OMRI Daily Digest I,II, No. 175, 8 September 1995
CONTENTS
[01] YELTSIN SIGNS LAW ON HUMANITARIAN AID FOR YUGOSLAVIA.
[02] CONTACT GROUP PREPARES PEACE PLAN . . .
[03] . . . BUT PEACE MAY BE HARD TO ACHIEVE.
[04] NATO AIR RAIDS CONTINUE.
[05] SERBS REFUSE TO WITHDRAW.
[06] SECURITY COUNCIL CONDEMNS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS.
[07] MACEDONIA TO RECEIVE $200 MILLION IN FOREIGN AID.
[08] RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN SOFIA.
[09] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT, PREMIER ON EUROPEAN INTEGRATION.
[10] GREEK-MACEDONIAN UPDATE.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 175, Part I,II, 8 September 1995
RUSSIA
[01] YELTSIN SIGNS LAW ON HUMANITARIAN AID FOR YUGOSLAVIA.
President Yeltsin
on 7 September signed a law allowing Russian firms to trade with rump
Yugoslavia, so long as the deals involve only "humanitarian" goods,
ITAR-TASS reported. The law, designed to facilitate the delivery of
Russian food and medicine to rump Yugoslavia while UN economic sanctions
are in effect, was passed by the State Duma during its 12 August special
session. The new law could bring Russia into conflict with the UN
sanctions regime, however, as it includes fuel among the commodities
that can be shipped. Yeltsin's parliamentary critics are calling for
Russia to withdraw entirely from UN sanctions against rump Yugoslavia.
-- Scott Parrish, OMRI, Inc.
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[02] CONTACT GROUP PREPARES PEACE PLAN . . .
The international Contact Group
has finalized outline proposals for a Bosnian peace settlement, which
are to be presented at the first meeting of the foreign ministers of
Bosnia, rump Yugoslavia, and Croatia in more than 18 months,
international agencies reported on 8 September. The preparatory meeting
was attended by EU mediator Carl Bildt and his UN counterpart, Thorvald
Stoltenberg. U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke said the foreign
ministers' talks on 8 September will include constitutional arrangements
but no territorial issues. He refused to predict the outcome of the
negotiations, saying that failure of the talks would be "an absolute
disaster." Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher played
down differences with Russia over recent NATO air strikes. He said
Russia supported the Holbrooke peace initiative and added he believed
that "we'll be able to work and stay together with the Russians." --
Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[03] . . . BUT PEACE MAY BE HARD TO ACHIEVE.
Holbrooke, after meeting with
rump Yugoslav Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic late on 7 September,
said "we had some problems" but gave no details, international media
reported. The meeting was requested by the Yugoslav delegation. Other
delegates also agreed that peace will be hard to achieve. Croatian
Foreign Minister Mate Granic is quoted as saying that he would be
satisfied if "only one piece of paper concerning some basic element
about constitutional arrangements" were produced. Negotiations between
Granic, Milutinovic, and their Bosnian counterpart, Muhamed Sacirbey,
began at the U.S. mission in Geneva on 8 September under Holbrooke's
chairmanship. The new proposal has not yet been published but is
reported to be based on a 51%--49% division of Bosnia between the
Muslim-Croat federation and the Serbs. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[04] NATO AIR RAIDS CONTINUE.
NATO warplanes using night vision gear continue
to bomb Bosnian Serb positions around the clock, Reuters reported on 8
September. NATO said night attacks on military barracks and ammunition
dumps near Sarajevo and other strategic targets, including bridges and
radar posts in Foca and west Bosnia, were a "success." NATO pilots have
so far flown about 2,000 sorties. The Serbs said civilian targets were
also being hit. U.S. Secretary of State Christopher said the strikes
will not cease, adding that "this campaign can continue for some time."
Another U.S. official is quoted as saying "we've advised the Bosnian
government to be restrained militarily . . . [and] not to initiate their
own military operations under cover of the NATO-UN operations."
Elsewhere, a Yugoslav government statement called on the UN Security
Council to rein in NATO, saying "unacceptable and unreasonable" air
strikes put the peace process in jeopardy, international agencies
reported. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[05] SERBS REFUSE TO WITHDRAW.
