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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 25, 00-02-04

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. 4, No. 25, 4 February 2000


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] ARMENIAN, RUSSIAN OFFICIALS DISCUSS ANTI-TERRORISM MEASURES
  • [02] SLOVAK GOVERNMENT DELEGATION SIGNS COOPERATION AGREEMENTS IN
  • [03] AZERBAIJAN TO CLOSE DOWN THREE INTERNET PROVIDERS...
  • [04] ...AS ARMENIA ACCUSES AZERBAIJANI HACKERS OF HUMAN RIGHTS
  • [05] AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION PARTY RE-REGISTERED
  • [06] RUSSIA AGAIN VIOLATES GEORGIAN AIRSPACE
  • [07] GEORGIAN, ABKHAZ OFFICIALS SIGN PROTOCOL ON EXCHANGE OF
  • [08] JAPAN TO REBUILD OIL REFINERY IN KAZAKHSTAN
  • [09] UNEMPLOYMENT RISING IN KYRGYZSTAN
  • [10] TAJIK PRESIDENT SOLICITS OSCE ASSISTANCE FOR DEMOCRATIC
  • [11] UZBEKISTAN APPROVES DEFENSE DOCTRINE

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [12] RENEWED VIOLENCE IN DIVIDED KOSOVSKA MITROVICA
  • [13] SERBIA IMPOSES BLOCKADE ON MONTENEGRO
  • [14] BELGRADE AUTHORITIES SLAM CRITICISM OF AUSTRIA
  • [15] CROATIAN POLICE ARREST HDZ BUSINESSMAN IN HUGE FRAUD CASE
  • [16] BOSNIAN ENVOY PLEDGES BETTER RELATIONS WITH CROATIA
  • [17] BOSNIAN HDZ TO SPLIT?
  • [18] SREBRENICA SURVIVORS FILE CHARGES IN THE HAGUE
  • [19] SAROVIC ENDS BID FOR BOSNIAN SERB PRESIDENCY
  • [20] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT
  • [21] ROMANIA, U.S. TO BOOST COOPERATION
  • [22] FORMER ROMANIAN PREMIER 'EXPLAINS' JOINING FAR-RIGHT PARTY
  • [23] WORLD BANK PLANS LARGE LOAN TO BULGARIA

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [24] PLANNING UNDER WAY TO PRESERVE KOSOVA'S CULTURAL HERITAGE

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] ARMENIAN, RUSSIAN OFFICIALS DISCUSS ANTI-TERRORISM MEASURES

    Visiting Yerevan on 2-3 February, Russian Interior Minister

    Vladimir Rushailo met with President Robert Kocharian,

    Premier Aram Sargsian, and his Armenian counterpart, Haik

    Harutiunian, to discuss the threat of terrorism, ITAR-TASS

    reported. Following a 3 February joint meeting of the boards

    of the two countries' Interior Ministries, Rushailo told

    journalists that they will soon undertake more joint

    operations against criminal groups operating in Russia and

    Armenia and to curb arms smuggling, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau

    reported. Also on 3 February, visiting Russian Security

    Council Secretary Sergei Ivanov and his Armenian counterpart,

    Serzh Sarkisian, signed a memorandum on increased cooperation

    in the spheres of defense, security, and commerce. LF

    [02] SLOVAK GOVERNMENT DELEGATION SIGNS COOPERATION AGREEMENTS IN

    ARMENIA

    Slovak Foreign Minister Eduard Kukan held talks in

    Yerevan on 2 February with his Armenian counterpart, Vartan

    Oskanian, on expanding economic cooperation, TASR and

    Armenpress reported. The two ministers also signed a protocol

    of cooperation between their respective ministries. The same

    day, Slovak Economy Minister Lubomir Harach and Armenian

    Minister of Industry and Trade Karen Jshmaritian discussed

    cooperation in the energy and nuclear power sectors and in

    the production of synthetic rubber and chemicals, according

    to Noyan Tapan. On 3 February, Kukan met with President

    Kocharian and with parliamentary speaker Armen Khachatrian,

    whom he assured of Slovakia's support for Armenia's bid for

    acceptance into full membership in the Council of Europe. LF

    [03] AZERBAIJAN TO CLOSE DOWN THREE INTERNET PROVIDERS...

