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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 27, 00-02-08

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. 27, 8 February 2000


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] ARMENIAN WAR VETERANS WANT FINAL SAY ON KARABAKH PEACE
  • [02] AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION PARTY HQ ATTACKED
  • [03] AZERBAIJAN SETS DATE FOR NEXT TURKIC SUMMIT
  • [04] HOSTAGE EXCHANGE IN GEORGIA IN JEOPARDY
  • [05] WORKERS' MOVEMENT IN KAZAKHSTAN CALLS FOR GENERAL STRIKE
  • [06] SLAVS IN KAZAKHSTAN ADVOCATE ACCESSION TO RUSSIA-BELARUS
  • [07] 'ISLAMIC EXTREMISTS' DETAINED IN SOUTHERN KYRGYZSTAN
  • [08] U.S. WATCHDOG CRITICIZES KYRGYZ ELECTION PREPARATIONS
  • [09] NEW POLITICAL PARTY FOUNDED IN KYRGYZSTAN
  • [10] TEACHERS IN KYRGYZSTAN STILL OWED 1998 SALARIES
  • [11] TWO POLICE SHOT DEAD AT ELECTION RALLY IN TAJIKISTAN
  • [12] MORE EXPLOSIONS IN DUSHANBE
  • [13] PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF TAJIK CENSUS RELEASED
  • [14] TURKMENISTAN POSTPONES SIGNING OF PSA WITH SHELL

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [15] YUGOSLAV DEFENSE MINISTER SHOT DEAD
  • [16] SPECULATION ABOUNDS ON BULATOVIC MURDER
  • [17] MESIC WINS CROATIAN PRESIDENCY
  • [18] GRANIC SEEKS TO 'TRANSFORM' DEFEATED CROATIAN PARTY
  • [19] KEY CROATIAN UNDERWORLD FIGURE ARRESTED
  • [20] MORE BOSNIAN ELECTRICITY FOR MONTENEGRO
  • [21] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT STARTS BRITISH VISIT
  • [22] ROMANIA, BULGARIA, REACH COMPROMISE ON DANUBE BRIDGE
  • [23] MOLDOVAN COMMUNISTS CONSOLIDATE TARACLIA VICTORY
  • [24] BULGARIA URGES AUSTRIA NOT TO BLOCK EU BID

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [25] THE VIKINGS MAKE A COMEBACK?

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] ARMENIAN WAR VETERANS WANT FINAL SAY ON KARABAKH PEACE

    AGREEMENT

    Meeting last weekend, the board of the Yerkrapah

    union of veterans of the Karabakh war warned that they will

    not accept any settlement of the Karabakh conflict that

    entails the return to Azerbaijani jurisdiction of occupied

    Azerbaijani territories bordering on the unrecognized

    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported

    on 7 February. "We will not allow anybody to decide on the

    fate of Armenia and Artsakh without asking Yerkrapah's and

    the people's opinion," union chairman Manvel Grigorian said.

    Prime Minister Aram Sargsian, who attended the meeting, said,

    "Rest assured that on this issue my views can't be different

    from yours. I can't accept a decision that you wouldn't like,

    especially on the question of [occupied] lands." Deputy

    parliamentary speaker Tigran Torosian told RFE/RL on 7

    February that the Miasnutiun parliament majority faction,

    which is dominated by Yerkrapah's political wing, the

    Republican Party of Armenia, agrees with Yerkrapah that a

    future peace deal must be put to public debate. LF

    [02] AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION PARTY HQ ATTACKED

    Some 100 men armed

    with clubs attacked the Baku headquarters of the opposition

    Musavat party and its newspaper, "Yeni Musavat," on 7

    February, breaking down doors and smashing windows, Turan and

    Reuters reported. The attackers seized or damaged the

    equipment of cameramen and photographers who arrived at the

    scene. Police summoned to the building failed to intervene.

