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RFE/RL Newsline, 07-07-18
CONTENTS
[01] RUSSIA WARNS EU AGAINST SOLIDARITY WITH BRITAIN
[02] EU GIVES 'LUKEWARM' BACKING TO U.K. IN EXTRADITION AFFAIR
[03] RUSSIAN MINISTER OPPOSES 'RESTRICTIONS' AGAINST U.K. COMPANIES
[04] DID RUSSIAN BOMBERS HEAD FOR SCOTLAND?
[05] ESTONIANS SAY PUTIN SNUBBED THEM
[06] REPORT CLAIMS HALF MILLION YOUNG PEOPLE BELONG TO EXTREMIST GROUPS
[07] FEDERAL OFFICIAL ASSESSES ABDUCTIONS IN NORTH OSSETIA
[08] EXPLOSION KILLS FOUR POLICE OFFICERS IN DAGHESTAN
[09] RULING PARTY CLAIMS ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER'S ELECTION VICTORY
'INEVITABLE'
[10] HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH SOUNDS ALARM OVER AZERBAIJANI MEDIA CRACKDOWN
[11] GEORGIAN JOURNALISTS APPEAL TO PRESIDENT OVER RESTRICTIONS ON
REPORTING TRIALS
[12] GEORGIAN OPPOSITION TO LOBBY FOR CHANGES TO ELECTION LAW
[13] GEORGIANS PROTEST PRICE HIKES
[14] ELECTION-OBSERVER MISSIONS OPEN OFFICIAL OFFICES IN KAZAKHSTAN
[15] TAJIK RAILWAY OFFICIAL ACCUSES UZBEKISTAN OF DELAYING TRAINS
[16] TURKMEN PRESIDENT EXPLORES ENERGY DEAL DURING VISIT TO CHINA
[17] UZBEK REFUGEES DETAINED IN CZECH REPUBLIC
[18] BELARUSIAN PRESIDENT SACKS KGB CHIEF
[19] UKRAINIAN AUTHORITIES CLAIM TO HAVE AFTERMATH OF PHOSPHORUS TRAIN
DERAILMENT UNDER CONTROL
[20] EU WANTS TALKS ON KOSOVA EVEN WITHOUT UN RESOLUTION...
[21] ...BUT RUSSIA'S STANCE REMAINS UNCLEAR
[22] KOSOVAR ALBANIANS SAY NEW APPROACH NEEDED
[23] SERBIA SAYS ECONOMICS 'KEY' TO TIES WITH BOSNIA...
[24] ...AND OPPOSES LINKAGE OF KOSOVA'S, REPUBLIKA SRPSKA'S STATUS
[25] INCIDENCE OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING STEADY IN KOSOVA
[26] BRITAIN INTERCEPTS WEAPONS EN ROUTE FROM IRAN TO AFGHANISTAN
[27] FORMER REBEL COMMANDER AND 38 MEN JOIN AFGHAN PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT
[28] U.S. DONATES $26 MILLION TO UN FOOD PROGRAM FOR AFGHAN ASSISTANCE
[29] AFGHANISTAN'S OPIUM PRODUCTION SETS NEW RECORD, SAYS U.S.
AMBASSADOR
[30] U.S. RESEARCH BODY REJECTS 'FORCED' CONFESSIONS IN IRAN
[31] TURKEY TO TRANSPORT IRANIAN GAS TO EUROPE
[32] TEHRAN POLICE CHIEF CONFIRMS SECURITY DRIVE WILL CONTINUE
[33] IRAN MAY RETURN TO TALKS WITH U.S. ON IRAQ
[34] OMANI MINISTER CONFIDENT OF IRANIAN NUCLEAR PLANT'S SAFETY
[35] IRAQI SHI'ITE, SUNNI GROUPS CONDEMN KIRKUK BOMBING
[36] IRAQI KURDISH LEADER SAYS KIRKUK ATTACK WAS AIMED AGAINST
NORMALIZATION
[37] UNKNOWN GUNMEN KILL 29 VILLAGERS IN CENTRAL IRAQ
[38] MIGRATION GROUP SAYS DISPLACEMENT IN IRAQ IS BECOMING CRITICAL
[39] U.S. FORCES DETAIN AL-QAEDA IN IRAQ LEADER IN MOSUL
[40] THERE IS NO END NOTE TODAY
Wednesday, July 18, 2007 Volume 11 Number 130
Russia
[01] RUSSIA WARNS EU AGAINST SOLIDARITY WITH BRITAIN
Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Grushko said on July 17 that Russia
will announce "very soon...[its] targeted and adequate" reaction to
British measures in response to Moscow's refusal to extradite Andrei
Lugovoi, the prime suspect in the 2006 London poisoning death of former
Russian security officer Aleksandr Litvinenko, international media
reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 11, 12, 13, and 17, 2007).
