BOSNEWS digest 460 - 09/11/95
BOSNEWS Digest 460
CONTENTS
[01] AMERICAN DEMANDS MADE MILOSEVIC ANGRY
[02] NATO WILL DIVIDE B-H IN THREE SECTORS
[03] "RESULT OF PEACE NEGOTIATIONS WILL BE PAINFUL FOR SERBS"
[04] MOSTAR MAJORS JOIN OHIO PEACE TALKS
[05] F. YUGOSLAVIA: NON-ALIGNED GROUP PROPOSE CHANGES
[06] APPEAL FOR MORE TRIBUNAL RESOURCES - CASSESE
[07] THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS ON THE DIPLOMATIC FRONT AND ON THE GROUND IN THE BALKANS
[08] THOUSANDS OF `CLEANSED' MUSLIMS, CROATS IN DANGER OF FREEZING TO DEATH.
[09] GAS DROPS TO A `TRICKLE' IN SARAJEVO AS BLIZZARD HITS.
[10] CROATS BLOCK EVEN SYMBOLIC AGREEMENT FOR REFUGEE RETURN.
[11] MOSTAR STILL DIVIDED.
[12] BOSNIAN GOVERNMENT ALLOWS ABDIC FOLLOWERS TO GO HOME.
[13] PEACEKEEPERS ATTACKED.
[14] PRESSURE ON MILOSEVIC.
[15] PLEA FOR PEACE AND UNITY.
[16] THINLY VEILED PARTITION.
[17] ANOTHER TRY FOR BANJA LUKA.
[18] DEM WITH DINARS.
[19] TENSIONS RISE OVER EASTERN SLAVONIA.
[20] CORRECTION/UPDATE.
[21] JOURNALIST RELEASED.
[01] AMERICAN DEMANDS MADE MILOSEVIC ANGRY
Dayton, November 6,1995 (Press TWRA) - Peace negotiations in
Dayton continue. The center of delegations' attention are
documents proposed by American side. According to officials close
to negotiations "the plan can not satisfy any of the sides in
conflict and no one can avoid the concessions". "There can be
neither clear winners nor loosers",said one official.
According to the same sources Serbian President Milosevic
became angry because US peace proposal demands from him the
concession which were not mentioned in the previous talks with
Holbrooke. American proposals demands from Milosevic to replace
leader of Bosnian Serbs Radovan Karadjic and General Ratko
Mladic, recognize B-H and Croatia and guarantee the human rights
to minorities in Serbia. The officials estimated that these are
too big concessions for Milosevic, and the Serbian press agency
"Tanjug" reported on Sunday that delegation of so called "FRY"
will reject any proposal which would be "in contrast with the
spirit" of previous agreements.
However, one anonymous official said that "serious
negotiations face to face" are expected this week "when the
initial inflexibility eases up".
Mostar - The EU spokesman in Mostar said that EU
Administrator over Mostar Hans Koschnik and mayors of east and
west part of Mostar Safet Orucevic and Mijo Brajkovic have been
invited to attend peace negotiations in Dayton. "The invitation
is unexpected, but the situation in Mostar explains it", said EU
spokesman and added that this invitation expressed the
negotiators intention to reach overall solution of the conflict.
[02] NATO WILL DIVIDE B-H IN THREE SECTORS
Sarajevo, November 6,1995 (Press TWRA) - The member of B-H
Presidency Ejup Ganic said for Sarajevo's daily "Oslobodjenje"
that NATO forces, when the implementation of peace agreement
starts will divide B-H in three military sectors. These sectors
will be under US, France and Britain control. French NATO units
shell arrive first and land in Ploce, and their headquarters will
be in Mostar. British units will be responsible for the second
sector, west Bosnia and their base and logistics center will be
in Split with the headquarters in Gornji Vakuf. Americans will
take over the third sector. Their units will be transferred from
Germany and the headquarters will be in Tuzla. The NATO General
Headquarters will be in Sarajevo.
Ganic stressed that B-H Government wants all B-H
international borders to be under NATO control.
[03] "RESULT OF PEACE NEGOTIATIONS WILL BE PAINFUL FOR SERBS"
Belgrade, November 6,1995 (Press TWRA) - "The outcome of peace US
negotiations will be painful for Serbs", said Bosnian Serbs
leader Radovan Karadjic for Serbian Radio Kragujevac. "Serbs are
those who moved away from their initial position the most, and
that was to unite with Serbia", said Karadjic and added that
negotiations should bring peace in B-H and enable Serbs to get
back part of the territories in Banja Luka region.
