OMRI Daily Digest II No. 73, 12 April 1995
CONTENTS
[01] BOSNIAN SERBS ATTACK GORAZDE.
[02] NEWS FROM SARAJEVO.
[03] CROATIA TO DEMOBILIZE TROOPS.
[04] CROATIA WANTS ONLY EUROPEANS AMONG PEACEKEEPERS.
[05] GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN MACEDONIA.
[06] STUDENTS BLOCK TRAFFIC IN CHISINAU.
[07] BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT ADOPTS BUDGET ON FIRST READING.
[08] ALBANIAN PRIME MINISTER IN RUSSIA.
[09] ALBANIA IS NOT VIOLATING UN EMBARGO, FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 73, Part II, 12 April 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] BOSNIAN SERBS ATTACK GORAZDE.
International media on 11 and 12 April
reported on the fighting throughout Bosnia-Herzegovina, observing that
Bosnian Serb forces have besieged the "safe area" town of Gorazde, in
the eastern part of the country. An estimated 13 artillery shells
pounded the city in the early evening of 11 April, prompting the UN to
call for NATO planes to pass over the area. Bosnian government radio
reported casualties, including "tens wounded," but those accounts remain
unconfirmed. Intensifying clashes between Bosnian government forces and
Bosnian Serbs on Mount Majevica in the northeast were reported on 11
April. The Bosnian Serb news agency SRNA said that Serbian forces
prevented a communications tower in the area from being taken. -- Stan
Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[02] NEWS FROM SARAJEVO.
Reuters on 11 April reported that UN officials have
been unable to forget an agreement with Bosnian Serbs on the reopening of
Sarajevo airport, closed two days earlier when Bosnian Serb fighters
sprayed bullets at a U.S. plane transporting relief supplies. Also on 11
April, Bosnian Serb soldiers removed a heavy gun from a UN storage site
near Sarajevo, only to return it several hours later without
explanation. Meanwhile, the Croatian news agency Hina, citing Bosnian
television, quoted Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic as asking the UN
and NATO to take action to prevent Serbian attacks on Sarajevo and "to
declare a demilitarized area within a 20 km-radius of the city."
Izetbegovic also warned Bosnian Serbs besieging Sarajevo of an all-out
attack if their actions do not cease. He also threatened not to opt for
an extension of the cease-fire, due to expire on 30 April, should
Belgrade fail to recognize Bosnia-Herzegovina or if the Bosnian Serbs
reject an international peace plan, The International Herald Tribune
reported on 12 April. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[03] CROATIA TO DEMOBILIZE TROOPS.
According to Hina on 11 April, Croatian
Defense Minister Gojko Susak has announced that President Franjo Tudjman
has resolved to demobilize some 30,000 troops. The demobilized soldiers
will return to civilian jobs, especially in regions where production is
adversely affected by labor shortages. "We'll demobilize our men but
this will not reduce our combat readiness," Susak was quoted as saying.
But he did not specify which troops will be affected by the decision. --
Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[04] CROATIA WANTS ONLY EUROPEANS AMONG PEACEKEEPERS.
Reuters and Nasa Borba
on 11 April reported that a top Croatian spokesman has called for the
removal of Asians and Africans from UN contingents in Croatia, soon to
be known as UNCRO. The spokesman said that European troops better
understand Croatia's problems and have more clout with the local Serbs.
It is also well known that Croatia hopes that greater European
involvement in UNCRO would mean more European support for Zagreb.
Croatia regards the Jordanian, Argentine, Nepalese, and Kenyan units in
particular as mainstays of the Serbian black market economy, and
President Franjo Tudjman has criticized the Third World contingents as
undisciplined and unprofessional. The UN, however, says that host
countries do not determine the ethnic composition of peacekeeping
forces, which must reflect the heterogeneous nature of the world body.
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] GERMAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN MACEDONIA.
Klaus Kinkel on 11 April arrived
in Skopje on a one-day visit, international agencies reported the same
day. Kinkel met with President Kiro Gligorov, Prime Minister Branko
Crvenkovski, Foreign Minister Stevo Crvenkovski, and other officials. He
said the Greek embargo against Macedonia was a "mistake" and called on
both sides to settle their dispute quickly. He also said that the EU
members are showing solidarity with Greece but that the other 14 members
are not trying to conceal the fact that the Greek embargo is "wrong."
Kinkel promised to facilitate closer ties between Macedonia and the
"European and transatlantic structures." He noted that it is
particularly important that Macedonia be admitted into the OSCE. --
Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[06] STUDENTS BLOCK TRAFFIC IN CHISINAU.
About 2,000 students on 11 April
blocked traffic in downtown Chisinau, while several hundreds more
picketed the headquarters of the state TV and Radio Company. According
to Interfax and Radio Bucharest, the demonstrators requested firm
guarantees that their social and political demands--including that
Romanian rather than Moldovan be proclaimed the country's official
language--be met. Negotiations with a government commission have
apparently been deadlocked over the past few days. The students' protest
is now in its fourth week. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[07] BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT ADOPTS BUDGET ON FIRST READING.
The Bulgarian
parliament on 11 April adopted the state budget on its first reading,
the domestic media reported the following day. The budget was approved
by the government on 30 March. It provides for a deficit of 47 billion
leva ($700 million) or 5.6% of GDP. Expenditures are estimated at 387
billion leva ($5.8 billion) and revenues at 340 billion leva ($5.1
billion). GDP is expected to amount to 800-850 billion leva ($12.0-12.8
billion), while it is estimated that inflation will drop to 40-50% from
121.9% in 1994. Prime Minister Zhan Videnov said average wages in
industry will rise to 8,922 leva ($135) in 1995, Standart reported. --
Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[08] ALBANIAN PRIME MINISTER IN RUSSIA.
Aleksander Meksi arrived in Moscow on
10 April for a two-day visit, dpa and Interfax reported the same day.
Meksi and his Russian counterpart, Viktor Cherno-myrdin, signed on 11
April five agreements on economic and scientific cooperation, including
accords on the prevention of double taxation and mutual investment
protection. They also initialed a friendship and cooperation treaty that
will go into force after being signed by the presidents of the two
countries. Meksi's visit to Moscow is the first by an Albanian premier
in 30 years, AFP reported on 10 April. Moscow and Tirana broke off
diplomatic relations in December 1961 and did not restore them until
1990. -- Fabian Schmidt and Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[09] ALBANIA IS NOT VIOLATING UN EMBARGO, FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS.
Albanian
Foreign Minister Alfred Serreqi, on a two-day visit to Croatia, has
denied accusations that his country is violating the UN embargo against
rump Yugoslavia, Reuters reported on 11 April. Hina cited Serreqi as
saying that Albania respects and will continue to respect the embargo
but that small amounts of fuel are being smuggled into rump Yugoslavia.
The foreign minister said the accusations are aimed at neutralizing
Albania's efforts to focus attention on the rights struggle of ethnic
Albanians in Serbia's Kosovo province. He told Croatian radio that "a
solution for Kosovo must be part of the overall solution" to the war in
the former Yugoslavia. Serreqi and his Croatian counterpart, Mate
Granic, signed a protocol on cooperation between their two ministries.
-- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
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