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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 26, 00-02-07

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. 26, 7 February 2000


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] ARMENIAN PRESIDENT PROPOSES 'NEW IDEAS' ON KARABAKH
  • [02] ...MEETS WITH PARTY LEADERS
  • [03] SON OF SLAIN ARMENIAN LEADER INHERITS POPULAR SUPPORT
  • [04] RUSSIA, AZERBAIJAN CONDEMN TERRORISM, SEPARATISM
  • [05] GEORGIA, ABKHAZIA EXCHANGE FIRST HOSTAGES
  • [06] GEORGIA, SLOVAKIA SIGN COOPERATION AGREEMENTS
  • [07] GEORGIA'S UN VOTING RIGHT AT RISK
  • [08] KAZAKH ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF ACQUITTED IN MIG SALE TRIAL
  • [09] ANOTHER KYRGYZ OPPOSITION PARTY BARRED FROM ELECTIONS
  • [10] TAJIK BUS EXPLOSION CASUED BY ANTI-PERSONNEL MINE
  • [11] KISS OF DEATH FOR THE TRANS-CASPIAN PIPELINE?

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [12] CROATIA ELECTS ITS PRESIDENT
  • [13] DEFEATED PARTY ABOUT TO SPLIT?
  • [14] TENSIONS CONTINUE IN DIVIDED KOSOVSKA MITROVICA
  • [15] DEL PONTE WANTS NATO TO SET UP UNIT TO CATCH WAR CRIMINALS
  • [16] FORMER SERBIAN COMMANDER CALLS FOR COUP
  • [17] SERBIAN MINISTER SLAMS WESTERN 'MEDIA CAMPAIGN'
  • [18] ROMANIAN DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION PARTNERS TO RUN ALONE IN LOCAL
  • [19] ROMANIAN NATIONAL PARTY HAS NEW-OLD LEADER
  • [20] MOLDOVA MAY INITIATE DUAL CITIZENSHIP AGREEMENT WITH
  • [21] ...AS ROMANIAN SENATOR SAYS THIS MAY REQUIRE MOLDOVA'S
  • [22] BULGARIA WORRIED ABOUT AUSTRIAN COALITION

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [23] WHAT FUTURE FOR KOSOVA'S SHADOW-STATE?

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] ARMENIAN PRESIDENT PROPOSES 'NEW IDEAS' ON KARABAKH

    SETTLEMENT...

    During talks with his Azerbaijani counterpart,

    Heidar Aliev, on the sidelines of the world economic summit

    in Davos last month, Robert Kocharian suggested two "new

    ideas" for resolving the Karabakh conflict, RFE/RL's Yerevan

    bureau reported on 4 February, quoting presidential spokesman

    Vahe Gabrielian. Gabrielian did not say what those ideas

    were, but he did comment that despite "some positive

    movement," the Davos talks did not yield "major progress" on

    resolving the conflict. On 3 February, the Azerbaijani

    Foreign Ministry issued a note saying that the unrecognized

    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's decision to demand entry visas