[04] MOSTAR MAJORS JOIN OHIO PEACE TALKS
The European Union Administrator, Hans Koshnik, and the
two Mostar Majors, Safet Orucevic and Mijo Brajkovic,
have been called to join the peace talks in Dayton, Ohio.
A spokesman for Koshnik stated that it was an unexpected
invitation, but that it could be explained by the current
situation in Mostar, and the wish of the international
peace mediators to reach an overall peace settlement.
Koshnik, Orucevic, and Brajkovic are expected to leave
for Dayton sometime today.
[05] F. YUGOSLAVIA: NON-ALIGNED GROUP PROPOSE CHANGES
The non-aligned caucus today presented some amendments to
the United States draft resolution on human rights violations to
the other members of the council.
These amendments were based on some proposals the Bosnian
delegation submitted and essentially contain a number of
proposals that would call on the government of the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) to fully cooperate with the war
crimes tribunal in The Hague and with the investigations in the
fate of missing Muslim persons from Bosnia.
The Croatian mission circulated its own paper last night
which contained amendments on human rights violations in the FRY.
Diplomats told International Report that it was undisputed that
the government of the FRY was committing violations of
international humanitarian law, but that the Croatian initiative
was too obvious an attempt to shift the blame from its own
government's violations.
A European diplomat predicted that the Croatian amendments
would not be accepted by Russia.
The council did not discuss the amendments and the draft
resolution today but postponed further deliberations until
tomorrow.
[06] APPEAL FOR MORE TRIBUNAL RESOURCES - CASSESE
The President of the International Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia, ANTONIO CASSESE, today appealed to the General
Assembly to provide the tribunal with the resources it needed to
fulfil its task. "When mass graves are suddenly available for
inspection, we should not be agonizing over whether the funding
is available for travel", he said.
Referring to the obstacles the tribunal was facing, Cassese
said it was like a giant which had no arms or legs. Unlike
domestic criminal courts, it had no enforcement agencies at its
disposal. Without the intervention of national authorities, it
could not execute arrest warrants, nor seize evidentiary
material, nor compel witnesses to give testimony, nor search the
scenes where crimes allegedly had been committed.
The adoption by states of all legislative, administrative
and judicial measures necessary for the expeditious execution of
the tribunal's decisions was of crucial importance, he said. At
present only 15 of the 185 member states had enacted implementing
legislation. That lack of cooperation was particularly paralyzing
when it came to the execution of arrest warrants. So far, two of
the entities of the former Yugoslavia - the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia and the Bosnian Serb administration in Pale, had
refused to cooperate. "This lack of cooperation has greatly
hampered the work of our tribunal: 41 of the first 43 accused are
in their territory, but they have failed to apprehend these
suspects and surrender them to our tribunal. Without suspects
physically in our presence, we cannot proceed to trial."
Another obstacle was the tribunal's difficulty in obtaining
the financial and practical resources necessary to do its work,
he continued. Its 1994-1995 biennial budget was approved only in
July 1995. Two months later, the UN's financial crisis had
created new problems. "We urgently need to recruit a full
complement of staff, we need to provide them with adequate tools
to work, and we need to have adequate funds available to cover
the initial expenses of setting up the tribunal's working
environment", Cassese said.
Addressing the question of whether the tribunal would become
useless if peace negotiations concerning the region of the former
Yugoslavia were successful, he replied: "No. If anything, the
importance of the tribunal will be even greater. For there to be
a lasting peace it must be accompanied by a sense of justice in
the minds of all the citizens and, in particular, of the victims
of atrocities. If, at the end of a war, torturers and their
victims are treated alike, the war's legacy of hatred, resentment
and acrimony will not have been snuffed out; rather, it will
continue to smoulder. The existence of peace in such a climate
would be precarious indeed. If, however, the tribunal, as an
impartial body, continues in its work of bringing to justice at
least some of the most egregious offenders, those who have
suffered through four years of hellish war will be better able to
find forgiveness required for peace to last".