    The vandals, who came from a village in the exclave of

    Nakhichevan, were protesting the publication in "Yeni

    Musavat" of materials about official corruption in the

    exclave. The author of those articles, Elbey Hasanli, has

    been arrested, according to Russian agencies. Musavat issued

    a statement later on 7 February calling for his release.

    Musavat Party Chairman Isa Gambar blamed Azerbaijani

    President Heidar Aliev for the incident, saying that the

    Azerbaijani authorities had known in advance that it was

    planned but failed to prevent it. LF

    [03] AZERBAIJAN SETS DATE FOR NEXT TURKIC SUMMIT

    The sixth summit

    of Turcophone states will take place in Baku on 8 April,

    ITAR-TASS reported on 7 February. Azerbaijan's President

    Aliev has ordered the creation of a special state commission,

    which he will chair, to prepare for that meeting. The summit

    was originally scheduled for June 1999 but was postponed to

    allow Aliev time to recuperate from heart bypass surgery (see

    "RFE/RL Newsline," 10 June 1999). LF

    [04] HOSTAGE EXCHANGE IN GEORGIA IN JEOPARDY

    Having handed over

    to the Abkhaz authorities the bodies of two Abkhaz customs

    officials killed in a shootout in western Georgia last month

    (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 7 February 2000), Georgia is now

    refusing to release another two Abkhaz taken prisoner in that

    incident until three Georgians held hostage in Abkhazia are

    freed, Caucasus Press reported on 8 February, citing the

    Georgia-based Abkhaz Security Ministry in exile. The three

    Georgians were taken prisoner during the fighting in

    Abkhazia's Gali raion in May 1998, and the relatives of one

    of them subsequently seized two Abkhaz whom they intended to

    trade for his release. Under the agreement signed in Sukhum

    on 3 February, the governments of Georgia and Abkhazia agreed

    on the release of all prisoners and hostages held by both

    sides, but the Abkhaz authorities subsequently claimed that

    some of the Georgians in question are convicted war criminals

    (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 and 7 February 2000). LF

    [05] WORKERS' MOVEMENT IN KAZAKHSTAN CALLS FOR GENERAL STRIKE

    Speaking at a press conference in Almaty on 7 February,

    Kazakhstan Workers' Movement leader Madel Ismailov called for

    a nationwide protest action on 29 February to demand the

    annulment of the 1995 presidential decree stipulating the

    preconditions for holding mass gatherings. Ismailov argued

    that the requirement that organizers of mass gatherings first

    obtain permission from local authorities to hold such

    meetings constitutes a violation of the constitutionally-

    guaranteed right to convene unarmed peaceful demonstrations.