    from foreigners was a violation of Azerbaijan's sovereignty,

    ITAR-TASS and Turan reported. Baku warned that foreigners

    whose passports contain such a visa will be barred entry to

    Azerbaijan. LF

    [02] ...MEETS WITH PARTY LEADERS

    Kocharian on 4 February met with

    the leaders of Armenia's political parties to brief them on

    his recent visits abroad and to discuss economic issues,

    RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. The domestic political

    situation was not discussed. "Orinats yerkir" leader Sergo

    Yeritsian said the meeting "marked the beginning of a

    political dialogue" between the president and other political

    forces. National Democratic Union Chairman Vazgen Manukian,

    who last month suggested that Kocharian was not in control of

    the political situation and should therefore resign, told

    journalists after the 4 February meeting that he had

    subsequently held a separate meeting with Kocharian, but he

    gave no details. LF

    [03] SON OF SLAIN ARMENIAN LEADER INHERITS POPULAR SUPPORT

    Stepan

    Demirchian, younger son of murdered Armenian parliamentary

    speaker Karen, pledged last week to continue the People's

    Party of Armenia's (HHK) cooperation with the Republican

    Party, its partner in the majority Miasnutiun parliament

    bloc, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. Last month, Stepan

    Demirchian was elected acting chairman of the HHK, which his

    father had founded in 1998. Demirchian told RFE/RL on 3

    February that "serious and competent people" continue to join

    the HHK. Touring towns in central Armenia the following day,

    he told supporters that the HHK will not do anything to split

    Miasnutiun. The HHK is perceived as the junior member of that

    bloc. Demirchian also said the HHK does not support calls by

    some opposition parties for new presidential elections. LF

    [04] RUSSIA, AZERBAIJAN CONDEMN TERRORISM, SEPARATISM

    Visiting

    Baku on 3-4 February, Russian Interior Minister Vladimir

    Rushailo held talks with his Azerbaijani counterpart, Ramil

    Usubov, and with President Aliev, Turan and Russian agencies

    reported. Rushailo and Usubov signed agreements on preventing

    terrorism and on deepening cooperation in preventing the

    smuggling of arms and narcotics across their shared border.

    Usubov thanked Moscow for extraditing more than 500 wanted

    criminal to Azerbaijan over the past three years. Aliev

    termed Rushailo's visit "politically important" and a step

    forward in the development of bilateral relations, according

    to Interfax. He characterized the Russian and Azerbaijani

    positions on the prevention of terrorism and separatism as

    similar, noting that those phenomena pose a threat to all

    democratic states. LF

    [05] GEORGIA, ABKHAZIA EXCHANGE FIRST HOSTAGES

    Two days after

    senior Abkhaz and Georgian government officials signed an

    agreement in Sukhum (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 February 2000),

    Georgia handed over the bodies of three Abkhaz customs

    officials shot dead last month, Caucasus Press reported. In

    exchange, the Abkhaz authorities released three Georgian

    hostages. A group of Georgians continues to block the

    Georgian side of the bridge over the Inguri River, which

    forms the internal border between Abkhazia and the rest of

    Georgia, to demand the release of five Georgians held by the

    Abkhaz, Caucasus Press reported on 7 February. Tbilisi says

    those five are all civilians, while the Abkhaz authorities

    claim that some of them have been convicted for war crimes

    committed during the 1992-1993 fighting, according to AP. The

    Georgian authorities, for their part, continue to hold two

    Abkhaz. LF

    [06] GEORGIA, SLOVAKIA SIGN COOPERATION AGREEMENTS

    Visiting

    Slovak Foreign Minister Eduard Kukan and Economy Minister

    Lubomir Harach held talks with the Georgian leadership in

    Tbilisi on 4 February. Kukan and Georgian Foreign Minister

    Irakli Menagharishvili signed a protocol on cooperation

    between their respective ministries. Meeting with Georgian

    President Eduard Shevardnadze, the Slovak ministers discussed

    the possibility of Slovak participation in the construction

    of a thermal power station in western Georgia. Shevardnadze

    described the overall situation in the Caucasus as

    "problematic" given the numerous unsolved conflicts. He

    expressed the hope that it will prove possible to conclude a

    Caucasus stability pact analogous to that forged last year

    for the Balkans, TASR reported. LF

    [07] GEORGIA'S UN VOTING RIGHT AT RISK

    Foreign Minister

    Menagharishvili told journalists on 4 February that Georgia

    risks losing its voting right at the UN unless it pays at

    least part of the $6 million it owes in membership dues,

    Caucasus Press reported. He expressed confidence that the

    Finance Ministry will release the necessary funds to pay at

    least part of that sum. Armenia, by contrast, has no

    outstanding debts to the UN and has already paid its $410,000

    membership dues for 2000, Groong reported on 2 February,

    citing Snark. LF

    [08] KAZAKH ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF ACQUITTED IN MIG SALE TRIAL