In his statement, U.S. Ambassador EDWARD GNEHM said that his
government "has recently been in contact with President Milosevic
of Serbia-Montenegro and it elicited from him a firm commitment
to cooperate with the work of the tribunal whether or not armed
conflict continues. We expect these encouraging words to be
matched by deeds. Similar assurances have not been forthcoming
from the Bosnian Serb administration in Pale."
Gnehm promised further financial contributions to the work
of the tribunal. The U.S. commitment to date totals 13.5 million
USD.
The election to fill the vacancy in the International Court
of Justice will take place on February 28, 1996, the Security
Council decided today. The elections have to be conducted in the
Security Council and in the General Assembly at the same time,
and the candidate who obtains an absolute majority vote in both
bodies is elected.
The vacancy was created by the death of Judge ANDREAS
AGUILAR MAWDSLEY of Venezuela. The new member of the court will
serve out the remainder of the nine-year term of Judge Mawdsley
until February 5, 2000.
[07] THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS ON THE DIPLOMATIC FRONT AND ON THE GROUND IN THE BALKANS
Peace talks continue between Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia at Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio. Croatian President Franjo Tudjman, leaving
Croatia today to return to the Dayton talks, renewed Zagreb's threat to
liberate eastern Slavonia, the last area of Croatia still occupied by Serbian
forces, by force if a peace settlement is not reached in Dayton by November
30.
Secretary of Defense William Perry and Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev
today agreed that Russian troops will participate in the planned NATO-led
peace implementation force. NATO commander Gen. George Joulwan's orders will
pass to Russian troops through Russian Gen. Leonty Shevtsov, who will be
Joulwan's deputy. This arrangement will ameliorate Russian objections
against taking military orders from NATO. However, the issue of political
control for the force remains unresolved.
The Clinton Administration announced today that it would supply the U.N. War
Crimes Tribunal with any intelligence information relevant to its inquiries.
The Administration was responding to Tribunal Chief Justice Richard
Goldstone's reported disappointment in the "quality and timeliness" of U.S.
intelligence on Serbian war crimes provided to the Tribunal.
Many observers suspect that the Clinton Administration is still reluctant to
provide the Tribunal with information that might lead to an indictment of
Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic for war crimes, particularly in
connection with the fall of Srebrenica. The current U.S. peace initiative
is largely dependent on negotiating with and effectively appeasing Milosevic
for success. Administration officials have repeatedly denied having hard
evidence against Milosevic - as though a smoking gun were needed to indict
or convict him. At the same time, they have attempted to focus public and
diplomatic attention on Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko
Mladic, whom the Administration has indicated should be removed from power
before a peace settlement is implemented in Bosnia.
Serbian forces today released Christian Science Monitor journalist David
Rohde after several days of U.S. demands for his freedom. Serbian forces had
imprisoned Rohde last week and charged him with forging documents and spying.
Rohde was the first journalist to expose Serbian massacres of thousands of
Muslims after the fall of Srebrenica, and had recently returned to the area
to follow up on his previous articles.
Sarajevo is facing a severe energy crisis. Winter weather has increased
demand for natural gas at a time that supplies are decreasing due to damage
to the pipeline crossing Serbian-occupied territory. U.N. officials claim
that the shortage is due to lack of payment by the Bosnian government to the
Russian supplier of the gas. However, both Bosnia and Russia deny that that
is the case. Bosnia accused the U.N. of ignoring Serbian sabotage of the
pipeline and siphoning off of gas for their own use.
[08] THOUSANDS OF `CLEANSED' MUSLIMS, CROATS IN DANGER OF FREEZING TO DEATH.
"Muslims and Croats evicted from their homes around Banja Luka were forced to
sleep in the open despite heavy snow, the UN refugee agency said Tuesday, and
warned that some could soon freeze to death," Reuters reports.
"There is a lot of snow on the ground, it's freezing weather, and many of
these people who are being evicted are elderly and ill," UNHCR spokesman Ron
Redmond told Reuters. "Some of them are still sleeping out in the open so I
think we can expect to begin hearing stories about people freezing to death."
Serb forces have been killing, imprisoning, or expelling non-Serbs in
northern Bosnia since overrunning the area in 1992. The UN estimates that only
13,000 non-Serbs are left in the Banja Luka region -- out of a pre-war non-
Serb population of half a million.
[09] GAS DROPS TO A `TRICKLE' IN SARAJEVO AS BLIZZARD HITS.
