported on 20 September. LF [10] ...AS RUSSIA PROMISES ARMSThe Russian Defense Ministry willsend several war planes and two trainloads of ammunition and arms, including sub-machine guns and grenade launchers, to Kyrgyzstan within a week, an unidentified Kyrgyz military source told ITAR-TASS on 20 September. That decision was taken at a meeting of CIS defense ministers in Moscow last week. Armenia has already sent a plane-load of technical equipment to Bishkek. Kyrgyz parliamentary deputy Dos Bol Nur Uulu told RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau on 20 September that the government forces deployed in the south of the country are short of ammunition. LF [11] ISLAMIC EXTREMISTS ARRESTED IN TAJIKISTANSeveral members ofan underground radical Islamist party allegedly founded by Uzbek fundamentalists were apprehended in Tajikistan's Leninabad Oblast on 19 September, ITAR-TASS reported the following day, citing the Tajik Security Ministry. In the town of Khojend, the activists were reportedly handing out leaflets calling for the creation of an Islamic state in Central Asia. LF [12] TURKMEN PRESIDENT CRITICIZES BANKING OFFICIALSMeeting on 17September in Ashgabat with banking sector officials, Saparmurat Niyazov criticized the work of both the Central Bank and the Foreign Trade Bank and fired the latter's chairman, Deputy Prime Minister Yula Gurbanmuradov, Interfax reported three days later. Niyazov criticized the Foreign Trade Bank for failing to repay loans on schedule. He added that the information supplied by the Turkmen government to international financial institutions is frequently incorrect, and he called for a review of data on the country's foreign debt. Meanwhile, German Ambassador to Ashgabat Hans-Jurgen Keilholz told businessmen on 20 September that bilateral trade fell by 10 percent over the first eight months of this year, compared with 1998. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[13] KOSOVA LIBERATION ARMY ACCEPTS CIVILIAN ROLEFollowing tensenegotiations with UN and NATO officials in Prishtina on 20 September, leaders of the Kosova Liberation Army (UCK) agreed to transform their force into a Kosova Protection Corps, Reuters reported. NATO Supreme Commander General Wesley Clark flew to Kosova to help forge the deal, which had been held up by disagreements over the role of the corps and the kind of weapons to be kept by its members. UCK political leader Hashim Thaci and UN Kosova chief Bernard Kouchner signed the agreement, along with UCK Chief of Staff General Agim Ceku and Kosova Force (KFOR) commander General Mike Jackson. Under the agreement, the KLA will become the 5,000-member Kosovo Protection Corps, and Ceku will be its commander. Only 200 members of the corps will be allowed to carry weapons. A new insignia will also be worn on the uniforms of the corps, replacing the UCK emblem. The corps will operate under the supervision of the KFOR commander. PB [14] SOLANA HAILS AGREEMENT, MOSCOW FEELS IGNOREDNATO Secretary-General Javier Solana said in Toronto on 21 September that the agreement marks "a milestone for the ongoing peace implementation efforts" in Kosova, AP reported. He warned, however, that anyone violating the weapons ban in the province "willl be dealt with severely." Kouchner said "we have to work all together to achieve not only the corps' transformation but offering services to the people of Kosovo." Belgrade strongly opposes the continued role of any aspect of the UCK in Kosova. The Russian Foreign Ministry said it has negative views on the "creation of paramilitary or semi-military formations under any name on the basis of the UCK," ITAR-TASS reported on 21 September. It added that Moscow's position on the issue was "ignored." PB [15] SOME UN OFFICIALS SKEPTICAL OF NEW CORPS, AGREEMENTWhilemany hailed the formal end of the UCK's existence as a structured paramilitary organization, others voiced skepticism. One unidentified UN official told AFP on 20 September that "we are satisfied that the UCK has handed in 10,000 arms even if we know they still have 100,000." There were several reports of broken or very old weapons being turned over to KFOR troops during the demilitarization. Another UN source said "we know that some radical commanders will not accept the new agreements." AFP also reported that there is some friction between UCK political leader Thaci and the head of the new corps, General Ceku. Thaci reportedly opposed the idea of Ceku leading the civilian force. PB [16] PROTEST RALLIES PLANNED IN SERBIA, AS ACTIVISTS DETAINED INCENTRAL TOWNPolice arrested 12 members of the student organization Otpor (Resistance) on 20 September in the town of Kragujevac, Belgrade's Radio B2-92 reported. The students were detained for organizing a protest against Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and were later released. In Novi Sad, Gordana Comic, leader of the Together caucus in the Vojvodina parliamentary