Grushko added that Russia "will take into account the interests of
ordinary citizens: tourists, participants in cultural and scientific
exchanges, and members of the business community. We do not want them
to suffer as a result of London's political actions." He argued that
"Russia...[previously] requested the extradition [from Britain] of 21
Russian citizens, including [self-exiled oligarch Boris] Berezovsky,
who has called for the overthrow of the current government in
Russia.... None of them has been extradited. Had Russia taken the same
path [of expulsions] that was chosen by London, I think the British
Embassy [in Moscow] would have lost 80 diplomats by now." Grushko
suggested that Russia might now find it difficult to cooperate with
Britain in some areas of mutual concern, such as fighting terrorism. He
also said that "Britain will appeal to EU solidarity. We hope that
common sense will prevail within the EU and that its members will not
give in to attempts to turn relations between Russia and the EU into a
tool to achieve unilateral political goals. These have nothing in
common with the EU's and Russia's real partnership interests." In
London, a spokesman for the Foreign Office said that no retaliation by
Russia would be justified. PM
[02] EU GIVES 'LUKEWARM' BACKING TO U.K. IN EXTRADITION AFFAIR
Speaking in Berlin during British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's visit
on July 16, Chancellor Angela Merkel noted the seriousness of the
issues involved in the Litvinenko case and expressed understanding for
Britain's position, the "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" reported on
July 18. She also noted Russia's importance for the EU member states
and said she hopes that the dispute will be resolved soon. Some unnamed
officials at the Foreign Ministry, which is controlled by former
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats (SPD), believe that
London "overreacted" in expelling four Russian diplomats and tightening
some visa procedures, Britain's "The Guardian" reported on July 18. The
paper suggested that "Britain failed to win the immediate, concerted
response it was seeking [from other EU member states]. The Foreign
Office had wanted a quick statement from the Portuguese, who hold the
EU Presidency, that would express a united European position.... But
late [on July 17], the Portuguese prime minister, Jose Socrates, had
been unable to find a consensus among his fellow leaders." The daily
noted that a statement might come soon, "but the delay may have
weakened its impact. Meanwhile, the Portuguese foreign minister, Luis
Amado, repeatedly emphasized that the matter was 'a bilateral issue'
between Britain and Russia." France, however, strongly supports
London's position. The London daily quoted Katinka Barysch, deputy
director of the London-based Centre for European Reform, as saying that
"at some point, the EU needs to stand up and say: 'Russia can do
whatever it wants in Russia, but on our territory you have to play by
our rules.'" Mark Leonard, director of the European Council on Foreign
Relations, argued that Britain has been less successful than Russia in
persuading its European partners of the merits of its case. "Quite a
lot of people are convinced by the Russian argument that we lecture
them about the rule of law, and now we're asking them to overrule their
own constitution," he said. The Russian Constitution prohibits the
extradition of Russian citizens. Britain's "The Times" wrote on July 17
that "while many world leaders might privately applaud the British
move, few would envy being engaged in a scrap with President [Vladimir]
Putin, who has earned the reputation as one of the toughest players on
the global stage." PM
[03] RUSSIAN MINISTER OPPOSES 'RESTRICTIONS' AGAINST U.K. COMPANIES
Natural Resources Minister Yury Trutnev said in Moscow on July 17 that
there is no reason to review agreements with British companies working
in Russia. He argued that it does "not make sense to impose
restrictions that would affect the investment climate" in connection
with the Lugovoi extradition dispute, international media reported.
Viktor Kremenyuk, who is deputy director of the Institute of United
States and Canada of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said the Kremlin
should avoid escalating the conflict by responding with more expulsions
or other sanctions. He also questioned why the British government has
taken that course. Kremenyuk said he "cannot understand why the British
government has decided to turn this more or less usual criminal case
into a political one. Why does one former KGB officer killing another
deserve this attention?" Several British media outlets called attention
on July 18 to the relatively low-key public statements by some Russian
officials in comparison to the tough language in some Russian dailies
on July 17. "Izvestia" wrote on July 17 that Britain already has its
hands full fighting terrorists and does not need to open a "second
front" against Russia. "Vremya novostei" suggested that "London is
deliberately aggravating" relations that are already bad. PM
[04] DID RUSSIAN BOMBERS HEAD FOR SCOTLAND?
On July 18, Britain's "The Times" reported that two Royal Air Force
Tornado fighter jets scrambled the previous day to intercept two
Russian Tu-95 "Bear" intercontinental bombers apparently headed for
Scotland from the Kola Peninsula. The Bears were shadowed by two F-16
fighter jets of the Royal Norwegian Air Force and turned back for home
before reaching British airspace. The paper noted that there was no
clear connection between the incident and the Lugovoi affair, but added
that such incidents are unusual. The daily wrote that "the Russian
military engaged in some old-fashioned saber-rattling," and that "the
spirit of the Cold War returned to the North Atlantic once again." The
Russian website newsru.com pointed out on July 18 that Bears "are a
symbol of the Cold War." On July 18, Colonel General Aleksandr Zelin,
who heads the Russian Air Force, said that the two Bears were on a
normal training mission and not heading for British airspace, Interfax
reported. He added that Russian long-range aviation "is getting back on
its feet" following what he called difficulties stemming from a fuel
shortage. PM
[05] ESTONIANS SAY PUTIN SNUBBED THEM
"The Moscow Times" on July 18 quoted unnamed Estonian politicians and
diplomats as saying that President Putin deliberately snubbed Tallinn
by inviting Finnish President Tarja Halonen and Hungarian Prime
Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany to a Finno-Ugric festival in Saransk on July
19, but no top Estonian official (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 17,
2007). Estonia will be represented by the cultural attache of its
embassy in Moscow. Marko Mihkelson, chairman of the Estonian
parliament's European Affairs Committee, told the Moscow daily by
telephone that this is another attempt by the Kremlin to drive a wedge
between EU member states. He said that "it seems quite obvious that the
people who wrote the invitations did not just forget Estonia but left
it out on purpose." Estonia, Finland, and Hungary are the only three
countries with mainly Finno-Ugric populations. PM
[06] REPORT CLAIMS HALF MILLION YOUNG PEOPLE BELONG TO EXTREMIST GROUPS
The daily "Novye izvestia" wrote on July 17 that it has "obtained a
copy of the Moscow Human Rights Bureau report on youth extremism in
Russia...[which says that] Russia has 141 active youth groups of an
extremist nature, with a total of around half a million members" (see
"RFE/RL Newsline," August 24, 2006, and July 16, 2007). The study
demonstrates that "extremist youth groups exist in all major cities,
their numbers are growing, and they are becoming more organized and
politicized. The Levada Center polling agency confirms that such an
upswing in extremist attitudes among young people has not been recorded
since 1988." The Moscow Human Rights Bureau report suggests that the
groups "are mostly concentrated in large cities in the Central,
Northwestern, and Urals federal districts. The Moscow region and St.
