OMRI Daily Digest I,II, No. 110, 7 June 1995
CONTENTS
[01] RUSSIA SOFTENS STANCE ON NATO FORCE FOR BOSNIA.
[02] SERBS FREE 108 HOSTAGES.
[03] SERBS TAKE WEAPONS FROM UN COLLECTION SITES.
[04] "PANIC IN KNIN."
[05] BELGRADE TALKS HIT IMPASSE.
[06] ETHNIC ALBANIAN LEADER RELEASED ON BAIL IN MACEDONIA.
[07]JAPAN CONTINUES TO ASSIST MACEDONIA.
[08] KULIKOV IN BULGARIA.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 110, Part I, 7 June 1995
RUSSIA
[01] RUSSIA SOFTENS STANCE ON NATO FORCE FOR BOSNIA.
On 6 June, after talks
with his British counterpart Douglas Hurd, Russian Foreign Minister
Andrei Kozyrev said he is "somewhat reassured" about the NATO plan to
create a "rapid reaction force" to support UN peacekeepers in Bosnia.
The weakening of earlier Russian objections to such a force followed
assurances by Hurd and other Western officials that its deployment would
have to be approved by the UN Security Council, Western agencies and
Interfax reported. Kozyrev said Russia could agree to an additional
deployment of troops under UN auspices, but said it could prove
counterproductive and trigger an escalation of hostilities in Bosnia.
Also on 6 June, Russian Defense Minister Pavel Grachev told Interfax
that Russian peacekeepers would remain in Bosnia, although he said there
are no plans to reinforce them. -- Scott Parrish, OMRI, Inc.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 110, Part II, 7 June 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[02] SERBS FREE 108 HOSTAGES.
International media reported on 7 June that
Bosnian Serbs the previous night sent 108 of their captives to Novi Sad
via Mali Zvornik, on the Serbian-Bosnian border. The men will be flown
out from Belgrade and include 17 British, 32 French, and 58 Ukrainian
soldiers, plus one Spanish military observer. The Serbs still hold about
150 peacekeepers, whom they indicated would also be released soon. Mlada
fronta dnes said the three Czech hostages continue to be held. Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic' s security chief had held long talks with
the Bosnian Serb leadership, as had the Greek foreign and defense
ministers, who then also met with Milosevic. Nasa Borba reported that
the Greeks are claiming credit for the releases, but the BBC noted that
Milosevic will be anxious to take credit for himself to pry more
concessions from the UN on the lifting of sanctions against Serbia-
Montenegro. -- Patrick Moore
[03] SERBS TAKE WEAPONS FROM UN COLLECTION SITES.
Bosnian Serb troops took
one tank and a 100 mm gun from UN storage depots near Sarajevo, AFP said
on 7 June. The M-36 tank was driven from Bare, where two French
peacekeepers still refuse to let the Serbs take them hostage. Vjesnik
reported from Orasje that the Serbian assault on the Croatian-held
pocket in northern Bosnian has now gone on for over a month. The BBC
noted that the food situation in many of the besieged, mainly Muslim
areas of Bosnia is becoming acute, with supplies being given only to the
weak and sick in some places. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] "PANIC IN KNIN."
This is how Vjesnik on 7 June described the situationin Krajina following the advance by Croatian forces to within shelling
range of the Grahovo road connecting Knin with Banja Luka. Western news
agencies speculated on growing rifts within the Krajina leadership under
President Milan Martic, who recently sacked the prime minister,
considered Milosevic' s man in Knin. Nasa Borba added that the first
refugees have already begun leaving Krajina for Bosnian Serb territory.
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman' s top aide, Hrvoje Sarinic, said
Zagreb is willing to talk with Knin. Krajina is impoverished, and
speculation is rife that Milosevic has written it off in a secret deal
with Tudjman that would let Serbia hold the rich area of eastern
Slavonia in return for giving less desirable real estate back to
Croatia. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] BELGRADE TALKS HIT IMPASSE.
Negotiations between US envoy Robert Frasure
and Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic aimed at securing the rump
Yugoslavia' s recognition of Bosnia-Herzegovina in exchange for the
lifting of sanctions broke down on 6 June, Reuters reported that same
day. The talks hit an impasse when Milosevic objected to the idea of
introducing a mechanism whereby a body other than the UN Security
Council may reintroduce sanctions. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[06] ETHNIC ALBANIAN LEADER RELEASED ON BAIL IN MACEDONIA.
Nevzat Halili,
leader of the ethnic Albanian Party for Democratic Prosperity-Party for
the People' s Union (PPD-PUPM), has been released on DM 70,000 bail,
Flaka reported on 6 June. He was sentenced to 18 months in prison on 19
May for preventing the police from carrying out their duties in
connection with a police raid on the self-proclaimed Albanian-language
university of Tetovo. The 17 February raid led to clashes between ethnic
Albanians and police in which one Albanian was killed. Halili has been
criticized by nationalist ethnic Albanians for his moderate stance in
the parliament. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[07]JAPAN CONTINUES TO ASSIST MACEDONIA.
Japanese Foreign Minister Yohei
Kono on 6 June said Japan will continue extending financial and
technological aid, totaling $5.9 million, to Macedonia to help promote
stability in the Balkans, Reuters reported the same day. Kono made the
pledge at a meeting with his Macedonian counterpart, Stevo Crvenkovski,
who currently is visiting Japan. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[08] KULIKOV IN BULGARIA.
Marshal Viktor Kulikov, commander of the Warsaw
Pact forces from 1977 until that organization' s demise in 1991,
criticized aspects of Soviet foreign policy during a recent visit to
Bulgaria, AFP reported on 5 June. Referring to the 1968 invasion of
Czechoslovakia, Kulikov said "With the benefit of hindsight and as a
soldier, I condemn this action." He did, however, defend current Russian
policy in Chechnya, insisting that Moscow' s military action was in
response to violations of the constitution. Kulikov also met with former
Bulgarian communist dictator Todor Zhivkov. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI,
Inc.
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