OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 93, 15 May 1995
CONTENTS
[01] FIGHTING CONTINUES IN THE POSAVINA REGION.
[02] KRAJINA SERB LEADER PRAISES RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
[03] WHAT ROLE FOR THE U.S. IN WESTERN SLAVONIA?
[04] ORDERLY EVACUATION OF SERBIAN REFUGEES CONTINUES.
[05] SERBIAN UPDATE.
[06] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT WARNS OF RECOMMUNIZATION.
[07] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION TO COOPERATE.
[08] ETHNIC GREEKS UNDER PRESSURE TO LEAVE ALBANIAN PUBLIC LIFE.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 93, Part II, 15 May 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] FIGHTING CONTINUES IN THE POSAVINA REGION.
The narrow corridor linking
Serbia with its conquests in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia continued to
be the main theater of fighting in Bosnia over the past few days. The
Serbs stepped up pressure on the Croatian-held enclave of Orasje on the
Bosnian side of the Sava River. Hina on 15 May reported that tanks and
artillery were involved in the attack and that fighting in one village
in particular was hand-to-hand. Nasa Borba noted the same day that the
Croats responded by shelling Serbian-occupied Brcko. The UN said the
Bosnian fronts were otherwise relatively quiet. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI,
Inc.
[02] KRAJINA SERB LEADER PRAISES RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
Rajko Lezajic, president of
the Krajina Serb legislature, said that Belgrade's policies are aimed at
promoting peace in the region, Nasa Borba reported on 15 May. The 13 May
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung discussed at length the "division of
roles" among the various Serbian factions and spokesmen: Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic and his supporters in Krajina were said to
be currently taking the part of peacemakers, while Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic and other Krajina officials follow a more bellicose
line. Meanwhile, the BBC on 15 May said Croatian forces that had
infiltrated into UN-controlled buffer zones in the Krajina's Sector
South have generally withdrawn but that some units in the Gospic area
are staying put. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] WHAT ROLE FOR THE U.S. IN WESTERN SLAVONIA?
Novi list on 13 May and NasaBorba two days later reported on remarks by Washington's influential
Ambassador to Zagreb, Peter Galbraith. He warned against violations of
the current mandate for UN peacekeepers and called Croatia's
reoccupation of western Slavonia earlier this month a dangerous
precedent. Galbraith pointed out that neither the Krajina Serb
leadership nor the Bosnian Serbs "lifted a finger" to help the Serbs of
western Slavonia. He also commented that Croatia received "not a green
light but a red light" from the U.S. regarding the move. The Voice of
Russia in Serbian, however, hinted on 14 May that Washington may have
been behind the armed action, quoting British newspapers to the effect
that the only man in Croatia more powerful than Galbraith is President
Franjo Tudjman. The broadcast also carried stories that may reinforce
Serbian fears that the Croatian government is fascistoid and bent on
destroying Serbian national identity. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] ORDERLY EVACUATION OF SERBIAN REFUGEES CONTINUES.
Serbian civilians
continue to leave western Slavonia for Bosnian Serb-held territory under
UN supervision. The monitors said it was probably the most orderly
transfer of refugees in the Yugoslav conflict to date. International
media also reported that Croatian officials have tried to convince Serbs
that it is safe to remain. Many elderly people have no intention of
leaving. Nasa Borba on 13 May said that a UN commission has begun work
on investigating reports of massacres of Serbian civilians and that some
Croatian military authorities were cooperating. Previous reports by
Serbs of wholesale atrocities in western Slavonia have largely proven
unsubstantiated. But this has not been the case with accounts of Bosnian
Serb attacks on Croats and Roman Catholic centers in the Banja Luka
area. In one such incident, a church was destroyed with monks still
inside. Novi list on 13 May carried the text of the local bishop's
formal protest letter to Karadzic. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] SERBIAN UPDATE.
Nasa Borba on 15 May reported that its chief editor,
Gordana Logar, has been elected president of the Independent Association
of Journalists of Serbia. Logar defeated Radio B 92 candidate Dusan
Masic at a convention of association members, netting 71 votes to
Masic's 44. In other news, the UN Security Council on 11 May approved a
resolution allowing rump Yugoslav ships to pass through Romainian locks
along the River Danube while the locks on the rump Yugoslav side undergo
repairs. The vessels had previously been barred from doing so by the
international sanctions imposed against Belgrade. The resolution is
slated to remain in effect for 60 days, but that period may be extended
upon recommendation of sanctions inspectors. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI,
Inc.
[06] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT WARNS OF RECOMMUNIZATION.
Zhelyu Zhelev, at a press
conference on 12 May, said the "real threat [for Bulgaria] is...the
restoration of communism," Pari reported the following day. But he
refused to blame the Socialist-led government directly, saying it is
responsible to the parliament and that he will address the National
Assembly if it wishes him to do so. Zhelev stressed that he is
determined to exercise his constitutional rights, which include
appointing ambassadors and vetoing laws. In response to government
accusations that he ignores the people's will by vetoing laws, Zhelev
noted that the total votes for him in the presidential elections
exceeded the number who voted for the Socialist parliament majority and
government by 600,000. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[07] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION TO COOPERATE.
Ivan Kostov, leader of the Union of
Democratic Forces, and the co-chairmen of the People's Union, Stefan
Savov and Anastasiya Dimitrova-Mozer, announced on 12 May that they will
cooperate in the forthcoming local elections, Demokratsiya reported the
following day. They agreed to nominate joint candidates, grant local
organizations a large degree of autonomy, and require candidates to
adhere to the local election platform. Extra-parliament opposition
groups will also be invited to cooperate, but according to Dimitrova-
Mozer, it is unclear which these will be. Talks are scheduled with the
Movement for Rights and Freedom, which is supported mainly by ethnic
Turks. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[08] ETHNIC GREEKS UNDER PRESSURE TO LEAVE ALBANIAN PUBLIC LIFE.
Five ethnic
Greek Albanians who are members of the minority organization Omonia and
have been sentenced to suspended prison terms for separatism and
espionage are under pressure from the ethnic Greek Albanian Party for
the Defense of Human Rights (PBDNJ) to leave public life. The PBDNJ was
founded after a court ruled that Omonia could not run as an ethnically
defined party in the 1992 elections. PBDNJ leader Vasil Melo was quoted
by Gazeta Shqiptare on 14 May as saying that "it would be better for
[Omonia], if the five disappear from political life." -- Fabian Schmidt,
OMRI, Inc.
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