|
|
RFE/RL Newsline, 08-01-01
CONTENTS
[01] PRESIDENT GIVES 2007 HIGH MARKS
[02] PUTIN TERMS BHUTTO ASSASSINATION 'A BARBARIC ACT OF TERRORISM'
[03] SILOVIKI FORM STRONG BLOC IN NEW DUMA...
[04] ...WHICH HAS RECORD PERCENTAGE OF WOMEN
[05] NEW DUMA ELECTS LEADERSHIP
[06] PLURALITY OF RUSSIANS EXPECT DUMA TO SUPPORT PUTIN
[07] ELECTION OFFICIALS ORDERED TO OPEN VOTING RECORDS FROM DUMA BALLOT
[08] RUSSIANS LOOK TO THE FUTURE WITH GREATER OPTIMISM...
[09] ...WHILE NEARLY HALF SUPPORT THE IDEA OF 'VELVET REPRIVATIZATION'
[10] RUSSIA SAYS IT IS HELPING IRAN STRENGTHEN AIR DEFENSES
[11] SIX MORE JAPANESE FISHERMEN RELEASED
[12] RUSSIAN TITANIUM PRODUCER INKS DEAL WITH BOEING
[13] RUSSIAN ARMS EXPORTS COULD TOP $7.5 BILLION IN 2008
[14] PRESIDENT SAYS SITUATION IN DAGHESTAN IS STABLE
[15] KALMYKIA'S PARLIAMENT DISSOLVED
[16] INGUSHETIAN ELECTION COMMISSION DENIES INFLATING VOTER TURNOUT
[17] KILLERS OF HUNTING PARTY IN KABARDINO-BALKARIA IDENTIFIED
[18] KABARDINO-BALKARIA RECALLS REPRESENTATIVE ON FEDERATION COUNCIL
[19] SUPREME COURT IN NORTH OSSETIA SENTENCES MEMBERS OF CHECHEN
CRIMINAL GANG
[20] ARMENIAN OPPOSITION PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ESTABLISHES NEW GROUP
TO 'ENSURE' FREE ELECTION
[21] AZERBAIJANI PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE REFUSES TO INVESTIGATE DEATH OF
OPPOSITION ACTIVIST
[22] AZERBAIJANI VETERANS GROUP CALLS ON PRESIDENT TO DECLARE 2008
'YEAR OF ARMY'
[23] PROMINENT GEORGIAN OPPOSITION FIGURE WITHDRAWS FROM PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGN
[24] POPULAR GEORGIAN PRO-OPPOSITION TV STATION 'SUSPENDS' BROADCASTING
[25] RUSSIA REACHES SETTLEMENT WITH KAZAKHSTAN FOR DAMAGE FROM ROCKET
CRASH...
[26] ...AND CONCLUDES AGREEMENT FOR CANAL LINKING CASPIAN AND BLACK
SEAS
[27] KAZAKH POLICE CONCLUDE 'SPECIAL OPERATION' TARGETING ILLEGAL
MIGRANTS
[28] KYRGYZ PRESIDENT ENDORSES NEW CABINET
[29] TAJIK COURT IMPOSES STIFF PRISON SENTENCES ON CONVICTED
'TERRORISTS'
[30] TAJIKISTAN REACHES PRICE AGREEMENT FOR IMPORTS OF UZBEK NATURAL
GAS
[31] BELARUSIAN AUTHORITIES RULE OUT CONCESSIONS TO VENDORS
[32] UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT INITIATES CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES...
[33] ...CALLS ON GOVERNMENT TO PRESERVE ECONOMIC STABILITY
[34] EU URGES SERBIA TO TAKE REALISTIC VIEW OF RELATIONS
[35] SERBIA PASSES DELAYED 2008 BUDGET
[36] SERBIAN MUSLIM LEADER BACKS SERBIA OVER KOSOVA
[37] ALBANIAN MINISTER STRIPPED OF IMMUNITY
[38] HUNTING TRIP WITH ICTY INDICTEE SPURS CONTROVERSY IN CROATIA
[39] AFGHAN PRESIDENT CONDEMNS BHUTTO ASSASSINATION
[40] U.S. AMBASSADOR TO AFGHANISTAN BACKS RECONCILIATION
[41] IRAN CONDEMNS PAKISTAN KILLING
[42] UNITED STATES CONCERNED BY MISSILE SALE TO IRAN
[43] IRANIAN OFFICIAL VISITS EGYPT
[44] IRANIAN MINISTER MAY FACE QUESTIONS IN PARLIAMENT
[45] IRAQI PRESIDENT INSISTS ALGIERS ACCORD STILL IN EFFECT...
[46] COALITION ANNOUNCED BETWEEN KURDISH PARTIES AND IRAQI ISLAMIC
PARTY
[47] U.S. FORCES KILL 11 MEMBERS OF SHI'ITE MILITIA SPLINTER GROUP IN
SOUTHERN IRAQ
[48] AL-BASRAH POLICE DISCOVER SPY DRONE AND WEAPONS CACHE
[49] GUNMEN KIDNAP 22 PEOPLE IN CENTRAL IRAQ
[50] There is no end note today.
Friday, December 28, 2007 Volume 11 Number 238
Russia
[01] PRESIDENT GIVES 2007 HIGH MARKS
President Vladimir Putin on December 27 chaired the final cabinet
session of 2007, symbolically taking the prime minister's seat at the
table, gazeta.ru and other Russian media reported. Putin is widely
expected to become prime minister in May 2008 provided that First
Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev is, as expected, elected
president in the March election. Putin said that 2007 has been a
successful year for Russia, noting that gross domestic product rose by
7.6 percent and real incomes rose by 10 percent. "The task of [Prime
Minister] Viktor Zubkov is to achieve such a pace of work that even my
possible arrival at the White House [the government's office complex]
will seem like a holiday for everyone," Putin told the ministers.
Zubkov reported that the so-called national projects, overseen by
Medvedev, have yielded positive results. He said that the average life
expectancy in Russia has risen from 64.9 years in 2003 to 67.5 years in
2007. Putin added that some 30 percent more new housing was constructed
in Russia in the first nine months of 2007 than in the same period in
2006. However, Putin noted that inflation, which is expected to reach
12 percent this year, was some 4 percent higher than
beginning-of-the-year forecasts. RC
[02] PUTIN TERMS BHUTTO ASSASSINATION 'A BARBARIC ACT OF TERRORISM'
In a statement posted on December 27 on the Kremlin's website
(http://www.kremlin.ru), President Putin called the murder of former
Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto "a barbaric act of terrorism."
