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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 85, 00-05-02Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 4, No. 85, 2 May 2000CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIAN PREMIER DISCUSSES ECONOMIC COOPERATION IN MOSCOWAram Sargsian told journalists on 29 April on his return froma two-day working visit to Moscow that he had reached agreement during talks with Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov on increased Russian investment in Armenia's stagnating industrial sector, ITAR-TASS reported. Also discussed were cooperation in the energy sector and Armenia's outstanding debts to Russia for supplies of nuclear fuel to the Medzamor nuclear power station. No details were divulged of Sargsian's meeting with Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeev. Kasyanov for his part told journalists in Moscow on 28 April that "it is too early" to discuss the possibility of Armenia's accession to the Union State of Russia and Belarus (see "RFE/RL Caucasus Report," Vol. 3, No. 16, 21 April 2000). He added that Armenia's accession to that union would necessitate "mutual concessions." LF [02] ARMENIAN MILITARY PROSECUTOR ORDERED TO CONTINUE PARLIAMENTSHOOTING INVESTIGATIONArmenian Prosecutor-General Boris Nazarian on 28 April rejected a request by Military Procurator Gagik Jahangirian to take over the conduct of the investigation into the 27 October Armenian parliament shootings, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. In a written statement, Nazarian said that the investigating team headed by Jahangirian "has not violated any provision of the Armenian code of criminal justice" and that "all [Jahangirian's] actions and petitions are justified and stem from the requirements of the law." On 26 April Jahangirian had submitted his resignation to Armenian President Robert Kocharian to protest the latter's ruling the previous day that he should not testify before parliament on the ongoing investigation into the shootings. Kocharian refused to accept Jahangirian's resignation (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). LF [03] ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT MAJORITY SHELVES IMPEACHMENT OPTIONAfter talks with unidentified legal experts on 28 April, themajority Miasnutiun parliament bloc distanced itself still further from demands expressed earlier in the week for President Kocharian's impeachment, Interfax and RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. Miasnutiun leader Andranik Markarian said that the bloc has not yet raised the impeachment issue with the Constitutional Court, which must endorse a parliament vote to impeach the president. But Markarian added that Miasnutiun may still ask the Constitutional Court to rule on the legality of Kocharian's order to Military Procurator Jahangirian not to testify before parliament, according to Interfax. Hmayak Hovanissian, who is deputy head of the People's Party of Armenia, the junior partner within Miasnutiun, told Interfax on 28 April that there is no good reason for Kocharian's impeachment, and that an impeachment attempt would "lead the country into a cul-de-sac." Meanwhile Kocharian on 28 April told journalists that he will shortly take the "resolute steps" that he believes the Armenian people expect from him, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. He did not elaborate. LF [04] ARMENIAN, TURKISH UNIVERSITIES SIGN LANDMARK AGREEMENTSenior officials from Yerevan State University and AnkaraPolytechnical University signed a cooperation agreement in Yerevan on 1 May, RFE/RL's bureau in the Armenian capital reported. Several dozen members of the youth organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation--Dashnaktsutiun gathered to protest both the signing of the agreement and Turkey's refusal to recognize as genocide the killings and forced deportations of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey in 1915. Armenia and Turkey have not established diplomatic relations. LF [05] KARABAKH PROSECUTOR GIVES DETAILS OF ASSASSINATION BIDMavrik Ghukasian, who is chief prosecutor of the unrecognizedNagorno-Karabakh Republic, told journalists from Armenia in Stepanakert on 22 April that nine people have been charged with the 22 March attempt to kill the enclave's President Arkadii Ghukasian, according to "Azg" of 26 April as circulated by Groong. The Karabakh prosector said that the enclave's former Defense Minister, Samvel Babayan, has confessed to organizing the assassination bid. He said that the perpetrators had also planned to kill two further senior officials, whom he did not name. They then hoped to pressure the enclave's government into naming Babayan as leader. The prosecutor said that Babayan had paid two of President Ghukasian's attackers some 2 million drams (approximately $3,800). He added that Babayan had also provided some $550,000 and 300 tons of diesel fuel to the Right and Accord bloc during last year's Armenian parliamentary election campaign. LF [06] POLICE USE FORCE TO BREAK UP DEMONSTRATION IN AZERBAIJAN...Police armed with batons attacked participants in anunsanctioned demonstration in Baku on 29 April to demand the resignation of President Heidar Aliev and safeguards to prevent the falsification of the parliamentary elections due in November, Reuters and RFE/RL's