"Sarajevo shivered
as Russian gas supplies slowed to a trickle," Reuters reported Monday, after a
late-autumn blizzard hit the Balkans this week. UN officials said Sarajevo is
receiving only half the gas it needs from the pipeline, which runs through
Serbia and Serb-occupied Bosnia before reaching the city.
As a result, residents now only receive gas -- the main source of heat in
the city -- every other day, despite sub-freezing temperatures. Officials
forbid Sarajevans to use electricity for heating, because the city's war-
battered power grid can't withstand the additional demand.
Restoration of gas and electricity to Sarajevo was supposed to be a key
condition of a 60-day ceasefire throughout Bosnia. Without utilities for most
of the last three winters under siege, Sarajevans have already been forced to
burn furniture, old clothing, tires, and books to keep from freezing.
Bosnian officials requested an increase in their natural-gas supply from
Russia, source of the fuel. However, Associated Press reports that the request
was denied -- "not by the Russian supplier but by the the UN Sanctions
Committee." No reason was reported for the denial, but the sanctions committee
may have decided to deny Sarajevans additional gas fearing it would just be
siphoned off by Serbia.
The early-season snowstorm also forced the closure of the treacherous road
over Mt. Igman after several severe traffic accidents. The winding Igman trail
is the lone route into Sarajevo not physically blocked by Serb checkpoints.
[10] CROATS BLOCK EVEN SYMBOLIC AGREEMENT FOR REFUGEE RETURN.
The presidents of
Bosnia and Croatia agreed to allow 600 families to return to their homes in
Bosnia: 300 Muslim families to Croatian-controlled Jajce and Stolac, and 300
Croat families to government-held Bugojno and Travnik.
That agreement was mostly symbolic, making little dent in the problem of
an estimated 2.5 million displaced Bosnians. And, Serb nationalists, who are
continuing to drive out all non-Serbs from territory they occupy, were
noticeably absent from even this modest accord.
But Bosnian Croat officials are blocking even the symbolic return of
several hundred. In Jajce, AP says, "Muslims are kept outside town in ghettos."
However, some Croat refugees have already gone back to their homes in
Bugojno as agreed, AP reports. "All my neighbors have been around to welcome
me back,'' said Milica Lovric, 64, who returned three weeks ago -- before the
Dayton announcement. "Nobody has been anything but kind to us."
Bosnian President Izetbegovic expressed optimism this week that his
government and Bosnian Croat nationalist forces will come to an agreement on
rules to govern the Muslim-Croat federation. Mayors from both the Muslim and
Croat sides of now-divided Mostar are scheduled to join the talks in Dayton.
[11] MOSTAR STILL DIVIDED.
Croats have conducted their own "ethnic cleansing"
campaign in Bosnia, and Mostar saw some of the worst. Although Muslim-Croat
fighting has ended, Muslims are still banished to the war-ravaged east side of
Mostar -- where the "hospital" has been built from "shipping containers, a few
chunks of concrete and much wishful thinking," Reuters reports.
Dr. Nedzad Imamovic, who worked at a hospital on the city's west side for
26 years, is now barred from even crossing into that part of Mostar. He yearns
for the city to be reunited. Notes Reuters: "When Imamovic's skills as a facial
surgeon are needed, his colleagues in the west have to summon a substitute
Croat doctor from Split in neighboring Croatia."
[12] BOSNIAN GOVERNMENT ALLOWS ABDIC FOLLOWERS TO GO HOME.
Supporters of Muslim
businessman-turned-warlord Fikret Abdic -- who cut his own deal with Serbs
besieging Bihac and helped blockade and bombard the enclave -- have been
allowed to return home to Velika Kladusa.
Abdic's forces were defeated when the Bosnian Army's Fifth Corps joined
with heavily armed Croatian soldiers to break the blockade of Bihac. About
20,000 Abdic supporters now live in a makeshift camp on the Croatian border.
Although Abdic and his fighters were instrumental in blocking food and
medicine from reaching starving people in Bihac -- the UN confirmed deaths by
starvation during the siege -- the Bosnian government is working with the UN
to encourage civilians who supported Abdic to return and reclaim their homes.
Some of the refugees have already returned to their homes without problem,
Ron Redmond at UNHCR told AP.
[13] PEACEKEEPERS ATTACKED.
