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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 3, No. 189, 99-09-28

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. 3, No. 189, 28 September 1999


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] GEORGIA DENIES INTERCEPTING CHECHEN ARMS SMUGGLERS
  • [02] PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA, KAZAKHSTAN AGREE TO MEET
  • [03] KAZAKHSTAN'S OPPOSITION CANDIDATES PROTEST ATTEMPTED VOTE
  • [04] KAZAKHSTAN'S UIGHUR MINORITY APPEALS TO PRESIDENT
  • [05] KYRGYZSTAN PREPARING TO STRIKE AGAINST GUERRILLAS?
  • [06] TAJIK VOTERS APPROVE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
  • [07] TAJIK OPPOSITION NAMES PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [08] OPPOSITION PROTESTS CONTINUE IN SERBIA
  • [09] OPPOSITON ACTIVIST DETAINED IN BELGRADE
  • [10] YUGOSLAV RED CROSS SAYS POVERTY INCREASING...
  • [11] ...AS CURRENCY LOSES VALUE
  • [12] SOLANA IMPRESSED WITH SERB, ETHNIC ALBANIAN EFFORTS IN
  • [13] SERBS IN KOSOVA CHARGED WITH WAR CRIMES
  • [14] BOSNIAN PRESIDENCY CHAIRMAN LAMENTS CORRUPTION, CRIME
  • [15] IRANIAN PRESIDENT PROMISES SUPPORT TO BOSNIA
  • [16] ALBANIA PROTESTS CALL FOR SEPARATE SERBIAN CORPS IN KOSOVA
  • [17] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT URGES PASSAGE OF LAND OWNERSHIP LAWS
  • [18] LOCAL GROUPS CLASH IN ROMANIAN CITY
  • [19] MOLDOVAN PRESIDENT ALTERS PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES
  • [20] BULGARIA CONSIDERS ALLOWING FOREIGNERS TO BUY LAND
  • [21] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT ASKS WEST TO HELP BALKANS

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [22] MOSCOW'S CHECHEN OPTIONS

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] GEORGIA DENIES INTERCEPTING CHECHEN ARMS SMUGGLERS

    Georgian

    Border Guards Commander Valerii Chkheidze on 27 September

    rejected as "absolute rubbish" Russian media reports that two

    days earlier his men had detained five Chechens attempting to

    transport weapons across the border from Georgia into

    Chechnya, Interfax reported. He added that such reports are

    intended to create a negative image of Georgia as "a country

    conniving with terrorists." Also on 27 September, Georgian

    President Eduard Shevardnadze similarly denied repeated

    Russian claims that arms are entering Chechnya via Georgia.

    He said that the only source of such clandestine weapons

    transfers are the Russian bases located in Georgia.

    Shevardnadze also told journalists that Georgia will not

    "change the regime" on Georgia's 80 kilometer border with

    Chechnya as it does not want to "support terrorism." But

    "Nezavisimaya gazeta" noted on 28 September that there are no

    effective controls along that frontier. LF

    [02] PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA, KAZAKHSTAN AGREE TO MEET

    During a

    telephone conversation on 27 September, Boris Yeltsin and

    Nursultan Nazarbaev agreed on an unofficial meeting to be

    held at an unspecified date next month, ITAR-TASS reported.

    They also discussed the 24 September meeting in Astana of the

    prime ministers of the CIS Customs Union member states as

    well as Nazarbaev's separate talks with Russian Premier

    Vladimir Putin (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 September 1999). LF

    [03] KAZAKHSTAN'S OPPOSITION CANDIDATES PROTEST ATTEMPTED VOTE

    BUYING

    The leaders of the Azamat (Citizen) Party said at a

    press conference in Almaty on 27 September that the pro-

    presidential Civic Party has spent almost $1 million on its

    campaign for the 10 October elections to the lower chamber of

    the parliament, RFE/RL's bureau in the former capital

    reported. Part of that sum, they added, was provided by

    foreign investors. The law on elections does not set an upper

    limit on campaign spending. Also on 27 September, independent

    candidate Erkin Sultanbekov told a separate press conference

    that some candidates are attempting to win voters by buying

    computers for local schools or distributing food and clothing

    to orphanages. LF

    [04] KAZAKHSTAN'S UIGHUR MINORITY APPEALS TO PRESIDENT

    Organizations representing Kazakhstan's ethnic Uighurs have

    sent an open letter to President Nazarbaev alerting him to

    the oppression of Uighurs in western China's Xinjiang

    Province, RFE/RL's Almaty bureau reported on 28 September.

