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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 104, 00-05-30Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 4, No. 104, 30 May 2000 Report," Vol. 3, No. 21, 26 May 2000). LFCONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT REJECTS U.S. CRITICISM OF HUMAN RIGHTSSITUATION...In an address to the Azerbaijani people on 28 May, the anniversary of the 1918 Declaration of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, Heidar Aliev said that the U.S. Congress Helsinki Commission's criticism last week of the political and human rights situation in Azerbaijan was unfair and lacking objectivity, Turan reported. He said such organizations should instead focus on the violations of the rights of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis forced to flee their homes during the war over Nagorno-Karabakh. During a five-hour hearing convened by that commission in Washington on 25 May, prominent Azerbaijani opposition politicians accused the Azerbaijani leadership of establishing an authoritarian regime and rejecting amendments proposed by the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights to the election law currently being debated in parliament. They also claimed that there are 50 political prisoners in Azerbaijan. LF [02] ...SAYS TURKEY'S HELP NEEDED TO RESOLVE KARABAKH CONFLICTMeeting in Baku on 29 May with Turkish Foreign MinisterIsmail Cem, Aliev said he hopes for progress in resolving the Karabakh conflict, adding that the OSCE Minsk Group is expected to present a new draft peace plan shortly, Turan reported. Aliev said he plans to meet on the sidelines of the CIS June summit with his Armenian counterpart, Robert Kocharian, to continue their discussion of ways to resolve the conflict. In his radio address the previous day, Aliev said he and Kocharian had several times been close to resolving the conflict but that the "destructive position" of the Armenian side prevented a solution. He said Turkey's assistance is essential in order to resolve the conflict. Aliev also expressed the hope that recently elected Turkish President Ahmed Necet Sezer's first foreign visit will be to Azerbaijan. Cem, for his part, pledged Ankara's support in the Karabakh peace process and for Azerbaijan's full membership in the Council of Europe. LF [03] KYRGYZ JOURNALIST AWARDEDThe Washington-based InternationalWomen's Media Foundation has bestowed its prize for this year on Zamira Sadykova, founder of the opposition weekly newspaper "Res Publika," RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported on 29 May. The foundation noted Sadykova's courageous journalistic work under continued pressure and persecution from the Kyrgyz government. Sadykova has twice been sentenced to imprisonment for libel. "Res Publika" suspended publication two months ago after being fined for slander (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 3 April 2000). LF [04] NEW KYRGYZ PROSECUTOR-GENERAL VOWS CRACKDOWN ON CORRUPTIONChubak Abyshkaev told journalists in Bishkek on 29 May thathis priorities are fighting corruption, smuggling, and economic crime, Interfax and RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. He said a total of 213 government officials were arrested on charges of economic crime between January 1999 and March 2000 and that 164 criminal cases have been opened. He estimated the total financial damage to the state as a result of those crimes at 105 million soms (about $2.2 million). LF [05] KAZAKHSTAN'S PREMIER AGAIN BEMOANS SLOW-DOWN INPRIVATIZATIONQasymzhomart Toqaev told a cabinet meeting on 29 May that the pace of privatization must be stepped up, ITAR-TASS reported. He said revenues from privatization during the first three months of this year amounted to only 11 percent of the planned amount. Two weeks earlier, Finance Minister Mazhit Esenbaev had similarly told the parliament that the budget may collect only two thirds of planned privatization revenues this year as a result of the previous government's decision to drop four large metallurgical combines from the list of enterprises to be privatized. Toqaev called last month for an investigation into the activities of the previous heads of the Finance Ministry's Property and Privatization Committee (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 12 April 2000). LF [06] TAJIK PRESIDENT MEETS WITH UN OFFICIALSImomali Rakhmonovmet in Dushanbe on 29 May with UN Special representative for Tajikistan Ivo Petrov and newly appointed UN Development Program coordinator Matthew Kahane, Asia Plus-Blitz and ITAR- TASS reported. Petrov informed Rakhmonov that the UN Security Council failed at its 12 May session to reach a decision on the nature of the future UN presence in Tajikistan following the expiry of the mandate of its observer mission there. Echoing Petrov's 24 May statement that Tajikistan needs substantial economic aid (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 May 2000), Rakhmonov told Kahane that his agency should focus on job creation, developing agriculture, combatting drought and attracting foreign investment in Tajikistan. Rakhmonov and Petrov agreed that the UN should play a greater role in seeking to end the civil war in Afghanistan. LF [07] TURKMEN PRESIDENT REJECTS OSCE PLEA FOR CLEMENCY FORPOLITICAL PRISONERSVisiting Ashgabat on 29 May on the first leg of a tour of the Central Asian states, Austrian Foreign Minister and OSCE chairwoman in office Benita Ferrero-Waldner asked President Saparmurat Niyazov to release Mukhametkuli Aymuradov and Shagildy Atakov, according to an RFE/RL correspondent travelling with the OSCE delegation. Aymuradov was sentenced in 1995 to 15 years imprisonment on charges of activities aimed at overthrowing the constitutional order, while Atakov was imprisoned last year on charges of swindling, which the OSCE considers were fabricated in retaliation for his involvement with a Baptist congregation. In addition, Ferrero-Waldner raised the case of Pirkuly Tanrykuliev and Nurberdy Nurmamedov, who have also been jailed for their political engagement. She expressed disappointment after the meeting at Niyazov's rejection of her plea for clemency. