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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 194, 5 October 1995

From: "Steve Iatrou" <[email protected]>

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] UPDATE ON MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT'S CONDITION.

  • [2] ACTING MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT NAMED.

  • [3] MACEDONIAN POLITICIANS PLEDGE CONTINUITY.

  • [4] NATO JETS HIT SERBIAN MISSILE SITES.

  • [5] BATTLEFIELD UPDATE.

  • [6] MONTENEGRIN NEWS.

  • [7] CROATIAN AUTHORITIES CLOSE DOWN BILINGUAL SCHOOLS.

  • [8] DIFFICULTIES FACED BY CROATIAN SERB REFUGEES.

  • [9] ROMANIAN RULING PARTY RESPONDS TO EXTREMISTS.

  • [10] ROMANIANS SEEK FREE MOVEMENT WITHIN EU.

  • [11] MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENT APPEALS FOR RELEASE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS.

  • [12] BULGARIA REAFFIRMS INTENTION TO RESTART NUCLEAR REACTOR.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 194, Part II, 5 October 1995

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] UPDATE ON MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT'S CONDITION.

    Two days after the attempt on his life, Kiro Gligorov is still in a serious and "delicate" condition, according to international agencies. An official statement says his situation is stable but he remains in intensive care following a six-hour operation in which shrapnel and two blood clots were removed from his brain. According to unconfirmed reports, Gligorov lost his right eye. Macedonian Radio on 4 October said surgeons were fighting to save his sight. Western diplomats were cited as saying they do not expect Gligorov to return to office even if he recovers. Meanwhile, about 150 people have been questioned in connection with the assassination attempt and some detained, AFP reported. There is speculation that extreme Macedonian nationalists may have planted the bomb to protest the Greek-Macedonian accord, which provides for a change of the Macedonian flag and parts of the constitution. -- Stefan Krause

    [2] ACTING MACEDONIAN PRESIDENT NAMED.

    Parliamentary chairman Stojan Andov-- who is also head of the Liberal Party, the second largest force in the governing coalition--was named acting president of Macedonia on 4 October, Flaka reported the following day. According to the Macedonian Constitution, the parliamentary chairman takes over as acting president if the elected president dies, resigns, or is incapacitated. The constitution also stipulates that presidential elections must take place within 40 days if the elected president's mandate is terminated for whatever reason. The New York Times on 5 October cited U.S. diplomat Victor Comas as saying Andov is pro-Western and committed to a market economy. The same report, however, quotes unnamed diplomats and Macedonian sources as saying that Andov lacks Gligorov's "political wisdom, flexibility, and popularity." -- Stefan Krause

    [3] MACEDONIAN POLITICIANS PLEDGE CONTINUITY.

    Macedonian Foreign Minister Stevo Crvenkovski on 4 October said the attempt on Gligorov will not mean a change in Macedonian politics, AFP reported the same day. Crvenkovski, addressing the UN General Assembly, called the attempt a "deliberate political act" aimed at destabilizing the country. He said it would not "under any circumstances force us to change our course" of democratization and good relations with all neighbors. Meanwhile, the first round of direct Greek-Macedonian talks ended in Athens on 4 October without concrete results but in a "constructive atmosphere," according to both sides. Talks will resume in Skopje on 10 October. -- Stefan Krause

    [4] NATO JETS HIT SERBIAN MISSILE SITES.

    International media reported on 4 October that NATO jets hit Bosnian Serb radar and SAM sites in southern and central Bosnia in the first such action since air strikes were suspended on 20 September. The pilots found that the Serbs had locked onto them while the jets were on a routine patrol to enforce the "no-fly zone." Nikola Koljevic, the Bosnian Serb "vice president," told Reuters that the attacks were "a definite step back in the peace process." Meanwhile on the diplomatic front, U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said he had a "serious proposal" from the Bosnian government for a ceasefire but gave no details. Sarajevo and Pale have very different understandings of what a truce would involve. -- Patrick Moore

    [5] BATTLEFIELD UPDATE.

    Both the Serbs and the Bosnian government reported success at the front on 4 October. Slobodna Dalmacija the following day said that Serbian forces were continuing their counteroffensive in western Bosnia and that fighting was particularly intense around Otoka and Bosanska Krupa along the Una River between Bihac and the Croatian border. Bosnian government troops of the Mostar-based Fourth Corps reported that they had driven the Serbs off key heights near the Sarajevo-Trnovo road and were controlling the road between Konjic and Kalinovik, the home town of Bosnian Serb commander General Ratko Mladic, news agencies said. -- Patrick Moore

    [6] MONTENEGRIN NEWS.