Petersburg have particularly high numbers of extremists." PM
[07] FEDERAL OFFICIAL ASSESSES ABDUCTIONS IN NORTH OSSETIA
Presidential envoy to the Southern Federal District Dmitry Kozak told
journalists on July 17 that the existence of an organized group in
North Ossetia that routinely abducts Ingush in retaliation for the
September 2004 school hostage-taking in Beslan is just one of several
possible explanations for those disappearances, according to RIA
Novosti as summarized by kavkaz-uzel.ru. Kozak's deputy Suleiman
Vagapov recently publicized that hypothesis (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"
July 17, 2007). Kozak, however, suggested that some abductions could
have been staged, given the speed with which the relatives of the
abducted person are informed of what has happened, kavkaz-uzel.ru
reported, but he added that it is "too early to jump to conclusions."
Kozak also said that a special group has been established composed of
federal and local prosecutor's office and Interior Ministry officials
to investigate abductions in the border region between North Ossetia
and Ingushetia. Meanwhile, the human-rights organization Memorial has
addressed separate open letters to North Ossetian President Taymuraz
Mamsurov and Russian Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika asking them to take
immediate measures to investigate the unending series of abductions of
Ingush in North Ossetia's disputed Prigorodny Raion and Vladikavkaz,
kavkaz-uzel.ru reported on July 18. LF
[08] EXPLOSION KILLS FOUR POLICE OFFICERS IN DAGHESTAN
Four policemen were killed and up to eight more injured early on July
18 when an explosive device detonated in the gymnasium of a school in
the town of Kizilyurt where they were exercising, Russian media
reported. LF
Transcaucasia And Central Asia
[09] RULING PARTY CLAIMS ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER'S ELECTION VICTORY
'INEVITABLE'
During a public debate in Yerevan on July 17 with Nikol Pashinian, one
of the leaders of the opposition Aylentrank (Alternative) movement,
Armen Ashotian, who is a leading member of Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisian's Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), said there can be no
doubt that Sarkisian will win the presidential election due in early
2008, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reported. Incumbent President Robert
Kocharian is barred by the constitution from seeking a third
consecutive term. Pashinian for his part argued that Sarkisian could
win only if the election outcome is rigged, but at the same time he
admitted that the opposition will only be able to prevent that scenario
if it closes ranks behind a single candidate. Aylentrank favors former
President Levon Ter-Petrossian who, however, has not indicated any
interest in trying to make a political comeback nine years after his
forced resignation (see "RFE/RL Newsline," June 15 and July 9, 2007).
LF
[10] HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH SOUNDS ALARM OVER AZERBAIJANI MEDIA CRACKDOWN
Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Ross met in Baku on 16-17
July with presidential administration head Ramiz Mehtiyev, Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, OSCE Office head Jose Luis Herrero, and
opposition and human-rights activists, zerkalo.az and day.az reported.
During his talks with Azerbaijani officials, Ross focused on what HRW
termed the marked deterioration in recent years with regard to media
freedom in Azerbaijan, and he called on President Ilham Aliyev to
pardon and release the seven journalists currently serving prison
terms. At the same time, he said their release alone would not serve to
bring about the desired improvement. Ross also met with Interior
Minister Ramil Usubov, to whom he complained about the widespread
torture of suspects by police, day.az reported. Ross said that his
organization has extensive data on such mistreatment, but that only in
a handful of instances has legal action been taken against the
policemen responsible. LF
[11] GEORGIAN JOURNALISTS APPEAL TO PRESIDENT OVER RESTRICTIONS ON
REPORTING TRIALS
The daily "Rezonansi" on July 17 published an open letter to President
Mikheil Saakashvili from a group of journalists concerned at the
implications of a new law prohibiting video recordings and photo
coverage of ongoing trials. The signatories recall that Saakashvili
headed the parliament's Constitutional and Legal Affairs Committee in
1997 when parliament first enacted legislation permitting such coverage
and incurred criticism for supporting that innovation. They appealed to
Saakashvili to veto the law, which the parliament passed in the third
and final reading on July 11 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 12, 2007),
saying that by doing so he would prove his commitment to democratic
principles and...freedom of expression." LF
[12] GEORGIAN OPPOSITION TO LOBBY FOR CHANGES TO ELECTION LAW
The leaders of five Georgian opposition parties -- the New Rightists
(aka New Conservatives), the Republican Party, the Conservative Party,
the Labor Party, and Industry Will Save Georgia -- signed in Tbilisi on
July 16 a memorandum calling for fundamental changes in the existing
election law, Caucasus Press reported. They advocated that the number
of parliament deputies be reduced from 235 to 150, of whom 50 would be
elected in single-mandate constituencies; that political parties be
permitted to nominate members of the central and regional election
commissions; and that the threshold for parliamentary representation
under the proportional system be lowered from 7 to 5 percent.