    Azerbaijan's Communications Ministry has decided to close

    down the Intrans and Baknet companies and the Azeurotel joint

    venture on the grounds that they have been operating without

    the required licenses, Groong reported on 3 February, citing

    the 1 February "Zerkalo." Company representatives told the

    newspaper, however, that they have repeatedly applied to the

    ministry for registration but have been refused. LF

    [04] ...AS ARMENIA ACCUSES AZERBAIJANI HACKERS OF HUMAN RIGHTS

    VIOLATION

    The blocking by Azerbaijani hackers of Armenian

    Websites that provide information about the Nagorno-Karabakh

    conflict constitutes a violation of the right of access to

    information, Snark on 31 January quoted the Armenian Foreign

    Ministry as saying. Armenian Television's Website is among

    those to fall victim to this practice. LF

    [05] AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION PARTY RE-REGISTERED

    The Ministry of

    Justice on 3 February formally registered the Democratic

    Party of Azerbaijan, Turan reported. The party was founded

    and originally registered in 1992 but had its registration

    revoked by the Ministry of Justice in 1995. Party secretary

    Aydyn Kuliev told RFE/RL's Baku bureau on 3 February that he

    does not think the ministry's decision reflects a change in

    the authorities' attitude toward the party, one of whose co-

    chairmen is former parliamentary speaker Rasul Guliev. Kuliev

    attributed the decision to re-register the party to the

    campaign it has waged to that end in recent months and to the

    pressure of public opinion both in Azerbaijan and abroad (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 7 January 2000). LF

    [06] RUSSIA AGAIN VIOLATES GEORGIAN AIRSPACE

    Tbilisi has

    protested to Russia after two Russian military helicopters

    entered Georgian airspace near the Georgian-Chechen border on

    3 February, Interfax reported. A Georgian border guard

    official said the two aircraft were apparently on a

    reconnaissance mission. Last year, Russian combat helicopters

    twice targeted Georgian villages close to the border with

    Chechnya, but no one was injured in either incident (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 23 August and 18 November 1999). LF

    [07] GEORGIAN, ABKHAZ OFFICIALS SIGN PROTOCOL ON EXCHANGE OF

    HOSTAGES

    Georgian Minister of State Vazha Lortkipanidze,

    accompanied by several senior military and security officials

    and by UN Special Representative Dieter Boden, traveled to

    Sukhum on 3 February for talks with Abkhaz President

    Vladislav Ardzinba and Prime Minister Vyacheslav Tsugba,

    Caucasus Press reported. The Abkhaz side had proposed the

    talks in the hope of stabilizing the tense situation on the

    border between Abkhazia and the rest of Georgia, where rival

    groups of Georgians and Abkhaz are demanding the release of

    co-ethnics held by the other side (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 1

    and 2 February 2000). The two sides finally signed a protocol

    pledging an exchange within two days of all persons taken

    hostage in the past two months. They also agreed to withdraw

    all illegal armed formations from the conflict zone within

    one month and to draw up, with the help of the UN Observer

    and CIS peacekeeping forces, a register of the armed forces

    in the conflict zone. The number of those forces may not be

    increased. LF

    [08] JAPAN TO REBUILD OIL REFINERY IN KAZAKHSTAN

    The Japanese

    Bank of International Cooperation has approved funding for a

    $450 million project whereby Japan's Marubeni company will

    rebuild the Atyrau Oil refinery, Interfax reported on 3

    February. The reconstruction will increase the refinery's

    annual capacity and boost product yield from crude oil, which

    is currently 42-29 percent. Japan's involvement in the

    project has been criticized by Atyrau Governor Imangali

    Tasmagambetov, who told Interfax last month that the refinery

    could meet the costs of reconstruction itself over a five-

    year period if it functioned at full capacity. In 1999,

    Tasmagambetov said, the refinery operated at only 38 percent

    of its capacity. Similarly, the Pavlodar refinery stood idle

    for much of last year because of limited supplies of crude

    oil. LF

    [09] UNEMPLOYMENT RISING IN KYRGYZSTAN

    Kyrgyzstan's Center for

    Employment said on 2 February that some 62,000 people are

    currently registered as unemployed, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau

