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OMRI: Daily Digest, Vol. 3, No. 54, 97-03-18

Open Media Research Institute: Daily Digest Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Open Media Research Institute <http://www.omri.cz>

Vol. 3, No. 54, 18 March 1997


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] GEORGIA DENIES ABKHAZ ALLEGATIONS OF TROOP DEPLOYMENTS.
  • [02] BIBLES CONFISCATED IN UZBEKISTAN.
  • [03] PENSIONERS DEMONSTRATE IN KAZAKSTAN.
  • [04] TAJIK TROOPS CLOSE IN ON TERRORIST.

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [05] NEW ALBANIAN PRIME MINISTER TO MEET REBEL LEADERS.
  • [06] EU MISSION IN TIRANA.
  • [07] SERBIAN PARLIAMENT PRAISES TREATY WITH BOSNIAN SERBS.
  • [08] BOSNIAN POLICE RETURN KURDS TO ISTANBUL.
  • [09] LOYALIST DAILY CONFIRMS MILOSEVIC'S DESIGNS ON FEDERAL PRESIDENCY.
  • [10] OSCE CALLS ON SERBIA TO OPEN UP TO OPPOSITION.
  • [11] ROMANIAN PRIME MINISTER STEPS BACK FROM HUNGARIAN UNIVERSITY PROMISE.
  • [12] ROMANIAN OPPOSITION PROTESTS IN DEFENSE OF EXTREMIST.
  • [13] BULGARIAN PRIME MINISTER PRESENTS STABILIZATION PROGRAM.

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] GEORGIA DENIES ABKHAZ ALLEGATIONS OF TROOP DEPLOYMENTS.

    The Foreign Ministry of Georgia's breakaway region of Abkhazia told ITAR- TASS on 17 March that Georgia had violated the 1994 ceasefire agreement by deploying six tanks and 100 military personnel in Georgia's Zugdidi raion, which is currently controlled by CIS peacekeeping troops. The Georgian Interior, Defense and State Security Ministries issued a denial. Also on 17 March, Abkhaz President Vladislav Ardzinba sent a letter to Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze warning that unless the latter takes measures to halt ongoing terrorist activities by Georgian saboteurs on Abkhaz territory, hostilities may erupt and the progress already achieved in mediated talks on a settlement of the Abkhaz conflict will be demolished. -- Liz Fuller

    [02] BIBLES CONFISCATED IN UZBEKISTAN.

    Uzbek customs officials confiscated 25,000 copies of the bible's New Testament sent to Uzbekistan by the Russian Bible Society, according to a BBC-monitored 14 March ITAR-TASS report. The Uzbek authorities regard the Russian Bible Society's action as missionary activity, which is banned. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [03] PENSIONERS DEMONSTRATE IN KAZAKSTAN.

    About 300 pensioners held a demonstration in front of the Kazakstani parliament building on 17 March commemorating the six-year anniversary of the all-Union referendum on preserving the Soviet Union, Reuters reported. Leaflets were distributed which said that 95.6% of participants six years ago, "including President Nursultan Nazarbayev, voted for the socialist development" of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic. An elderly woman at the demonstration was quoted as saying a return to the past was out of the question but "it is also impossible to suffer any longer." Pensioners receive about 2,800 tenge per month ($37), often too little to provide for basic necessities. -- Bruce Pannier

    [04] TAJIK TROOPS CLOSE IN ON TERRORIST.

    Special units of the Tajik Security Ministry have closed in on Rezvon Sadirov near the village of Chormagz, about 100 kilometers southeast of Dushanbe, Nezavisimaya Gazeta reported on 18 March. Sadirov's brother Bahrom was apprehended near Obigarm on 14 March in an attack by government troops allied with fighters of the United Tajik Opposition. Rezvon and about 40 others are expected to be in custody soon. The Tajik opposition is not engaged in this action as it "falls outside their zone of influence." Rezvon had been in contact with the government until he broke off radio communications on 16 March. The Sadirovs and their group are wanted by both the government and opposition for two hostage taking episodes, one in December, the other in February. -- Bruce Pannier

    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [05] NEW ALBANIAN PRIME MINISTER TO MEET REBEL LEADERS.