The statement added: "We hope that the organizers of this crime are
found and punished accordingly. This was another cruel challenge issued
by the forces of terrorism not only to Pakistan, but the entire
international community." Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail
Kamynin also condemned Bhutto's murder in a statement posted on
December 27 on the ministry's website, adding: "Now it is especially
important that all of Pakistan's responsible political forces show
maximum restraint, resist the extremists' provocations, and do
everything possible to defeat decisively the forces of international
terrorism, which are actively attempting to use the difficult situation
in Pakistan on the eve of the parliamentary elections planned for 8
January 2008." Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Losyukov said
the murder of Bhutto could trigger a wave of terrorism in Pakistan,
ITAR-TASS reported on December 27. "We believe that it is a dangerous
development, which in such an unstable situation on the eve of
elections in Pakistan can become yet another factor of instability," he
said. JB
[03] SILOVIKI FORM STRONG BLOC IN NEW DUMA...
The new State Duma, which convened on December 24, includes at least 40
active or retired officers of the military or security services,
"Nezavisimaya gazeta" reported on December 26. That figure represents
nearly 10 percent of the 450-seat chamber. Colonel General Viktor
Zavarzin (Unified Russia) will again head the Defense Committee, while
former Federal Security Service (FSB) Director General Nikolai Kovalyov
(Unified Russia) was again chosen to head the Veterans' Affairs
Committee. Colonel General Vladimir Vasilev (Unified Russia), a former
deputy interior minister, will continue as head of the Security
Committee. Other prominent siloviki include Valery Vostrotin (Unified
Russia and a member of the Defense Committee), a colonel general in the
Emergency Situations forces; Colonel General Arkady Baskaev (Unified
Russia and a member of the Defense Committee), a former commander of
the Moscow district Interior Ministry troops; former Deputy Defense
Minister Andrei Kokoshin (Unified Russia and a member of the Science
and Technology Committee); General Aleksandr Korzhakov (Unified Russia
and a member of the Defense Committee), who once headed President Boris
Yeltsin's security team; and former FSB Colonel Andrei Lugovoi (Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia and a member of the Defense Committee), who
is wanted in the United Kingdom in connection with the November 2006
killing of Kremlin critic Aleksandr Litvinenko. In addition, Airborne
Forces Lieutenant General Aleksei Sigutkin (Unified Russia) was
selected to head the Duma's apparatus. RC
[04] ...WHICH HAS RECORD PERCENTAGE OF WOMEN
The new State Duma includes 62 women, including 22 from the previous
Duma, newsru.com reported on December 24. Forty-four of the women are
from Unified Russia, while 11 of the 38 A Just Russia Deputies are
women, as are four of the 40 Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
deputies and four of the 57 Communists. According to the website, seven
of the women come from business, three from nongovernmental
organizations, 12 are officials, two are former cosmonauts, five are
athletes, and one is a ballerina. Britain's "The Sun" newspaper on
December 28 noted that four Unified Russia deputies -- rhythmic gymnast
Alina Kabayeva, gymnast and Olympic champion Svetlana Khorkina, Olympic
skating champion Svetlana Zhurova, and boxer Natalia Karpovich -- have
starred in "racy photoshoots in various Russian magazines." In all,
roughly half of the deputies in the new Duma have become lawmakers for
the first time, newsru.com reported on December 24. About 70 are "top
managers" in major industries, including oil, chemicals, metallurgy,
and transport. For the first time, two handicapped deputies have joined
the chamber, the website reported. RC
[05] NEW DUMA ELECTS LEADERSHIP
The new State Duma reelected Unified Russia party leader Boris Gryzlov
as its speaker on December 24, Russian media reported. Deputies also
selected nine deputy speakers: Yury Volkov, Vyacheslav Volodin,
Nadezhda Gerasimova, Svetlana Zhurova, Lyubov Sliska, and Valery Yazev
from Unified Russia; Aleksandr Babakov from A Just Russia; Vladimir
Zhirinovsky from the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia; and Ivan
Melnikov from the Communist Party. Deputies also named the heads of 32
committees, 26 of whom are members of Unified Russia. In the last Duma,
Unified Russia controlled all of the lower chamber's committees and
commissions. The names of the new deputies and the composition of the
Duma's committees can be found on the Duma's website
(http://www.duma.gov.ru). Prime Minister Zubkov addressed the opening
session and urged deputies to adopt the necessary legislation to
implement the government's plan for the country's development in the
period ending in 2020. RC
[06] PLURALITY OF RUSSIANS EXPECT DUMA TO SUPPORT PUTIN
One-third of Russians believe the Unified Russia faction in the Duma,
which controls 315 of the chamber's 450 seats, will "exclusively
represent the interests of Vladimir Putin," according to a new poll by
the Levada Center reported by gazeta.ru on December 27. Just 16 percent
believe the faction will support the president elected in March, even
if that president is the Unified Russia candidate, Dmitry Medvedev.
Twenty percent of respondents said the faction will represent the
interests of the country, while 13 percent said it will protect the
bureaucracy. The same poll found that 15 percent of respondents believe
the Union of Rightist Forces party can survive its defeat in the
December 2 Duma elections, while 14 percent believe the liberal Yabloko
party will survive. Surprisingly, 42 percent said they don't think the
Communist Party will survive into the next election and 40 percent said
the same about the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, although both of
those parties polled well enough on December 2 to gain seats in the
Duma. RC
[07] ELECTION OFFICIALS ORDERED TO OPEN VOTING RECORDS FROM DUMA BALLOT
The Moscow City Election Commission has ordered local polling stations
to open the sealed election protocols from the December 2 Duma
elections, "Vedomosti" reported on December 28. According to the daily,
the move comes at the order of the Central Election Commission and will
be carried out nationally in the coming days, ostensibly in order to
update voter lists for the March 2008 presidential election. Observers
note, however, that opening the protocols will make it impossible to
contest the results of the Duma elections, at a time when the Communist
Party and others have pending court cases questioning them. In
addition, opposition activists told the daily that opening the lists
will enable officials to determine, by name, who voted and who did not,
theoretically enabling the management of enterprises to check up on
their employees. Moscow City Election Commission official and Yabloko
member Andrei Buzin noted that cases of people being pressured to vote
were widely documented during the elections. RC
[08] RUSSIANS LOOK TO THE FUTURE WITH GREATER OPTIMISM...