    reported. In October 1999, Labor and Social Affairs Minister

    Imankadyr Rysaliev had given the number of people officially

    registered as out of work at 56,000. Local observers say the

    figure is closer to 1 million of the country's 4.8 million

    population. Of the 6,000 people who underwent retraining

    courses last year, approximately half subsequently found new

    jobs. Only 10 percent of those registered as unemployed drew

    unemployment benefits last year, although that allowance has

    been increased from 150 soms to 250 soms ($5.5). LF

    [10] TAJIK PRESIDENT SOLICITS OSCE ASSISTANCE FOR DEMOCRATIC

    ELECTIONS

    Imomali Rakhmonov on 3 February assured visiting

    OSCE Secretary-General Jan Kubis that he will do everything

    in his power to ensure that the upcoming parliamentary

    elections are democratic. At the same time, he requested the

    help of the OSCE in achieving that objective, ITAR-TASS and

    Asia Plus-Blitz reported. Rakhmonov also expressed an

    interest in possible OSCE assistance in post-conflict

    rehabilitation. Kubis, who in 1998-1999 served as the special

    representative in Tajikistan of the UN secretary-general,

    also met on 3 February with Tajik Foreign Minister Talbak

    Nazarov and with National Reconciliation Commission Chairman

    Said Abdullo Nuri to discuss the situation in the country. On

    4 February, ITAR-TASS quoted a German Embassy official in

    Dushanbe as saying that the German government has allocated

    $100,000 to finance the activities of the joint UN/OSCE

    commission that will monitor the parliamentary elections. The

    Iranian Embassy has donated 20 tons of paper to the Central

    Commission for Elections and Referenda, according to Asia

    Pluz-Blitz. LF

    [11] UZBEKISTAN APPROVES DEFENSE DOCTRINE

    Uzbekistan's National

    Security Council on 3 February approved a new, "exclusively

    defensive" military doctrine that demonstrates the country's

    "peace-oriented policy," Interfax reported. That document

    lays down guidelines for a fundamental reform of the armed

    forces. Council members stressed the threat posed to Central

    Asia by "the criminal aspirations of radically-oriented

    extremist forces" that promote international terrorism and

    religious extremism. They also advocated coordinated measures

    by the states of the region to counter that threat. LF


    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [12] RENEWED VIOLENCE IN DIVIDED KOSOVSKA MITROVICA

    Hundreds of

    angry ethnic Albanians stoned French military vehicles and

    blocked their paths in Kosovska Mitrovica on 4 February, AP

    reported. French peacekeepers then broke up the crowd by

    firing tear gas. At 9:00 p.m. local time the previous

    evening, unknown assailants shot two ethnic Albanians dead.

    Half an hour later, a grenade attack on a Serbian cafe

    injured up to 15 people. Then at 10:00 p.m. local time,

    unknown persons killed an ethnic Albanian woman. Shortly

    afterward, unidentified individuals hurled a grenade into a

    second Serbian cafe, wounding some 10 people, Reuters

    reported. Angry Serbian and Albanian crowds then confronted

    each other on the bridge that links the two halves of the

    divided city. The incidents came in the wake of a rocket

    attack on a UN bus in which two elderly Serbs died (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 3 February 2000). PM

    [13] SERBIA IMPOSES BLOCKADE ON MONTENEGRO

    Serbian officials

    closed the border with Montenegro for the transport of all

    goods on 3 February, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported.

