OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 182, 19 September 1995
CONTENTS
[1] SACIRBEY OFFERS BANJA LUKA "DIALOGUE."
[2] SERBS FLEE BANJA LUKA.
[3] CROATIAN, MUSLIM CIVILIANS "IN GRAVE DANGER."
[4] "THE PEACE PLAN FALLS WITH BANJA LUKA."
[5] LITHUANIAN PRESIDENT IN ROMANIA.
[6] ROMANIA WANTS TO JOIN NATO AT SAME TIME AS HUNGARY.
[7] NEW RESTRICTIONS ON ROMANIAN MEDIA.
[8] SEPARATISTS HINDERING 14TH ARMY AMMUNITION DESTRUCTION.
[9] BULGARIA WILL NOT HELP RUSSIA TO BREAK SANCTIONS AGAINST FORMER YUGOSLAVIA.
[10] BULGARIAN SOCIALIST PARTY GAINS MAJORITY SHARE IN DUMA.
[11] ALBANIA UPDATE.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 182, Part II, 19 September 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[1] SACIRBEY OFFERS BANJA LUKA "DIALOGUE."
As Croatian and Bosnian forcesclose in on Banja Luka, Bosnian Foreign Minister Muhamed Sacirbey has
offered to talk with Serb leaders there. AFP on 18 September quoted him
as calling this "an opportunity to set an example of mutual coexistence
for the future of how the entire peace process should go ahead. We are
trying in fact to create the symbol of a Bosnian southern breeze, rather
than a Bosnian storm." British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind agreed
to help find Serbian leaders willing to talk. "We hope it could provide
the basis for a ceasefire throughout the country," he said. -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[2] SERBS FLEE BANJA LUKA.
Nasa Borba on 19 September reported that a column
of refugees 70 km long is moving from the threatened Bosnian Serb
stronghold of Banja Luka toward Derventa and Serbia beyond. The
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung added that the lightning offensive by
allied forces has left the Serbs with only 50% of the republic's
territory, and that figure appears to be shrinking rapidly. Tanjug
reported unsuccessful Croatian and Bosnian advances near Mostar, but
there has been no independent confirmation of the story. The VOA said
that Bosnian Serb commander General Ratko Mladic is in a Belgrade
hospital recovering from surgery to remove a kidney stone, and that his
civilian counterpart, Radovan Karadzic, is largely ignored by fellow
Bosnian Serbs. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[3] CROATIAN, MUSLIM CIVILIANS "IN GRAVE DANGER."
The Banja Luka Serbs arereported to have been particularly ruthless and systematic in their
"ethnic cleansing," which was extended to the complete destruction of
historic mosques and other monuments. The BBC on 19 September quoted
international monitors as saying that the few remaining Croatian and
Muslim civilians now face special peril from the fleeing Serbs. The
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on 18 September noted the same about the
non-Serbs in Donji Vakuf. The BBC on 17 September, however, reported
that Bosnian Prime Minister Haris Silajdzic refused to comment on
accounts of atrocities against 6,000 Serbs trapped in that area. British
and Serbian papers, moreover, continue to carry articles about sinister
behavior by Croatian forces in Krajina, including grisly murders of the
few, mainly elderly and infirm Serbian civilians who stayed behind.
Croatia denies the stories and accuses some of the journalists of long-
standing bias. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[4] "THE PEACE PLAN FALLS WITH BANJA LUKA."
This is how Nasa Borba on 19September sums up the relationship between developments on the ground
and diplomacy. The International Herald Tribune quoted Sacirbey as
adding that "military pressure has been an effective force" in the peace
process. The VOA reported that Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic has
urged the international community to use its influence in Zagreb and
Sarajevo to halt the offensive. Following the killing of a Danish
peacekeeper near Bihac, the UN Security Council demanded the Croatian
and Bosnian forces stop fighting. A State Department spokesman insisted
that the current peace plan remain the basis of future talks. U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said "the light here is red.
It's a red stoplight. Stop the fighting. Go back to the negotiating
table," AFP reported from Moscow on 18 September. Meanwhile in New York,
UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali said that time has come to
replace UN forces in Bosnia with "regional" ones. -- Patrick Moore,
OMRI, Inc.
[5] LITHUANIAN PRESIDENT IN ROMANIA.
Algirdas Brazauskas on 18 September
began a two-day official visit to Romania, Radio Bucharest reported.
Brazauskas, who is returning Romanian President Ion Iliescu's visit to
Vilnius in March 1994, is the first Lithuanian head of state to visit
Romania. Brazauskas' talks with Iliescu the same day focused on ways to
coordinate the countries' efforts to join Euro-Atlantic structures.