Some two-fifths of Russians consider that 2007 was a successful year,
according to polls released by the country's main polling agencies in
the last 10 days. A similar percentage believe that 2008 will be "about
the same." According to a poll by the Public Opinion Foundation,
released on December 21 and reported by Interfax, although 38 percent
of respondents rated 2007 positively, 67 percent were unable to name a
specific positive event and 65 percent were unable to name a specific
negative event. A poll by the All-Russian Center for the Study of
Public Opinion (VTsIOM), reported by RBK on December 28, found that 40
percent of respondents are looking ahead to 2008 with optimism, up from
30 percent who were optimistic about 2007 in a poll taken at the end of
last year. Just 25 percent of respondents viewed 2007 negatively. Four
years ago, 53 percent of Russians said that 2003 was a bad year.
"People are beginning to forget how badly they lived during the period
of [economic] crises," sociologist Yelena Matrosova told RBK. RC
[09] ...WHILE NEARLY HALF SUPPORT THE IDEA OF 'VELVET REPRIVATIZATION'
A poll by the Levada Center has found that 46 percent of respondents
favor the "compulsory purchase of private companies at prices assigned
by the government and their transfer to state corporations headed by
high-level bureaucrats," gazeta.ru reported on December 26.
Kremlin-connected fund manager Oleg Shvartsman made headlines in
November when he told "Kommersant" that Kremlin-connected siloviki led
by deputy presidential administration head Igor Sechin have been using
"voluntary-compulsory" means to take over private businesses (see
"RFE/RL Newsline," December 6 and 20, 2007). Twenty-three percent of
respondents oppose such actions. In a later interview, Shvartsman
elaborated on his views: "These enterprises were created by our fathers
and grandfathers," he said. "And suddenly, at the decision of one
person who was bribed, they belong to private individuals. This isn't
right. The people do not support this." RC
[10] RUSSIA SAYS IT IS HELPING IRAN STRENGTHEN AIR DEFENSES
Deputy Foreign Minister Losyukov said on December 27 that Russia is
helping Iran strengthen its air defense capabilities, RIA Novosti
reported. "I know we are assisting in work to reinforce Iran's air
defense systems," Losyukov told reporters in Moscow, adding, however,
"I have no concrete information on the issue and can make no comment
whatsoever on the type of [military] hardware." Iranian Defense
Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar said on December 26 that Russia will
supply Iran with the S-300 antiaircraft missile-defense system "on the
basis of a contract signed with Russia in the past," but did not say
when or how many of the systems will be shipped to Iran. Russian
officials declined to comment on the S-300 sale (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"
December 27, 2007). Meanwhile, the Bush administration expressed
concern over Iran's announcement that Russia will supply it with S-300
antiaircraft missile-defense systems, AFP reported. "We have ongoing
concerns about the prospective sale of such weapons to Iran and other
countries of concern," said Scott Stanzel, a White House spokesman. JB
[11] SIX MORE JAPANESE FISHERMEN RELEASED
Russia has released six more of the 11 Japanese fishermen detained
earlier this month after their boats were seized in disputed waters,
Japan's Foreign Ministry reported on December 27. AP quoted the
ministry as saying that a vessel has been sent to pick up the six crew
members off Shikotan Island, which is one of the four islands held by
Russia since the end of World War II, but still claimed by Japan. On
December 13, the Russian Coast Guard detained four boats carrying 11
people off the northern coast of Kunashiri Island, which is also
claimed by both countries, on suspicion of border violations and
illegal fishing (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 13, 2007). A captain
of one of the ships was subsequently released. Japan's Foreign Ministry
said it will continue to press for the early return of the remaining
four fishermen. JB
[12] RUSSIAN TITANIUM PRODUCER INKS DEAL WITH BOEING
The Russian company VSMPO-Avisma on December 27 signed a deal worth
more than $1 billion to supply titanium to U.S. aircraft maker Boeing.
Reuters reported that VSMPO-Avisma, the world's largest titanium
producer, will supply Boeing with titanium under a deal running from
2011 to 2015, while Boeing will invest $27 billion in Russia over a
period of 30 years. The news agency quoted Boeing's Russia chairman,
Sergei Kravchenko, as saying that the contract represents a "serious
contribution" to a major program for purchasing Russian titanium worth
$18 billion from VSMPO-Avisma. According to Reuters, the supply deal
follows an agreement struck in August to found a 50-50 joint venture to
produce titanium parts for Boeing's next generation of passenger jets,
the 787 Dreamliner. Meanwhile, "Vedomosti" on December 27 quoted
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr Zhukov as saying that foreign
investment in Russia reached $45 billion in 2007, 1 1/2 times higher
than the $30.5 billion foreigners invested in Russia in 2006. JB
[13] RUSSIAN ARMS EXPORTS COULD TOP $7.5 BILLION IN 2008
Rostekhnologia General Director Sergei Chemezov predicted at a December
27 press conference in Moscow that exports of Russian armaments and
military hardware may exceed $7.5 billion in 2008, Interfax reported.
"I think that we will witness a certain growth [of military exports]
next year," Chemezov said. "Exports may reach $7.5 billion. This is
quite possible." Chemezov said that Russia's arms exports in 2007
totaled more than $7 billion. Rostekhnologia is the new conglomerate
encompassing virtually all Russia's weapons producers and traders,
including the arms-export monopoly Rosoboroneksport, as well as
machine-building firms and the giant carmaker AvtoVAZ. JB
[14] PRESIDENT SAYS SITUATION IN DAGHESTAN IS STABLE
Speaking at a press conference in Moscow, where he met on December 21
with Russian Prime Minister Zubkov, President Mukhu Aliyev
characterized the political and economic situation in Daghestan as
"stable," kavkaz-uzel.ru reported on December 24. Aliyev noted that the
number of "terrorist acts" committed has fallen dramatically over the
past two years, from 47 in 2005 to 18 last year and only one this year.
It is not clear which of the high-profile killings in recent months he
had in mind. Aliyev nonetheless conceded that a small group of
"terrorists" is still active in Untsukul Raion. On December 23, the
Daghestan Interior Ministry said a total of 59 people have been
detained in the ongoing crackdown in the Untsukul village of Gimri (see
"RFE/RL Newsline," December 17 and 18, 2007). A member of the Russian
Interior Ministry troops was wounded in a shoot-out with unidentified
gunmen near Gimri on December 24. LF
[15] KALMYKIA'S PARLIAMENT DISSOLVED
At an emergency session on December 20, 14 of the 26 deputies to the
Republic of Kalmykia parliament voted to surrender their mandates and
hold pre-term elections, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported the following day.