Conservative Party leader Kakha Kukava reasoned that those proposals,
if implemented, would help to create equal conditions for all parties
and candidates in the parliamentary and presidential elections to be
held in the fall of 2008. LF
[13] GEORGIANS PROTEST PRICE HIKES
Some 1,000 people congregated on July 17 outside the Tbilisi Municipal
Administration building to protest the doubling of public transport
tariffs on July 1, an increase in gas prices, and the abolition of some
social benefits, Caucasus Press reported. The protest was organized by
the opposition groups Kartuli Dasi (Georgian Group), Tavisupleba
(Liberty), and Chven Tviton (We Ourselves). LF
[14] ELECTION-OBSERVER MISSIONS OPEN OFFICIAL OFFICES IN KAZAKHSTAN
At a press conference in Astana, Lubomir Kopaj, the head of the OSCE's
Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR)
election-observer mission, announced on July 17 the opening of an
official office in Kazakhstan, ITAR-TASS reported. The initial OSCE
presence comprises 19 experts and 36 long-term observers based in
Almaty and Astana, with some of the more than 400 short-term observers
to be deployed in the regions once they arrive in Kazakhstan. In
separate comments at a press conference in Astana, Vladimir Garkun, the
deputy head of the CIS election-monitoring mission, also announced on
July 17 the establishment of a formal office in the country. The CIS
team includes another 400 observers preparing to monitor the August 18
elections to the Mazhilis, or lower house of the Kazakh parliament. In
a special ceremony in Astana the same day, Central Election Commission
Chairman Kuandyk Turgankulov formally welcomed the CIS monitors,
promising that "state bodies and volunteers will provide [all] the
necessary logistic and technical support," and invited them to attend
meetings of the election commission. The CIS mission is to be formally
led by Vladimir Rushailo, CIS executive secretary and former head of
the Russian National Security Council. The Central Election Commission
has already initiated the accreditation process for foreign observers
(see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 13, 2007), following a formal request for
an ODIHR observer mission to monitor the election (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," July 2, 2007). RG
[15] TAJIK RAILWAY OFFICIAL ACCUSES UZBEKISTAN OF DELAYING TRAINS
The deputy head of the Tajik state railway agency, Narzikhon Zaripov,
accused Uzbekistan on July 16 of causing widespread delays along
Tajikistan's 950-kilometer railway network, according to Asia-Plus.
Speaking to reporters in Dushanbe, Zaripov explained that some 94
percent of all trains arriving in Tajikistan suffer from varying delays
resulting from "long, unauthorized inspections" conducted by the Uzbek
authorities. All international rail routes entering and exiting
Tajikistan run through Uzbekistan, making the Tajik railway network
seriously vulnerable to any delays on the Uzbek side of the border. The
same day, another Tajik Railways official, Vladimir Sobkalov, informed
journalists in Dushanbe that Tajikistan is actively seeking investors
interested in financing the modernization of the rail system and the
purchase of new diesel locomotives. He noted that the Chinese are
especially interested in acquiring a dominant share of the country's
railway network, although he warned that such a proposal "is
unacceptable for Tajikistan," adding that Tajikistan is also
negotiating with other companies, including Ukrainian investors.
Tajikistan's rolling-stock includes some 1,800 cargo cars, 342
passenger carriages and 57 diesel locomotives, although many remain in
serious need of repair and modernization. RG
[16] TURKMEN PRESIDENT EXPLORES ENERGY DEAL DURING VISIT TO CHINA
President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov arrived on an official two-day
state visit to China on July 17 and met with Chinese President Hu
Jintao the same day, ITAR-TASS and Turkmen Television reported. During
the meeting with his Chinese counterpart and other senior officials,
the Turkmen president discussed measures aimed at expanding bilateral
economic cooperation and reviewed plans for the construction of a
natural-gas pipeline from Turkmenistan to China. Most significantly,
Berdymukhammedov signed a contract with China's largest oil company,
China National Petroleum Corporation, for the export of 30 billion
cubic meters of Turkmen natural gas annually to China for a 30-year
period, AP reported. Prior to his arrival in Beijing, Berdymukhammedov
hailed the visit as an "important event in the implementation of the
main priorities of Turkmenistan's foreign policy" and pledged to begin
exporting oil and gas to China by 2009. The visit is Berdymukhammedov's
first to China since assuming the presidency in February 2007, but is a
follow-up to a preparatory state visit to China by late President
Saparmurat Niyazov in April 2006, which resulted in several preliminary
bilateral agreements at the time (see "RFE/RL Newsline," April 4,
2006). Turkmenistan, which holds the world's fifth-largest natural-gas
reserves and has substantial oil resources, is seeking to reduce the
over 70 percent Russian share of Turkmen gas exports by diversifying
energy ties to China and with a possible gas pipeline to Pakistan and
Afghanistan (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 9, 2007). RG
[17] UZBEK REFUGEES DETAINED IN CZECH REPUBLIC
Acting at the request of an Uzbek warrant submitted to Interpol, Czech
police detained two Uzbek refugees on July 3, RFE/RL's Uzbek Service
reported on July 17. The two refugees, Omanullo Maqsudov and Zohid
Mirzaev, were among hundreds of Uzbeks who fled the violence in May
2005 in the eastern city of Andijon. Rights groups have accused Uzbek
security forces of firing indiscriminately on unarmed participants in
those protests. The two men were detained while crossing the
Czech-German border and are currently being held in the western Czech
city of Plzen. Lawyers for the refugees told RFE/RL's Uzbek Service
that the Uzbek authorities have 40 days to provide necessary documents
proving that the detainees have committed a crime before a Czech court
can rule on an Uzbek extradition request. A similar case occurred in
November 2001, when prominent Uzbek opposition leader and poet Muhammad
Solih was briefly detained by Czech police acting on an Uzbek
extradition request despite the fact that he had been granted political
asylum in Norway and was only in the Czech Republic to attend a
conference (see "RFE/RL Newsline," November 30 and December 11 and 12,
2001). RG
Eastern Europe
[18] BELARUSIAN PRESIDENT SACKS KGB CHIEF
President Alyaksandr Lukashenka on July 17 dismissed Stsyapan
Sukharenka as chairman of the State Security Committee (KGB) and Vasil
Dzemyantsey as KGB first deputy chairman, Belarusian media reported.