Baku bureau reported. The demonstrators also demanded the release of political prisoners and opposition access to the state-controlled media, according to Turan. Estimates of the number of participants range from 5,000--20,000. Dozens of demonstrators and several journalists, including "Azadlyg" editor Gunduz Tahirly, were injured or beaten, while a police spokesman claimed that 34 police were likewise injured by sticks or stones thrown by demonstrators. The ten opposition parties aligned in the Democratic Congress had convened the protest in the city center after refusing an offer from the municipal authorities to hold it on the outskirts (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 28 April 2000). LF [07] ...ARREST OPPOSITION LEADERSPolice on 30 April detainedsome 50 participants in the Baku demonstration, including leading Musavat Party member Arif Hadjiev, Akhrar Party leader Vagif Hadjibeyli, and People's Party leader and former Premier Panakh Guseinov, Turan reported. Those three, and 12 other people, were sentenced by Baku district courts the same day to between five and 15 days' detention. The Azerbaijani Prosecutor-General's office warned on 30 April that criminal proceedings may be opened against the organizers of the protest, Reuters reported. Speaking on national television the same day, presidential administration official Ali Hasanov said that the opposition has no reason to fear vote- rigging in the November parliamentary poll, as Azerbaijan's accession to full membership of the Council of Europe is contingent on that vote being acknowledged to be free and democratic. LF [08] AZERBAIJAN AIMS TO DEEPEN COOPERATION WITH NATOVisitingBaku on 27-28 April, NATO political committee chairman Admiral Guido Venturoni discussed with Azerbaijan's Defense Minister Safar Abiev and with President Aliev the prospects for expanding Azerbaijan's cooperation with NATO within the parameters of the Partnership for Peace program, Turan reported. Abiev specifically denied his Georgian counterpart David Tevzadze's 26 April statement that joint exercises involving forces from the U.S., Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia are being planned (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 28 April 2000). He also argued that Azerbaijan's military cooperation with NATO does not pose a threat to Azerbaijani-Russian relations. LF [09] AZERBAIJAN, GEORGIA, TURKEY CONCLUDE LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR OILPIPELINEIn a written statement issued in Washington on 28 April, U.S. President Bill Clinton hailed the agreement reached earlier that day by Azerbaijani, Georgian and Turkish foreign ministry officials and Western oil company representatives, AP and Caucasus Press reported. That agreement addressed earlier Georgian reservations concerning Georgia's legal responsibilities in the event of damage to the Georgian sector of the planned Baku-Ceyhan oil export pipeline (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 3 March 2000). LF [10] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT INAUGURATEDEduard Shevardnadze was swornin on 30 April for his second presidential term. Caucasus Press and Reuters reported. Pledging to become "stronger, firmer and more decisive," Shevardnadze singled out as a priority over the next five years purging incompetent and corrupt officials from the government. He further promised to pay outstanding wages and pensions arrears within a short time (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). Shevardnadze expressed regret that during his previous presidential term he had not succeeded in restoring Georgia's territorial integrity. He said the as yet unratified Georgian-Russian treaty signed in 1994 is obsolete, and that a new pact should be drafted. The inauguration ceremony was attended by Russian oligarchs Boris Berezovskii and Vladimir Gusinskii. Foreign heads of state were not invited because of economic constraints. LF [11] KAZAKH STRIKERS PLAN PROTEST MARCHCurrent and formeremployees of the Taraz Phosphorous Plant in Kazakhstan's southern Zhambyl Oblast plan to begin a protest march to Almaty on 6 May if their demands for payment of wage arrears, pensions and other allowances are not met by that date, RFE/RL's Almaty correspondent reported on 2 May. They began a protest action and hunger strike on 11 April to demand those payments (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 19 April 2000). [12] ISSUE OF KAZAKH OPPOSITION NEWSPAPER CONFISCATEDBigeldyGabdullin, editor of the opposition weekly "XXI vek," told journalists in Almaty on 28 April that the previous day's issue of the paper had been confiscated by Almaty tax police, who declined to give any explanation for their action, RFE/RL's bureau in the former capital reported. The paper has repeatedly been subjected to official pressure (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 14 January 2000). LF [13] KYRGYZ PICKET PARTICIPANTS ARRESTEDPolice in Bishkek on 28April arrested three participants in the ongoing picket in central Bishkek to demand the release of arrested Ar-Namys party chairman Feliks Kulov and the annulment of the results of the parliamentary elections held in February-March, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported. The three were charged with hooliganism. The picket entered its 47th day on 1 May. Kulov's lawyer, Larisa Ivanova, told RFE/RL on 1 May that the Kyrgyz Security Ministry has completed its investigation into the charges against Kulov. LF [14] OSCE OFFICIAL MEETS WITH KYRGYZ OPPOSITIONOSCE Secretary-General Jan Kubis held discussions in Bishkek on 28 April with representatives of several opposition parties and NGOs, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported. Those talks focussed on the domestic political situation and the possibility of an OSCE-sponsored round table discussion between the opposition and the Kyrgyz leadership. Together with Premier Amangeldy Muraliev and Foreign Minister Muratbek Imanaliev, on 29 April Kubis attended the opening of an OSCE office in the southern city of Osh. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[15] COHEN, CLARK WARN KOSOVARSOn separate trips to Kosova on 1May, U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen and outgoing NATO Supreme Commander Europe General Wesley Clark told ethnic Albanians not to support any insurgency in southwestern Serbia's Presevo Valley area. Referring to a new 120-member U.S. surveillance team in that region, Cohen said: "We have strengthened our capability of interrupting the flow of weapons that may be transported illegally," AP reported. Referring to the mainly ethnic Albanian Kosova Protection Force, Clark said: "We're not going to allow them to get involved in providing logistic support for any fighting. They're not going to be permitted to have a security role and certainly not a logistics role." He stressed that "people [in Kosova] have to have tolerance. They have to move out of the past, out of the 19th century and move into the 21st century," Reuters reported. PM [16] SECURITY COUNCIL CHIEF SLAMS RUSSIAN, CHINESE DIPLOMATSAnwarul Chowdhury, who is Bangladeshi Ambassador to the UNand currently holds the Security Council chair, said in New York on 1 May that the UN should appoint a special envoy to investigate reports of missing persons in Kosova. "The Council cannot maintain credibility unless we address this issue," Reuters quoted him as saying. Chowdhury added that he regrets that Russian Ambassador to the UN Security Council Sergei Lavrov and Chinese Deputy Ambassador Shen Guofeng met Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic in Belgrade on 26 April before a Security Council delegation visited Kosova (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). Chowdhury added that the two diplomats had every right to visit Belgrade but said it is "regrettable that the ambassadors visited with war criminals." PM [17] SERBIAN WORKERS HOLD PROTESTS...Several thousand Belgraderesidents held a 1 May demonstration under the auspices of the Nezavisnost (Independence) trade union movement. The meeting's theme was: "The world of work is the key to democracy," RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. The union said in a statement that workers had allowed Milosevic to "push them into evil and hatred," and that now "the moment has come to touch every hand that stretches out to help us. The workers in Serbia must take responsibility for their role in the democratization of Serbia," Reuters reported. Union leader Branimir Canak said: "this is the moment to wake up and say a decisive 'no' to the regime of Slobodan Milosevic." PM [18] ...WHILE REGIME CELEBRATES IN BAMBI PARKPro-Milosevicunions held their 1 May celebration in Smederevo. The top leadership, however, attended a festival the previous night in Milosevic's home town of Pozarevac to mark the opening of the visitors' season for Bambi [Amusement] Park, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. The park was built during the 1999 Kosova conflict with money from the Bambi cookie company, the city government, and the Madona Company, which is a business venture of Milosevic's son, Marko. Many Serbs regard Bambi Park as the ultimate symbol of regime corruption and privilege. PM [19] OSCE DENIES ALBANIAN OPPOSITION'S CHARGE OF BIASOSCEspokesman Giovanni Porta told dpa in Tirana on 1 May that the Democratic Party's charges that the OSCE supports the governing Socialists "are not fair. The OSCE has always kept an open, clear and unbiased attitude in its mediation efforts in Albania." Democratic Party officials have charged that the OSCE supports the Socialist position on electoral legislation, which, the Democrats argue, will enable the Socialists to rig upcoming elections (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report, 7 April 2000). PM [20] CROATIAN ADMISSION TO PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE IMMINENT?President Stipe Mesic, Prime Minister Ivica Racan, and othertop Croatian leaders visited the aircraft carrier "U.S.S. Dwight D. Eisenhower" near Dubrovnik on 30 April. Racan told reporters afterward that he is pleased to have seen the ship "only eight days before my trip to Brussels, where Croatia expects to be admitted to Partnership for Peace." He set the date for formal admission as 25 May, "Jutarnji list" reported on 2 May. Racan will visit NATO headquarters on 8-9 May to discuss his country's prospects for admission to the alliance. The Croatian government of the late President Franjo Tudjman supported NATO during the 1999 Kosova conflict, and the former general himself sorely wanted to see his country admitted to the alliance. But NATO did not allow Croatia to join Partnership