    LF

    [06] SLAVS IN KAZAKHSTAN ADVOCATE ACCESSION TO RUSSIA-BELARUS

    UNION

    Meeting on 6 February in Almaty, representatives of

    the LAD movement, Kazakhstan's Cossacks, and the Communist

    Party of Kazakhstan adopted an open letter to Kazakhstan's

    President Nursultan Nazarbaev advocating that Kazakhstan join

    the Russia-Belarus Union, RFE/RL's correspondent in the

    former capital reported. They asked Nazarbaev to call a

    nationwide referendum on the issue. And they also appealed to

    public organizations asking them to collect signatures in

    support of their initiative. An article published on 26

    January in "Nezavisimaya gazeta" argued that while the

    Russia-Belarus Union state cannot restore the level of

    political and economic unity that characterized the USSR, the

    Eurasian Union, first proposed by Nazarbaev in 1994, could do

    so. The CIS, the Russia-Belarus Union, and the CIS Customs

    Union could ultimately merge to create such a Eurasian Union,

    the newspaper suggested. LF

    [07] 'ISLAMIC EXTREMISTS' DETAINED IN SOUTHERN KYRGYZSTAN

    Kyrgyzstan's Interior Ministry said on 7 February that nine

    members of the radical Islamist Khizbut Tahrir Movement were

    detained over the past week in southern Kyrgyzstan and

    several more in neighboring Jalalabad oblast, RFE/RL's

    Bishkek bureau reported. Interfax put the total number of

    arrests at 13. The detainees were distributing leaflets

    critical of Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov and calling

    for "changing the constitutional order" in the states of

    Central Asia, Interfax and RFE/RL reported. LF

    [08] U.S. WATCHDOG CRITICIZES KYRGYZ ELECTION PREPARATIONS

    In a

    10-page report released on 4 February, a mission from the

    National Democratic Institute warns that recent actions by

    all three branches of power in Kyrgyzstan suggest that the 20

    February parliamentary elections are unlikely to be free,

    fair, and democratic, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported.

    Specifically, the report notes the Justice Ministry's

    refusal, upheld in court, to register four popular parties to

    contest the poll and law suits brought against two deputies

    of the present parliament who are running for re-election.

    The report also notes that existing problems could be

    resolved before the elections if the Kyrgyz government

    observes the constitution, the spirit of the new election

    law, and international norms and standards. LF

    [09] NEW POLITICAL PARTY FOUNDED IN KYRGYZSTAN

    Some 40 people

    participated in the founding congress on 5 February of a new

    political party named Erk, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported.

    The head of the party's organizing committee, Adyl Kasymov,

    described its political orientation as "center-rightist." He

    said one of its primary objectives will be to assist young

    people who are seeking to acquire plots of land to build

    their own homes. Homeless young people in Bishkek staged

    several demonstrations last year to demand that the city

    authorities allow them to build homes on waste ground on the

    city outskirts (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 8 June and 10 August

    1999). LF

    [10] TEACHERS IN KYRGYZSTAN STILL OWED 1998 SALARIES

    Kyrgyzstan's

    Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture has admitted that

    the country's teachers are owed some 62 million soms (about

    $1.3 million) in salary arrears for 1999, RFE/RL's Bishkek

    bureau reported on 6 February. Some teachers have still not

    received their salaries for 1998. LF

    [11] TWO POLICE SHOT DEAD AT ELECTION RALLY IN TAJIKISTAN

    Bodyguards of Islamic Renaissance Party Chairman Said Abdullo

    Nuri shot and fatally wounded two Tajik police officials at

    an election rally in the northern town of Mastchoh on 6

    February, Asia Plus-Blitz reported. Nuri told journalists the

    following day that the police had opened fire when the

    bodyguards resisted their efforts to disarm them, while the

    Tajik Interior Ministry claimed that the bodyguards fired

    first. Interfax quoted Nuri as saying he is "satisfied" with

    the current social and political situation in the country. He

    predicted that his party will poll 30-35 percent of the vote

    in the 27 February elections to the lower chamber of the new

    parliament. LF

    [12] MORE EXPLOSIONS IN DUSHANBE

    Three small bombs exploded in

    quick succession in central Dushanbe on the evening of 7

    February, causing minor damage to buildings but no injuries.

    Investigators have detained one suspect, according to

    Interfax. LF

    [13] PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF TAJIK CENSUS RELEASED

    The population

    of Tajikistan currently stands at 6,105,300, which exceeds

    the count at the last census in 1989 by 1 million but is less

    than the 6.3 million the authorities had estimated, ITAR-TASS

    reported on 7 February, quoting State Statistical Agency

    Director Khabib Gaibullaev. The preliminary figure suggests

    that despite the outmigration of some 437,000 people (mostly

    ethnic Russians) in the period between the two censuses,

    Tajikistan has the world's highest rate of population growth.