The presidential press service said Sukharenka and Dzemyantsey were
dismissed "in connection with their transfer to other jobs." Sukharenka
assumed the post of KGB chief in December 2005. During the presidential
election campaign in 2006 and shortly afterward, Sukharenka became
known for his heavy-handedness in dealing with opposition protests and
activists, whom he publicly denounced as terrorists. Sukharenka's job
was given to Yury Zhadobin, who was head of the presidential protection
service until his new assignment. JM
[19] UKRAINIAN AUTHORITIES CLAIM TO HAVE AFTERMATH OF PHOSPHORUS TRAIN
DERAILMENT UNDER CONTROL
Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman Ihor Krol told Interfax on July
18 that the situation in the area of the toxic phosphorus spill in Lviv
Oblast has been brought under control. Krol announced that six children
with symptoms of injuries to their respiratory organs were hospitalized
in Lviv, while 59 more children have been sent to other health centers.
He added that rescue teams are continuing to spray water on the damaged
train tanks and insulate them from exposure to the air with foam. On
July 16, a freight train carrying poisonous yellow phosphorus in tanks
from Kazakhstan to Poland derailed near the settlement of Ozhydiv in
Lviv Oblast, and several tanks caught fire after the phosphorus leaked
out. Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kuzmuk commented on July 16 that
the accident was the most serious environmental catastrophe in Ukraine
since the 1986 Chornobyl blast, but later backtracked on this remark.
The Health Ministry reported on July 17 that 14 people involved in the
decontamination efforts at the site of the derailment were
hospitalized. More than 800 people living in the area were evacuated.
JM
Southeastern Europe
[20] EU WANTS TALKS ON KOSOVA EVEN WITHOUT UN RESOLUTION...
The EU's foreign-policy chief, Javier Solana, said on July 17 that he
expects Serbia and Kosova to hold talks even if efforts to resolve
Kosova's final status move beyond the UN, international media reported.
A draft resolution formally presented to members of the UN Security
Council on July 17 includes a call for fresh talks, as Serbia and
Russia have demanded, but Russia has indicated it would veto the
resolution (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 16 and 17, 2007). Serbia and
Russia object to the time limits imposed on talks and the resolution's
origin in a UN proposal to grant Kosova independence. Solana indicated
that the resolution will nonetheless soon be put to the vote at the UN,
saying that "I don't think we have a long time" to reach a resolution
on Kosova's future within the UN. In New York, Western ambassadors on
July 17 indicated that they will put a resolution to the vote at the UN
Security Council "very soon," which Britain's deputy ambassador, Karen
Pierce, told AFP means "within, let's say, the next 36 hours." Solana
did not outline the format of the proposed talks, but said he expects
EU diplomats will need to "shuttle between" Serbia and Kosova. That
suggests the formal roundtable negotiations seen in earlier UN-brokered
talks are unlikely in the initial phases of discussions. The Kosovar
daily "Zeri" recently claimed that Western powers are considering
holding an international conference on Kosova in September. AG
[21] ...BUT RUSSIA'S STANCE REMAINS UNCLEAR
The EU's Solana also said that talks with Serbia and Kosova will
"probably" be "under the aegis of the Contact Group," an informal
six-member group of countries that has sought to coordinate diplomatic
efforts in the Balkans since the mid-1990s, AFP reported on July 17.
"I'm sure there will be an agreement among members of the Contact Group
to open a process of negotiations," Solana said. The transfer of
responsibility for a solution from the UN, where Russia holds veto
rights, to the Contact Group, where Russia has no veto, could offer
Russia a diplomatic route out of the impasse. However, Russia's
willingness to engage with other members of the Contact Group is
increasingly open to question. British Deputy UN Ambassador Pierce told
AFP on July 17 that "we used to have a very cooperative relationship
with the Russians on the Balkans through the Contact Group," but she
said the Russians "no longer seem to want to work through the Contact
Group and bring this to a managed conclusion." The Contact Group is due
to meet in Berlin on July 25. AG
[22] KOSOVAR ALBANIANS SAY NEW APPROACH NEEDED
Kosova's president, Fatmir Sejdiu, said on July 17 that the UN should
seek "alternative routes" to decide the future of the UN-administered
Serbian province, local and international media reported. "If there is
no solution through the UN Security Council -- a very quick solution --
alternative routes should be sought, but in cooperation with the
international community," Sejdiu said. Another member of the
five-member team negotiating the region's future on behalf of Kosovar
Albanians, Hashim Thaci, indicated that he believes it is already time
for an alternative approach, telling journalists on July 17 that the UN
"has failed to find a solution for Kosova's status" and that "the role
of the UN Security Council has been weakened." Neither commented on the
prospect of further talks outside the UN, but they and other members of
the negotiating team have in the past said they believe the previous
UN-brokered talks exhausted the possibilities for compromise. Serbia
has not indicated how it would react if the EU were to withdraw the
issue of Kosova's future from the UN. But at a press conference held
after a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Serbian Prime
Minister Vojislav Kostunica said on July 17 that "any further talks
between the Serbian government and representatives of the Albanian
majority in the province [of Kosova] would not need a new resolution to
take place." Kostunica repeated a recent refrain of Serbian diplomats,
saying there is plenty of scope for "an unconventional solution in the
form of a compromise," but he gave no hints as to what that compromise
might be. AG
[23] SERBIA SAYS ECONOMICS 'KEY' TO TIES WITH BOSNIA...