assembly, said a protest outside the assembly building will be held on 21 September. She said the people gathered there will "indict all those who have mutilated Novi Sad and Vojvodina," BETA reported. In Leskovac, the opposition coalition Alliance for Change said it will begin daily protests on 21 September in the town's main square. It added that the highlight of those protests will be a mock trial of Milosevic and his wife, Mira Markovic. Zoran Djindjic, a leader of the Alliance for Change, said protests in 17 cities will be staggered and will be aimed at reminding citizens of the damage Milosevic has inflicted on the economy, the health care system, and agriculture. PB [17] BOSNIAN SERB PREMIER MEETS WITH MILOSEVICMilorad Dodik, theacting prime minister of the Republika Srpska, met with Yugoslav President Milosevic in Belgrade on 20 September, the Onasa news agency reported. No details of the meeting are known. The meeting came a few days after Milosevic met with ousted Srpska President Nikola Poplasen and the former Serbian member of the Bosnian presidency, Momcilo Krajisnik. PB [18] MONTENEGRO CHARGES YUGOSLAV PREMIER WITH PLANNING COUPMontenegrin Prosecutor-General Bozidar Vukcevic on 20September filed criminal charges against Momir Bulatovic for allegedly planning a military coup against Podgorica, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. Vukcevic said in a statement that the Yugoslav premier had proposed at an April government meeting that the Yugoslav army "occupy" all media institutions in Montenegro. Vukcevic said the idea had been "tantamount to a putsch" and had jeopardized "state order" and the constitution. Serbian opposition leader Vuk Draskovic has also said that Milosevic and his allies had planned a coup in Montenegro. PB [19] SERBIAN BUSINESSES MOVING TO MONTENEGROPredrag Drecun,Montenegro's labor minister, said on 20 September that more than 1,000 Serbian businesses have relocated to his republic in the last few months, Radio B2-92 reported, citing "Glas Javnosti." Drecun said the companies moved because of "more favorable trading conditions." He added that their total value was some $70 million. PB [20] U.S. TEAM IN BOSNIA TO INVESTIGATE CORRUPTIONA delegationfrom the U.S. arrived in Bosnia-Herzegovina on 20 September to investigate allegations of widespread corruption, AP reported. Robert Frowick, one of the heads of the delegation, met with Bosnian co-Premier Haris Siljdzic upon arriving in Sarajevo. Frowick said the mission is a fact-finding trip on behalf of the U.S. congress. He said the group would also look into reports on the failure of the government to collect taxes and customs revenues. In other news, 15 bodies were exhumed from a mass grave near Sarajevo on 19 September. They are believed to be Muslims killed by Serbian soldiers in June 1992. More than 24,000 people are still missing from the Bosnian wars. PB [21] TUDJMAN DISTANCES HIMSELF FROM BOSNIAN CROAT WAR VETERANSTheoffice of Croatian President Franjo Tudjman said on 20 September that the president was unaware that he was to be awarded a medal from a Bosnian Croat army branch, AP reported. The Association of Homeland War Volunteers and Veterans issued "medals of gratitude" to Tudjman and late Croatian Defense Minister Gojko Susak at a ceremony in Siroki Brijeg on 18 September. Also given an award was Mladen "Tuta" Naletilic, currently wanted by the war crimes tribunal in The Hague. He is being held in Zagreb. Tudjman's office added that no one was sent on the president's behalf to accept the medal. PB [22] ISRAELI ARMS SMUGGLER INDICTED IN ROMANIAThe Prosecutor-General's Office on 20 September said it is indicting Shimon Naor for smuggling arms to two unnamed African countries that are on the UN embargo list, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. Naor, who is of Romanian origin, had faked orders from the Sudanese embassy in Bucharest. Naor's accomplices, two Romanians and one Moldovan, will also be indicted. The Burundi honorary consul in Romania is being investigated under suspicion of involvement in the ring. MS [23] OFFICIAL LANGUAGE TO PREDOMINATE IN MOLDOVAN ELECTRONIC MEDIAAs of 1 January 2000, 65 percent of all programs broadcast byall Moldovan radio and television companies must be in the official state language, Infotag reported on 20 September, quoting Alexei Chubashenko, chairman of the National Board for the Electronic Media. Violators of that regulation will receive punishments ranging from a warning to loss of their broadcasting license. The regulations will not apply to foreign broadcasters, cable and satellite television, or media outlets in areas that have large ethnic minorities. MS [C] END NOTE[24] MORALITY AND LOCAL POLITICS: THE CASE OF BULGARIABy Michael ShafirWith no fewer 96 parties competing in next month's local elections, observers who are unfamiliar with politics in Bulgaria might be misled into concluding that the ballot's