for Peace because of its record on democratization and minority rights. Mesic and Racan are firmly committed to overcoming the international isolation of the Tudjman years. PM [21] TUDJMAN'S PARTY PICKS NEW LEADERSome 2,000 delegates to thecongress of the Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) chose former Deputy Foreign Minister Ivo Sanader as new party leader in Zagreb on 30 April. Referring to the HDZ's having slipped to at least fifth place in recent opinion polls, Sanader told supporters: "The Croatian public seems to have forgotten everything the HDZ has done for this country.... But we shall return to power much sooner than a lot of people are expecting," Reuters reported. His main rival was Branimir Glavas, who is a right-wing leader from eastern Slavonia. Glavas charged that the party has failed to confront the scandals and corruption charges that cost it a series of elections at the beginning of the year. Ivic Pasalic, whom many regard as Tudjman's chosen successor, took himself out of the running for any party offices, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported on 29 April. Pasalic has been at the center of several scandals (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report," 2 May 2000). PM [22] PARLIAMENT TO VOTE THIRD TIME ON PRIME MINISTERLegislatorsagreed in Ljubljana on 28 April to hold a third round of voting for prime minister on 3 May. The move came two days after Andrej Bajuk, who is the center-right candidate, received 43 out of 90 possible votes, thereby falling just three votes short of an absolute majority (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). Under the rules governing a third round of balloting, a candidate needs only a simple majority. Reuters quoted top political analysts in Ljubljana as saying that the outcome is too close to predict. President Milan Kucan wants early elections to provide a fresh mandate for parliament. PM [23] IMF DELEGATION EXTENDS ROMANIAN STAYPrime Minister MugurIsarescu told journalists on 28 April that after the last round of talks with the head of the IMF delegation Emmanuel Zervoudakis he is "optimistic" that the IMF will extend the stand-by agreement with Romania by 11 months, as requested by his cabinet. Isarescu also said that the latest economic data confirms that Romania is heading towards economic growth. But Zervoudakis on the same day decided to extend his stay in Romania for further discussions on the recently-approved budget. He is meeting Isarescu again on 2 May. Government spokeswoman Gabriela Vranceanu-Firea on 1 May said Romania has fulfilled 20 out of the 25 conditions demanded by the fund. The main remaining problems, she said, are the high burden imposed on the budget by wages and the arrears owed by loss-making state-owned companies. MS [24] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT PROMULGATES LAW ON COMMUNIST REGIME'S'CRIMINALITY'President Petar Stoyanov on 28 April signed into law the recently-approved legislation on the "criminal" nature of the communist regime (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). Stoyanov, who earlier said he had misgivings about the law, said he was doing so because the legislation "does not grant, annul, or violate any legal rights," BTA reported. He said the law is of a "declaration type." Stoyanov also said that he is "encouraged" by the steps the cabinet has taken as of late to combat corruption, adding that "the time has come for strong statements to make room for all-out action." But he also said he does not agree with Prime Minister Ivan Kostov's proposal to curtail the immunity of judges as part of the effort to fight corruption. MS [25] BULGARIA REACTS TO MACEDONIAN PREMIER'S INTERVIEWForeignMinistry spokesman Radko Vlaikov on 28 April told journalists that Bulgaria hopes a statement by Macedonian President Boris Trajkovski has been "misinterpreted" by the Macedonian media, because "it would be alarming if the opposite were true," BTA reported. In an interview with the daily "Utrinski Vestik" on 22 April, Trajkovski said that criminals, smugglers and drug traders penetrate Macedonia from Bulgaria, and urged the EU not to lift visa requirements for Bulgarian nationals. "Transferring one's own problems to one's neighbors has never been a useful thing to do," Vlaikov said. MS [C] END NOTE[26] ROMANIA, MOLDOVA CONCLUDE PROBLEMATIC BASIC TREATYby Michael ShafirThe foreign ministers of Moldova and Romania, Nicolae Tabacaru and Petre Roman, on 28 April initialed in Chisinau the basic treaty between their countries in the presence of the EU coordinator for the South East European Stability Pact Bodo Hombach. The treaty must now be approved by the two countries' presidents and by the Moldovan and Romanian legislatures. Although negotiations on the treaty have lasted for no less than seven years, the stumbling blocs do not appear to have been really solved in the document finally agreed on. They were rather circumvented through compromises that make its repudiation by its opponents on both sides of River Prut a certainty. Bucharest has been pushing for a treaty that would express the anomaly of the imposed separation of Bessarabia from the Romanian state. It therefore wished the treaty to be called one of "fraternity," to speak of "two Romanian states," to include an explicit denunciation of