Deputies reportedly conceded that new blood is needed to expedite
economic reform, but personal animosity between some deputies and
speaker Igor Kichkov may also have contributed to their decision,
according to the website. President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov raised the
possibility of pre-term parliamentary elections 10 days after firing
Prime Minister Anatoly Kozachko on December 5 (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"
December 6, 2007). LF
[16] INGUSHETIAN ELECTION COMMISSION DENIES INFLATING VOTER TURNOUT
Ingushetian Central Election Commission Chairman Musa Yevloyev has told
Interfax that allegations that the reported 98 percent turnout in
Ingushetia for the December 2 elections to the Russian State Duma was
exaggerated are without foundation, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported. But
kavkaz-uzel.ru reported the same day that as of December 22, 45,248
people had submitted written statements denying that they cast ballots;
that figure is equal to 28 percent of the republic's registered voters.
On December 24, the independent website ingushetiya.ru reported that
the number of those who have formally denied voting has reached 57,898,
kavkaz-uzel.ru reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 3 and 4,
2007). LF
[17] KILLERS OF HUNTING PARTY IN KABARDINO-BALKARIA IDENTIFIED
Boris Salmaksov, a senior investigator with the Russian
Prosecutor-General's Office in the Southern Federal District, told
Interfax that the party of nine hunters found murdered in the Chegem
Raion of the Kabardino-Balkaria Republic (KBR) last month were killed
by a band of armed militants, some of whose members also participated
in the October 2005 attack on Nalchik, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported on
December 26 and 27 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," November 5 and 6, 2007).
Salmaksov said a hunt for the suspected killers has been launched
throughout the Russian Federation. On December 17, regnum.ru quoted a
local investigator as saying the suspects were still in
Kabardino-Balkaria. Local commentators have questioned why, if the
killers were indeed Islamic militants, they purloined the hunters'
mobile phones but left untouched their supplies of food, which could
prove crucial to survival in the mountains during the winter months. LF
[18] KABARDINO-BALKARIA RECALLS REPRESENTATIVE ON FEDERATION COUNCIL
At the instigation of Boris Zherukov, who heads the KBR chapter of the
pro-Kremlin Unified Russia party, the KBR parliament voted on December
20 to recall Khachim Karmokov, who represents the KBR on the Federation
Council, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported. The vote was 81 in favor and three
against, with one abstention. Karmokov headed the A Just Russia list of
candidates from the KBR in the December 2 State Duma elections;
Zherukov argued that the republic's representative to the Federation
Council should be a member of the Duma majority. LF
[19] SUPREME COURT IN NORTH OSSETIA SENTENCES MEMBERS OF CHECHEN
CRIMINAL GANG
The Supreme Court in North Ossetia sentenced four Chechens on December
26 on charges of kidnapping and membership of an organized criminal
group, kavkaz-uzel.ru reported. The four men were found guilty of
participating from 1994 through 2001 in an organized "kidnapping for
ransom" criminal enterprise that targeted villagers in North Ossetia.
Three of the men received prison sentences of between 13 and 17 years,
while the fourth man received a lighter sentence of only two years
after he cooperated with the authorities. RG
Transcaucasia And Central Asia
[20] ARMENIAN OPPOSITION PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ESTABLISHES NEW GROUP
TO 'ENSURE' FREE ELECTION
Speaking at a press conference in Yerevan on December 26, Armenian
presidential candidate and opposition Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law)
party leader Artur Baghdasarian announced the formation of a new "civil
movement," called In the Name of Democracy and Citizens' Freedom, that
will seek to ensure that the February 2008 presidential election is
"free and fair," Arminfo reported. Baghdasarian, who was constrained to
resign as Armenian parliament speaker last year after a dispute with
incumbent President Robert Kocharian, claimed that "tens of thousands
of people" have joined his effort and declared, "our goal is to
eliminate the atmosphere of fear reigning in the country and to ensure
a free and fair election." He also warned that "poverty, unemployment,
and immigration are rampant in the country," and pointed to the
negative impact of the sharply appreciating Armenian currency, which he
said is hurting both small and medium-sized businesses and ordinary
citizens dependant on remittances from abroad. Calling for "drastic
reforms" that he argued could only be implemented by a "legitimately
and democratically elected" president, Baghdasarian went on to dismiss
as "false and pre-planned" recent public opinion polls that ranked him
as a distant second to rival presidential contender Prime Minister
Serzh Sarkisian. Baghdasarian said that he is confident that he will
"make it into the second round of the election." RG
[21] AZERBAIJANI PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE REFUSES TO INVESTIGATE DEATH OF
OPPOSITION ACTIVIST
Vuqar Aliyev, the press spokesman for the Nizami district prosecutor's
office in Baku, announced on December 27 that the office will not
investigate the death of opposition activist Faina Kungurova, a former
member of the opposition Democratic Party of Azerbaijan who died in
unclear circumstances in police custody last month (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," November 27, 2007), Turan reported. Human rights and civil
society activists have designated Kungurova, who was 33, the first
woman political prisoner to die in detention in Azerbaijan. Aliyev said
that the prosecutor's office concluded that "there was no outside
influence on the case," and hence no need to investigate. According to
a forensic examination, Kungurova suffered a fatal heart attack,
reportedly after undergoing intensive questioning while in pre-trial
detention. She was arrested on October 6 by police for allegedly
"standing in a suspicious place" as President Ilham Aliyev's motorcade
drove past. Following her arrest, police searched her home and
reportedly discovered an unspecified amount of drugs. Kungurova was a
well known opposition activist who was imprisoned in 2002 but pardoned
two years later after international organizations pressured the
Azerbaijani authorities to release her (see "Azerbaijan: Activist
Becomes First Female Political Prisoner To Die In Detention,"
rferl.org, November 29, 2007,). RG
[22] AZERBAIJANI VETERANS GROUP CALLS ON PRESIDENT TO DECLARE 2008
'YEAR OF ARMY'
In comments during a press conference in Baku on December 27, Yashar
Jafarli, the head of Azerbaijan's Retired and Reserve Officers Union,
called on President Aliyev to declare 2008 the "year of [the] army,"
Turan reported. Jafarli said that such a commemoration would coincide
with "the 90th anniversary of the creation of the national army" of
Azerbaijan, adding that in light of the "lack of contacts between the
army and society," the declaration would address the "importance of
propaganda of [the] army and its problems in [the] media." The Retired
and Reserve Officers Union, which comprises several veterans' groups
and military-related nongovernmental organizations, is an active
advocate for soldiers' rights and for improved social benefits for the
armed forces. RG
[23] PROMINENT GEORGIAN OPPOSITION FIGURE WITHDRAWS FROM PRESIDENTIAL
CAMPAIGN
Wealthy business tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili issued a statement on
December 27 from London expressing his "readiness" to withdraw his
candidacy in the January 5 presidential election, Caucasus Press
reported. The announcement follows days of mounting political scandal
after the Georgian authorities accused Patarkatsishvili of attempting
to organize the overthrow of the government and released secretly
recorded audiotapes showing him offering a bribe to the head of the
special police department if police agreed to help oust the government
(see below). Patarkatsishvili is expected to submit a formal
declaration to the Georgian Central Election Commission renouncing his
candidacy in the coming days. RG
[24] POPULAR GEORGIAN PRO-OPPOSITION TV STATION 'SUSPENDS' BROADCASTING
Giorgi Targamadze announced on December 26 that the popular
pro-opposition Imedi television station of which he is director has
"temporarily suspended" its broadcasts because its employees have been
subject to "official pressure and blackmail," Interfax and ITAR-TASS
reported. Targamadze also explained that the decision was taken in
response to the "dirty political games" underway prior to the January 5
presidential election and due to the "misunderstanding" of the
candidacy of Imedi-TV co-owner Patarkatsishvili, Rustavi-2 TV reported.