stakes are high. Those more familiar with Bulgarian reality see it otherwise. Take Prime Minister Ivan Kostov. Addressing journalists in Pernik on 12 September, he described the upcoming elections as "a political flea market." What Kostov "forgot" to mention was that his Union of Democratic Forces (SDS), as the strongest parliamentary group represented in the legislature, is responsible for the abundance of parties. Having postponed until this fall the passage of a new law on political parties that might have cut the number of formations eligible to compete to around 10, Kostov's party unwittingly brought about the current state of affairs. Many see the current contest as one between the ruling United Democratic Forces (ODS) and the opposition, among which the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) is the most prominent formation. Apart from the SDS, the ODS includes the Bulgarian Agrarian Union, the People's Union, and the Bulgarian Social Democratic Party. This alliance won the 1997 parliamentary elections but has since been weakened by the late 1998 split in the Social Democratic Party, a wing of which--led by Petar Dertliev--left the ODS and joined the opposition. That rift, however, is unlikely to play a major role in the local elections, since Dertliev has almost no followers. More significant was the departure from the ODS of the ethnic Turkish Initiative Committee for Renewal, which was recently renamed National Movements for Rights and Freedom (NDPS). But the NDPS will mainly be competing against the rival Movement for Rights of Freedom (DPS), headed by Ahmed Dogan, for the Turkish vote. Furthermore, NDPS leader Gyuner Tahir has already said that in those constituencies where his party is not fielding candidates, it will support the ODS. The ODS's goal is clear: to repeat its success at the 1997 parliamentary ballot. Local elections were last held in Bulgaria in 1995: at that time, the BSP won 194 mayoralties, the DPS 26, independents 17, the ODS 15, and the Business Bloc two. Viewed from this perspective, the slogan chosen by the BSP for the local elections "It Is Our Turn [to Win]" is undoubtedly misleading. In fact, the slogan makes sense only if seen against the background of the BSP's defeat in the 1997 parliamentary elections. But local elections are never a mirror of general elections; rather, they are often decided by strictly local issues and by local politicians who opt to ignore the interests of the "center" and to form alliances that may not conform with what the "center" would like to see. Moreover, local government is still weak in Bulgaria. Whatever the outcome of the October contest, it will have virtually no impact on the central government. According to a survey conducted by the MBDM polling institute and published in the daily "24 Chasa" on 9 September, the ODS will gain 27 percent backing and the BSP just 16 percent. Three days later, "Demokratsiya" published a poll by the Alpha Research Institute suggesting that the ODS will receive 32 percent of the vote and the BSP 17 percent. This is good news for the ruling alliance, although not as good as it might have wished. The Alpha poll had the ODS winning six out of the Bulgaria's 10 largest towns. SDS Chief Secretary Hristo Bisserov, speaking to journalists on 7 September, said the BSP "stands no chance in any of the large towns" and that the party will be "marginalized." Should that prove the case, the question would arise as to what extent it reflects pre-electoral maneuvering. In June, the ODS amended the law on local elections to stipulate that in localities with a population of less than 500, mayors will no longer be elected but appointed by the local district council. Depriving some voters of the right to exercise their democratic privilege is quite unacceptable, even if it is justified by budgetary constraints, as the ODS claims. Even Vice President Todor Kavaldjiev criticized the amendment. For all its drawbacks, however, the measure cannot be viewed as disadvantageous for the opposition. The BSP contested the amendment at the Constitutional Court and lost. It also challenged the provision obliging candidates to state whether they were informers for, or on the payroll of, the communist secret police. That requirement, the BSP claimed, infringes on constitutional rights. But the court did not support that view, arguing that the provision does not disqualify former informers or members of the secret police from running and stating that its "essence" was to be found its "moral character." Indeed, when it comes to morality, the BSP does have a problem. Whether many Bulgarians care about morality nowadays, having long suffered the economic hardships of a legacy with which the BSP itself is identified, is another question--one that for the time being remains unanswered. 21-09-99 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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