OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 144, 26 July 1995
CONTENTS
[01] KARADZIC, MLADIC, MARTIC INDICTED FOR WAR CRIMES.
[02] INHABITANTS OF ZEPA FLEE TO THE HILLS.
[03] WHO IS NEXT?
[04] ATTACK ON BIHAC CONTINUES.
[05] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION ARGUES OVER COOPERATION IN LOCAL ELECTIONS.
[06] RUMP YUGOSLAV HUMAN RIGHTS MINISTER ON BULGARIAN MINORITY.
[07] ALBANIAN GOVERNMENT DRAFTS LAND LAW.
[08] ETHNIC TURKISH POLITICIAN KILLED IN GREECE.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 144, Part II, 26 July 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] KARADZIC, MLADIC, MARTIC INDICTED FOR WAR CRIMES.
The International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on 25 July formally indicted
24 more Serbs for crimes against humanity, bringing the total to 46.
Heading the list are Bosnian Serb civilian leader Radovan Karadzic, his
military counterpart, General Ratko Mladic, and Krajina Serb "President"
Milan Martic, AFP reported. The indictment said that the two Bosnian
Serbs "intended to destroy Bosnian Muslim and Bosnian Croat people as
national, ethnic, or religious groups and killed, seriously injured, and
deliberately inflicted upon them conditions intended to bring about
their physical destruction." Martic was singled out for the rocket
attacks on Zagreb in May. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported on
26 July that not everyone has such a bleak view of the Serbs. Dutch
UNPROFOR commander Colonel Karremans said he admired the Serbs' military
feat in taking Srebrenica, while Dutch army commander General Couzy
denied that genocide had taken place in Srebrenica. -- Patrick Moore,
OMRI, Inc.
[02] INHABITANTS OF ZEPA FLEE TO THE HILLS.
International media reported on
25 July that Bosnian Serb forces entered the UN-declared "safe area"
town of Zepa. Most of the inhabitants, including Bosnian government
soldiers, had fled to the surrounding hills, caves, and forests, where
they prefer to fight and face mines and booby traps rather than be
massacred. Wounded and infirm civilians were evacuated to government-
held territory in buses and have begun to reach Sarajevo and Kladanj.
Some told reporters that Serbian heavy weapons, including 15 tanks, had
decided Zepa's fate. The Bosnian government wants the UN to airlift its
soldiers out of the area to make sure they are not killed, as happened
in Srebrenica. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] WHO IS NEXT?
The Serbs appear to have Gorazde next on their list,although the U.S. State Department has warned them to be cautious, the
VOA said. NATO continued on 25 July to be hamstrung in drawing up a plan
for air strikes should the Serbs attack Gorazde or the other remaining
"safe areas." The problem is that the alliance has conceded the UN's
right to a veto over strikes, and it can only hope that Secretary-
General Boutros Boutros Ghali will delegate such authority to a UNPROFOR
commander on the ground. The International Herald Tribune on 26 July
reported that the Rapid Reaction Force may not be doing much in
Sarajevo, either. In response to a question about whether British and
French forces will open the supply road on Mt. Igman, a British
spokesman said it is not an "easy military option" since it would
involve taking land and silencing Serbian guns. On 26 July, one of those
guns shelled downtown Sarajevo, seriously wounding six, Reuters
reported. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] ATTACK ON BIHAC CONTINUES.
Meanwhile in the Bihac pocket, Croatian
forces have begun massing and firing on Serbian positions. Bosnian
government commander General Atif Dudakovic told Croatian Television on
25 July that 30,000 Serbs and Muslim renegades are attacking him and the
Croats. Croatian media reported Serbian shelling of Livno and of parts
of eastern Slavonia. Meanwhile, indignation is growing worldwide over
inaction against the Serbs. Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad
told Reuters of his "disgust" for Western inaction and said he is
willing to face sanctions if he send arms to the Bosnian government.
Saudi Arabian King Fahd called on the UN to lift the embargo, and
similar sentiments have come from top officials in Egypt, Vecernji list
reported. The International Herald Tribune on 25 July and the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung the following day noted growing anger
over Bosnia in Muslim countries in general. Jewish leaders in Germany
have also spoken out. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION ARGUES OVER COOPERATION IN LOCAL ELECTIONS.
The
Union of Democratic Forces (SDS) and the People's Union (NS) on 25 July
issued differing statements on cooperating in the upcoming local
elections, Bulgarian newspapers reported the following day. The NS said
the possibilities for talks at the local level have been exhausted and
insists on talks between the central leaderships. The SDS, for its part,
still wants talks at the regional level. Neither formation is willing to
withdraw its candidate for Sofia mayor, even though the opposition has
agreed to try to find a common candidate. Stefan Sofiyanski has been
nominated by the SDS, and former interim premier Reneta Indzhova is the
NS candidate. Meanwhile, Executive Director of the First Private Bank
Ventseslav Yosifov announced he will also run. Duma reports that the
ruling Bulgarian Socialist Party will support him. -- Stefan Krause,
OMRI, Inc.
[06] RUMP YUGOSLAV HUMAN RIGHTS MINISTER ON BULGARIAN MINORITY.
Margit
Savovic on 25 July met with Ginyo Ganev, chairman of the Sofia-based
Agency for Bulgarians Living Abroad, Bulgarian media reported the same
day. She said that the 27,000 Bulgarians living in eastern Serbia have
every possibility to keep up their national identity and traditions but
added that the state cannot subsidize them because of the UN sanctions.
She denied the existence of blacklists of Bulgarians who are not allowed
to travel to Bulgaria, saying the Bulgarian authorities should request
information from rump Yugoslav institutions rather than trust "other
sources." -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[07] ALBANIAN GOVERNMENT DRAFTS LAND LAW.
The Albanian government has drafted
a controversial law regulating the buying and selling of real estate,
BETA reported on 25 July. The parliament is expected to vote on the law
soon. Until 1991, land in Albania was either communal or state-owned.
Thereafter, it was divided up between those who worked on it. Some
opposition parties have criticized the draft law, arguing that it would
undermine the property rights of those who owned land before communism.
-- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[08] ETHNIC TURKISH POLITICIAN KILLED IN GREECE.
Former parliamentary deputy
Ahmet Sadik was killed on 24 July when his car crashed into a tractor in
northern Greece, Reuters reported the following day. Sadik, who was a
deputy from 1989 to 1993, was one of the most influential politicians
representing the 120,000-member Muslim community in Greece. In 1994, he
was sentenced to 16 months in prison for spreading false information
after he accused Greek officials of suppressing the Muslim minority. But
he was allowed to pay a fine instead of serving time. Despite Greek
objections, Sadik always described himself as Turkish. He failed to be
reelected in 1993 after a 3% threshold for entry to the parliament was
introduced. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
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