    In the 1970s and 1980s, the Tajik SSR had the highest

    birthrate of any Soviet republic. The exodus of ethnic

    Russians is the primary reason why Dushanbe's population has

    decreased by some 60,000 and now totals 536,000, Gaibullaev

    said. He added that almost 20 percent of all homes in the

    capital are currently standing empty. LF

    [14] TURKMENISTAN POSTPONES SIGNING OF PSA WITH SHELL

    Shell and

    the Turkmen government have postponed indefinitely the

    signing of a production-sharing agreement on extracting gas

    from three deposits in eastern Turkmenistan, Interfax

    reported on 7 February, quoting an unnamed Turkmen government

    official. The signing of that document had originally

    scheduled been for 20 February. The official added that talks

    between the two sides on the terms of the agreement will

    continue. The gas in question is earmarked for export via the

    proposed Trans-Caspian pipeline. LF


    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [15] YUGOSLAV DEFENSE MINISTER SHOT DEAD

    An unknown gunman shot

    Pavle Bulatovic and wounded two other people as they were

    having dinner in the restaurant of a Belgrade stadium on 7

    February. The minister, who had occupied that post since

    1993, died of his wounds shortly afterward in a military

    hospital. The government then went into an emergency session

    and issued a statement in which it praised Bulatovic and his

    work as defense minister. The government condemned the

    assassination as a "terrorist act" and pledged "full support

    to the relevant state organs in their uncompromising struggle

    against terrorism." Bulatovic was a member of Montenegro's

    Socialist People's Party (SNP), which supports Yugoslav

    President Slobodan Milosevic. The minister was a close ally

    of federal Prime Minister Momir Bulatovic, who is also of an

    SNP member. The two men were not related. PM

    [16] SPECULATION ABOUNDS ON BULATOVIC MURDER

    The assassination of

    Bulatovic came just three weeks after the gangland-style

    slaying of another Milosevic supporter, namely warlord Zeljko

    Raznatovic Arkan (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report," 18 January

    2000). Bulatovic, however, was not a prominent leader but

    rather "an apparatchik," the BBC's Serbian Service commented.

    His death therefore has at best a "symbolic significance"

    from a political perspective. Some speculation centers on

    possible links between his death and growing tensions between

    Milosevic and the reformist leaders in Montenegro. Other

    observers note that Bulatovic's dinner partners were

    businessmen and suggest that his death may have been linked

    to Belgrade's murky world in which business, politics, and

    the underworld meet. One Montenegrin commentator told

    London's "The Guardian" that a "country in which the defense

    minister was killed like that in a restaurant is a real

    banana republic." PM

    [17] MESIC WINS CROATIAN PRESIDENCY

    Stipe Mesic of the governing

    coalition of four small parties defeated Drazen Budisa of the

    larger two-party coalition in the run-off election on 7

    February. Mesic took some 56 percent of the votes, while

    Budisa gained some 43 percent. Budisa conceded defeat soon

    after the first returns became public. The dapper and

    outspoken Mesic pledged to be "the president of all citizens

    of the Republic of Croatia" and to speed up his country's

    integration into the EU and NATO. He told reporters: "I would

    sum up our problem in three words: employment, employment,

    and employment," Reuters reported. Observers note that his

    election comes as a deep disappointment to ethnic Croatian

    hard-liners in Herzegovina, whose generous subsidies he has

    pledged to cut off or reduce. Mesic was a prominent

    politician in the last years of the former Yugoslavia but has

    since played a relatively minor role in Croatian politics. He

    is married to a woman of Serbian-Ukrainian background, whose

    family was killed by the pro-Axis regime during World War II.

