OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 183, 20 September 1995
CONTENTS
[1] ALLIES NOW CONTROL 60% OF BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA.
[2] BOSNIA, CROATIA AGREE TO HALT OFFENSIVE.
[3] FATE OF BANJA LUKA HANGS IN THE BALANCE.
[4] CROATIAN PARLIAMENT DEBATES ELECTION LAW.
[5] SERBIAN UPDATE.
[6] ILIESCU ON NATO, RUSSIA.
[7] TOUGH ENVIRONMENTAL LAW ADOPTED IN ROMANIA.
[8] MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENT RESUMES WORK.
[9] DNIESTER AUTHORITIES BAN LATIN SCRIPT.
[10] PARLIAMENTARY CONTROL OVER BULGARIAN STATE MEDIA UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
[11] BULGARIAN SOCIALISTS NAME SOFIA MAYORAL CANDIDATE.
[12] ALBANIAN COURT RULES AGAINST EX-PREMIER.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 183, Part II, 20 September 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[1] ALLIES NOW CONTROL 60% OF BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA.
Croatian, Bosnian, and
Bosnian Croat forces hold 60% of Bosnia. The 20 September Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung added that it has been confirmed that the Croats have
taken Bosanska Kostajnica and Bosanska Dubica, while the Bosnian Fifth
Corps has moved into Bosanski Novi. The fate of Prijedor remains
unclear. Reuters on 19 September noted that government troops have also
made major gains in the Ozren salient and that "the new line runs from
Rjecice, north of Maglaj, to Bosansko Petrovo in the east." The BBC
reported that Croatian and Bosnian authorities have agreed on who will
administer the various territories "regardless of who liberated them."
Meanwhile around Sarajevo, Bosnian Serbs continued to pull their heavy
weapons out of the exclusion zone. In New York, the UN Security Council
condemned the Serbs for the death of two Danish peacekeepers near Bihac.
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc., OMRI, Inc.
[2] BOSNIA, CROATIA AGREE TO HALT OFFENSIVE.
International media on 19
September reported that Croatian President Franjo Tudjman met in Zagreb
with his Bosnian counterpart Alija Izetbegovic and Bosnian Croat leader,
Kresimir Zubak. The two countries' foreign ministers were also present,
along with the Croatian defense minister and the Bosnian chief-of-staff.
The two sides agreed to suspend their military advance to allow U.S.
envoy Richard Holbrooke, who was also present, an opportunity to explore
the chances for a political solution. The diplomat said that things were
coming along "step by step." U.S. Senate majority leader Bob Dole stated
that despite his great admiration for the U.S. negotiators, the actions
on the ground were having a greater impact than "all the skills of the
U.S. diplomats put together," Croatian media noted. -- Patrick Moore,
OMRI, Inc.
[3] FATE OF BANJA LUKA HANGS IN THE BALANCE.
Bosnian Foreign Minister
Muhamed Sacirbey told AFP on 19 September that his troops would not
enter Banja Luka in order to facilitate a peaceful settlement and to
prevent panic. Reuters the next day said, however, that Bosnia still
insists on "the effective surrender" of the Serbian stronghold. The BBC
quoted Prime Minister Haris Silajdzic as warning the Serbs that an
attack could come if they continued to resist reintegration into the
republic. Nasa Borba said on 20 September that "there is no [Bosnian
Serb] state without Banja Luka." Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic
stated that his forces will "take revenge" now that they have
"consolidated their defenses." His "vice president," Nikola Koljevic,
told AFP that his people would reject Sacirbey's offer of dialogue and
that the allied advance was "very bad for the peace process." -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[4] CROATIAN PARLIAMENT DEBATES ELECTION LAW.
Croatian media continue to
report that the Sabor is discussing a bill introduced by the ruling
Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ). President Franjo Tudjman is
expected to call early elections to the lower house by the end of the
year to enable the HDZ to capitalize on the popularity of the army's
recent successes against the Serbs. The bill would reduce the number of
seats from 138 to 127, of which 80 would be elected by party lists and
only 28 by a direct district vote. An additional 12 deputies would be
elected by party lists among the 420,000 registered voters working
abroad. A party would need 5% of the total vote, instead of the current
3%, to gain entry into the parliament. All these measures are expected
to favor the HDZ, which also enjoys control over the most important
media as well as substantial funds. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[5] SERBIAN UPDATE.