    Montena-fax on 4 October reported that the previous day some 25 tons of humanitarian aid from Russia, consisting largely of medical supplies, arrived in Podgorica. In other news, ATA reported that Albanian officials on 1 October detained a tanker carrying some 9,000 liters of contraband fuel destined for Montenegro. This last seizure brings the total amount of smuggled fuel seized over the past two months to some 50,000 liters. -- Stan Markotich

    [7] CROATIAN AUTHORITIES CLOSE DOWN BILINGUAL SCHOOLS.

    Croatian media have recently been reporting extensively on the Ministry of Education's decision in late September to replace the two-language curriculum of three secondary schools in Zagreb with a one-language curriculum. In explaining this decision, which encountered bitter reactions from students, parents, and teachers, the ministry said the schools were "experimental" but that the experiment had failed. Critics suspect that the real reason for the decision is a myopic attempt at combatting the brain drain of a country that lives from tourism, shipping, and emigre remittances. The head of one school who supported the two-language curriculum was accused of manipulating the students for political reasons and was fired, Novi list reported on 5 October. Minister of Education Ljilja Vokic has stressed that the Croatian authorities want to have strong control over the country's education system. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [8] DIFFICULTIES FACED BY CROATIAN SERB REFUGEES.

    According to recent Serbian media reports, between 6,000 and 7,000 Croatian Serb refugees want to return home but are prevented from doing so by bureaucratic wranglings. The Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has stopped issuing collective passports for refugees, while the Croatian Government Office in Belgrade, which handles humanitarian issues, claims it has no instructions from Zagreb on how to deal with refugees wanting to return. Meanwhile, the Croatian government has set a deadline for those who have left to come back and claim their property. In related news, Croatia's admission into the Council of Europe, as well as EU post-war aid to Croatia, has been made conditional on the resolution of the problem of the refugees and their property. The UN Security Council on 4 October expressed its "deepest concern" about the status of Croatian Serb refugees, Novi List reported on 5 October. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [9] ROMANIAN RULING PARTY RESPONDS TO EXTREMISTS.

    The Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR), in a 4 October letter addressed to the leadership of the chauvinistic Greater Romania Party (PRM), has denounced the recent "attacks of unprecedented virulence" launched by PRM Chairman Corneliu Vadim Tudor against President Ion Iliescu. In a pamphlet published with the PRM mouthpiece Romania mare, Tudor accused Iliescu of being "a brash dictator" and a "protector of impertinent Zionists." He also commented that the president has "delivered the country to the Jews." Tudor's reaction was provoked by Iliescu's statement during his recent visit to the U.S. that Tudor and Gheorghe Funar, the leader of the Party of Romanian National Unity, were "Romanian Zhirinovskys." The PDSR's letter, which was broadcast by Radio Bucharest, stressed that Tudor's attacks have ""seriously affected" cooperation between the two parties. -- Dan Ionescu

    [10] ROMANIANS SEEK FREE MOVEMENT WITHIN EU.

    Lazar Comanescu, a spokesman for the Romanian Foreign Ministry, has said Romania insists on unrestricted travel within the EU for its citizens, Radio Bucharest reported on 4 October. He said Romania will bring up this issue at all talks with EU representatives by pointing to the principle of equal treatment and opportunities for all EU associate members. Jacques Santier, president of the European Commission, has stressed the necessity to find a solution to this problem, Comanescu added. Comanescu's statement was an indirect response to the EU's recent decision to extend visa requirements to Romania, along with some other 100 countries blacklisted as posing a security or immigration threat to the EU. -- Matyas Szabo

    [11] MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENT APPEALS FOR RELEASE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS.

    The Moldovan parliament has asked that diplomatic efforts be stepped up in order to free the members of the so-called "Ilascu group" from a Tiraspol jail, BASA-press and Infotag reported on 4 October. The four men were sentenced to various prison terms for allegedly committing terrorists acts during the 1992 armed conflict between Moldova and the breakaway Dniester region. The parliament resolution, which denounces the "mediaeval practices" of the Dniester authorities, was adopted at the initiative of the opposition Christian Democratic Popular Front. The front's leaders have repeatedly accused the Chisinau government of failing to drum up international support for liberating the four political prisoners. -- Dan Ionescu

    [12] BULGARIA REAFFIRMS INTENTION TO RESTART NUCLEAR REACTOR.

    RFE/RL and Bulgarian newspapers report that Bulgaria has officially reaffirmed its intention to restart the controversial Reactor No. 1 at the Kozloduy nuclear power plant despite international objections. Director of the Bulgarian Atomic Energy Agency Yanko Yanev said an agreement has been reached with the International Atomic Energy Agency to shut off the unit after the winter for further examination. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Trade Kiril Tsochev met with the EU's representative to Bulgaria to deliver Bulgaria's official position on the issue. The official statement says that Bulgaria is one of the few countries that has a legal framework regulating the use of atomic energy and has ratified the convention on nuclear safety. Bulgarian papers cited Tsochev as saying he wishes France "would not conduct nuclear tests in Muroroa and then take on problems like our reactor." -- Stefan Krause

    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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