Patarkatsishvili has openly financed much of the activities of the
Georgian opposition over the past several months. The
Prosecutor-General's Office has publicly implicated both
Patarkatsishvili and Valeri Gelbakhiani, a member of parliament who is
also a senior member of the Patarkatsishvili campaign staff, in a
"conspiracy to overthrow the Georgian government" (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," December 27, 2007). The pro-government television channel
Rustavi-2 recently broadcast a secretly recorded tape purportedly
showing Gelbakhiani and Patarkatsishvili seemingly offering a $100
million bribe to Erekle Kodua, a senior official from the Interior
Ministry, in return for his assistance in "unrest" planned to follow
the January election. For his part, Patarkatsishvili issued a statement
late on December 26 admitting that he met with Kodua in London on
December 23, but explaining that he "was prepared to pay as much as
Kodua asked for" in an effort to prevent another harsh crackdown by
police on opposition protesters, AFP and Imedi-TV reported.
Patarkatsishvili also said he has video footage of his own that he
claims shows an Interior Ministry official asking a contract killer to
assassinate him in London, where he currently lives (see "Georgian
Opposition Broadcaster Shuts Down As Political Scandals Heat Up,"
December 27, 2007, rferl.org). Prosecutors in Georgia said they will
investigate Patarkatsishvili's allegations, but at the same time
suggested that he may be using them as an excuse to avoid returning to
Tbilisi, where he is wanted for questioning. The Georgian authorities
imposed a state of emergency following opposition demonstrations last
month and temporarily suspended Imedi's broadcasts. RG
[25] RUSSIA REACHES SETTLEMENT WITH KAZAKHSTAN FOR DAMAGE FROM ROCKET
CRASH...
Speaking in Astana on December 27, Anatoly Perminov, the head of the
Russian Space Agency, confirmed that Russia has reached a long-awaited
settlement with Kazakhstan providing compensation for environmental
damage resulting from a rocket crash in September 2007,
Interfax-Kazakhstan reported. According to the terms of the settlement,
Russia agreed to pay Kazakhstan $2.4 million for damage resulting from
the falling debris and subsequent contamination from the crash of a
Russian Proton rocket (see "RFE/RL Newsline," September 7 and 11,
2007). Russia also promised to reduce the number of Proton rocket
launches from the Soviet-era Baikonur Cosmodrome that Russia leases
from Kazakhstan for some of its space launches. The Baikonur facility
is one of the world's leading space facilities and is regularly used to
launch commercial and military satellites, as well as supply missions
for the International Space Station. Two other Proton rockets crashed
at Baikonur in 1999, leading to the imposition of a suspension on all
launches at that time (see "RFE/RL Newsline," July 7 and 8 and November
3, 1999). RG
[26] ...AND CONCLUDES AGREEMENT FOR CANAL LINKING CASPIAN AND BLACK
SEAS
In a statement released in Astana, an unidentified Kazakh Ministry of
Transport and Communication official announced on December 27 that
Kazakh and Russian officials have finalized an agreement to build a
600-kilometer canal linking the Caspian and Black Seas, ITAR-TASS
reported. The project, reached at a formal meeting of a bilateral
Kazakh-Russian working group, entails the construction of a strategic
canal running from the Caspian Sea to the basin of the Sea of Azov and
linking to the Black Sea. The working group has also drafted a proposal
to the Eurasian Development Bank soliciting financing. The proposed
canal project was first presented to the Kazakh government in 2006 by
Eurasian Economic Community Deputy Secretary-General Serik Primbetov as
a Russian initiative (see "RFE/RL Newsline," September 20, 2006). RG
[27] KAZAKH POLICE CONCLUDE 'SPECIAL OPERATION' TARGETING ILLEGAL
MIGRANTS
At a press conference in Astana on December 27, unnamed officials of
the press center of the Kazakh Interior Ministry reported on the
results of a recently concluded "special operation" targeting "illegal
migrants," according to Kazakhstan Today. The four-day nation-wide
police operation, which ended on December 24, uncovered a total of
10,446 foreign citizens working and living illegally in the country. Of
the total, 9,916 were from other CIS countries and another 530 were
identified as being from "other foreign countries." The detainees
included more than 100 people who were wanted on various criminal
charges in Kazakhstan and abroad. The Kazakh police deported 1,218 of
the detained foreigners for "violating migration legislation" and
initiated criminal cases against another 23 illegal migrants. The
police operation also involved a sweeping inspection of firms and
businesses employing the illegal migrant workers, as a result of which
some 202 employers were charged with administrative offensives and
fined for "violating the rules of recruiting and using foreign labor."
RG
[28] KYRGYZ PRESIDENT ENDORSES NEW CABINET
Speaking in Bishkek on December 27, Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiev
endorsed the new cabinet selected by newly appointed Prime Minister
Igor Chudinov, according to ITAR-TASS. The Kyrgyz parliament formally
approved the new cabinet earlier in the day, AKIpress reported.
Although the new cabinet is dominated by ministers from the previous
government, Chudinov made some new appointments, including the former
mayor of Bishkek, Arstanbek Nogoev, who has been appointed minister of
agriculture, water resources, and industry; Marat Mambetov as the
minister of health; and Tajikan Kalimbetov as the new finance minister.