    A

    Kazakh military court on 4 February acquitted acting Chief of

    Army General Staff Bakhytzhan Ertaev of abuse of office in

    connection with last year's illegal sale to North Korea of

    some 40 obsolete MiG fighter aircraft, Russian agencies

    reported. Ertaev had told the court last month that in giving

    the go-ahead for that sale, he was merely obeying orders from

    his superiors, including Defense Minister Mukhtar Altynbaev,

    whom he demanded be summoned as a witness (see "RFE/RL

    Newsline," 11 and 12 January 2000). Ertaev, who was

    hospitalized last month after suffering a heart attack in the

    court room, may sue the National Security Committee for

    damages, according to Interfax. His co-defendant, businessman

    Aleksandr Petrenko, was found guilty of participating in the

    sale but was immediately amnestied, according to dpa on 4

    February. LF

    [09] ANOTHER KYRGYZ OPPOSITION PARTY BARRED FROM ELECTIONS

    A

    Bishkek district court ruled on 5 February that the congress

    convened in early January by the Party of the Democratic

    Movement of Kyrgyzstan (PDMK) to select the party's

    candidates for the 20 February parliamentary elections was

    illegal, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported. The

    court maintained that only 57 delegates attended that

    gathering, while 59 are required for a quorum, and therefore

    ruled that the party cannot participate in the poll. But PDMK

    chairman Jypar Jeksheev told RFE/RL that of a total of 83

    delegates selected, 71 did attend the congress. Kyrgyz

    Committee for Human Rights chairman Ramazan Dyryldaev

    condemned the court ruling as politically motivated. As a

    result of the ruling, the number of political parties that

    will contend the poll has dropped to nine. Moreover, former

    Bishkek Mayor and Ar-Namys party chairman Feliks Kulov, who

    topped the list of PDMK candidates to contest the mandates to

    be distributed under the proportional system, is now

    precluded from running. LF

    [10] TAJIK BUS EXPLOSION CASUED BY ANTI-PERSONNEL MINE

    Tajik

    Security Ministry experts told ITAR-TASS on 4 February that

    the explosion in a Dushanbe city bus the previous day was not

    caused by a bomb or a faulty gas cylinder but by a foreign-

    made anti-personnel mine. Seven people died in that explosion

    (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 February 2000). LF

    [11] KISS OF DEATH FOR THE TRANS-CASPIAN PIPELINE?

    Relations

    between Ankara and Ashgabat have cooled after a Turkish

    singer accompanying a Turkish delegation to the Turkmen

    capital rejected the amorous advances of President Saparmurat

    Niyazov, according to the "Sueddeutsche Zeitung" of 4-5

    February. The lady has reportedly been asked by the Turkish

    authorities not to divulge details of the episode to the

    Turkish press. LF


    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [12] CROATIA ELECTS ITS PRESIDENT

    Voters began casting their

    ballots at 7:00 a.m. local time on 7 February in the second

    round of the Croatian presidential elections. Stipe Mesic of

    the smaller four-party governing coalition is pitted against

    Drazen Budisa of the larger two-party coalition. The latest

    public opinion polls give Mesic a slight edge over Budisa,

    but most observers agree that the results are too close to

    predict. Unofficial results are expected at midnight. The

    inauguration is slated for 18 February. The election campaign

    centered primarily on the candidates' styles and

    personalities because there are hardly any differences

    between them on political issues of substance. Budisa

    stressed his honesty and integrity. Mesic presented himself

    as a counterbalance to the two-party coalition that dominates

    the government and as a man close to ordinary people. He was

    not friendly toward the Herzegovinians, an approach that may

    win him some votes in Croatia proper but is likely to cause

    the Herzegovinians to vote en masse for Budisa. PM

    [13] DEFEATED PARTY ABOUT TO SPLIT?

