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OMRI: Daily Digest, Vol. 3, No. 44, 97-03-04

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

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

Vol. 3, No. 44, 4 March 1997


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] ARMENIA ACCUSES AZERBAIJAN OF PREPARING FOR WAR . . .
  • [02] . . . WHILE BAKU DENOUNCES YEREVAN'S HOSTILE INTENTIONS.
  • [03] GEORGIAN DEPUTIES STAGE HUNGER STRIKE.
  • [04] ABKHAZ FORCES BLOCK ALLEGED EVACUATION OF RUSSIAN BORDER-GUARD EQUIPMENT.
  • [05] KAZAKSTANI UPDATE.
  • [06] INTER-TAJIK TALKS SUSPENDED.

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [07] CHAOS REIGNS THROUGHOUT ALBANIA.
  • [08] BERISHA RE-ELECTED PRESIDENT, FIRES ARMY CHIEF.
  • [09] SERB MOB ATTACKS MUSLIM HOMES, RUSSIAN TROOPS WATCH.
  • [10] NEW RIFT BETWEEN SERBIA AND MONTENEGRO OVER MEDIA.
  • [11] CROATIA TO OPEN CONSULATE IN BANJA LUKA.
  • [12] CONSTANTINESCU ON TREATY WITH UKRAINE.
  • [13] TURMOIL IN ROMANIAN NATIONALIST PARTY.
  • [14] OPPOSITION OFFENSIVE IN ROMANIA.
  • [15] BULGARIA'S BREAD CRISIS.

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] ARMENIA ACCUSES AZERBAIJAN OF PREPARING FOR WAR . . .

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry on 1 March released a statement accusing Azerbaijan of undertaking a large-scale military build-up in order to prepare for a "forceful solution" to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, international agencies reported. The statement said that Azerbaijan has exceeded the weapons limit stipulated in the 1990 Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty and thus violated the "letter and spirit" of the May 1994 cease-fire agreement in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the ministry, Azerbaijan purchased some 150 tanks and 10 warplanes from Ukraine between 1993 and 1995. It currently has 285 tanks, while only 220 are allowed under the CFE treaty. The ministry also voiced concern over the "concentration of the Azerbaijani military" in areas near the border with Armenia. -- Emil Danielyan

    [02] . . . WHILE BAKU DENOUNCES YEREVAN'S HOSTILE INTENTIONS.

    An official statement released by the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry accused Yerevan of building up its military potential and preparing what it called "new aggression" against Azerbaijan, Russian and Western media reported on 3 March. Baku said that Yerevan possesses missile complexes capable of launching nuclear attacks on targets up to 300 km away, claiming 20 Armenian servicemen have been trained in Russia to operate these missile systems. Meanwhile, Azerbaijani Security Minister Namig Abbasov has accused Armenia of holding more than 800 Azerbaijani hostages, Russian media reported the same day. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [03] GEORGIAN DEPUTIES STAGE HUNGER STRIKE.

    Ten deputies of the parliament, including deputy speaker Vakhtang Kolbaya, have gone on hunger strike to demand the withdrawal of Russian peace- keeping forces from Abkhazia and South Ossetia, ITAR-TASS reported on 2 March. The hunger strikers are members of the Abkhazeti caucus, which represents the 250,000 or so mainly ethnic Georgian refugees who fled Abkhazia in 1993 after Abkhaz forces took control of the whole region. Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze said he sympathizes with the deputies but warned against attempts "to exploit their sacred feelings" for political purposes, according to a 3 March Iprinda report monitored by the BBC. -- Emil Danielyan

    [04] ABKHAZ FORCES BLOCK ALLEGED EVACUATION OF RUSSIAN BORDER-GUARD EQUIPMENT.

    Abkhaz speedboats on 28 February blocked a Russian border-guard naval base in the Ochamchira district to prevent the "theft of valuable equipment and ransacking of the base," AFP reported. Col.-Gen. Vladimir Ruzlyaev, commander of Russia's Caucasus Special Border District denied the Abkhaz allegations saying his troops were conducting a "routine action" aimed at the "replacement of personnel." According to a 1 March RIA-Novosti report monitored by the BBC, a spokesman for the district said the two sides "seem satisfied" with the results of talks between Ruzlyaev and Abkhaz leaders. -- Emil Danielyan

    [05] KAZAKSTANI UPDATE.

