OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 167, 28 August 1995
CONTENTS
[01] SHELLS KILL AT LEAST 32 IN SARAJEVO.
[02] BOSNIA UNIMPRESSED WITH U.S. PEACE PLAN.
[03] RUSSIA TO CALL FOR RESUMPTION OF GAS DELIVERIES TO SERBIA.
[04] SERBIAN SOLDIERS KILL KOSOVAR ALBANIAN.
[05] TUDJMAN CELEBRATES REOPENING OF RAILWAY.
[06] KRAJINA CONTROVERSY CONTINUES.
[07] THREE BULGARIAN OFFICIALS CHARGED WITH ARMS SMUGGLING TO SERBIA.
[08] FLOODING IN ALBANIA.
[09] EGYPTIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN ALBANIA.
[10] TRIPARTITE BALKAN MEETING.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 167, Part II, 28 August 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] SHELLS KILL AT LEAST 32 IN SARAJEVO.
Reuters and AFP on 28 August
reported that a shell landed 30 meters from the Markale market place
around 11:00 a.m., killing at least 32 people and wounding at least 40.
The centrally located market, now enclosed, was the site of a similar
shelling in February 1994, which killed 68 and led to international
outrage against the Serbs. In the latest incident, six shells also hit
the main street nearby. The morgue said that it took in 15 people in the
first 20 minutes alone. Bosnian Radio said that the shells came from
Serbian positions to the south. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[02] BOSNIA UNIMPRESSED WITH U.S. PEACE PLAN.
The attack came as U.S.
diplomat Richard Holbrooke was preparing to resume talks in Paris aimed
at a settlement to the Bosnian conflict. The VOA quoted him as warning
the Serbs that they should sign on in the coming week or risk the "heavy
involvement" of NATO. Given the track record of threats of NATO air
strikes, it is doubtful that Pale will be very impressed by such
remarks, and the latest shelling could perhaps be seen in that context.
The Bosnian government, for its part, has launched its own 12-point
plan. Its military commander, General Rasim Delic, has dismissed the
U.S. project as not "having either a head or a tail." He added that
Bosnia "cannot expect a lot from the international community. We have
only one direction--to continue fighting." Meanwhile in Bonn, Hans
Koschnik, EU administrator of Mostar, threatened to withdraw the
European police unless the Croats and Muslims unified their respective
police forces. He also accused the Croats of virtually blockading the
Muslims and said this action must stop, Reuters reported on 25 August.
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] RUSSIA TO CALL FOR RESUMPTION OF GAS DELIVERIES TO SERBIA.
Rump Yugoslav
Trade Minister Djordje Siradovic, returning from talks in Moscow, said
Russia will call for an immediate resumption of gas deliveries to the
rump Yugoslavia, TV Belgrade reported on 25 August. Siradovic said the
talks were held in "a very positive and friendly atmosphere in which we
found complete understanding on the Russian side and their readiness to
talk openly and very constructively about all key issues concerning
trade and economic cooperation." Other issues discussed included the
export of rump Yugoslav wheat and corn to Russia, and long-term imports
of Russian oil to the rump Yugoslavia. The agreement on the construction
of a gas pipeline via Bulgaria is ready to be signed. -- Fabian Schmidt,
OMRI, Inc.
[04] SERBIAN SOLDIERS KILL KOSOVAR ALBANIAN.
Three rump Yugoslav soldiers
shot and killed an ethnic Albanian near Djakovica on 26 August,
international agencies reported the next day. The Democratic League of
Kosovo said the incident occurred as the soldiers were passing a group
of local people. The soldiers reportedly insulted and beat up the locals
before opening fire on them. It was the 11th killing to date of an
ethnic Albanian by the rump Yugoslav military or police. Meanwhile,
Serbian forces are being redeployed in Kosovo and Serbian civilians
mobilized, the BBC reported on 26 August. Elsewhere Albanian TV on 26
August said that Kosovar shadow state President Ibrahim Rugova has
called for better cooperation among Kosovar Albanians following the
settling of Serbian refugees in the region. According to the Serbian
authorities, about 6,000 Serb refugees have so far arrived in Kosovo,
BETA reported on 27 August. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[05] TUDJMAN CELEBRATES REOPENING OF RAILWAY.