In his first official visit to Bosnia-Herzegovina, the speaker of the
Serbian parliament, Oliver Dulic, on July 17 told the parliament of the
Bosnian Serb-dominated region of Republika Srpska that "the economy is
the key word that is expected to determine our future relations" and
that "realism, not emotions" should be the cornerstone of relations,
the Bosnian news agency SRNA reported. Dulic was visiting a day after
the Serbian parliament discussed the ratification of an Agreement on
Special and Parallel Ties, which Serbia signed in September with the
Republika Srpska (see "RFE/RL Newsline," September 27, 2006, and June
13, 2007). Ratification of the agreement is due to go to the vote on
July 19. Members of Serbia's largest parliamentary and nationalist
party, the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), oppose ratification on the
grounds that the agreement does not lay the foundations for a joint
state and halts military cooperation, Serbian media reported on July
16. The Republika Srpska, which relied heavily on Serbian practical
support during the 1992-95 war and on its diplomatic support since the
conflict, is critically dependent on the Serbian economy both for
imports and exports. The Republika Srpska imported almost three times
as much from Serbia as it exported to Serbia in 2006, according to
Serbian statistics. AG
[24] ...AND OPPOSES LINKAGE OF KOSOVA'S, REPUBLIKA SRPSKA'S STATUS
During his visit to Banja Luka, Serbian parliament speaker Dulic said
that any attempt to connect the status of Kosova with the future of the
Republika Srpska would harm the interests of the Republika Srpska,
Radio-Television Serbia reported on July 17. Leaders of the Republika
Srpska have in the past threatened to hold a referendum on independence
if Kosova is granted independence from Serbia, and they have accused
the international community of double standards in its attitudes toward
Kosova and the Republika Srpska. However, the region's prime minister,
Milorad Dodik, has been more reticent this year, emphasizing instead
that his government will do "everything to preserve peace and stability
in the Republika Srpska's territory, no matter what decision on Kosovo
is made" (see "RFE/RL Newsline," September 19 and 20, 2006, and January
5 and 26, April 12, and May 9, 2007). Dulic made clear in Banja Luka
that Serbia accepts Bosnia as a single state. Meanwhile, in Vienna,
Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic on July 17 said that the proposal
to grant Kosova internationally supervised statehood amounts to
"nothing other than the forced partition of Serbia," international
media reported. AG
[25] INCIDENCE OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING STEADY IN KOSOVA
Kosova's police force said on July 16 that it identified 19 victims of
human trafficking during the first half of 2007, the news service
KosovaLive reported. A police spokesman, Veton Elshani, said the number
does not indicate any rise in the trend, but he noted that prostitution
is growing more common. Nine of the victims came from Kosova itself,
and another six from Albania. AG
Southwestern Asia And The Middle East
[26] BRITAIN INTERCEPTS WEAPONS EN ROUTE FROM IRAN TO AFGHANISTAN
British officials on July 16 said that they have intercepted weapons
being transported into Afghanistan from Iran, the first instance of
British acknowledgement of possible Iranian support for the Taliban,
Bloomberg reported on July 17. In Parliament, Defense Secretary Des
Browne said that British troops interdicted a shipment of arms bearing
markings "suggesting they are of Iranian origin" crossing the border
from Iran into Afghanistan. The U.S. government first suggested in
April that Iran has supplied the Taliban with weapons (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," April 18, 2007) and U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said
in June that weapons of Iranian origin were undoubtedly flowing into
Afghanistan, though he stopped short of accusing Iran's government of
involvement (see "RFE/RL Newsline," June 5, 2007). Brown echoed Gates'
sentiments, but added that the Iranian government must take
responsibility for the flow of arms out of the country. JC
[27] FORMER REBEL COMMANDER AND 38 MEN JOIN AFGHAN PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT
A former insurgent commander, Ilyas, together with 38 of his men
surrendered their arms and joined the government of central Kapisa
Province on July 16, Pajhwak Afghan News reported the same day. Over
the past seven years, Ilyas, a former commander of the Hizb-e Islami
party of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, conducted antigovernment activities in
Afghanistan alongside Taliban militants. Ilyas and his men surrendered
their arms, including rockets and land mines, to officials of the
Disarmament of Irresponsible Armed Groups program in Kapisa, said
Najibullah Mujaddidi, deputy head of the Commission for Strengthening
Peace and Reconciliation. Ilyas is the first rebel commander in Kapisa
Province to join the government, Mujaddidi said, adding that Ilyas
reiterated his commitment to a positive role in Afghanistan's
reconstruction. Ilyas told Pajhwak that he joined the government after
realizing the futility of fighting, but said he would fight foreign
troops again if they do not withdraw. JC
[28] U.S. DONATES $26 MILLION TO UN FOOD PROGRAM FOR AFGHAN ASSISTANCE
The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) announced on July 17 that
the United States has donated $26 million to provide food assistance in
Afghanistan, according to a WFP press release the same day. Rick
Corsino, WFP country director for Afghanistan, said that the donation
will assist millions of Afghans, including those affected by natural
disasters, such as floods, drought, and landslides, as well as those
displaced by fighting. The contribution will also aid the unemployed,
Corsino added. Some 48,000 metric tons of wheat will be distributed
through a range of WFP projects funded by the donation, including the
"Food-for-Work" program in which communities are paid in food to build
or repair infrastructure. Food will also be distributed prior to
winter, during which hundreds are Afghans have restricted access to
resources. These programs are helping the Afghan people "build a better
future," said Tony Banbury, WFP's regional director for Asia. JC
[29] AFGHANISTAN'S OPIUM PRODUCTION SETS NEW RECORD, SAYS U.S.