    "Jutarnji list" reported on 7

    February about an imminent split in the Croatian Democratic

    Community (HDZ), which governed from 1990 until its

    overwhelming defeat in the 2000 parliamentary and

    presidential elections (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report, 16

    November 1999). A moderate wing led by former Foreign

    Minister Mate Granic and Vesna Skare-Ozbolt plans to form the

    Croatian Christian Democratic Party. Other prominent HDZ

    politicians likely to join the new party are Nikica Valentic,

    Vlatko Pavletic, Pavao Miljavac, and Ivan Jarnjak, the daily

    added. Observers note that if the split takes place, the HDZ

    would be left primarily in the hands of two hard-line

    factions. One of those factions is led by Vladimir Seks,

    while the other is headed by Ivic Pasalic and consists

    primarily of Herzegovinians. PM

    [14] TENSIONS CONTINUE IN DIVIDED KOSOVSKA MITROVICA

    Violence

    involving ethnic Albanians and Serbs, as well as Albanians

    and French and Italian peacekeepers, continued on 4 and 5

    February (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 February 2000). AP

    reported on 6 February that some 10 people died in the

    violence and that dozens were injured, including 16 French

    peacekeepers. Some 2,000 Albanians and an unspecified number

    of Serbs staged rival protests on 6 February, but no clashes

    were reported. Bernard Kouchner, who is the UN's chief

    civilian administrator in the province, broke off a fund-

    raising trip to Japan to return to Mitrovica. He suggested

    that "extremists" are seeking to "blow up the progress we've

    made." He vowed: "They will not succeed. We will not give

    up." PM

    [15] DEL PONTE WANTS NATO TO SET UP UNIT TO CATCH WAR CRIMINALS

    Carla Del Ponte, who is the Hague-based war crimes tribunal's

    chief prosecutor, wants the Atlantic alliance to form a

    special unit to arrest indicted war criminals, "Vesti"

    reported on 7 February. She told the Copenhagen daily

    "Politiken" that one reason why more war criminals have not

    been brought to justice is that NATO has not made catching

    them a priority. Del Ponte added that alliance officials in

    Brussels reacted "positively" to her suggestion. PM

    [16] FORMER SERBIAN COMMANDER CALLS FOR COUP

    Retired General

    Stevan Mirkovic, who is a former chief of the Yugoslav Army

    General Staff, said that "a military coup is the only way out

    of the current crisis between Serbia and Montenegro," "Vesti"

    reported on 6 February. He added that it is "possible" that

    Yugoslavia will face a civil war unless the military takes

    action "as it did in Pakistan." Mirkovic declined to say

    precisely who he thinks might lead a coup. The former general

    was one of the founders of the small League of Communists-

    Movement for Yugoslavia, which is widely regarded as a

    collection of political dinosaurs. It is headed by Mira

    Markovic, the wife of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.

    PM

    [17] SERBIAN MINISTER SLAMS WESTERN 'MEDIA CAMPAIGN'

    Information

    Minister Aleksandar Vucic said in Belgrade on 5 February that

    the U.S. and other Western countries are waging a "media

    campaign" against the Serbian authorities. He charged that

    virtually all independent media in Serbo-Croatian and in

    Albanian are "funded and controlled" by Washington, "Danas"

    reported. Vucic added that the Hungarian Embassy in Belgrade

    is the Western powers' main direct contact with the

    independent media. PM

    [18] ROMANIAN DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION PARTNERS TO RUN ALONE IN LOCAL

    ELECTIONS

    The leaders of the National Peasant Party

    Christian Democratic (PNTCD) have agreed to a demand by the

    National Liberal Party (PNL), their main partner in the

    Democratic Convention of Romania (CDR), that the two parties

    run on separate lists in this summer's local elections,

    RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported on 4 February. The two