    PM

    [18] GRANIC SEEKS TO 'TRANSFORM' DEFEATED CROATIAN PARTY

    Mate

    Granic, a former Croatian foreign minister who was defeated

    in the first round of the presidential elections, told

    "Vjesnik" of 8 February that he does not intend to found a

    Christian-democratic party (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 7 February

    2000). He added that "the era of the classic Christian-

    democratic parties has passed." Granic argued that his main

    goal is to "radically transform" the Croatian Democratic

    Community (HDZ), which governed from 1990 to 2000, into a

    "modern, European democratic party of the center." PM

    [19] KEY CROATIAN UNDERWORLD FIGURE ARRESTED

    The Zagreb office of

    Interpol said in a statement on 7 February that German police

    arrested Zoran Petrovic Ivica, who is regarded as a major

    figure in the Croatian underworld. He is wanted in Zagreb for

    several crimes, including murder. PM

    [20] MORE BOSNIAN ELECTRICITY FOR MONTENEGRO

    Edhem Bicakcic, who

    is prime minister of the mainly Muslim and Croatian Bosnian

    federation, signed an agreement in Herceg Novi with

    Montenegrin Prime Minister Filip Vujanovic. According to the

    text, Bosnia will continue to supply electric power to

    Montenegro until the end of 2000. Observers note that the

    reform-minded government in Podgorica has developed good

    relations with Sarajevo since President Milo Djukanovic took

    office in early 1998. PM

    [21] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT STARTS BRITISH VISIT

    Emil Constantinescu

    is to be received at Buckingham Palace on 8 February and will

    also conduct talks with British Premier Tony Blair, Romanian

    radio reported. The previous day, Constantinescu met with

    Foreign Affairs Secretary Robin Cook, Defense Secretary Geoff

    Horn, and International Development Secretary Clare Short to

    discuss his country's bid for integration into European and

    Atlantic structures and ways of boosting British investments

    in Romania. Constantinescu told a Royal Institute of

    International Affairs forum that Romania backs the U.K. and

    the German approach that the EU must be a "Europe of nations"

    in which each country must be able to safeguard its own

    identity. MS

    [22] ROMANIA, BULGARIA, REACH COMPROMISE ON DANUBE BRIDGE

    At a

    meeting in Brussels attended by EU Commissioner for

    Enlargement Guenter Verheugen, Bulgaria and Romania on 7

    February agreed to settle their long-standing dispute about

    the construction of a second bridge over the River Danube, an

    RFE/RL correspondent in Brussels reported. Romanian

    Transportation Minister Traian Basescu said after the meeting

    that his country will not participate in financing the

    project because it needs to direct all EU investments toward

    building its own infrastructure, but he noted that Romania

    may agree to use some funds for the construction of roads

    leading to the bridge. Bulgaria is to finance the

    construction alone, possibly securing funding from the Balkan

    Stability Pact and other sources. The two countries' premiers

    are to decide by 20 March where the bridge is to be located.

    MS

    [23] MOLDOVAN COMMUNISTS CONSOLIDATE TARACLIA VICTORY

    Three out

    of the four mayors elected in the 6 February local election

    runoffs in the Taraclia district are members of the Party of

    Moldovan Communists (PCM), while the fourth is an

    independent. The local elections have thus produced a total

    of six mayors from the PCM, two from the Democratic Agrarian

    Party, and two independents, RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau

    reported. MS

    [24] BULGARIA URGES AUSTRIA NOT TO BLOCK EU BID

    In a letter to

    Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel made available to

    Reuters on 7 February, Foreign Minster Nadezhda Mihailova

    urged Schuessel "to be the guarantor that your government

    will not obstruct EU enlargement to the east." Mihailova also

    asked him to ensure that the rights of thousands of

    Bulgarians living in Austria are not violated and that

    Austria will not reject Bulgaria's efforts to have the

    country taken off the list of states whose citizens are

    restricted by the Schengen accords in traveling within the

    EU. MS


    [C] END NOTE

    [25] THE VIKINGS MAKE A COMEBACK?

    By Mel Huang

    The acquisition by Nordic banking giant MeritaNordbanken

    of French bank Societe Generale's operations in Latvia and

    Lithuania in early January is the latest of several examples

    pointing to the economic monopoly that the rich Nordic states

    are securing over their less affluent Baltic neighbors. Since

    the restoration of independence more than eight years ago,

    the Nordic countries--especially Sweden and Finland--have

    come to play a major role in the economies of Estonia,

    Latvia, and Lithuania. However, concern is growing among

    local observers that this perceived Nordic dominance in the

    Baltics has scared off other foreign investors.