Nasa Borba on 20 September reported that Vojislav
Seselj, leader of the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party (SRS) and
accused war criminal, has reissued a call to Belgrade citizens to
assemble outside the federal legislature on 21 September to protest NATO
air strikes against Bosnian Serbs and the policies of Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic. He also invited representatives of the opposition
Democratic Party and Democratic Party of Serbia to attend, advising
participants to leave all weapons at home. In another development,
Orthodox Church leaders in the rump Yugoslavia appear to be allying ever
closer with ultranationalist sentiment. BETA on 19 September reported
that Metropolitan Radovic has sent U.S. President Bill Clinton a letter
condemning American involvement in recent NATO air strikes against
Bosnian Serbs and alleging "genocide" against the Serbs. -- Stan
Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[6] ILIESCU ON NATO, RUSSIA.
Romanian President Ion Iliescu was quoted by
Radio Bucharest on 19 September as saying that his country's
"participation in joint exercises with NATO within the Partnership for
Peace program and the wish to join [that organization were] not directed
against anyone, hence not against Russia either." He added that Romanian
was seeing NATO's presence in Eastern Europe as a factor of stability.
Iliescu was speaking in Bucharest at a joint press conference with his
Lithuanian counterpart, Algirdas Brazauskas. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[7] TOUGH ENVIRONMENTAL LAW ADOPTED IN ROMANIA.
The Romanian Senate on 19
September passed the Law on Environmental Protection that severely
punishes individuals or enterprises that cause massive pollution, Radio
Bucharest reported. The bill provides for prison terms of between six
and 10 years for failing to take emergency steps in case of nuclear
accidents or for deliberately releasing toxic substances into natural
waters. The import of toxic waste is punished with up to six years in
jail. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[8] MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENT RESUMES WORK.
The parliament of the Republic of
Moldova on 19 September reconvened after the summer recess, BASA-press
and Infotag reported. In an inaugural address, parliamentary chairman
Petru Lucinschi warned against increasing polarization as a result of
the current political crisis in the country. The main opposition party,
the Christian Democratic Popular Front (FPCD), announced that its
deputies might walk out if the executive and legislative did not reveal
what efforts have been made to free the so called "Ilascu group," jailed
in the breakaway Dniester region. FPCD Chairman Iurie Rosca was quoted
as saying that his party repeatedly asked the authorities in Chisinau to
intervene on the behalf of Ilie Ilascu and his associates, who are being
detained in Tiraspol under charges of terrorism. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI,
Inc.
[9] DNIESTER AUTHORITIES BAN LATIN SCRIPT.
All schools in Moldova's
breakaway Dniester region that "provide education in Moldovan based on
the Latin script" will be closed down by 10 November, the local
authorities announced on 19 September. Tiraspol accused Chisinau of
breaking earlier agreements by helping finance Latin-script tuition on
the left Dniester bank. A Moldovan Education Ministry official said that
all Romanian-language schools in the Dniester region would be
transferred to the right bank of the Dniester River if Tiraspol enforced
its restrictions. -- Dan Ionescu, OMRI, Inc.
[10] PARLIAMENTARY CONTROL OVER BULGARIAN STATE MEDIA UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
The
Constitutional Court on 19 September ruled that the parliament's control
over the state media is unconstitutional, Demokratsiya reported the
following day. Under a "provisional status" adopted in 1991, Bulgarian
state television, radio, and the Bulgarian Telegraph Agency are
controlled by a parliamentary committee pending the adoption of a new
media law, which has yet to be passed. The Constitutional Court ruled
that the committee may appoint the directors-general of the three state
media but will no longer be entitled to approve regulations, structures,
programming, financing, or the board of directors. The court also ruled
that the president, prime minister, chairman of the parliament, and
representatives of the Supreme and Constitutional Courts will have
unlimited access to TV and radio but that the heads of parliamentary
committees will no longer enjoy this privilege. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI,
Inc.
[11] BULGARIAN SOCIALISTS NAME SOFIA MAYORAL CANDIDATE.
The Sofia
organization of the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP) on 19 September
named Ventsislav Yosifov as its mayoral candidate for the upcoming local
elections, Duma reported the following day. In a first vote, the BSP
delegates decided to support a nominally independent rather than a party
candidate. In a second vote, Yosifov won the nomination over Aleksandar
Karakachanov of the Green Party. Yosifov is head of the First Private
Bank; his candidacy was proposed initially by a so-called initiative
committee. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[12] ALBANIAN COURT RULES AGAINST EX-PREMIER.
Albania's Constitutional Court
on 19 September ruled that the Supreme Court is neither legally nor
constitutionally empowered to hear an appeal sought by jailed Socialist
leader and former Premier Fatos Nano. Nano has been serving a 12-year
sentence since April 1994 partly for his role in a funds
misappropriation scandal. Supreme Court Chair Zef Brozi, who has been
seeking greater judicial autonomy for the court, said he was not certain
how the Supreme Court justices would react to the Constitutional Court's
ruling, Reuters reported. -- 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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