Croatian President Franjo
Tudjman, together with his government ministers and 600 guests, took a
ten-hour "freedom train" ride from Zagreb to Karlovac, Gospic, Knin, and
Split on 26 August. It was the first time in over four years that the
key rail route to Dalmatia has been open, international and Croatian
media noted. Enthusiastic rallies greeted Tudjman in what was both a
display of patriotic sentiment and the opening of the parliamentary
election campaign. He said Croatia will reintegrate eastern Slavonia
either through negotiations or, if necessary, by force. Tudjman called
on Croats living abroad to come back and help resettle the former
Krajina. With regard to the Serbs who fled, the president said that they
"disappeared ignominiously, as if they had never populated this land. We
urged them to stay, but they didn't listen to us and, well, bon voyage."
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[06] KRAJINA CONTROVERSY CONTINUES.
The Croatian authorities and the UN have
again traded charges over allegations of Croatian atrocities in Krajina.
The BBC on 28 August reported that the UN produced a film allegedly
showing two Serbian civilians deliberately killed by Croatian troops. A
UN spokesman talked of "arson and murder." Croatian authorities said
Croatian soldiers had been on an operation to mop up the last remaining
pockets of Serbian resistance, in this case in the rugged Plavno area,
20 km north of Knin. Some 70 Serbian peasants asked for and received
Croatian identity papers. But Reuters on 27 August quoted General Ivan
Cermak as saying in Grubor that "three [armed] Chetniks and two
civilians were killed in the action. I have come to supervise the action
personally in order to prevent further accusations that Croatian troops
are burning Serb houses." Meanwhile in Serbia, Nasa Borba on 28 August
reported that the authorities near Cacak have banned that independent
daily as reading material for the Krajina refugees. -- Patrick Moore,
OMRI, Inc.
[07] THREE BULGARIAN OFFICIALS CHARGED WITH ARMS SMUGGLING TO SERBIA.
Three
Bulgarian military officials on 25 August were charged with diverting
arms worth $670,000 to Serbia in November 1993, AFP reported the same
day. The accused are Colonel Valentin Popinski, head of the Defense
Ministry's commercial department, his assistant Colonel Stoian Tsakov,
and Lieutenant Colonel Nikolai Nikolov, an Interior Ministry official
who monitors arms deliveries. They were in charge of supplying the
Albanian Defense Ministry with 100 mine launchers and 1,000 mines and
ammunition, but the consignment, which was to have been transported to
Albania in trucks, went "missing" in Skopje. The three men face between
10 and 30 years in prison if convicted. The military prosecutor
reportedly has a contract signed by Popinski and the Serbian private
firm Target for the delivery of the same cargo. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI,
Inc.
[08] FLOODING IN ALBANIA.
Heavy rains on 25 August flooded roads near Lezha
and cut power and telephone lines in several northern Albanian
districts, AFP reported on 26 August. Five people died when their truck
was hit by water rushing down from the mountain near the village of
Kalivac. Large tracts of agricultural land were under water. -- Fabian
Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[09] EGYPTIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN ALBANIA.
Amr Moussa arrived in Albania on
27 August, international agencies reported. His talks with Albanian
Foreign Minister Alfred Serreqi are to focus on relations between the
two countries and developments in the Middle East and Bosnia. Serreqi is
due to pay a two-day visit to Greece to discuss bilateral problems and
the conflict in former Yugoslavia with his counterpart, Karolos
Papoulias, later this week. The Albanian Foreign Ministry said his visit
is "very important to strengthen [both countries'] already good
relations." -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[10] TRIPARTITE BALKAN MEETING.
The foreign ministers of Romania, Bulgaria,
and Greece, meeting in the northern Greek city of Ioannina on 26 August,
reiterated a call to lift UN sanctions against the former Yugoslavia,
Romanian media and Reuters reported the same day. They also advised NATO
and the UN not to use force in that country. Telecommunication projects
and two proposed highways linking the three states with other parts of
Europe were discussed. One of the road projects has been delayed by a
dispute between Bulgaria and Romania over the location of a new bridge
across their common border along the Danube. No agreement was reached on
this project, and the two countries asked Greece to mediate. Greek
Foreign Minister Karolos Papoulias warned his Bulgarian and Romanian
counterparts, Georgi Pirinski and Teodor Melescanu, that a "deal should
be reached fast," because expected EU financing of the project "will not
wait for ever." Melescanu told Romanian TV on 27 August that the problem
will be discussed by the three countries' ministers of transportation.
-- Michael Shafir, 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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