    President Nursultan Nazarbayev on 3 March sacked seven of his 21 ministers, AFP reported. He said his government needs to be streamlined, adding that "there are 1 million officials out of a population of 16 million". In other news, Nazarbayev signed a presidential decree pledging state support for foreign investment in Kazakhstan, ITAR-TASS reported on 1 March. Under the law, foreign entrepreneurs and businessmen will be partly or completely exempt from taxes for the first five years they operate in Kazakstan. In addition, their taxes will remain low for the next five years. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [06] INTER-TAJIK TALKS SUSPENDED.

    The latest round of inter-Tajik talks came to a halt in Moscow on 3 March, Russian and Western media reported. The unexpected recess is believed to be linked to the detention last month of six Tajik opposition partisans charged with involvement in a recent spate of killings of Russian servicemen in Tajikistan. One of the six, a member of the Kasim Ismatov group, was reportedly killed in detention earlier this week. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [07] CHAOS REIGNS THROUGHOUT ALBANIA.

    Army tanks entered the southern Albanian city of Gjirokaster on 4 March, according to Western agencies, citing ATA. Civilians armed with automatic weapons burned down Gjirokaster's police station on 3 March. In Vlora, earlier decimated by rioting, an Italian helicopter rescued 35 foreigners, flying them to Brindisi. Gunshots were heard overnight in Tirana, where a dusk-to-dawn curfew is in effect and police have instructions to shoot armed civilians without warning. The general prosecutor in Tirana warned that those convicted of fomenting armed insurrection will face capital punishment or life in jail, while looters and those erecting barricades will receive sentences of 15-25 years. Albania's ambassador to the U.K., Pavli Mihal Qesku, admitted that Vlora, Sarande, and a stretch along the coast were now in rebel hands but added "in the rest of the country the government is in control of everything," Reuters reported. -- Michael Wyzan

    [08] BERISHA RE-ELECTED PRESIDENT, FIRES ARMY CHIEF.

    Albanian President Sali Berisha on 3 March was re-elected by parliament, which is dominated by his Democratic Party (PD), Western media reported. Berisha fired army chief of staff Sheme Kosova the next day, blaming him for failing to defend military bases from rioters. Kosova was replaced by General Adem Copani, Berisha's defense advisor. Meanwhile, under new rules requiring newspapers to submit stories to the government for approval and allowing them only to run the government version of the disturbances, only one newspaper, the PD's Rilindja Demokratike, appeared on 4 March. U.S. State Department spokesman Nicholas Burns issued a statement "strongly regretting" the 2 March declaration of a state of emergency and introduction of press censorship. He also criticized Berisha's re-election as "likely to increase polarization," according to AFP. Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van Mierlo offered the EU's assistance in re-establishing order and arbitrating the conflict. -- Michael Wyzan

    [09] SERB MOB ATTACKS MUSLIM HOMES, RUSSIAN TROOPS WATCH.

    Some 150 Serbs armed with sticks and clubs on 2 March burned down nine of 11 prefabricated houses built for Muslim returnees to the village of Gajevi, while the Russian soldiers stationed there watched the attack but did not intervene, international agencies reported. Gajevi is on the Serb- controlled side of a demilitarized separation zone in northeastern Bosnia that is patrolled by the Russian SFOR troops. Next day the SFOR troops set up roadblocks around the village. SFOR says that policing is the job of local police, and says the incident represents a failure of the Bosnian Serb police to maintain order in the separation zone. But Sead Jamakosmanovic, a Bosnian Federation government official, said Russian peacekeepers were to blame for failing to prevent the incident. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [10] NEW RIFT BETWEEN SERBIA AND MONTENEGRO OVER MEDIA.