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[08] MONTENEGRO NOT TO ARREST MILOSEVICMontenegrin Premier FilipVujanovic said in Podgorica that "no one in Yugoslavia, Montenegro, or the international community could seriously expect Montenegrin authorities to arrest [Yugoslav President] Slobodan Milosevic and extradite him to The Hague," AP reported on 30 May. Vujanovic added, however, that he hopes Milosevic will not visit the mountainous republic "in the near future." The prime minister's statement comes in response to recent remarks by a prominent Montenegrin supporter of Milosevic that the Yugoslav president has accepted an invitation to visit Montenegro and that Milosevic's backers know the Montenegrin government will be under international pressure to arrest him (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 29 May 2000). Elsewhere, Miodrag Vukovic, who is an aide to Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic, said that any visit by Milosevic to Montenegro would be a "provocation," "Vesti" reported on 30 May. Vukovic added that Milosevic should come to Montenegro only as a private citizen and not expect to be officially welcomed as president. PM [09] SERBIAN STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES IN MONTENEGROVujanovic metin Podgorica on 29 May with unnamed representatives of the Serbian Otpor (Resistance) student movement. One Otpor member told the private Beta news agency that the Montenegrin authorities regard Otpor as "one of the democratic forces in Serbia." The Montenegrin authorities have met previously with many Serbian opposition leaders and provided them with refuge and moral support. But Djukanovic and other Montenegrin leaders have stressed that the Serbs must democratize Serbia by themselves (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 26 May 2000). PM [10] DID IVANOV SNUB SERBIAN OPPOSITION?This is the question thatthe private Belgrade daily "Danas" asked on its front page on 30 May, following the visit of several top Serbian opposition leaders to Moscow the previous day (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 29 May 2000). The leaders met with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Avdeev, but Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov was "too busy" to see them, Reuters quoted unnamed Foreign Ministry officials as saying. The ministry issued a statement calling for "the prompt return of the Studio B television station to its owner, [which is] the Belgrade city council." Representatives of the opposition Yabloko party discussed the current situation in Yugoslavia with the visitors and called on the Russian president and government to "support human rights in Yugoslavia," "Danas" reported. The daily "Izvestiya" criticized the Foreign Ministry for what it called "supporting Milosevic," "Vesti" reported. PM [11] SERBIAN OPPOSITION TO REORGANIZE?Vladan Batic, who is one ofthe leaders of the Alliance for Change, said in Belgrade on 29 May that the opposition's disappointingly small rally there two days earlier may be the "swan song" of the opposition in its present form (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 29 May 2000). Batic argued that the opposition may need to "regroup" if it continues to remain ineffective and unable to agree on a common platform, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. He did not elaborate. PM [12] BOSNIAN SERB LEADER IN THE HAGUECooperation between BanjaLuka and the Hague-based war crimes tribunal was on the agenda of talks between Republika Srpska Prime Minister Milorad Dodik and the tribunal's president, Claude Jorda, on 29 May. This is the first visit by a top Bosnian Serb official to the tribunal. Dodik also met with unnamed indicted war criminals at a seaside prison. The Bosnian Serb leader said that the tribunal must demonstrate that it seeks to determine responsibility for war crimes committed by individuals of any nationality. He argued that many Serbs regard it as an anti-Serbian "political tribunal" and feel that the "whole [Serbian] nation is on trial here," AP reported. Dodik added that peacekeepers in Bosnia should arrest former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic, both of whom have been indicted by the tribunal, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. PM [13] ANOTHER MASS GRAVE FOUND NEAR SREBRENICAAmor Masovic, whoheads the Bosnian government's commission on missing persons from the 1992-1995 war, said in Sarajevo on 29 May that experts have found the remains of some 80 people in a forest between Srebrenica and Bratunac. He added that identification of the bodies will begin in approximately three weeks. PM [14] IRANIANS DROWN TRYING TO REACH CROATIAA Bosnian Serb policespokesman said in Banja Luka on 30 May that police have found the bodies of four Iranians in the Sava River and that an unspecified additional number of Iranians are believed to be hiding on Bosnian Serb territory. The spokesman ruled out any terrorist links, adding that the Iranians sought to reach Croatia and Italy via Bosnia, AP reported. Meanwhile on an Italian ship off the Istrian coast, Croatian police found 240 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of nearly $9 million, Reuters reported on 29 May. The Croats acted on a tip from U.S. drug authorities. PM [15] KOUCHNER WANTS KOSOVA'S SERBS TO REGISTER FOR