    Belgrade has periodically imposed a blockade on truck traffic

    with the mountainous republic as part of the ongoing cat-and-

    mouse maneuvering between the political leaderships in

    Belgrade and Podgorica. PM

    [14] BELGRADE AUTHORITIES SLAM CRITICISM OF AUSTRIA

    Ivica Dacic,

    who is the spokesman for Yugoslav President Slobodan

    Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia, said in Belgrade on 3

    February that recent international criticism of Austria and

    Freedom Party leader Joerg Haider is similar to the criticism

    that Serbia has received abroad "for years." Dacic stressed

    that "all that is happening in regard to Austria is only

    another example of interference in the internal affairs of

    other countries, because...anything is possible in today's

    Europe, which serves America and not itself." He added that

    any country that does not accept Washington's "new world

    order" can expect to be internationally isolated. Elsewhere,

    far-right Radical Party leader Vojislav Seselj said this

    party "does not have any particular sympathy for Haider"

    because he is not pro-Serbian. "If he would have changed his

    position on the Serbian question we would have sympathized

    with him," Reuters reported. Observers note that Serbs living

    in Austria generally reject Haider, whom they regard

    primarily as a xenophobe. PM

    [15] CROATIAN POLICE ARREST HDZ BUSINESSMAN IN HUGE FRAUD CASE

    Police arrested Miroslav Kutle at the Bregana border crossing

    with Slovenia on 3 February, hours after Zagreb police issued

    a warrant for his arrest. Kutle and three other top officials

    of the financially troubled Tisak printing and news

    distribution firm are suspected of illegally transferring

    some $6 million from Tisak to several companies owned by

    Kutle. The businessman told "Jutarnji list" that he is

    innocent and that he "never took anything from Tisak." Zagreb

    police chief Zdenko Senicnjak told Reuters that police had to

    wait for the recent change of government before they could

    act against Kutle and his associates. Observers note that

    Kutle's is but the best-known case of a businessman

    embezzling huge sums under the protection of powerful

    politicians belonging to the Croatian Democratic Community

    (HDZ), which held power from 1990 to its defeat in January

    2000. Kutle and his associates have been linked to other

    cases of fraud or embezzlement, including the collapse of the

    Dubrovacka Banka. PM

    [16] BOSNIAN ENVOY PLEDGES BETTER RELATIONS WITH CROATIA

    Bosnian

    Ambassador to Croatia Hasan Muratovic spoke with Deputy Prime

    Minister Slavko Linic in Zagreb on 3 February about

    "improving economic relations," RFE/RL's South Slavic

    Service. In Sarajevo, Bosnian Muslim leader Alija Izetbegovic

    said the Bosnian government should make improving relations

    with Croatia its top priority in the wake of the HDZ's

    defeat. PM

    [17] BOSNIAN HDZ TO SPLIT?

    The Sarajevo Muslim daily "Avaz" wrote

    on 4 February that Bosnian Foreign Minister Jadranko Prlic,

    who is also a member of the Bosnian HDZ's presidency, will

    soon form his own party, to be called the Croatian People's

    Union (HNU). The newspaper quoted unnamed Croatian sources as

    saying that Prlic and some of his associates have concluded

    that the defeated Croatian HDZ and its Bosnian affiliate are

    no longer capable of defending the interests of Bosnia's

    Croats. Observers note that the Bosnian HDZ has long been

    dominated by the hard-line nationalists from Herzegovina.