    Sixteen ethnic Uighurs were sentenced to death in that region

    last week. Yusufbek Mukhlisi, who heads the Eastern

    Turkistani Revolutionary Front, told RFE/RL on 28 September

    that after the meeting of the "Shanghai Five" states in

    Bishkek last month (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 26 August 1999),

    the Chinese authorities launched a crackdown on Uighurs in

    Xinjiang. Those five states are Russia, China, Kazakhstan,

    Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. LF

    [05] KYRGYZSTAN PREPARING TO STRIKE AGAINST GUERRILLAS?

    Interfax

    on 27 September quoted National Guard Commander Lieutenant-

    General Abdygul Chotbaev as saying that preparations are

    under way for a military strike against the ethnic Uzbek

    guerrillas holding 13 hostages in southern Kyrgyzstan. But

    Chotbaev added that all other possible means of securing the

    hostages' release, including "people's diplomacy," should

    also be used. Human Rights Movement of Kyrgyzstan Chairman

    Tursunbek Akunov left Bishkek last week for an unnamed

    Islamic state where he hopes to hold talks with the "senior

    commanders" of the guerrillas, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau

    reported on 27 September. Akunov has been mediating between

    the guerrillas and the Kyrgyz leadership for several weeks.

    LF

    [06] TAJIK VOTERS APPROVE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS

    In a

    nationwide referendum on 26 September, voters overwhelmingly

    endorsed proposed changes to 27 articles of the country's

    constitution, Reuters reported. The final results of that

    vote are not yet available. Turnout was 91.2 percent of the

    2.9 million electorate. The amendments provide for creating a

    bicameral parliament, extending the president's term in

    office from five to seven years, and allowing the formation

    of religious-based political parties (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"

    24 September 1999). LF

    [07] TAJIK OPPOSITION NAMES PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE

    The Islamic

    Renaissance Party, resuming its congress on 27 September

    after a one week-break, approved Minister of Economic and

    Foreign Economic Relations Davlat Usmon as its candidate for

    the 6 November presidential elections, Interfax and ITAR-TASS

    reported. Usmon was nominated by recently elected IRP

    chairman Said Abdullo Nuri, RFE/RL's Tajik Service reported.

    From 1990-1992 he was deputy chairman of the IRP and served

    as deputy premier in the National Reconciliation Government

    in 1992. ITAR-TASS quoted First Deputy Prime Minister Hodja

    Akbar Turandjonzoda as arguing at the congress that the party

    should not nominate a candidate for the poll, as doing so

    "could consolidate anti-Islamic forces against us." LF


    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [08] OPPOSITION PROTESTS CONTINUE IN SERBIA

    Tens of thousands of

    people on 27 September demonstrated for the seventh straight

    day against the rule of Yugoslav President Slobodan

    Milosevic, Reuters reported. At least 15,000 protesters--less

    than one-third of the number who had taken to the streets the

    previous day--gathered in Belgrade's Republic Square to

    attend mock trials of Milosevic and his wife, Mirjana

    Markovic. Rally organizers blamed the low turnout on bad

    weather. In Novi Sad, opposition leader Nenad Canak said he

    will form a "transitional government" for Vojvodina and that

    he himself will be "premier." He added that he will seek

    international aid for the province. High turnouts were

    reported at rallies in Nis, Cacak, and Kragujevac. Serbian

    opposition leader Vuk Draskovic said in Prague the same day

    that he advocates ousting Milosevic by means of elections

    rather than street demonstrations (see above). PB

    [09] OPPOSITON ACTIVIST DETAINED IN BELGRADE

    Marchers in Belgrade

    stopped and jeered at the capital's main police station to

    protest the arrest of opposition activist Nikola Djurickovic

    as well as a new police action that began on 27 September, AP

    reported. Djurickovic--who owns the sound system used at the

    Belgrade opposition rallies--was arrested the previous day

    and sentenced to a week in jail for having "irregular"

    residence papers. Police began a door-to-door action on 27

    September to check the residence papers of all Belgrade

    citizens, saying this would let citizens "get acquainted"

    with local police. The opposition claims it is a "police

    sweep" aimed at opponents of the government. Vladan Batic, an

    organizer of the opposition rallies, said the government is

    "trying to count the opponents of the regime and mark us with

    yellow ribbons," as Germans had done with Jews before and

    during World War II. PB

    [10] YUGOSLAV RED CROSS SAYS POVERTY INCREASING...