ELECTIONSBernard Kouchner, who heads the UN's civilian administrationin Kosova, said in Sofia on 29 May that he hopes the Serbian authorities will allow Serbian refugees from Kosova to register with UN officials there by 11 July. He added that he also hopes to convince Serbs inside and outside Kosova that it is in their interest to register and vote. Several local Serbian leaders have called for a boycott of the registration process until the UN and NATO guarantee the safety of Kosova's Serbian minority and enable the refugees to return. Kouchner has said repeatedly that organizing local elections in the fall is one of his top priorities. PM [16] KOSOVA SERBS ANGRY AFTER KILLINGSAn unidentified personshot and killed three Serbs, including a four-year-old boy, in Cernica on 28 May. Two additional Serbs are being treated for wounds at the nearby U.S. Camp Bondsteel. A NATO spokesman said in Prishtina that an ethnic Albanian suspect remains at large. Almost all of Cernica's 600 Serbian inhabitants attended the funeral of the three victims the following day. The villagers were "distraught and angry," AP reported. Moderate Kosovar Serb leader Momcilo Trajkovic said that "it is high time" for Serbs to reconsider their continued participation in Kouchner's interim administrative council. In Mitrovica, local Serb leader Oliver Ivanovic told a protest meeting of about 1,000 Serbs that Serbs in Kosova must "guard their own houses and streets." KFOR strictly forbids the formation of local paramilitary groups. PM [17] ALBANIA, BULGARIA TO CRACK DOWN ON CRIMEPresident RexhepMeidani and his Bulgarian counterpart, Petar Stoyanov, agreed in Tirana on 29 May to step up cooperation in combating prostitution, drug trafficking, and other crimes affecting their two countries. Stoyanov discussed with several top Albanian officials improved coordination on joint projects within the framework of the EU's Stability Pact. On 30 May, Stoyanov is slated to visit the port of Durres, which will be linked to Macedonia, Bulgaria, and Turkey by an east-west highway to be built largely with EU funds. PM [18] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT ORDERS INVESTIGATION INTO INVESTMENTCRISISSpeaking on Romanian Radio on 29 May, President Emil Constantinescu said he has ordered the government to open an investigation into the circumstances that prompted the collapse of the National Investment Fund (FNI) and the illegal withdrawal of deposits from the fund after it had been temporarily closed. He said he had ordered the Intelligence Service to investigate whether the crisis is "jeopardizing national security" and whether it had been purposely provoked. Ruling coalition parties and the opposition have accused each other of having provoked the crisis. As thousands of people demonstrated in various cities to demand the return of their investments in the FNI, a rumor prompted withdrawal demands from account holders with the Commercial Bank. Bank officials gave assurances that the bank is not in danger of collapsing. MS [19] COMMISSION ENDS DRAFTING AMENDMENTS TO MOLDOVANCONSTITUTIONThe joint commission on drafting amendments to the constitution has ended its work, having reached compromises among its members on most of the points on the agenda, RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau reported on 29 May. The commission, which is composed of three representatives of the parliament, three of the president and one of the Council of Europe's Venice Commission of constitutional experts told journalists that some points remain to be decided by the parliament. The commission is recommending that the legislature vote confidence in the premier instead of the government as a whole and that the formation of the government follow his being installed in office. The premier is to be appointed by the president and present the government team to the president for approval. The cabinet does not need to have its program approved by the parliament before it is sworn in. Venice Commission representative Giorgio Malinverni said the proposed system resembles "the [semi-presidential] French system." MS [20] MOLDOVAN PRESIDENT BACKS ILASCU GROUP JUDICIAL RETRIAL INTHIRD COUNTRYPresidential spokesman Anatol Golea on 29 May said that President Petru Lucinschi considers the idea of having the case of the Tiraspol-imprisoned group reviewed in a third, OSCE-member country to be "a reasonable compromise," RFE/ RL's Chisinau bureau reported. Romania recently proposed that the case be retried in Poland (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 29 May 2000). MS [21] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT URGES LAWMAKERS TO REVIEW LENGTH OFMILITARY SERVICEPetar Stoyanov on 29 April asked the parliament to reconsider a recent law shortening military service, AP reported. He said his intervention was prompted by Bulgarian military leaders' opposition to the law. Under the new law, as of 1 October 2001 service is to be cut to nine months for most soldiers and six months for those with a university degree. In 1998, military service was reduced from 18 months to 12 months and from 12 months to nine months for university graduates. MS [22] EU SIGNS LOAN FOR BULGARIAN NUCLEAR MODERNIZATIONPedroSolbes, EU commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, has signed a $212 million loan approved last month for the modernization of the Kozloduy nuclear power plant, dpa reported on 29 May. The same day, the Bulgarian River Shipping Corporation warned that the country's idle Danube ship owners will not survive more delays in clearing the Yugoslav section of the river, AP reported. The corporation's executive director, Dimitar Stanchev, said the ship owners cannot survive another winter like the last one. His remarks were prompted by an