Former Finance Minister Akylbek Dzhaparov was named minister of trade
and economic development. Bakiev appointed former Energy and Industry
Minister Chudinov as prime minister on December 24 (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," December 27, 2007). RG
[29] TAJIK COURT IMPOSES STIFF PRISON SENTENCES ON CONVICTED
'TERRORISTS'
Judge Mirzosharif Hojiboev, the presiding judge of the Sughd district
court in the northern Tajik city of Khujand, handed down stiff prison
sentences on December 26 to three men convicted on terrorism charges,
RFE/RL's Tajik Service reported. The three men were arrested in late
May 2007 in the Isfara district, and were found guilty of engaging in
"terrorism, creating an illegal armed group, and of cooperation" with
the banned Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), as well as being
members of an outlawed extremist Islamist group known as Bayat,
Asia-Plus reported. Two of the men were sentenced to prison terms of 10
years and the third to 17 years. The extremist Bayat group, an outlawed
Islamist movement believed to have been formed in the early 1990s and
operating mainly in areas of northern Tajikistan, has been linked to
the January 2004 murder of a Christian missionary in the Isfara
district (see "RFE/RL Central Asia Report," May 25, 2004). The unnamed
defense lawyer for the men vowed to appeal the sentence to the Tajik
Supreme Court. RG
[30] TAJIKISTAN REACHES PRICE AGREEMENT FOR IMPORTS OF UZBEK NATURAL
GAS
An unidentified source in the TojikGaz state energy company confirmed
on December 27 that Tajikistan has reached a new agreement on the price
of natural gas imported form Uzbekistan, according to the Avesta
website. The agreement, concluded with officials from UzTransGaz, the
state gas producer in Uzbekistan, reportedly sets the price of gas
imports at $150 per 1,000 cubic meters, a 50 percent increase over the
current price, and covers the import of some 1 billion cubic meters of
gas from Uzbekistan through 2008. Senior officials from UzTransGaz and
TojikGaz signed an initial agreement on gas supplies in Tashkent
earlier this month that increased planned imports by about 300 million
cubic meters. According to the final agreement, Tajikistan is required
to pay in full for the gas imports from Uzbekistan in advance,
following past problems with mounting arrears. RG
Eastern Europe
[31] BELARUSIAN AUTHORITIES RULE OUT CONCESSIONS TO VENDORS
Alyaksandr Kalinouski, who is head of the commercial department of the
Minsk City Executive Committee, said at a meeting with a group of
owners of small businesses on December 27 that there will not be any
reversal of the presidential decree restricting the activities of small
businesses, Belapan reported. "Nobody is preparing documents that would
introduce alterations into it [the clause that bars certain business
owners from hiring employees other than three family members as of
January 1, 2008]," Kalinouski said. "This is the clear position of the
leadership of the country, the government, and so on," he said, adding
that the government might only take some measures to facilitate the
re-registering of businesses as "private unitary enterprises." Most of
the business owners present at the meeting left the hall in protest.
Anatol Shumchanka, leader of the Perspektyva small-business
association, said the vendors' problems will grow and protests are
imminent. Shumchanka announced a protest rally in Minsk on January 10,
2008, and a "March of Entrepreneurs" later in the month. AM
[32] UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT INITIATES CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES...
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko has issued a decree on the
creation of a National Constitutional Council, RFE/RL's Ukrainian
Service reported on December 27. The goal of the council is to prepare
a new version of the Ukrainian Constitution or amendments to the
present one. Yushchenko believes that drafting either a new
constitution or amendments to the existing one should not be the
competence of the parliament alone. The Constitutional Council will
comprise representatives proposed by political parties, local
governments, the National Academy of Sciences, and national
human-rights organizations. The decree sets January 15, 2008, as the
deadline for nominations. Yushchenko will personally head the council.
AM
[33] ...CALLS ON GOVERNMENT TO PRESERVE ECONOMIC STABILITY
Yushchenko also said on December 27 that the Ukrainian government and
parliament should keep the economic situation in Ukraine stable, while
at the same time compensating the population for their devalued
Soviet-era savings bank deposits, UNIAN reported. Compensation for lost
savings was among the leading slogans of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc
during the recent parliamentary election campaign. Yushchenko said such
compensation is the obligation of the entire state, not just of a
particular coalition. Yushchenko said that the state owes citizens 132
billion hryvnyas ($26 billion), which amounts to half the national
budget, but that the government while fulfilling its electoral pledges
should keep the budget deficit under 2 percent and inflation under 10
percent in 2008. AM
Southeastern Europe
[34] EU URGES SERBIA TO TAKE REALISTIC VIEW OF RELATIONS
The incoming president of the EU, Slovenia, has responded to the
Serbian parliament's resolution that makes further steps towards EU
membership contingent on the EU's stance on Kosova's independence by
calling on Serbia not to turn its back on the EU (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," December 27, 2007). Slovenian Foreign Minister Dmitrej Rupel
said on December 27 that "nobody is being forced to become a member,"
but questioned whether Serbia could realistically turn its back on the
EU, Reuters reported. "How can a country surrounded by European Union
member states survive if it is not a member itself?" he asked. All of
Serbia's neighbors are members of, or intend to join the EU. Rupel also
suggested that the upcoming presidential and local elections in Serbia
may have contributed to the near-unanimous support for the resolution,
saying that "most actions in Belgrade are intended for pre-election
use." Slovenia assumes the EU's rotating presidency on January 1 and
will hold the chair for six months. Serbia will hold presidential
elections on January 20. The date of local elections is due to be set
by the end of this month. AG
[35] SERBIA PASSES DELAYED 2008 BUDGET
Serbia's parliament has given its assent to a budget deficit of 0.5
percent of gross domestic product in 2008 in a vote delayed by
government discussions about the wording of a parliamentary resolution
on Kosova (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 27, 2007). The deficit was
originally intended to be 0.6 percent of GDP, local and international
media reported. However, the approved budget envisages a substantially
smaller cut in public spending than originally planned, just 0.8
percent rather than 1.7 percent. The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
has been urging Serbia to cut spending more sharply. The government's
revenue assumptions are based on a forecast that the economy will
expand by 6 percent in 2008. The budget, which is worth 654.4 billion
dinars ($12 billion), an increase of 9.9 percent on the 2007 budget,
secured the backing of 132 of the 250 members of parliament. AG
[36] SERBIAN MUSLIM LEADER BACKS SERBIA OVER KOSOVA
One of Serbia's most senior Muslim clerics called on December 27 for
Serbia to retain sovereignty over Kosova, Serbian media reported.