    formations will run on joint lists in the fall parliamentary

    elections. A new protocol for the CDR is to be signed by 15

    February. The PNLCD and the PNL said they will both back

    incumbent President Emil Constantinescu in the upcoming

    presidential elections. MS

    [19] ROMANIAN NATIONAL PARTY HAS NEW-OLD LEADER

    A 6 February

    extraordinary congress of the Romanian National Party (PNR)

    has elected former Romanian Intelligence Service chief Virgil

    Magureanu as the party's new chairman and decided that the

    position of deputy chairman will "for the time being remain

    vacant." Magureanu, who was a driving force behind the PNR,

    took over the post of acting chairman after former chairman

    Viorel Catarama was forced to "withdraw" last year (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 6 September 1999). The PNR said it

    represents a "Third Way" in Romanian politics between the

    left and right. It will run alone in the local elections and

    seek to forge alliances with other formations for the

    parliamentary elections. MS

    [20] MOLDOVA MAY INITIATE DUAL CITIZENSHIP AGREEMENT WITH

    ROMANIA...

    Ion Ieseanu, chief of the Consular Directorate at

    the Moldovan Foreign Ministry, told RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau

    on 5 February that his country may soon initiate an agreement

    with Romania whereby Moldovan nationals would be granted dual

    citizenship. Thousands of Moldovans have besieged the

    Romanian embassy in Chisinau recently inquiring about how to

    acquire Romanian citizenship, following the beginning of

    negotiations between Bucharest and Brussels on Romania's

    accession to the EU. Moldovans fear that Romania may

    introduce visa requirements for Moldovan nationals in the

    near future. They also believe that Romanian citizens will

    soon be allowed to travel freely within the "Schengen space."

    Romanian Ambassador to Chisinau Victor Barsan emphasized that

    Foreign Minister Petre Roman has recently said Romania has no

    intention of imposing such requirements and that Moldovans

    will continue to be allowed to cross the border by presenting

    their ID cards only. MS

    [21] ...AS ROMANIAN SENATOR SAYS THIS MAY REQUIRE MOLDOVA'S

    'DISTANCING FROM RUSSIA'

    Romanian Senate Foreign Affairs

    Commission Chairman Gheorgi Prisacaru told RFE/RL's Chisinau

    bureau on 5 February that under Romanian legislation, it is

    easier to grant citizenship to Moldovan nationals than to

    nationals of other countries. Prisacaru said granting

    citizenship may depend on two factors: EU demands and

    "Moldova's distancing from Russia." MS

    [22] BULGARIA WORRIED ABOUT AUSTRIAN COALITION

    Bulgarian

    President Petar Stoyanov on 4 February said Sofia is

    "concerned" that the new Austrian government "may hamper the

    EU's enlargement policy and thus [harm] Bulgaria's national

    interests," BTA reported. Stoyanov said the EU's enlargement

    is "vital" for Bulgaria, and he noted that his country

    subscribes to the EU's "philosophy and system of values,"

    which he added are "based on the principles of tolerance and

    European solidarity." Bulgaria therefore can only support the

    stance taken by the EU toward the new Austrian government,

    whose policies must be "followed closely," Stoyanov said. MS


    [C] END NOTE

    [23] WHAT FUTURE FOR KOSOVA'S SHADOW-STATE?

    By Fabian Schmidt

    A 31 January session of the Kosovar shadow state

    parliament has caused a great deal of controversy. On that

    day, a deadline was due to pass for all parallel state

    structures in Kosova to cease to exist. But rather than

    disbanding, the parliament vowed to meet again within 10

    days.

    The shadow-state was created by moderate Kosovars in

    1989 after Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic abolished the

    province's autonomy. In particular, it succeeded in setting

    up comprehensive health and education systems. Funds came

    primarily from "taxes" paid by Kosovars working abroad. The

    Kosovar shadow-state, an excellent example of self-help and

    passive resistance, has been called "the world's most

    successful NGO."