Bosnian Serbs on 7 September insisted that
more NATO air strikes will not make them pull back their big guns from
the 20 km exclusion zone around Sarajevo, international agencies
reported the next day. UN spokesman Alexander Ivanko said there was no
evidence the Serbs were about to comply with the UN demand that big guns
be pulled back. "We have checked and no heavy weapons have moved out of
the exclusion zone." Ivanko said. He added that "the Bosnian Serbs
continue to defy the will of the international community." -- Fabian
Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[06] SECURITY COUNCIL CONDEMNS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS.
The UN Security
Council issued two separate statements rapping Croatia for the mass
exodus of 150,000 Serbs and condemning the lack of Bosnian Serb
cooperation in allowing access to Muslim prisoners, Reuters reported on
7 September. It demanded that access be provided to sites deemed
important by the International War Crimes Tribunal for its
investigations. The U.S. has produced evidence that between 2,000 and
2,700 Bosnian civilians were machine-gunned to death soon after
Srebrenica fell in July. UN investigators have not been allowed to visit
those sites. About 10,000 civilians from Srebrenica and 3,000 from Zepa
are unaccounted for. The second statement on Croatia expressed "deep
concern" at the mass exodus of local Serbs. The council demands that
Croatia "immediately investigate . . . report [on the burning of houses,
looting of Serbian property, and killings], and take appropriate measure
to put an end to such acts." The council also demanded respect for the
rights of local Serbs, including their return in safety. -- Fabian
Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[07] MACEDONIA TO RECEIVE $200 MILLION IN FOREIGN AID.
Donor countries and
international organizations belonging to a consultative group chaired by
the World Bank have agreed on new aid for Macedonia worth $200 million,
Reuters reported on 7 September. Together with some $400 million saved
through a debt rescheduling accord reached with the Paris Club in July
1995, the new credit will cover Macedonia's 1995 external financing gap
of about $600 million. World Bank Director Rachel Lomax said financial
support for Macedonia in 1996 looked strong, since the country has made
great progress in economic reforms since 1994, despite "adverse external
circumstances." -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[08] RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN SOFIA.
Andrei Kozyrev arrived in Sofia on 7
September for his first official visit to Bulgaria, AFP reported the
same day. He met with his Bulgarian counterpart, Georgi Pirinski, and
President Zhelyu Zhelev. Talks focused on the situation in the former
Yugoslavia and a possible eastward expansion of NATO. Kozyrev said the
Yugoslav conflict has to be solved by the warring sides, rather than
outside forces. He also repeated Russia's position against a NATO
expansion, while Zhelev said the decision to apply for membership was
Bulgaria's sovereign choice and was not directed against Russia. The two
sides also signed a new consular treaty. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[09] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT, PREMIER ON EUROPEAN INTEGRATION.
Zhelyu Zhelev and
Zhan Videnov on 7 September addressed the National Assembly to mark the
creation of a Bulgarian-EU parliamentary committee, Bulgarian newspapers
reported the following day. Both stressed the importance of closer ties
with the EU. Zhelev said Bulgaria will be able to present its request
for EU membership within months. He called integration into European
structures the best guarantee "for [Bulgaria's] democratic and stable
development." Videnov said his government is preparing a strategy for
beginning negotiations on full EU membership, which he described as
Bulgaria's main foreign policy priority. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[10] GREEK-MACEDONIAN UPDATE.
AFP on 8 September reported that the foreign
ministers of Greece and Macedonia, Karolos Papoulias and Stevo
Crvenkovski, will meet in New York on 12 or 13 September to sign an
agreement between their two countries. The Greek Foreign Ministry said
the accord "should enable mutual recognition." Tanjug, citing Macedonian
press reports, reported that Greece and Macedonia will sign a seven-year
friendship treaty, drafted by the U.S., the EU, and the UN, that will
require Macedonia to change its flag and clarify certain articles of its
constitution. Greece, for its part, will lift the embargo on Macedonia
and stop blocking Macedonia's admission to certain international bodies.
Only the name issue will remain frozen for the time being. Reuters on 7
September cited Macedonian Finance Minister Jane Miljovski as saying
that a name change was not realistic and that the dispute over it had
not been rational from the start. -- Stefan Krause, 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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