    Among the economic sectors, the Nordic role in the

    Baltics is perhaps most visible in banking.

    MeritaNordbanken's recent acquisition of Societe Generale

    branches comes after several years of Nordic banks'

    acquisitions in the Baltics. Sweden's ForeningsSparbanken

    (Swedbank) took over the largest banking establishment in the

    Baltics, Hansapank, in 1998. Not to be outdone, Sweden's

    Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB) took controlling stakes

    in large banks in each of the three Baltic states: Uhispank

    in Estonia, Unibanka in Latvia, and Vilniaus Bankas in

    Lithuania. The Baltic presence of the two Swedish banks

    expanded through several acquisitions and mergers.

    Several upcoming events in 2000 could allow Nordic banks

    to consolidate their hold over the Baltic banking sector.

    Lithuania is set to sell off stakes in its two remaining

    large state-owned banks, Zemes Ukio Bankas (Agricultural

    Bank) and market leader Taupomasis Bankas (Savings Bank).

    Latvia's banking market is poised for further consolidation,

    while the Estonian Central Bank has hinted it is willing to

    sell its large stake in the country's third-largest bank,

    Optiva Pank.

    In many other sectors, Nordic companies already have

    almost complete control, especially in public utilities. The

    three fixed-line telephone operators in the Baltics are

    controlled by their Nordic counterparts in Finland and

    Sweden. Energy companies such as Sweden's state-owned

    Vattenfall continue to express interest in the Baltic region.

    Vattenfall already owns several local heating and electric

    distributors and has been frantically purchasing all free-

    floating shares in Lithuania's power utility Lietuvos

    Energija on the Vilnius Bourse.

    However, the impact is strongest in Estonia, the country

    closest to both Finland and Sweden. Most of Estonia's larger

    companies have either a Finnish or Swedish owner or strategic

    investor. One of Estonia's most successful companies, the

    seatbelt maker Norma, was taken over by a Swedish company in

    late 1999. Estonia's main meatpacking company, Rakvere

    Lihakombinaat, is Finnish-owned, while the textiles giant

    Kreenholm in Narva was sold to the Swedes many years ago.

    So far this year there have already been two major

    acquisitions. Skanska, one of the largest construction

    companies in the world, purchased Estonia's EMV and

    immediately announced that it wants to move the stock off the

    Tallinn Bourse in order to assume 100 percent ownership.

    Also, a majority stake in Estonia's leading distillery Liviko

    was purchased by Finnish alcohol monopoly Remedia, which

    already owns the Estonian distillery Ofelia. The concern that

    the majority of Estonia's most successful companies will soon

    be foreign-owned increased when Finnish dairy company Valio

    recently announced its interest in acquiring Estonia's

    biggest dairy conglomerate, United Dairies.

    Despite some large investments by other European and

    North American businesses, the perceived dominance of Nordic

    companies in the Baltics serves to dampen the interest of

    firms from elsewhere. U.S. and Canadian companies have made

    inroads in the energy sector of all three Baltic countries

    but seem less interested in other sectors. German companies

    have slowly increased their investment in the region, most

    notably in the gas sector. Other European countries have been

    less active, either because of a lack of interest or the

    perception that the Baltics are the Nordic countries'

    backyard.

    The acquisition of Societe Generale's operations in the

    Baltics helps to strengthen such a perception. Latvia's

    Commercial Banking Association President Teodors Tverijons

    noted that "the expansion of the Scandinavian banks [into the

    Baltics] is growing because there are a lot more Finnish,

    Swedish, and Norwegian companies here than French companies."

    And, pointing to a Catch-22 situation, he added that it makes

    "no sense" for a French bank to open a branch in Latvia if

    there are no French companies there.

    08-02-00


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


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