    Bashkim Fino announced he will visit insurgent leaders in southern Albania, after they threatened to march on Tirana demanding President Sali Berisha's immediate resignation. The insurgents, meeting in Belci--a small town near Fier--had delivered an ultimatum to Berisha demanding his resignation by 18 March. They also said that "Fino, whose authority we recognize, must not cooperate with the arrangements made by Berisha or we will withdraw our confidence in him," Reuters reported. Greek Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos said Berisha's resignation would be "the simplest way" to resolve the crisis. Meanwhile, over 700 Albanian refugees arrived in Puglia on 17 March and more vessels were heading for the Italian coast the following day, Italian border guards told AFP. The latest arrivals bring the total number of refugees to land in Italy since 13 March to around 7,000. One ship with 487 people on board berthed at Brindisi with some difficulty after encountering engine trouble. Reception facilities in southern Italy are overfilled. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [06] EU MISSION IN TIRANA.

    The UN Security Council on 17 March urged Albanian authorities to cooperate with a EU fact-finding mission that arrived in Tirana the same day. The 11- member team was mandated by a meeting of EU foreign ministers the previous day in Apeldoorn which ended without agreement on sending troops to Albania. Italian Foreign Minister Lamberto Dini estimated that assistance to Albania would be carried out by "between 100 and 150 civilians." German Chancellor Helmut Kohl also ruled out military intervention. The mission's findings are to be presented to EU foreign ministers in Brussels on 24 March. Meeting the EU team, Berisha said rapid assistance, mainly in food and medicine, was vital to restore order. Meanwhile, life in Tirana returned to near-normal on 17 March, with shops open, public transport running, and civil servants back in offices. Schools, however, stayed closed, an overnight curfew and strict controls on the press remained in effect, and Rinas airport stayed shut. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [07] SERBIAN PARLIAMENT PRAISES TREATY WITH BOSNIAN SERBS.

    The Serbian parliament on 17 March adopted a declaration supporting the treaty signed last month aimed at strengthening ties between the Bosnian Serb entity in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, local media reported. Some deputies questioned the purpose of the declaration, since the pact is between the Republika Srpska and the federal Yugoslav state. The pro-government daily Vecernje Novosti wrote that the declaration was meant as a show of support for the "spiritual unification of Serbian people and erased borders." The Serbian parliament also recommended that the federal parliament ratify the pact later this week. But French Foreign Minister Herve de Charette asked federal Yugoslav authorities to delay ratification until the High Representative for Bosnia, Carl Bildt, confirms the agreement conforms with the Dayton peace accords, Nasa Borba reported. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [08] BOSNIAN POLICE RETURN KURDS TO ISTANBUL.

    Some 100 Kurds from Turkey were arrested by Bosnian police in Sarajevo on 17 March under suspicion of trying to reach Western countries illegally and were deported the same day, Oslobodjenje reported. An anonymous caller had informed the police that a local tourist agency was smuggling Kurds to Germany via Bosnia-Herzegovina for a price up to $2,500, international agencies reported. Turkish citizens can enter Bosnia and stay up to three months without a visa. Police confirmed an increased inflow of Kurds with legal Turkish documents to Sarajevo; Oslobodjenje put the number in the city before the arrests at 400-500. In other news, Berlin authorities said on 17 March they would step up the forced repatriation of Bosnian refugees unless they started returning home voluntarily, Reuters reported. But Berlin's Interior Minister Joerg Schoenbohm said they rule out the forcible return of Muslims who were expelled from Serb areas, and of traumatized refugees. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [09] LOYALIST DAILY CONFIRMS MILOSEVIC'S DESIGNS ON FEDERAL PRESIDENCY.

