OMRI Daily Digest I,II, No. 165, 24 August 1995
CONTENTS
[01] SOSKOVETS PROPOSES OIL SHIPMENT TO YUGOSLAVIA.
[02] SUSAK SAYS CROATIA CAN RETAKE EASTERN SLAVONIA . . .
[03] . . . WHILE HERZEGOVINIAN SERBS SEAL THE MONTENEGRIN BORDER.
[04] KARADZIC WANTS 64% OF BOSNIA.
[05] MAZOWIECKI DESCRIBES SERB ATROCITIES IN SREBRENICA.
[06] CROATIAN UPDATE.
[07] MONTENEGRO UPDATE.
[08] SITUATION IN KOSOVO IS A "SERIOUS PROBLEM."
[09] ROMANIA WANTS END TO SANCTIONS ON RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
[10] MACEDONIAN GOVERNMENT DRAFTS LAW ON RESTITUTION.
[11] U.S. MILITARY DELEGATION IN ALBANIA.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 165, Part I,II, 24 August 1995
RUSSIA
[01] SOSKOVETS PROPOSES OIL SHIPMENT TO YUGOSLAVIA.
Following a meeting with
rump Yugoslav Trade Minister Djordje Siradovic, Russian First Deputy
Prime Minister Oleg Soskovets asked the ministries of Fuel and Energy
and Foreign Economic Relations to draft proposals for the shipment of an
unspecified quantity of natural gas to rump Yugoslavia, Interfax
reported on 23 August. Soskovets also asked the Ministry of Emergency
Situations to prepare a proposal to ship 5,000 tons of fuel oil to rump
Yugoslavia. Both shipments are intended as "humanitarian aid." Soskovets
asked the Foreign Ministry to draw up a corresponding proposal for
consideration by the UN International Sanctions Committee. Siradovic
said a protocol calling for rump Yugoslavia to sell Russia 2 million
tons of wheat and 1 million tons of corn is ready for signing, adding
that "sanctions must be lifted from Yugoslavia as soon as possible"
because of the influx of refugees from Krajina. -- Scott Parrish, OMRI,
Inc
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[02] SUSAK SAYS CROATIA CAN RETAKE EASTERN SLAVONIA . . .
Croatian
Defense Minister Gojko Susak warned that his forces could push Serbian
troops out of eastern Slavonia, AFP reported on 23 August. He said they
would do this in less time than Operation Blitz took in western Slavonia
in May if the international community does not secure the peaceful
reintegration of the area into Croatia. Rump Yugoslavia, however, seems
bent on holding onto the prosperous region. Nasa Borba reported on 24
August that an EU representative is nonetheless in Serb-held Vukovar in
an effort to restart talks between Croatia and its rebel Serbs. --
Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] . . . WHILE HERZEGOVINIAN SERBS SEAL THE MONTENEGRIN BORDER.
AFP on 23 August also quoted Susak as saying that his government can no
longer tolerate Serbian shelling of the Dubrovnik area. For some days
observers have been expecting a push by some 10,000 Croatian troops into
the Trebinje region of eastern Herzegovina behind Dubrovnik. Montena-fax
said that the local Serbian authorities have banned all people from
Trebinje from leaving the district without special permission. Many had
been fleeing into Montenegro, including military-aged men. -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] KARADZIC WANTS 64% OF BOSNIA.
AFP on 23 August quoted Bosnian Serb
leader Radovan Karadzic as saying that the Serbs must have 64% of the
land in any settlement because that is the amount they legally own. He
did not mention the land taken violently, and one of his statements in
particular suggested a hearty appetite: "Our territory must be integral,
it must have territorial continuity. It is of vital importance that our
borders be on the Sava and Una Rivers, that the Drina River is ours,
that we have a part of Sarajevo." His "foreign minister," Aleksa Buha,
praised the "U.S.-Russian" peace project, while Bosnian Foreign Minister
Muhamed Sacirbey said that there is "no American plan, but an
initiative." Elsewhere, U.S. President Bill Clinton named a new team of
envoys to the former Yugoslavia. Meanwhile in Jakarta, Indonesian
officials on 24 August announced that the Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian
presidents had agreed "in principle" to meet in Indonesia, which
currently chairs the Non-Aligned Movement. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] MAZOWIECKI DESCRIBES SERB ATROCITIES IN SREBRENICA.
The UN
special rapporteur for human rights in the former Yugoslavia has
presented his final report, international media said on 23 August. The
former Polish prime minister resigned in disgust last month over the
international community's inaction in the face of Serbian atrocities in
the UN-declared "safe havens" in eastern Bosnia. He said that "there is
significant direct and circumstantial evidence indicating that summary
executions took place, both of individuals and small groups of people.