Hamdija Effendi Jusufspahic, the head of the Islamic Community of
Serbia, said that continued Serbian sovereignty is a means of
preserving peace and stability in Serbia and in the region as a whole,
but he added that Kosova, whose population is largely Muslim, should
enjoy "the highest degree of autonomy and democracy." In talks on
Kosova's final status, Serbia's government has offered Kosova "95
percent" autonomy. Serbia's Muslim community is currently divided in
its loyalties, with some looking to Jusufspahic, who is retiring, and
his successor Adem Zilkic, and others backing Muamer Zukorlic, who
argues that the Muslim leadership in Sarajevo -- rather than in
Belgrade -- should continue to lead Serbia's Muslims (see "RFE/RL
Newsline," October 10 and 12, November 19 and 29, and December 3,
2007). AG
[37] ALBANIAN MINISTER STRIPPED OF IMMUNITY
Albania's foreign minister, Lulzim Basha, faces investigation and
charges of corruption after the Albanian parliament voted on December
27 to strip him of immunity. Basha is suspected of abuse of office in a
previous post, as transportation minister, when he awarded a $595
million road-building contract to a U.S.-Turkish joint venture,
Bechtel-Enka (see "RFE/RL Newsline," October 4, 16, and 30, and
November 27, 2007). The contract was to extend an existing highway by
40 kilometers to Albania's border with Kosova by 2009. Basha himself
urged parliamentarians to lift his immunity, saying such a move would
be a valuable precedent in the country's effort to counter corruption.
He maintains, however, that he is not guilty of abusing his position.
The overwhelming majority -- 107 -- of the 140 deputies voted in favor
of the motion. Among those who voted against were members of the
opposition Socialist Party, who, while accusing Basha of corruption,
oppose the precedent of a member of parliament being stripped of
immunity by a simple majority. Prosecutors have already questioned
Basha and former Deputy Transport Minister Armand Teliti. AG
[38] HUNTING TRIP WITH ICTY INDICTEE SPURS CONTROVERSY IN CROATIA
Croatia's president, Stjepan Mesic, on December 27 entered the
controversy aroused by pictures of an indicted Croatian war criminal
hunting with Croatia's interior minister, warning that the incident has
damaged Croatia's credibility with the international community. Mladan
Markac, one of three former generals indicted by the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for their role in
crimes against ethnic Serbs in the closing stages of the war in
Croatia, was shown hunting boar on Mount Bilogora in the company of
Interior Minister Ivica Kirin and other senior officials, allegedly on
December 22-23. The date of the pictures is contested, but if it is
accurate, Markac may have breached the terms of the house arrest
imposed on him by the ICTY. "If Croatia wants to be a country that is
trusted, all have to comply with the rules," the news agency Hina
reported Mesic as saying. Markac and his fellow defendants, Ante
Gotovina and Ivan Cermak, enjoy the official support of the Croatian
government in their defense against the charges leveled by the ICTY. A
similar controversy was recently stirred in Bosnia-Herzegovina, when
the Bosnian Muslim member of the country's three-member presidency,
Haris Silajdzic, met with Rasim Delic, the wartime leader of the
Bosnian Muslim army, while Delic was on provisional release from the
ICTY (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 18, 2007). AG
Southwestern Asia And The Middle East
[39] AFGHAN PRESIDENT CONDEMNS BHUTTO ASSASSINATION
Hamid Karzai on December 27 called the assassination of Pakistani
former Prime Minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto an act of
"immense brutality" and "a big loss for all of us," Afghan and
international media reported. Karzai told reporters at a news
conference in Kabul, hours after returning from Pakistan where he held
talks with Bhutto and President Pervez Musharraf, "We in Afghanistan
condemn this act of cowardice and immense brutality in the strongest
possible terms," adding "I am deeply sorry, deeply pained that this
brave sister of ours, this great daughter of the Muslim world, is no
longer with us." In a separate statement issued by his office, Karzai,
who has survived two attempts on his life, said: "No doubt, the enemies
of peace, stability, and the prosperity of Pakistan and the Muslim
world are behind the heinous crime." Karzai praised Bhutto for her
strong stance against extremism and violence in Pakistan and the
region. MM
[40] U.S. AMBASSADOR TO AFGHANISTAN BACKS RECONCILIATION
At a news conference in Kabul on December 27, U.S. Ambassador William
Wood said the U.S. is in favor of a "serious reconciliation program
with those elements of the Taliban who are prepared to accept the
constitution and the authority of the elected government," Pajhwak
Afghan News reported. "The only place where we have concern would be
the members of the Taliban with close connection to al-Qaeda, the
reason being that al-Qaeda is an international threat, it is a global
threat and we don't believe that there should be separate peaces with
al-Qaeda," Wood said. Wood also remarked that Afghan and coalition
forces have killed or arrested many Taliban field commanders and other
militant leaders in the past year and thwarted their offensive
operations. As a result, there has been an increase in the flow of
foreign militant fighters into Afghanistan and a rise in terrorist
attacks, he added. President Karzai has voiced a growing interest in
meeting with Taliban leaders to try to persuade them to join the
government and stabilize the country. MM
[41] IRAN CONDEMNS PAKISTAN KILLING
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini "strongly"
condemned in Tehran on 27 December the murder earlier that day of
leading Pakistani politician Bhutto, IRNA reported. Bhutto was killed
in a suicide attack at a campaign rally in Rawalpindi; 20 others also
died in the attack. Hosseini said "this terrorist act" had no other
purpose but to disrupt peace in Pakistan, and he expressed the hope
that the Pakistani government's efforts to find the culprits will
restore peace in Pakistan. Iran's ambassador in Pakistan, Mashallah
Shakeri, phoned Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, on December 28 to
convey his personal condolences and a similar message from Iranian
Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki, IRNA reported. VS
[42] UNITED STATES CONCERNED BY MISSILE SALE TO IRAN
The White House expressed concern on December 26 at the possible sale
by Russia of advanced ground-to-air defensive missiles to Iran, AFP
reported (see Part 1). Iranian media have described the S-300
air-defense systems as an advanced version of the Russian TOR-M1 system
previously sold to Iran, and capable of hitting targets at very high
altitudes. The S-300 system can strike missiles or planes within a 145
kilometer range and at an altitude of over 27,000 meters, AP reported.
The Iranian Defense Ministry announced the prospective sale on December
26. White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said in Crawford, Texas, on
December 27 that "we have ongoing concerns about the prospective sale
of such weapons to Iran and other countries of concern," AFP reported.