    For the first time, pro-regime media have said Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic is likely to run for the federal Yugoslav presidency, AFP reported. Vecernje Novosti wrote on 14 March that he "very probably" will seek the post. The pro-government daily thereby seemed to confirm long- standing speculation among observers of Serbian politics that Milosevic intends to beef up the powers of the federal presidency and then obtain the office for himself. The federal parliament, which is dominated by Milosevic's Socialist Party of Serbia, will elect the president in June. Milosevic is constitutionally barred from seeking a further term as Serbian president. Current Yugoslav President Zoran Lilic is widely regarded as Milosevic's loyal follower. -- Patrick Moore

    [10] OSCE CALLS ON SERBIA TO OPEN UP TO OPPOSITION.

    Danish Foreign Minister Niels Helveg Petersen, the current chair of the OSCE, met with Serbian opposition leaders Vuk Draskovic and Vesna Pesic in Copenhagen on 17 March, international news agencies reported. Following the talks with them and with student leader Ivan Pravdic, Helveg Petersen told the press: "It is tremendously important that the upcoming elections are well-prepared and that the opposition has free access to the media ... I believe the government now should establish a dialogue with the opposition and give [it] real access to the media." The OSCE has made recommendations on democratization to the regime of President Slobodan Milosevic in recent weeks, but the opposition leaders said the government is dragging its feet. -- Patrick Moore

    [11] ROMANIAN PRIME MINISTER STEPS BACK FROM HUNGARIAN UNIVERSITY PROMISE.

    Victor Ciorbea, after promising shortly before his visit to Budapest earlier this month to reopen the Hungarian-language Bolyai University in Cluj, now says the final say will depend on the existing Babes-Bolyai University's faculty senate, because universities enjoy autonomy, Radio Bucharest reported on 17 March. Ciorbea and President Emil Constantinescu had earlier clarified that the Hungarian university, closed in 1958, would re-open as a Hungarian section within the unified Babes-Bolyai university (see OMRI Daily Digest, 14 March 1997). Ciorbea's recent statement was made at a meeting with the university's two ethnic Romanian deputy rectors, who oppose the move and have threatened to resign in protest. Ciorbea added that a separate, independent Hungarian-language university could be set up elsewhere, provided it respected relevant laws. On 18 March, Romania libera printed a declaration of the Cluj branch chairman of Ciorbea's party, the National Peasant Party Christian Democratic, opposing any change in the Babes-Bolyai University status quo. -- Michael Shafir

    [12] ROMANIAN OPPOSITION PROTESTS IN DEFENSE OF EXTREMIST.

    Senators representing the Party of Social Democracy in Romania, the Party of Romanian National Unity, and the Greater Romania Party (PRM) walked out of Senate debates on 17 March, announcing they would not participate in the house's work before meeting with President Emil Constantinescu, Romanian TV reported. The three opposition parties, which are protesting the manner in which PRM leader Corneliu Vadim Tudor was stripped of his parliamentary immunity (see OMRI Daily Digest, 14 March), said the ruling coalition had turned down a "compromise proposal," according to which the Constitutional Court would be asked to express its opinion. On 18 March, however, Senate Chairman Petre Roman said he had decided to ask the court's opinion himself. Radio Bucharest reported that the three factions are also likely to boycott debates in the Chamber of Deputies, the other house of the bi- cameral parliament. -- Michael Shafir

    [13] BULGARIAN PRIME MINISTER PRESENTS STABILIZATION PROGRAM.

    Caretaker Prime Minister Stefan Sofiyansky presented on national television on 17 March the main measures of a program aimed at stabilizing the country's economy. He called for understanding and support, admitting the program could cost as many as 58,000 people their jobs. Sofiyansky said the government would compensate them and strive to create new jobs rather than continue subsidizing failing industries. All prices would be fully liberalized except for temporary continuation of subsidies for bread, milk, white cheese, and chicken. Wages would be increased by 70 percent starting 1 April, and a new social-security system would be created. Earlier, RFE/RL reported that Bulgaria had reached a tentative agreement with key IMF officials to create a national finance board with power to introduce tough austerity measures to rescue the economy. Sofianski and Anne McGuirk, head of an IMF mission to Bulgaria, announced plans by the IMF to provide Bulgaria with credits totaling about 700 million dollars. The accord still needs formal IMF approval. The finance board is be set up in Bulgaria before the end of June. -- Michael Shafir

    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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