On the question of mass executions of large numbers of people at one
time, the evidence so far obtained leads to the chilling conclusion that
these may have occurred." He also noted that Serbian civilians came in
to loot and burn homes and shops, and to destroy mosques. Meanwhile the
new Serbian "mayor" of Srebrenica has invited anyone interested to
visit. "The whole world can come and investigate, film in Srebrenica,"
Miroslav Deronjic told AFP, regretting that until now "nobody has made
such a request." In another "safe area," Gorazde, the Serbian
authorities have given the peacekeepers permission to leave. -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[06] CROATIAN UPDATE.
Vjesnik on 24 August reported on the government's
plans to return the Croatian population to areas of the former Krajina
from which the Serbs had "ethnically cleansed" them since 1991. The
resettlement will take place in approximately three waves, depending on
the availability of accommodation in the various parts of the region.
The government also said it plans to have the vital Zagreb-Knin-Split
railway running by 28 August, which would be the first time in over four
years. Roman Catholic church sources in Zagreb quoted the bishop's
office in Banja Luka as saying that on 19 August the Serbs dynamited a
church in Sanski Most, making this the 43rd church in the bishopric to
be deliberately destroyed. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[07] MONTENEGRO UPDATE.
BETA reported on 23 August that on the same day
the Montenegrin republic's legislature met in special session to discuss
the prospects for peacefully resolving the conflicts in the former
Yugoslavia. The session was called after opposition parties' lobbying
efforts, which have also recently revolved around calls for a peaceful
resolution of outstanding regional differences. On the previous day,
President Momir Bulatovic appeared on Montenegro Television and lashed
out against the Krajina Serb leadership and Orthodox Church officials.
According to Bulatovic, Croatia's reclaiming of Krajina amounted to "a
tragedy" but Krajina leaders were to blame since "they did not defend
Krajina." He also remarked that the Orthodox Church had recently become
overtly politicized by de facto defending the Krajina Serb leadership
and thereby "demonstrating its [political] amateurishness." -- Stan
Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[08] SITUATION IN KOSOVO IS A "SERIOUS PROBLEM."
That is how EUnegotiator Carl Bildt described the situation in the mainly ethnic
Albanian province and added that he would soon visit rump Yugoslavia,
Macedonia and Albania, BETA reported on 23 August. According to the
Albanian-language service of Deutsche Welle, 3,600 Serbian refugees have
so far arrived in Kosovo. BETA, however, says that another 4,500 are
expected to arrive soon in Pristina alone. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[09] ROMANIA WANTS END TO SANCTIONS ON RUMP YUGOSLAVIA.
Following
the visit to Belgrade of Foreign Affairs Minister Teodor Melescanu (see
OMRI Daily Digest, 23 August 1995), Romania reiterated its call for UN
sanctions against rump Yugoslavia to be lifted. At a press conference
carried by Radio Bucharest on 23 August, Foreign Ministry spokesman
Mircea Geoana said the "lifting of the embargo in the context of
negotiations could work as a stimulating element for all the sides"
involved in the conflict. He said Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic
had raised the issue in the talks with Melescanu. The conflict in former
Yugoslavia will also figure prominently at the meeting due to be held
between the Greek, Bulgarian and Romanian foreign ministers over the
weekend in Greece, Geoana said. In other news, the Croat ambassador to
Bucharest, Nikola Debelic, said in an interview with the RFE/RL Romanian
service that the recent Croat offensive in Krajina has established a
"military balance" allowing for "negotiations on an equal basis." He
expressed the hope that Romania will use its influence on Belgrade to
persuade Serbia to give up its "aggressive politics and its territorial
claims on neighboring countries." -- Michael Shafir, OMRI, Inc.
[10] MACEDONIAN GOVERNMENT DRAFTS LAW ON RESTITUTION.
The Macedonian
government approved a draft law on the restitution of real estate that
was nationalized between August 1944 and February 1968, MIC reported on
23 August. The Ministry of Finance has registered 37,000 hectares of
agricultural land, 16,000 hectares of forest, 21,000 hectares of
pasture, 285 apartment buildings and 169 business objects and various
herds of cattle and sheep that will be affected by the law. Finance
Minister Jane Miljovski said that it is the government's aim to give
back all property that physically exists, or to provide compensation. --
Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[11] U.S. MILITARY DELEGATION IN ALBANIA.
Secretary of the Army Togo
West is leading a U.S. military delegation to Albania on 24 August,
Rilindja Demokratike reports the same day. West will meet with President
Sali Berisha and Defense Minister Safet Zhulali and visit U.S. army
units deployed to reconstruct a hospital in Tirana in the framework of a
military-medical exercise called "Crystal Water 95." West brings with
him a donation of medical supplies worth $500,000. Elsewhere, deputy
Chief of the General Staff Armand Vincani received the commander of an
Italian frigate that will participate in joint exercises with the
Albanian navy beginning on 26 August. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a nonprofit organization with research offices in Prague, Czech Republic.
For more information on OMRI publications please write to [email protected]
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