Addressing a joint session of Romania's two-chamber parliament,
Brazauskas defined his country's "main [foreign policy] goal" as joining
NATO. He said a selective admission to that organization would create
the "emergence of gray zones in which a vacuum of security would
prevail." Brazauskas also met with Premier Nicolae Vacaroiu and the
chairmen of both houses of the parliament. The two countries are
expected to sign accords on culture, health, and Interior Ministry
cooperation. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[6] ROMANIA WANTS TO JOIN NATO AT SAME TIME AS HUNGARY.
Evenimentul zilei on
18 September quoted Defense Minister Gheorghe Tinca as saying his
country wanted "to join NATO at all costs at the same time as Hungary."
Budapest has already set 1997 as a deadline for joining the Western
military alliance. Romania and Hungary have been negotiating a bilateral
basic treaty since 1991 but have been unable to reach agreement on the
final wording. The main stumbling block is the treatment of the large
Hungarian minority in Romania. Tinca also commented that military
relations with Russia were in "poor shape." He rejected Russian
objections to Romania's plans to join NATO and suggested that Russia was
"isolating itself" from the rest of Europe. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[7] NEW RESTRICTIONS ON ROMANIAN MEDIA.
The Chamber of Deputies on 18
September adopted Article 206 of the new Penal Code on "defamation
through the media." According to the article, Journalists using the
electronic media and press for the purpose of calumny are liable to jail
terms of between six months and three years. The opposition National
Peasant Party-Christian Democratic denounced the legislation as
curtailing freedom of expression and jeopardizing democracy in general.
Meanwhile, two journalists who wrote that President Ion Iliescu worked
for the KGB went on trial on 18 September for having "offended the
authorities." If found guilty, the two could be sentenced to up to three
years in prison. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[8] SEPARATISTS HINDERING 14TH ARMY AMMUNITION DESTRUCTION.
Authorities in
the breakaway Transdniester region in Moldova are obstructing efforts to
destroy ammunition of the former 14th Army, the deputy commander of
Russian troops in the region told Interfax on 18 September. The officer
said that at the end of the previous week, the arms depots and testing
ground near the village of Kolbasna had been blocked by units of the
breakaway republic's armed forces. -- Doug Clarke, OMRI, Inc.
[9] BULGARIA WILL NOT HELP RUSSIA TO BREAK SANCTIONS AGAINST FORMER YUGOSLAVIA.
Bulgarian deputies on 18 September rejected a call by a
visiting delegation from the Russian State Duma to help create a land
corridor to supply fuel to rump Yugoslavia, international agencies
reported the same day. Chairman of Bulgaria's parliamentary Foreign
Policy Committee Nikolay Kamov said there was a consensus [among
committee members] on not breaking the UN sanctions and "no opportunity
for Bulgaria to oppose unilaterally the sanctions or stop enforcing
them." The Russian delegation had asked for a corridor through Bulgaria
to deliver fuel to rump Yugoslavia as humanitarian aid. Standart on 19
September reported that the Russian deputies threatened serious
consequences if Bulgaria did not comply. Gen. Leonid Mayorov, an adviser
to Duma speaker Ivan Rybkin, was quoted as saying the first Russian air
planes with humanitarian aid for the Bosnian Serbs will leave Russia on
19 September. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[10] BULGARIAN SOCIALIST PARTY GAINS MAJORITY SHARE IN DUMA.
Businessman
Nikolay Krivoshiev, in a letter published in 24 chasa on 19 September,
announced he will hand over his 49% stake in the Bulgarian Socialist
Party's newspaper Duma to the party's Supreme Council, bringing the
BSP's stake up to 51%. The remaining 49% is held by the newspaper's
staff. Krivoshiev took his share in 1994 in order to "save the
newspaper" and help the party, as he said in his letter. He accused
Duma's editor in chief, Stefan Prodev, of working against the BSP's
interests and its leadership, saying that handing over his shares to the
party leadership will help the necessary "clarification process." --
Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[11] ALBANIA UPDATE.
The Albanian government has asked the Constitutional
Court to rule that the country's Supreme Court has no jurisdiction to
hear an appeal by jailed Socialist leader and former premier Fatos Nano,
international media reported on 18 September. Should the Constitutional
Court rule in the government's favor, Nano, who was jailed for 12 years
in April 1994 on charges of falsifying documents and misappropriating
aid money, is likely to remain in prison. In other news, Republika on 14
September reported that Ramiz Alia, Albania's last communist ruler, has
joined the Socialist Party. Alia, who had been serving a prison sentence
for various crimes, including corruption, was released in July 1995. At
the time, Socialist leaders vowed that Alia would not be welcome to join
their ranks. -- Stan Markotich, 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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