OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 118, 19 June 1995
CONTENTS
[01] BOSNIAN ARMY ADVANCES ON FOUR FRONTS.
[02] IZETBEGOVIC SAYS BOSNIANS WILL FREE SARAJEVO.
[03] SERBS DECLARE SPECIAL MOBILIZATION, CONTINUE PRESS-GANGING.
[04] SERBS FREE LAST UN HOSTAGES.
[05] SERBIAN SANCTIONS UPDATE.
[06] SERBIAN RADICAL RALLY FAILS TO MEET EXPECTATIONS.
[07] ARE RELATIONS BETWEEN ALBANIA AND MACEDONIAN ALBANIAN PARTIES IN CRISIS?
[08] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION UPDATE.
[09] COMMUNIST PARTIES MEET IN ATHENS.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 118, Part II, 19 June 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] BOSNIAN ARMY ADVANCES ON FOUR FRONTS.
International media reported over
the weekend that Bosnian forces were advancing near Tuzla, to the north
and south of Sarajevo, and to the south of that city. The Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung said on 19 June that key Serbian supply routes to the
north and south of the capital had been cut, leaving the Bosnian Serbs
attacking Sarajevo from the west under siege. The International Herald
Tribune noted on 17 June that it was the government army' s best
performance since the Serbs launched the war in the spring of 1992 and
that for the first time Croatian artillery was backing the mainly Muslim
army on the Sarajevo fronts. The Serbs responded by shelling the city,
killing two in a hospital and seven at a water distribution center. --
Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[02] IZETBEGOVIC SAYS BOSNIANS WILL FREE SARAJEVO.
Bosnian President Alija
Izetbegovic said over the weekend that the capital will be free sooner
or later and that the current offensive will not stop until the Serbs'
strangle-hold has been eased. He noted appeals from the international
community for a cease-fire but added that the world has done nothing for
Sarajevo and that his government does not feel obliged to listen to such
pleas. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the BBC, and the VOA carried
the stories. -- Patrick Moore , OMRI, Inc.
[03] SERBS DECLARE SPECIAL MOBILIZATION, CONTINUE PRESS-GANGING.
The BBC on
18 June said that Bosnian Serb authorities proclaimed a special
mobilization of civilians and declared a "state of war" in the Sarajevo
area. Nasa Borba notes on 19 June the continuing roundup of draft-age
Serbian males from Bosnia and Krajina in Belgrade' s student center, in
Valjevo, and elsewhere. Vreme adds that those in charge of the project
have a list of 18,000 "deserters" they want to round up and send back to
the front. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] SERBS FREE LAST UN HOSTAGES.
The last group of 26 peacekeepers held by
Bosnian Serbs was released via Novi Sad on 18 June, just hours before
the Serbs' own deadline of midnight for resolving the crisis. Serbian
intelligence chief Jovica Stanisic was again present among Bosnian Serb
leaders, as he was when the three previous large groups of hostages were
freed. International media also reported that UNPROFOR has effectively
withdrawn its peacekeepers from all Serb-held territory, including four
heavy weapons collection points near Sarajevo. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI,
Inc.
[05] SERBIAN SANCTIONS UPDATE.
European Commission reports on sanctions
against the rump Yugoslavia indicate that violations, especially
stemming from Albania and Macedonia, continue to take place, Reuters
reported on 18 June. The reports, which cover the first four months of
1995, also implicate Greek and Italian groups in the practice of
funneling contraband fuel shipments to Albania, from where they are
transported to the rump Yugoslavia. "Significant quantities of oil
products, including thousands of tonnes of A1 aviation fuel declared '
for heating purposes' have been arriving in Albania during the reported
periods," according to one report. It is also suggested that the 3,050
officially reported cases of sanctions violations by Macedonia
"represent only a fraction of the consignments that have crossed the
border in violation of the sanctions." -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[06] SERBIAN RADICAL RALLY FAILS TO MEET EXPECTATIONS.
A 17 June rally
sponsored by the Serbian Radical Party (SRS) attracted an estimated
crowd of 5,000, Reuters reported the same day. SRS supporters had
planned a massive ultranationalist, anti-Milosevic rally, but public
interest did not meet expectations. Other major opposition parties--
including the Democratic Party (DS), the Democratic Party of Serbia
(DSS), and the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO)--refused to endorse the
rally. Organizers also attributed the low attendance to the fact that
SRS leader and accused war criminal Vojislav Seselj was unable to attend
because he is serving a two month sentence for a 2 June incident in
which he clashed with the police. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[07] ARE RELATIONS BETWEEN ALBANIA AND MACEDONIAN ALBANIAN PARTIES IN CRISIS?
Koha Jone on 14 June claimed that relations between Albania and
Macedonian ethnic Albanian parties have deteriorated since the
opposition Albanian Socialist Party met with the Macedonian ethnic
A
lbanian Party for Democratic Prosperity (PPD) earlier this month.
According to sources within the PPD, Shaban Murati, the Albanian
ambassador to Skopje, was upset by "the warm reception and extensive
publicity" the PPD gave to the Socialists. Meanwhile, AKS carried a
report on 18 June stressing that the Albanian government has
consistently supported the Albanian-language University in Tetovo and
that Albanian President Sali Berisha repeatedly called for it to be
established. It added, however, that Albania has recently changed its
policy toward Macedonia to one of restraint. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI,
Inc.
[08] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION UPDATE.
The Internal Macedonian Revolutionary
Organization-Union of Macedonian Associations (VMRO-SMD) on 18 June
decided to support the Union of Democratic Forces (SDS) mayoral
candidates in those areas where the SDS has signed no agreement with the
ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedom (MRF), Demokratsiya
reported the following day. In these constituencies, the VMRO-SMD will
either nominate its own candidates or join forces with other "opposition
patriotic formations." Alliances with the Bulgarian Socialist Party were
categorically ruled out. VMRO-SMD local council candidates may run on
joint tickets with the SDS anywhere in the country, since the agreement
between the SDS, MRF, and the People' s Union (see OMRI Daily Report, 16
June 1995) concerns only joint candidates for mayor. In other news,
Demokratsiya reported that Ivan Kurtev was reelected chairman of the
Social Democratic Party on 18 June. -- Stefan Krause , OMRI, Inc.
[09] COMMUNIST PARTIES MEET IN ATHENS.
Representatives of 25 communist and
leftist parties met in Athens on 17-18 June to discuss perspectives of
communism and the reasons for the fall of communism in Eastern Europe,
AFP reported on 17 June. The conference was organized by the hard-line
Communist Party of Greece (KKE) and attended by representatives from the
Balkans, Russia, North Korea, Iraq, Canada, Australia, and several
European and Middle East countries. The French, Portuguese, Cuban and
Chinese parties failed to send delegates. Opening the session, KKE
member Makis Mailis called the fall of communism in Eastern Europe a
"step backwards for humanity" and urged delegates to fight "for the
final victory of communism over capitalism." -- Stefan Krause , OMRI,
Inc.
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