AMBASSADOR
The U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan William Wood said on July 17 that
Afghanistan's opium-poppy harvest set a new record this season as
expected, despite intense efforts to eradicate the crop, AP reported
the same day. Preliminary data show that Afghan poppy farmers have
harvested 457,135 acres this year, nearly 50,000 more acres than in
2006, Wood said. Opium-production profits are believed to fuel Taliban
fighting in Afghanistan, as well as contribute to widespread heroin
addiction among Afghan citizens and government corruption. Wood
expressed his strong support for forced eradication, such as the
U.S.-led poppy spraying in Colombia, but noted that there is "not yet
an international consensus" on the practice. Afghan President Hamid
Karzai has previously stated his opposition to crop spraying due to
fear the chemicals could harm livestock or contaminate crops and
drinking water (see "RFE/RL Newsline," June 8, 2007). JC
[30] U.S. RESEARCH BODY REJECTS 'FORCED' CONFESSIONS IN IRAN
The head of the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, D.C., Lee
Hamilton, has rejected in a statement any confessions Haleh Esfandiari,
a member of the center currently detained in Iran, may have made under
detention, Radio Farda reported on July 17 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July
17, 2007). Hamilton said Esfandiari, who has been accused of subversive
activities, has been kept in solitary confinement and her confessions,
which Iranian television is showing on television on July 17 and 18,
are illegitimate and "ludicrous," Radio Farda reported. Esfandiari is
one of several Iranian-American researchers or correspondents currently
detained and accused of various hostile acts against the Islamic
republic. Some observers believe her broadcast confessions may be a
good thing -- a prelude to her release in a manner similar to another
academic detained in the past in Iran, Ramin Jahanbegloo, CNN reported
on July 17. VS
[31] TURKEY TO TRANSPORT IRANIAN GAS TO EUROPE
An Iranian finance official, Ahmad Nurani, told reporters in Ankara on
July 17 that Iran will sell gas to partners in the Nabucco gas
pipeline, which is planned to pipe gas from the Caspian region and
Middle East to Europe, via Turkey, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Austria,
Reuters reported. The Nabucco project is expected to cost 4.6 billion
euros ($6.3 billion) and pipe 31 billion cubic meters of gas per year
to Europe, though not before 2015. The preliminary agreement is in a
memorandum of understanding signed on July 13 by Turkish Energy
Minister Hilmi Guler and Iranian Oil Minister Kazem Vaziri-Hamaneh. It
also includes agreements for the Turkish Petroleum Corporation to
produce 20 billion cubic meters of natural gas in three phases from the
South Pars gas field in the Persian Gulf, and another to use Iran as a
transit route to export Turkmen natural gas, presumably by Turkish
parties, Reuters reported. VS
[32] TEHRAN POLICE CHIEF CONFIRMS SECURITY DRIVE WILL CONTINUE
Tehran police chief Ahmad Reza Radan told ISNA on July 14 that the
nationwide police drive to assure public decency and security on the
streets has not ended, and police will increase the number of agents on
the streets from July 23 to confront offenses such as disrespect for
the norms of Islamic dress, Radio Farda reported on July 15. Radan said
police will be visiting shops selling "unsuitable" clothes in Tehran.
The drive began on April 21, and has apparently led to the detentions
of dozens of violent criminals or rapists, some of whom have been
sentenced to death. Radan said more agents will be deployed to arrest
drug addicts and criminals. Another offense Radan said police will be
on the lookout out for is boys with "deviant" hairstyles, ISNA
reported. He said these hairstyles are "derived from deviant Western
models that are not in keeping with the norms of our society." People
cannot appear in public as they please, he said, because society is not
a private domain. He added that boys with "deviant" hair will be asked
where they had their hair cut, ISNA reported. VS
[33] IRAN MAY RETURN TO TALKS WITH U.S. ON IRAQ
Iranian Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki told the press in Tehran on
July 17 that Iranian and U.S. diplomats may hold a second round of
talks on Iraqi security "in the near future," following the first round
held in Baghdad on May 28, IRNA reported. He said Iraqi officials have
requested another round of talks but that Iran asked the United States
to convey its request for talks through the Swiss Embassy in Tehran,
which handles its interests in Iran in the absence of formal diplomatic
ties. It was not immediately clear if the request has been made, but
Mottaki said Iran will take a "positive view" of it once it is. He said
Iran would consider "any proposal" that might be made on its nuclear
dossier, responding to a reporter's question on a reported proposal by
the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Muhammad
el-Baradei, on direct Iran-U.S. talks to help resolve the dispute over
Iran's nuclear program. VS
[34] OMANI MINISTER CONFIDENT OF IRANIAN NUCLEAR PLANT'S SAFETY
At a joint press conference on July 17 with Foreign Minister Mottaki,
visiting Omani Foreign Minister Yusuf bin Allawi said Oman is confident
the Bushehr nuclear plant Iran and Russia are building on the Persian
Gulf coast meets security standards, and that it is not necessary for
gulf envoys to inspect the site, ISNA reported. He said that "from what
we have heard from Iranian officials" and with the assurances of the
IAEA, "this reactor, which has not yet started working, is sufficiently
secure." Some Persian Gulf states have expressed concerns over the
environmental impact of the plant. Allawi said Oman lacks the technical
staff to inspect the site anyway. He added that members of the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC), which includes Oman, and the Arab League