    The Yugoslav

    branch of the International Red Cross said on 27 September

    that some 2 million Yugoslavs are living in poverty, the news

    agency Beta reported, citing the daily "Blic." It said some

    800,000 people are dependent on humanitarian aid. It is

    unclear if these figures include people in Kosova. The

    government said there are some 700,000 refugees from Bosnia-

    Herzegovina and Croatia in Serbia and about 250,000 displaced

    people from Kosova. The newspaper reported that the average

    wage has fallen below $80 a month. PB

    [11] ...AS CURRENCY LOSES VALUE

    The Yugoslav dinar fell on the

    Belgrade black market on 27 September owing to growing

    inflation, Reuters reported. The exchange rate was 14-14.5 to

    the German mark compared with 13.5-14 the previous day. The

    official exchange rate is 6 dinars to DM1. Local media

    reported recent price hikes of between 10 and 300 percent on

    various goods. PB

    [12] SOLANA IMPRESSED WITH SERB, ETHNIC ALBANIAN EFFORTS IN

    KOSOVA

    NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana said on 27

    September that the security situation in Kosova is improving

    and that he believes all sides are working toward peace and

    stability in the Serbian province, Beta reported. Speaking in

    Prishtina after talks with officials from the international

    community, Solana said some 45,000 UN peacekeeping troops

    (KFOR) from 45 countries have been deployed in Kosova thus

    far. He also praised the "brilliant leadership" of KFOR

    commander Lieutenant-General Michael Jackson and the UN's

    Kosova mission head, Bernard Kouchner. He warned that anyone

    who commits "criminal deeds" in Kosova will be punished. In

    Belgrade, Serbian official Veljko Odalovic said some 300 non-

    Albanians have been killed and 500 kidnapped in Kosova since

    KFOR troops arrived in June. In other news, the bodies of 22

    ethnic Albanian men were discovered in a mass grave outside

    of Mitrovice. PB

    [13] SERBS IN KOSOVA CHARGED WITH WAR CRIMES

    The international

    war crimes tribunal at The Hague said on 28 September that it

    has provided UN peacekeeping forces in Kosova with

    information and evidence that led to the arrest of nine Serbs

    suspected of committing atrocities in Kosova, AP reported.

    The men were arrested in Rahovec and Mitrovice over the past

    three days by German, Dutch, and French KFOR troops. They are

    charged "in relation to war crimes in Kosovo," tribunal

    spokesman Paul Risley said. The men will be tried in the

    Serbian province, he said, adding that they have not been

    indicted by the court in The Hague. PB

    [14] BOSNIAN PRESIDENCY CHAIRMAN LAMENTS CORRUPTION, CRIME

    Ante

    Jelavic, the Croatian member and chairman of the Bosnian

    presidency, said on 27 September that terrorism, crime, and

    corruption are the greatest deterrents to the postwar

    development of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Hina reported, citing the

    Sarajevo daily "Oslobodjenje." Jelavic said that all people

    in administrative posts should be held responsible for that

    situation. Jelavic said that various tax rates and excise

    duties in the two entities that make up the Bosnian

    Federation have created conditions in which organized crime

    flourishes. PB

    [15] IRANIAN PRESIDENT PROMISES SUPPORT TO BOSNIA

    Mohammad

    Khatami pledged his country's continued support to Bosnia-

    Herzegovina during a meeting in Tehran with Alija

    Izetbegovic, the Muslim member of the Bosnian presidency, on

    27 September, the Iranian state agency IRNA reported. Khatami

    said that the Balkans are a "linking chain" between East and

    West. Izetbegovic called for strengthening bilateral

    relations and increasing economic ties. In other news, a

    Bosnian Muslim team said it has recovered the remains of 110

    people in and around the town of Prijedor. The people were

    allegedly killed by Serbian forces from April to July 1992.