earlier statement of a Danube Commission official, who had said in Budapest that the reopening of the waterway navigation system will be delayed by one year. MS [C] END NOTE[23] PUTIN'S 'PERESTROIKA' UNDERMINES RUSSIAN CONSTITUTIONBy Donald N. JensenIn an article in the 11 May issue of the newspaper "Sovetskaya Rossiya," legal scholar Georgii Shakhnazarov offers proposals for constitutional reform that deserve serious consideration as President Vladimir Putin seeks to rework the Russian political system. Shakhnazarov, currently with the Gorbachev Foundation and formerly an adviser to the former Soviet president, has in the past argued that the Russian Constitution should be amended to reduce the strong powers the president enjoys. Now he turns that argument on its head. Russia's problem, he argues, is not that the president is too powerful. The country, according to Shakhnazarov, needs such a chief executive and voters support that. Unfortunately, a strong parliament and judiciary do not balance the presidency, and consequently there is no real system of checks and balances. Shakhnazarov proposes expanding Article 80, Paragraph 3 of the constitution, under which the president "defines the basic guidelines for the state's domestic and foreign policy" to include the Federal Assembly. The government would be made more accountable to the legislature. The role of the bloated presidential administration, in recent years a powerful political force, would be curtailed. The only direct constitutional reduction of the president's powers, according to Shakhnazarov's proposals, would be the simplification of the impeachment process, virtually impossible under the current system. Such changes, Shakhnazarov argues, would help Putin restore the "normal legal order" for which Russian society is yearning. They also would help the new president achieve the policy goals he has established. Shakhnazarov's proposed amendments are unlikely to receive much attention in the Kremlin. Having inherited a flawed constitution designed to codify the personal authority of his predecessor, Putin has preferred to revise that document through legislation and presidential decrees rather than by the complicated amendment process. In most constitutional systems, Putin's ambitious plans--to alter the composition of the Federation Council, reorganize the country into seven super-regions administered by presidential appointees, and streamline the mechanism for removing local governors--would be fundamental enough to require constitutional amendment and months of national debate. The Putin administration correctly, though unwisely, argues that in Russia this restructuring does not require constitutional amendment. Such changes, however, drastically shift the balance of power between the center and the regions. If they are ordered from above, rather than resulting from amendments to the constitution or through a referendum, they are far more likely not to work as intended, if they take hold at all. This approach further diminishes the rule of law. Another problem is that Putin's "perestroika" seems to reflect a vertical view of political power that routinely relies on strong--sometimes coercive--executive authority to attain its goals. This orientation, as social scientist Virginie Coulloudon has recently pointed out, is shared by many Russian elites, from the new president to Anatolii Chubais. Even if its goals, such as a free market, are laudable, it reflects suspicion of political pluralism, the separation of powers (which would be strengthened by Shakhnazarov's proposals), and the resolution of conflicts through negotiation and consensus. In this regard one of the most interesting aspects of Putin's proposals to bring the regional governors to heel has been the extent to which it has been welcomed by so-called "democrats" in the Moscow establishment. While many regional governors are indeed corrupt, as these supporters of centralization point out, they probably are less so than numerous officials in Moscow, where the temptations are far greater. Moreover, if the goal of the federal reorganization is to improve local governance, subordinating the governors to the Kremlin is likely to be less effective than making the regional leaders more accountable to their local constituencies. The current Russian Constitution, like basic laws elsewhere, seeks to balance liberty and order. Thus, the government embraces the principles of popular consent, the separation of powers, and federalism. Popular consent was expressed by the direct election of the State Duma. The sharing of political authority among three branches of the federal government was intended to reduce the prospects for tyranny. Federalism gave both national and regional governments independent authority. In such systems, political conflict is intended to be--and usually is--healthy. These principles have never had deep roots in Russia. The many flaws in the current constitution--including the imbalances that Shakhnazarov discusses--have further impaired such values. On 24 May, Sergei Medvedev, Putin's first deputy chief of staff, expressed his high regard for the country's constitution and added that the "political regime in Russia was and is democratic." At the same time, he urged the Duma to pass the president's federal reorganization passage to stabilize the situation in the country and restore the vertical hierarchy of power. The problem for Putin is that stability is not usually ensured by centralizing power. And even when the constitution is deeply flawed, such an approach is rarely more legitimate or effective. The author is associate director of RFE/RL's Broadcasting Division. 30-05-00 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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