have begun studies "at the highest levels" on the peaceful use of
nuclear power, "as Iran is doing. This is enough to create confidence
that this peaceful...technology is the right of all countries and is no
danger to anybody," ISNA reported. He said Iran and GCC members already
cooperate on security issues, but expressed hope that bilateral
agreements between Iran and these states will turn into a collective
agreement covering the fight against "terrorism and trafficking and all
the things harmful to regional interests." VS
[35] IRAQI SHI'ITE, SUNNI GROUPS CONDEMN KIRKUK BOMBING
The Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council issued a statement on its website on
July 16 strongly condemning the triple bombings in the northern city of
Kirkuk that killed 85 people and wounded more than 240 (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," July 17, 2007). The Shi'ite group blamed the attack on
takfiris (unbelievers) and Saddamists. "As we strongly condemn the
heinous crime that was inflicted on the people of Kirkuk, we call on
our Iraqi government and security agencies to strike against the rotten
heads of those terrorists and uproot this evil from our dear land," the
statement said. Meanwhile, the Sunni-led Muslim Scholars Association
issued a statement on its website on July 17 also condemning the
bombings, but blamed them on U.S. forces and the Iraqi government. The
association "condemns those criminal acts and holds the occupation
forces and the current government fully responsible for them." It calls
on the Iraqi people to be aware of the plots of their enemies that "aim
at targeting their unity and common history." SS
[36] IRAQI KURDISH LEADER SAYS KIRKUK ATTACK WAS AIMED AGAINST
NORMALIZATION
Kurdistan region President Ma'sud Barzani said on July 17 that the July
16 triple bombing in Kirkuk was meant to impede the city's
normalization process, the Kurdish daily "Khabat" reported. "Obviously,
the enemies and terrorists will try by all means to impede the process
of the normalization of Kirkuk and other areas of Kurdistan as well as
putting obstacles to the implementation of Article 140 of the new
federal Iraqi Constitution," Barzani said. "We call on the dear
residents of Kirkuk to be resilient against the plotters' aims and to
try to maintain the atmosphere of brotherhood and coexistence in the
city in order to prevent any irritation and tension that would only
serve the enemies' interests," he added. Article 140 calls for a
three-step process of normalization, a census, and finally a referendum
to be held at the end of 2007 to determine whether Kirkuk is to be
integrated into the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region. The city's Arab
and Turkoman communities have demanded that the referendum be
postponed, saying that thousands of Kurds have flooded Kirkuk in an
effort to alter the city's demographic makeup. SS
[37] UNKNOWN GUNMEN KILL 29 VILLAGERS IN CENTRAL IRAQ
Masked gunmen wearing police uniforms raided a village in the Diyala
Governorate on July 16 and killed at least 29 people, including women
and children, international media reported on July 17. An Iraqi
military spokesman, Colonel Raghib Rawi al-Umayri, said that "dozens of
gunmen disguised as Iraqi Army troops, but in civilian vehicles,
stormed Al-Dwailiyah village" north of the provincial capital Ba'qubah.
He said most of the victims were members of a Shi'ite tribe and he
blamed the attack on Al-Qaeda-linked fighters who have been fighting
U.S. and Iraqi forces in the governorate. On June 19, U.S. and Iraqi
forces launched Operation Arrowhead Ripper, a major security operation
against Al-Qaeda-linked groups in the region (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"
June 20, 2007). SS
[38] MIGRATION GROUP SAYS DISPLACEMENT IN IRAQ IS BECOMING CRITICAL
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) announced on July 17
that the rate at which Iraqis are being displaced since the bombing of
the Al-Askari mosque in February 2006 has not abated, and the situation
is fast becoming a crisis, international media reported. The attack on
the mosque, a revered Shi'ite shrine in Samarra, resulted in a wave of
sectarian violence (see "RFE/RL Newsline," February 22, 2006).
According to the IOM's mid-year review on displacement in Iraq, the
country is "experiencing the worst human displacement in its history,
with almost 2.2 million persons displaced within its borders and an
additional 2 million who have fled the country to the surrounding
region." The organization warned that the mass displacement is fast
becoming a regional and ultimately international crisis. IOM
spokeswoman Jemini Pandya told reporters that on average, 60,000 Iraqis
have fled their homes every month since the start of 2007, mainly due
to sectarian violence, joint U.S.-Iraqi military operations, and
general lawlessness. SS
[39] U.S. FORCES DETAIN AL-QAEDA IN IRAQ LEADER IN MOSUL
The U.S. military announced on July 17 that a senior Al-Qaeda in Iraq
leader in Mosul was captured during a security operation the same day.
The military said that the suspect, whose name was not released, was
recently promoted within the organization after coalition-led security
operations created several vacancies in the group's command structure.
Intelligence reports indicated that the suspect was "responsible for
mortar and sniper attacks against Iraqi forces and a December attack
against coalition forces." "We're putting continuous pressure on
Al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders and their networks," U.S. military spokesman
Major Marc Young said. "We will continue attacking these networks so
Iraqis can live peacefully, without fear of vicious terrorist attacks,"
he added. SS
End Note
[40] THERE IS NO END NOTE TODAY
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