Seven French soldiers from the UN's "Rapid
Reaction
Force" were wounded Monday after assailants fired guns and threw grenades at
their base near Mostar. UN officials say they don't know who carried out the
attack.
[14] PRESSURE ON MILOSEVIC.
U.S. negotiators are reportedly pressuring Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic to remove two key Bosnian Serbs from power:
political leader Radovan Karadzic, and commanding Gen. Ratko Mladic. Both have
been indicted by an international tribunal for genocide and crimes against
humanity.
The U.S. reportedly seeks a provision in a new Bosnian constitution
barring indicted war criminals from holding office.
"Milosevic is upset because he thinks the Americans brought him to Dayton
on false pretenses," one official involved in the talks told AP. The talks are
expected to last several more weeks.
The president of the UN war-crimes tribunal asked the U.S. to demand that
indicted criminals be turned over for prosecution. "If, at the end of the war,
torturers and their victims are treated alike, the war's legacy of hatred,
resentment and acrimony will not have been snuffed out," said Antonio Cassese.
[15] PLEA FOR PEACE AND UNITY.
Mothers of Sarajevo children killed under siege
vowed to meet each day in a city park until a peace agreement is reached in
Ohio. The park is site of a makeshift memorial, featuring an alter with the
photographs of toddlers killed by sniper and artillery fire.
"The children's tears, the children's screams, were not a strong enough
weapon for defense," the mothers wrote in a letter sent to negotiators in
Dayton. "Don't divide Bosnia. It is like a heart, when you split it the patient
dies. Don't even try to divide the graves of our children, they cannot be
divided."
[16] THINLY VEILED PARTITION.
However, "the future being mapped out behind
closed doors in Dayton is a scantly shrouded partition," charges journalist
Samantha Power in a Boston Globe opinion piece. "Anybody loyal to multiethnic
living or born to a mixed marriage will soon be left stateless."
A draft constitution leaked to the New York Times would even allow the two
portions of a supposedly unitary Bosnia to maintain their own separate armies.
Supporters of the proposal say it is the only chance of bringing the carnage
in Bosnia to an end, and Bosnia will remain one nation -- although comprised
of two parts.
[17] ANOTHER TRY FOR BANJA LUKA.
John Shattuck, America's assistant secretary
of state for human rights, arrived in Sarajevo Tuesday hoping to travel to Serb
-occupied Banja Luka to discover what happened to 2,000 Muslim men separated
from their families when women and children were expelled from the region.
Western leaders and aid workers "fear the men have been or will be
slaughtered by Serbs, the same fate that befell thousands of men when Serbs
captured the eastern Bosnian enclave of Srebrenica in July," AP reports.
[18] DEM WITH DINARS.
At the advice of the World Bank, the Bosnian government
has agreed to adopt the German mark as the country's official currency along
with the Bosnian dinar, Bosnian media report. The Deutschemark (DEM) has long
been the only currency accepted in city markets.
[19] TENSIONS RISE OVER EASTERN SLAVONIA.
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman has
repudiated the first agreement announced at the Dayton "peace talks." After
agreeing to seek a peaceful resolution of the status of eastern Slavonia (the
last part of Croatia occupied by Serb forces), Tudjman said that he would
resort to military means if an agreement isn't reached by Nov. 30.
[20] CORRECTION/UPDATE.
At least one UN translator reported (by Oslobodenje) to
have been killed in Srebrenica has in fact been found alive. Hasan Nuhanovic,
27, was permitted to leave the UN compound in Srebrenica with Dutch soldiers,
the Washington Post and AP report. However, his father, mother, and 21-year-old
brother were ordered out of the UN compound on July 13 with other refugees --
denied UN protection. "They were last seen passing through the compound gate
behind which the Serb soldiers were standing," according to a statement signed
by 3 UN military observers. They haven't been seen since.
It is believed that Serbs massacred up to 8,000 people, mostly unarmed
civilians, when they overran the "UN-designated safe area" this summer.
[21] JOURNALIST RELEASED.
Serb nationalists released Christian Science Monitor
reporter David Rohde Wednesday, after imprisoning him for two weeks when he
crossed into territory under their control.
Karadzic called the release a "good-will gesture." However, Serb
nationalists also accomplished the goal of preventing Rohde from further
reporting on Serb atrocities. This summer, Rohde was the first Western
journalist to see first-hand evidence of mass slaughter in Srebrenica.
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