    Several prominent moderate Croat leaders from Bosnia proper

    have left the HDZ over the years, including Stjepan Kljuic

    and Kresimir Zubak. PM

    [18] SREBRENICA SURVIVORS FILE CHARGES IN THE HAGUE

    The Mothers

    of Srebrenica and Podrinje Association, which is based in the

    Bosnian town of Vogosca and represents the survivors of the

    1995 Srebrenica massacre, filed a "criminal complaint" on 4

    February with the Hague-based war crimes tribunal. The

    Mothers of Srebrenica said in a statement that they want an

    investigation of the role that several UN and other

    international officials played in the fall of Srebrenica and

    the massacre that followed, in which Serbian forces killed

    approximately 7,000 Muslim males. Those charged include

    Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Kofi Annan, Yasushi Akashi, General

    Bernard Janvier, General Rupert Smith, Thomas Karremans,

    Thorvald Stoltenberg, Carl Bildt, Lord Owen, and General Sir

    Michael Rose. PM

    [19] SAROVIC ENDS BID FOR BOSNIAN SERB PRESIDENCY

    Republika

    Srpska Vice President Mirko Sarovic said in Banja Luka on 3

    February that he will remain in that office, the private Beta

    news agency reported. Observers note that in effect, the

    announcement ends his bid to take over the presidency. The

    international community's Wolfgang Petritsch recently called

    the bid "illegal" (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 January 2000).

    PM

    [20] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES MEDIUM-TERM DEVELOPMENT

    STRATEGY

    The government on 3 February approved the medium-

    term development strategy aimed at accelerating Romania's

    accession to the EU, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 3 February 2000). The government also

    approved setting up a commission, chaired by Prime Minister

    Mugur Isarescu and Academician Tudor Postolache, to work out

    the program that is due to be submitted to the EU in March.

    And it gave the go-ahead to establish an agency for the

    protection of abandoned children, in line with EU demands.

    President Emil Constantinescu, who chaired the government

    meeting, said at a joint press conference with Isarescu that

    Romanians "know where they are headed, know the rules," and

    cannot allow the effort to join the EU to be "derailed." He

    urged his countrymen to accept the envisaged austerity

    measures. MS

    [21] ROMANIA, U.S. TO BOOST COOPERATION

    U.S. Undersecretary of

    State Thomas Pickering and Foreign Minister Petre Roman on 3

    February signed a " framework-convention" for enlarging the

    two countries' "strategic partnership," RFE/RL's Bucharest

    bureau reported. They agreed to increase economic cooperation

    and boost efforts to promote regional stability and military

    relations as well as combat "unconventional risks." On 4

    February, a joint U.S.-Romanian peace-keeping exercise was

    scheduled to begin at three airfields in Romania. MS

    [22] FORMER ROMANIAN PREMIER 'EXPLAINS' JOINING FAR-RIGHT PARTY

    In an interview with RFE/RL on 3 February, former Prime

    Minister Radu Vasile said he is "not aware" of the fact that

    the Romanian Right Party, which he and his supporters joined

    earlier that day, had "a reputation of [promoting]

    extremism." If this is the case, he noted, "our joining the

    party will transform it." Earlier on 3 February, Vasile was

    elected chairman of the party, which subsequently changed its

    name to the Romanian People's Party. AFP reported that the

    party's manifesto says the formation espouses nationalism,

    close links with the Orthodox Church, authoritarianism, and

    the "rejection of multi-culturalism." MS

    [23] WORLD BANK PLANS LARGE LOAN TO BULGARIA

    The World Bank is

    planning to lend Bulgaria $ 200 million in several tranches

    this year, the bank's chief representative for Bulgaria,

    Andrew Vorkink, told BTA on 2 February. Vorkink spoke with

    journalists after talks in Sofia with Deputy Premier Petar

    Zhotev. He said the bank considers that Bulgaria's handling

    of projects financed by it has improved and that all of the

    10 projects now under way are being satisfactorily

    implemented. Three years ago, Vorking said, 40 percent of the

    projects launched were considered by the bank to have been

    unsatisfactorily implemented. MS


    [C] END NOTE

    [24] PLANNING UNDER WAY TO PRESERVE KOSOVA'S CULTURAL HERITAGE

    By Jolyon Naegele

    The Council of Europe is developing a plan to preserve

    Kosova's cultural heritage, the destruction of which is

    defined by the UN's war crimes tribunal as a war crime.