    PB

    [16] ALBANIA PROTESTS CALL FOR SEPARATE SERBIAN CORPS IN KOSOVA

    Albania said demands by Serbian leaders in Kosova to create a

    parallel Serbian civil defense corps in the province are

    "provocative," Reuters reported. Deputy Foreign Minister

    Pellumb Xhufi said that Tirana is "categorically against" the

    setting up of such a force. He added that "the Kosova

    Protection Corps includes Serbs and is not exclusively

    Albanian." In other news, Albania and Macedonia agreed on 27

    September to increase transport links between the two

    countries. Air traffic is to be restored between Skopje and

    Tirana, while a ferry link from Pogradec to the town of Ohrid

    will be inaugurated. A railway line between Pogradec and the

    Macedonian town Struga is also planned. PB

    [17] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT URGES PASSAGE OF LAND OWNERSHIP LAWS

    Emil

    Constantinescu has sent a letter to the leaders of the

    political parties represented in the parliament urging them

    to pass a package of bills on land ownership, according to a

    27 September Rompres report cited by the BBC. The bills deal

    with the restoration of land ownership rights to farm land,

    forests, and waters as well as the privatization of farm

    land. In the letter, Constantinescu reminded the leaders that

    time is running out, given their 9 September promise to pass

    the bills within three weeks. VG

    [18] LOCAL GROUPS CLASH IN ROMANIAN CITY

    Police arrested nine

    people in the city of Brasov on 27 September who allegedly

    were involved in a confrontation between local groups two

    days earlier, an RFE/RL correspondent reported. The clash

    started when 100 or so small-business owners, armed with

    clubs and knives, gathered to fight a gang that allegedly

    extorts money from them. Some 300 police officers were

    required to keep the two groups apart. The Romanian news

    agency Mediafax reported that the confrontation involved two

    rival gangs involved in a struggle for influence in the city.

    Several newspapers criticized the police for not making any

    arrests until two days after the incident. Prime Minister

    Radu Vasile said the police's response was "inadmissible." VG

    [19] MOLDOVAN PRESIDENT ALTERS PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES

    Presidential spokesman Anatol Golea on 27 September said the

    draft law to amend the constitution has been altered

    following consultations with representatives of the Council

    of Europe, BASA-Press reported. Golea said the president's

    office has decided to scrap two provisions of the draft law

    stating that the president would be the chairman of the

    Supreme Council of the Magistrate and would be responsible

    for naming the prosecutor-general. The draft law is designed

    to increase the powers of the presidency. VG

    [20] BULGARIA CONSIDERS ALLOWING FOREIGNERS TO BUY LAND

    Bulgarian

    Prime Minister Ivan Kostov has said his country may lift its

    constitutional ban on foreign ownership of land, according to

    a 27 September BTA report cited by the BBC. Kostov said the

    ban might be lifted in conjunction with the preparation of a

    package of laws on local self-government. VG

    [21] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT ASKS WEST TO HELP BALKANS

    Petar Stoyanov

    on 27 September said the best way to encourage the Serbian

    people to overthrow Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is

    to help other countries in the Balkans, "The Chicago Tribune"

    reported the next day. Stoyanov, who is currently on a visit

    to the U.S., said Serbs must be shown that cooperation with

    the West pays off for countries in the region. He added that

    "any visible success in countries like Bulgaria, Romania, or

    Macedonia sends this message to the Serbian people." Stoyanov

    said Bulgaria has lost the equivalent of $5 million owing to

    UN sanctions and embargoes in the region over the past

    decade. He added that his country needs Western aid and

    investment. VG


    [C] END NOTE

    [22] MOSCOW'S CHECHEN OPTIONS

    By Liz Fuller

    Statements by leading Russian politicians and military

    officers over the past few days suggest that the Russian

    leadership is still undecided about the most effective way to

    defuse the threat that Chechen radicals pose. Those radicals

    are led by field commanders Khattab and Shamil Basaev, who

    have launched two invasions of Daghestan since early August.