the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop pact that had made possible the annexation by the Soviet Union in 1940 of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina, and to be explicitly written "in the Romanian language." For Chisinau, on the other hand, a treaty that would emphasize anomalies was a treaty that would in the long run undermine its independent statehood. The famous saying "in the long run we are all dead" was quite rightly perceived to be fully applicable if Moldova were to accept Bucharest's "suggestions." The compromise solutions, as all compromises go, are "neither fish, nor fowl", or, as a Romanian daily put colloquially, "neither horse, nor donkey." The treaty is neither one of "fraternity" nor a "regular treaty," but is rather designated as one of "privileged relations." No reference is made to "two Romanian states," but mention is made of the joint "roots in the historic past," and of a "community of culture and language." The Russian-German pact is not explicitly denounced, but is implicitly rejected by making reference to two documents approved by the Moldovan parliament and by the Romanian government in 1991, upon Moldova's declaration of independence. One must note that the Moldovan position on this point is rather delicate: the declaration of independence approved by the country's parliament in 1991 had indeed "noted" the pact's denunciation by the "parliaments of many states" but had stopped short of embracing that denunciation, for nullification of the pact would have found Moldova back to the status of a Romanian province. Not so the Romanian government's 1991 declaration, which, while welcoming the Moldovan declaration of independence, viewed it as "a decisive step on the road to peaceful obliteration of the nefarious consequences" of the pact, which was described as "directed against the rights and interests of the Romanian people." Finally, the pact does not stipulate in which language it is formulated, though it is clearly written in Romanian. The Moldovans had long insisted that mention be made of the fact that the treaty is written in either the "state" or the "official" languages (plural), for although the two are practically identical, the state language in Moldovan is defined in the constitution as being "Moldovan.". Naturally, each side is now attempting to present the treaty in the interpretation best suited to over-ruling possible objections to it. In Moldova, President Petru Lucinschi and parliament chairman Dumitru Diacov emphasized the "regular features" of the document, which, they claimed, contains "all provisions" that a regular treaty (that is indistinguishable from other basic treaties) should include. Foreign Minister Petre Roman, on the other hand, chose to present the treaty as being one "between two fraternal states" and spoke again of "the two Romanian states" while referring to the treaty's significance." The Romanian Foreign Ministry went one step further, explaining that the "principle of inviolability of borders" included in the text does not necessarily rule out border modifications (that is, the eventual re-unification of the two states), since the Helsinki Final Act stipulates that "peaceful border modifications," with the agreement of both sides, are possible. What, then, is "privileged" about the treaty? What made the two sides suddenly agree on the compromise? And why now and not earlier? Bodo Hombach's presence at the initialing ceremony provides more than a hint. Praising the treaty, the EU official said that the document is likely to help both Romania's quest for integration in the EU and Moldova's effort to achieve EU associate status and to become a full- fledged member of the South East European Balkan Stability Pact. Indeed, soon thereafter President Emil Constantinescu, attending a meeting of Central and East European heads of states in Hungary, apparently secured the agreement of his peers for Chisinau to be invited to their next meeting. Romania's reasons for agreeing to the pact now can also be linked to the EU integration effort, the more so as Bucharest, though invited to accession talks recently, has little else to offer the EU than proof of its eagerness to solve standing problems with its neighbors. The "privileged relationship" at closer scrutiny amounts to no more than an engagement on Romania's side to promote Moldova's integration efforts alongside its own. By so doing, Romania has in fact accepted Moldova's position that a "re-integration" of the two countries can only occur within the larger context of European integration. But Bucharest is also undertaking to defend "Moldovan territorial integrity" and "sovereignty" in all possible forums and in practice. Roman explained that this is precisely an illustration of the "privileged relations" aspect of the treaty. This allusion to the Transdniester conflict is one that may be problematic. The OSCE rotating chairmanship that Romania takes over in 2001 could be a forum to defend and promote Moldovan full sovereignty. But that prestigious position is by definition limited in time. And an eventual involvement by Romania in the Transdniester conflict beyond words and mediation efforts is unlikely to convince the EU that Bucharest promotes regional stability. 02-05-00 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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