    The move comes after more than half a year in which the

    UN administration in Kosova (UNMIK) has virtually neglected

    the province's war-damaged monuments, museums, and libraries.

    The Council of Europe and the European Commission have

    agreed to establish a high-level group of experts to prepare

    a detailed survey of the damage and destruction to the

    architectural and archaeological heritage of all ethnic and

    religious groups throughout the region. Once they complete

    the survey this spring, they will establish a list of

    priorities and set up teams of experts from local,

    provincial, and federal (Yugoslav) levels, representing all

    groups in Kosova, to draw up by this summer proposals for

    action.

    Since the arrival last June of the NATO-led peacekeeping

    force, KFOR, protection of cultural monuments has been

    limited to Serbian Orthodox churches. Nevertheless, more than

    50 churches in Kosova have been damaged by vandalism since

    June.

    By far the most thorough survey to date of the

    destruction of Kosova's cultural heritage has been conducted

    by a Harvard University librarian, Andras Riedlmayer, and two

    architects, an American and an Albanian. They spent three

    weeks in Kosova conducting a survey of architectural

    monuments, libraries, historical archives, public records,

    and museums. One of the survey's goals is to assess damage

    and reconstruction efforts and to identify projects and

    institutions in need of assistance.

    Riedlmayer says that Serbian forces in 1998-1999 caused

    widespread destruction to some 500 villages in Kosova and

    severely damaged or destroyed more than 200 mosques or one in

    three Muslim houses of worship. The Serbs also gutted the

    overwhelming majority of some 500 defensive stone towers

    known as kullas, traditionally inhabited by large Kosovar

    Albanian families.

    Riedlmayer also notes that the destruction of Serbian

    Orthodox village churches in Kosova since the end of the war

    is a tragedy. But as he puts it, "it is also wrong to

    ignore...the massive and deliberate destruction of Albanian

    religious and cultural heritage by Serbian police, soldiers,

    and paramilitaries."

    Another purpose of the survey is to gather evidence for

    the Office of the Prosecutor of the UN's war crimes tribunal

    in its investigations into war crimes allegedly committed by,

    among others, Yugoslavia's indicted President Slobodan

    Milosevic.

    "The deliberate destruction of cultural property without

    overriding military necessity is a war crime," Riedlmayer

    notes. "And the indictment against Milosevic actually

    specifies among the charges the destruction of cultural and

    religious heritage. On the other hand, when we talked to the

    Prosecutor's Office at The Hague they told us that they had

    no one with either the time or the expertise on their side to

    look into this."

    The Hague tribunal last May indicted Milosevic and five

    other senior Serbian and Yugoslav officials with "criminal

    responsibility for violations of the laws or customs of war."

    The tribunal's statute says this includes "seizure of,

    destruction or willful damage done to institutions dedicated

    to religion, charity and education, the arts and sciences,

    historic monuments and works of art and science."

    Riedlmayer's survey team visited some 80 sites and

    collected documentation on another 120. His preliminary

    report in mid-December alleged that there was a clear pattern

    of Serbian forces systematically targeting mosques in Kosova-

    -including a number of important monuments from the 15th and

    16th centuries. According to the survey, "in the majority of

    cases, it was evident...that this was not collateral damage

    from fighting between Belgrade's forces and the Kosova

    Liberation Front (UCK) rebels, nor the result of NATO's

    bombing."

    Riedlmayer comments that "Given that on any kind of

    population basis, Belgrade's claim to sovereignty over Kosova

    is rather weak..., heritage has played a disproportionate

    role in the politics of Kosova, at least since the 1980s....

    Then when Belgrade took over direct rule in 1989 and 90, one

    of the first things that happened was a revision of the

    listed monuments in Kosova."

    Riedlmayer says the California-based Packard Humanities

    Institute has given a grant of $24,000 to pay for material

    and labor to conserve Kosova's 100 most-endangered buildings

    until funding for reconstruction becomes available.

    The author is an RFE/RL correspondent based in Prague.

    04-02-00


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


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