Iran is facing sanctions over its contested nuclear activities. VS
[43] IRANIAN OFFICIAL VISITS EGYPT
Ali Larijani, the Iranian Supreme Leader's representative on Iran's
Supreme National Security Council, was in Egypt from December 24-27,
where he met with senior Egyptian officials, including the foreign and
intelligence ministers, Radio Farda reported on December 27. Larijani
was ostensibly on a cultural and academic visit, but the broadcaster
observed the visit was probably a further step in the two countries'
discreet efforts to improve hitherto less-than-cordial ties. Bilateral
relations deteriorated quickly following Iran's 1979 revolution, which
toppled a Westernizing monarchy with which Egypt had cordial ties in
the 1970s (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 13, 2007). Larijani also met
the Egyptian head of the Arab League, Amr Musa. Radio Farda cited
Larijani as telling the press in Cairo that "we have so far moved in a
positive direction, but should not hurry." VS
[44] IRANIAN MINISTER MAY FACE QUESTIONS IN PARLIAMENT
Interior Minister Mostafa Purmohammadi told journalists in Tehran on
December 26 that he, like them, has read in the news that 11
parliamentarians have signed a motion calling on him to appear in
parliament for questioning. Purmohammadi has faced objections in recent
months from some parliamentarians over his working methods, including
his tendency to appoint or dismiss provincial or district governors
without consulting with local members of parliament. Parliamentarians
also want him to account for money the ministry might have spent to
computerize parliamentary elections next March. Such expenditures would
have required the approval of the Guardians Council, which has a
decisive say on the entire electoral process and has been reserved on
computerization proposals so far. Purmohammadi said the parliamentary
presidium has not yet formally taken receipt of the motion, but he is
ready to answer questions "from the first day," "Aftab-i Yazd" reported
on December 27. Zanjan representative Rafat Bayat said in parliament on
December 26 that the motion, signed by 11 members of parliament, has
been submitted to the presidium, which she said must formally announce
its receipt on December 27, ISNA reported. VS
[45] IRAQI PRESIDENT INSISTS ALGIERS ACCORD STILL IN EFFECT...
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's office issued a statement on December
27 insisting that the 1975 Algiers Accord signed by Iran and Iraq that
demarcates the two countries' shared border is still in force,
international media reported. "The Algiers Treaty is valid and not
void. It is still in force and no party can unilaterally cancel the
treaty. This fact is recognized by the president and he did not mean in
his passing and improvised remarks to cancel the active treaty," the
statement said. During a December 25 press conference, Talabani was
asked by a journalist whether the treaty is still in effect. He
responded that the current Iraqi government voided the treaty because
it was concluded between then former Iraqi Vice President Saddam
Hussein and the former Shah of Iran, and not between Iraq and Iran. In
response to Talabani's initial comments, Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini said the accord is permanent and cannot
be breached (see "RFE/RL Newsline," December 27, 2007). Iraqi
government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said that while Baghdad is
committed to the treaty, it is seeking an alternative to it, Reuters
reported the same day. "The government is looking forward to an
alternative treaty that will be better than the Algiers Accord,"
al-Dabbagh said. SS
[46] COALITION ANNOUNCED BETWEEN KURDISH PARTIES AND IRAQI ISLAMIC
PARTY
Iraqi President and leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)
Jalal Talabani announced on December 24 in Al-Sulaymaniyah that his
party, together with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), has formed a
coalition with the Sunni-led Iraqi Islamic Party, Al-Sharqiyah
television reported on December 25. Talabani made the announcement
during a joint press conference with KDP leader and Kurdistan regional
President Mas'ud Barzani, and Iraqi Vice President and Iraqi Islamic
Party leader Tariq al-Hashimi. Talabani praised the new coalition, but
stressed that other alliances have not been nullified. "Relations have
always existed among the three parties and today, we signed the
document which we discussed more than a year ago," Talabani said. "This
alliance completes the other alliances....This alliance does not mean
we have abandoned our previous alliances, but instead reinforces them,"
he added. Al-Hashimi said the agreement will have an important impact
on the political process. SS
[47] U.S. FORCES KILL 11 MEMBERS OF SHI'ITE MILITIA SPLINTER GROUP IN
SOUTHERN IRAQ
The U.S. military announced on December 27 that it killed 11 members of
a breakaway faction from Muqtada al-Sadr's militia, the Imam Al-Mahdi
Army, in the southern city of Kut earlier that day. In a statement, the
U.S. military said that the operation was directed against a person
"reportedly responsible for attacks against coalition forces and
supporters of coalition forces." There was no immediate comment from
al-Sadr, but U.S. officials have said that one of the main reasons for
the sharp decline in violence in Baghdad and southern Iraq has been
al-Sadr's call for a six-month freeze on his militia's activities that
began in August. Previously, al-Sadr said any Imam Al-Mahdi Army
members who do not observe the cease-fire will no longer be considered
members of the militia. "We commend all those who honor al-Sayyid
Muqtada al-Sadr's cease-fire pledge," said U.S. military spokesman
Major Winfield Danielson on December 27. "Significant progress has been
made in the fight for a secure and stable Iraq, but dangerous criminal
elements still exist." SS
[48] AL-BASRAH POLICE DISCOVER SPY DRONE AND WEAPONS CACHE
Police in the southern city of Al-Basrah announced on December 26 the
discovery of a spy drone and a large cache of weapons in a private
home, Al-Arabiyah satellite television reported the same day. Al-Basrah
Police Chief Major General Abd al-Jalil Khalaf said Iraqi security
forces raided a house in central Al-Basrah after receiving a tip-off
and arrested five people. The house contained a large cache of weapons,
including several mortar rounds, 20 rocket propelled grenades, 20
rockets, 50 hand grenades, several bombs and a spy drone. "What is
strange is that a spy drone is used for the purposes of spying and
information gathering," Khalaf said. "In fact, this raises our concern
about the reasons why this plane is here, given that we have
information that some of these planes were sold to certain people." He
declined to offer further details and said an investigation is
underway. SS
[49] GUNMEN KIDNAP 22 PEOPLE IN CENTRAL IRAQ
Unknown gunmen on December 27 kidnapped 22 people along the road
between the Kan'an and Balad Ruz districts in the Diyala Governorate,
Al-Sharqiyah television reported. Iraqi security sources said the
gunmen, suspected of being Al-Qaeda in Iraq members, set up bogus
checkpoints along the road and stopped two vehicles. The gunmen then
forced the occupants out of the vehicles and took them to an unknown
location. The security sources said an investigation has been launched
into the incident. Elsewhere in the Diyala Governorate, the Iraqi
military said it has discovered the decomposed bodies of 17 men near
the provincial capital of Ba'qubah, "Gulf News" reported on December
27. All the victims had gunshot wounds to the head. According to Iraqi
Army Sergeant Nasr al-Dulaymi, 60 bodies have been discovered in the
governorate over the past month. SS
End Note
[50] There is no end note today.
|