    During the Serbian crackdown in 1998 and the full-blown

    conflict the following year, however, moderates who until

    then had advocated non-violence attributed primary political

    importance among Kosovars to those prepared to take up arms

    and defend the ethnic Albanians from Serbian forces. After

    those forces left in June 1999, the UN set up a civilian

    administration in the province and called on the various

    self-proclaimed government structures among Serbs and

    Albanians alike to dissolve themselves and join new bodies

    sponsored by the UN's UNMIK.

    Shadow-state President Ibrahim Rugova and his main

    rival, former Kosova Liberation Army (UCK) leader Hashim

    Thaci, committed themselves in a 15 December 1999 agreement

    with UNMIK to disband their respective rival underground

    governments by the end of January 2000. In exchange,

    representatives of their respective political parties--the

    Democratic League of Kosova (LDK) and the Party of Democratic

    Progress of Kosova (PPDK)--as well as representatives of

    other parties were to receive positions as heads of

    administrative departments. These departments will be

    equivalent to ministries and will form part of the Interim

    Administrative Council, overseen by the UNMIK administration.

    They were created after weeks of difficult negotiations.

    But at the 31 January session, the shadow-state

    parliament not only failed to disband itself and its

    government. It also decided that its mandate and that of

    Prime Minister Bujar Bukoshi will expire only when new

    elections are held. The smaller parties in the legislature--

    including the Liberal Party of Kosova and the Christian

    Democrats--had rejected any dissolution of the legislature,

    arguing that the parliament gained full legitimacy through

    underground elections in 1992 and 1998. Rugova's LDK, which

    is the largest party within the shadow-state parliament and

    has a majority of seats there, apparently shied away from

    overruling its smaller long-standing political allies.

    UNMIK spokesman Jock Covey responded by announcing that

    UNMIK has given the shadow-state another 10 days to disband,

    noting that this delay is preventing the council from

    beginning its work. The delay, moreover, has triggered harsh

    reactions from several Kosovar observers.

    Journalist Baton Haxhiu, for example, wrote in a

    commentary in the leading Prishtina daily "Koha Ditore" on 2

    February that "everybody was skeptical when the [15 December

    1999] agreement was signed between UNMIK and the [ethnic]

    Albanian political parties. Everybody believed that the newly

    created structures would fail.... Often [international

    officials] asked: 'Who would possibly go against the views of

    international community, against the future of Kosova,

    against the institutional life of Kosova...? Now it is the

    parliament of Kosova that has done so."

    Haxhiu added that the shadow-state failed to protect its

    citizens and quickly collapsed during the 1999 war: "The

    question remains: are these [legislators] the same people who

    have been silent for ten years..., who have lied to their own

    people, pretending that [the people] have a parliament, that

    they have a president, that they have a government, that they

    have free elections and state institutions?"

    The journalist stressed, moreover, that all other

    parallel Kosovar structures had respected the commitment to

    disband: "The UCK has agreed to be transformed into the

    Kosova Protection Corps, and [Thaci's] Provisional Government

    of Kosova ceased to exist on [31 January, as it said it would

    do] in a press statement.... However, the president and the

    prime minister of the [shadow-state] Republic of Kosova

    continue to exist. Their armed structures continue to exist.

    These imitations of the UCK, which never took part in the

    war, can continue their activities, while those that fought

    [that is, the UCK] have surrendered their arms.

    "UNMIK has pedantically criticized the parallel

    structures that were created after the [February 1999]

    Rambouillet negotiations [namely Thaci's government]. It has

    searched every suspicious house and every person it suspected

    of potentially seeking to destabilize Kosova. And it acted

    well. But falling silent and tolerating what happened on [31

    January] will not promote the stabilization of Kosova....

    Where is UNMIK now?"

    Meanwhile, Rugova said in Prishtina on 2 February that

    the shadow-state has indeed been dissolved. It is unclear,

    however, whether he can claim to speak for the parliament. In

    any event, much of the press reacted with skepticism to his

    claims.

    07-02-00


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


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