    In military terms, there are four options. First, Moscow

    could launch a massive ground offensive, as was the case in

    December 1994. Second, it could intensify the aerial

    bombardment of Chechen targets, which Russian officials still

    insist is directed not against the civilian population but

    only against locations and facilities used by the

    "guerrillas." Third, it could send its own commandos into

    Chechen territory to locate and wipe out the most influential

    Chechen field commanders. And fourth, it could opt for a

    division of Chechnya, attempting to bring the northern,

    lowland region under its control while continuing massive air

    strikes against Grozny and the mountainous south. The

    dividing line between the two sectors would be the River

    Terek.

    It is in the south that Chechnya's oil, one of the

    sources of funding for the guerrillas' operations, is

    located. Depriving the "viable" northern half of Chechnya's

    most important prospective source of income would therefore

    increase the region's dependence on the federal budget.

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has ruled out the

    first option "for the time being," saying that "if in order

    to eliminate the base of terrorism we have to use special

    forces, then we will do so, but very, very, accurately." That

    statement could be construed as Moscow's favoring the third

    option. "Nezavisimaya gazeta" noted last week that

    preparations for a full-fledged ground war could not be

    completed before the deterioration of weather conditions

    within the next four to six weeks. The newspaper also noted

    that it is politically inexpedient to launch such a war in

    the run-up to the December elections to the State Duma.

    Defense Minister Igor Sergeev said on 26 September that a

    ground operation cannot be ruled out. He added that several

    possible variants of such an operation exist, the primary

    objective of which would be to "eliminate bandits" and create

    a "security zone" around Chechnya.

    "Izvestiya" quoted an unnamed Russian military officer

    as saying that the third option is the most logical. He added

    that operations to eliminate specific field commanders were

    planned more than once during the 1994-1996 Chechen war but

    had invariably been called off under pressure from

    unidentified politicians in Moscow. Russian Air Force

    Commander Anatolii Kornukov has ruled out the second option,

    telling Interfax on 25 September that Russia will not resort

    to carpet-bombing to destroy Chechnya's infrastructure. The

    U.S., too, has made clear its opposition to indiscriminate

    air strikes, calling on Moscow to scale down its military

    operations against Chechnya and try to resolve the crisis

    through dialogue.

    Moscow's choice of military tactics will hinge on its

    plans for administering Chechnya once the guerrilla threat is

    neutralized and some semblance of order restored. With regard

    to those plans, the choice is more limited: Moscow can either

    continue to support President Aslan Maskhadov or select a

    "puppet" head of a "government in exile."

    Having initially advocated the latter course, Putin last

    week appeared to retreat from that position, saying that if

    Moscow decides on negotiations, Maskhadov, as the elected

    president of Chechnya, is the only possible interlocutor. But

    on 27 September, Putin said such talks are contingent on

    Maskhadov expressing condolences to the relatives of the more

    than 300 victims of the apartment bombings in Moscow,

    Buynaksk and Volgodonsk. The Russian authorities claim that

    Chechen terrorists were responsible for those attacks but

    have offered little evidence to corroborate those claims.

    If Moscow is confident that most Chechens support

    Maskhadov, rather than the field commanders who oppose him

    (some of whom participated in the attacks on Daghestan), then

    the most logical course of action would be the fourth of the

    military options listed above: seeking to divide Chechnya

    into a northern zone loyal to Moscow and a southern zone

    that, theoretically, could be blasted into the Stone Age in

    an attempt to eliminate the offending field commanders. That

    option would require deploying more Russian troops in

    Daghestan, to where the field commanders would withdraw in

    order to escape any carpet-bombing. It would also require

    intervention sooner rather than later in order to minimize

    the damage inflicted on northern Chechnya as well as

    alleviate the alienation and bitterness of the population of

    the northern region.

    Maskhadov's traditional support base is in the north of

    Chechnya. So, too, is that of one potential candidate for the

    post of head of a provisional Chechen government in exile:

    former State Duma speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov. In a recent

    interview with "Nezavisimaya gazeta," Khasbulatov expressed

    his intention to return to main-stream Russian politics.

    Alternatively, Doku Zavgaev, who was installed in Grozny in

    October 1995 to head a pro-Russian puppet government, could

    be recalled from his present post as Russia's ambassador to

    Tanzania to head such a cabinet.

    28-09-99


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


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