    Montenegrin media accused the pro-government daily Borba and the state news agency Tanjug of being politically biased in favor of Serbia, although the two federal units within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia should have equal treatment in media founded by the federation, Nasa Borba reported. Borba and Tanjug were singled out for their recent attacks on Montenegrin Premier Milo Djukanovic following his criticism of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. Meanwhile, the Serbian Renewal Movement, led by Vuk Draskovic, accused the state media of becoming increasingly aggressive in spreading false information on the state of affairs in the country. On the other side, the state-run daily Politika on 4 March accused the "opposition media"of being tendetious, one-sided and aggressive. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [11] CROATIA TO OPEN CONSULATE IN BANJA LUKA.

    Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granic on 3 March met with Banja Luka Catholic Bishop Franjo Komarica and announced that Croatia will soon open a consulate in that Bosnian Serb stronghold, Hina reported. Komarica said the remaining Banja Luka Croats were looking forward to the opening of the consulate, and that it would help improve their current situation. Komarica mentioned the unsolved issue of the two Banja Luka parish priests who had disappeared and whose fate was still unknown. In other news, Catholic authorities in Bosnia-Herzegovina said on 28 February that churches and monasteries were being targeted for attack in the weeks leading up to the visit of Pope John Paul II to Sarajevo, scheduled for 12-13 April, AFP reported. A day earlier, an anonymous caller threatened to kill the Pope during the Sarajevo visit. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [12] CONSTANTINESCU ON TREATY WITH UKRAINE.

    At a meeting with potential foreign investors on 3 March, President Emil Constantinescu said Romania has "assumed a great risk" by deciding to give up any territorial claim on Ukraine in the pending basic treaty between the two countries, the daily Ziua reported. In a related development, several dailies report that leaflets denouncing the government's position on the treaty were found in Bucharest, Suceava and Turnu Severin. The leaflets also attacked the government's decision to allow foreign investors to buy land in Romania and called for military rule of the country. A spokesman for the Bucharest police said the views expressed in the leaflets "are reminiscent of the position of some political parties," the daily Cotidianul reports. The extremist Greater Romania Party has often called for military rule in the past, and opposes any concessions to Ukraine. The latter position is shared by the Party of Romanian National Unity and several semi-political organizations. -- Michael Shafir

    [13] TURMOIL IN ROMANIAN NATIONALIST PARTY.

    The leadership of the Party of Romanian National Unity (PUNR) will discuss the expulsion of former party Chairman Gheorghe Funar from the party, several dailies report. Although the move was allegedly prompted by Funar's private use of faxes and phones of the Cluj mayoralty he heads, the real reason is to be sought in the turmoil now affecting the PUNR. The Cluj branch of PUNR on 28 February decided to expel Ioan Gavra, the PUNR secretary general. The branch is dominated by Funar, who refuses to recognize the legality of his own dismissal as PUNR chairman on 22 February. Observers viewed this as an attempt by Funar to tackle his critics. Romanian media speculate that the party may be on the verge of splitting up. -- Michael Shafir

    [14] OPPOSITION OFFENSIVE IN ROMANIA.

    Former President Ion Iliescu told well-wishers congratulating him on his 67th birthday that the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR) will start monitoring the implementation of "Contract with Romania," the electoral program of the ruling Democratic Convention of Romania. He accused the government of failing to implement its electoral promises and of leading the country into an economic dead-end, Radio Bucharest and Romanian television reported on 3 March. In a related development, the PDSR announced it will launch a motion in the Chamber of Deputies demanding a debate on the government's agricultural policies. The Senate on 3 March was the scene of loud protests of the leader of the Greater Romania Party, Corneliu Vadim Tudor, who accused the government of intending to restore the monarchy. Tudor and several PDSR senators walked out in protest after a reply by a representative of the ruling coalition. -- Michael Shafir

    [15] BULGARIA'S BREAD CRISIS.

    Former Prime Minister Zhan Videnov caused the bread crisis with his deliberate inaction and irresponsibility, claims today's Trud. The paper went on saying that there were at least three very lucrative grain deals that were not concluded due to a lack of response by the premier. Russian Ambassador to Bulgaria Leonid Kerestezhiants, cited by Standart, said that Videnov had asked Russia for 150,000 metric tons of grain but did not even bother to do so in writing. According to Pari, Russia should soon deliver the mentioned quantity of wheat to Bulgaria. The deal should be finalized during the 9 March visit of Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Oleg Lobov to Sofia. -- Maria Koinova

    [As of 1200 CET]


    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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