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OMRI Daily Digest, Vol. 2, No. 151, 96-08-06

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

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

Vol. 2, No. 151, 6 August 1996


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] NEWSPAPER CLOSED DOWN IN AZERBAIJAN.
  • [02] GEORGIAN ARMY MANEUVERS.
  • [03] EMIGRATION FROM GEORGIA.
  • [04] YEREVAN UNOFFICIALLY LOBBIES ANKARA.
  • [05] UN SPECIAL ENVOY MEETS WITH TAJIK PRESIDENT.

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [06] MOSTAR NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE.
  • [07] IFOR FINDS BIG SERB ARMS CACHE.
  • [08] MUSLIMS ATTACK "SERBS."
  • [09] TUDJMAN CELEBRATES FIRST ANNIVERSARY OF RECAPTURE OF KNIN . . .
  • [10] . . . WHILE SERB RADICAL LEADER SAYS KRAJINA BELONGS TO THE SERBS.
  • [11] SERBIAN LEADERS REACT TO NEWS OF KRAJINA LIBERATION ARMY.
  • [12] SUPREME COURT JUDGE: ILIESCU'S CANDIDACY UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
  • [13] ILIESCU STILL LEADING POLLS.
  • [14] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT ON POLITICAL SITUATION.
  • [15] GREEK-LANGUAGE SCHOOLS TO OPEN IN SOUTHERN ALBANIA.

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] NEWSPAPER CLOSED DOWN IN AZERBAIJAN.

    The Azerbaijani Information and Press Ministry on 1 August ordered a halt to the publication of the partly Turkish-owned daily newspaper Avrasiya (its editor is Hurriyet's Baku correspondent), according to the Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters Sans Frontieres. Information and Press Minister Nariman Hasan-Zade told Avrasiya's editor that the paper had been shut down because of six recent articles on controversial topics including the Gebele early-warning radar station and Azerbaijani-Iranian relations. -- Liz Fuller

    [02] GEORGIAN ARMY MANEUVERS.

    On 5 August, 3,000 Georgian troops began three days of maneuvers in western Georgia close to the border with Abkhazia under the personal supervision of Defense Minister Vardiko Nadibaidze, BGI reported. The Abkhaz army had held exercises near Sukhumi on 1-2 August under the supervision of Defense Minister Vladimir Mikanba and President Vladislav Ardzinba, according to reports in Nezavisimaya gazeta on 3 August and Interfax on 1 August monitored by the BBC. -- Liz Fuller

    [03] EMIGRATION FROM GEORGIA.

    Between 800,000 and 1 million people, or approximately 20% of the total population, have left Georgia over the past five years, generally for economic reasons, according to ITAR-TASS on 27 July and Russian Public TV (ORT) on 5 August. The majority of emigres are university graduates under 35 years of age. -- Liz Fuller

    [04] YEREVAN UNOFFICIALLY LOBBIES ANKARA.

    Armenian parliamentary deputy Telman Ter-Petrossyan was in Ankara on a private visit recently to lobby the Turkish government to open up its border for trade with Armenia, Cumhuriyet reported on 5 August. Along with other unnamed businessmen, the elder brother of Armenian President Levon Ter-Petrossyan held talks with Turkish parliamentarians, businessmen, and journalists to encourage Turkey to buy Armenian electricity and cement, and to accept Armenia as a market for Turkish goods and as a transit country for Turkmen and Russian natural gas. -- Lowell Bezanis

    [05] UN SPECIAL ENVOY MEETS WITH TAJIK PRESIDENT.

    Gerd Dietrich Merrem, the UN Special Envoy to Tajikistan, met with President Imomali Rakhmonov on 5 August to discuss the implementation of the Ashgabat ceasefire agreement, ITAR-TASS reported. The agreement allows for prisoner exchanges and UN monitoring of the situation in the contested Tavil Dara region. Last week, UN observers attempted to reach the city of Tavil Dara but were unsuccessful, RFE/RL reported. Merrem said that the prisoner exchange is important for "strengthening trust" between the two sides. Rakhmonov again reiterated his willingness to hold talks with the opposition, as long as there are no conditions attached. -- Roger Kangas

    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [06] MOSTAR NEGOTIATIONS CONTINUE.

    Talks broke off again in the early morning of 6 August in the dispute between Croats and Muslims over the joint administration of Mostar, Reuters reported the same day. The EU had extended the 4 August deadline for its withdrawal if the Muslims and Croats do not agree over the administration of the divided city. EU spokesman Dragan Gasic said that only "half a sentence" was keeping the two sides from resolving the crisis. Talks are to be continued on 6 August to try to amend the disputed document. Croats want the city council to be a "provisional" body until the Bosnian federation's constitutional court rules on Croat complaints of voting irregularities. Meanwhile, the daily Oslobodjenje on 6 August reported that a supreme court rejected the Croat complaint as "groundless," but it is not clear whether it was the Bosnian federation Supreme Court or Bosnia-Herzegovina's Supreme Court. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [07] IFOR FINDS BIG SERB ARMS CACHE.

    Italian NATO troops accidentally came upon a major Bosnian Serb arms depot while looking for potential polling sites in Markovici, northeast of Sarajevo. The cache had not been registered with IFOR and contains 1,000 tons of weapons and ammunition occupying a space of 1,200 square meters, AFP reported on 5 August. At least 4,000 Serbian civilians mobbed the 30 Italians as they tried to begin carting off the ammunition, a job that IFOR said would require 100 trucks to complete. Two Bosnian Serb officers claimed that the site was about to be registered with NATO, but the Italians noted that it had not been declared before and was dangerously concealed near civilian housing. The crowd in any event forced the Italians to return to the depot with their trucks, the BBC noted. Under they Dayton agreement such unauthorized caches can be confiscated and destroyed. -- Patrick Moore

    [08] MUSLIMS ATTACK "SERBS."

    A Muslim crowd of about 100 persons, mainly women and teenagers, blocked a UN- protected convoy in Ilidza on 4 August. The International Police Task Force (IPTF) was attempting to escort what the Muslims believed to be two busses of Serbian civilians wanting to return to the Sarajevo suburb of Osjek. The Muslims damaged IPTF vehicles with bricks and rocks, and a UN translator was slightly injured, news agencies reported. The busses turned out, however, to be carrying Muslims. UN spokesman Patrik Svensson said that the incident was probably designed to intimidate the remaining 240 Serbs living in Osjek. The opposition in Sarajevo has charged the governing Party of Democratic Action of trying to pack the suburbs with Muslim refugees from eastern Bosnia in order to change the ethnic and political balance. -- Patrick Moore

    [09] TUDJMAN CELEBRATES FIRST ANNIVERSARY OF RECAPTURE OF KNIN . . .

    Croatian President Franjo Tudjman on 5 August attended a celebration of the first anniversary of the recapture of the former rebel Serb stronghold of Knin by Croatian forces, AFP reported. Knin, which was a beginning point of the four-year Serb rebellion, represented Tudjman's greatest military victory. But the Croatian Helsinki Committee on 3 August released a report saying that at least 115 Croatian Serbs were "arbitrarily executed" in the months following the August 1995 retaking of the city and that 110 others "disappeared." The Committee also accused senior officials, including Tudjman, of knowing about the atrocities and not doing anything about them. It blamed the Croatian government for failing to prevent criminal acts from taking place after the offensive, while at the same time creating obstacles for exiled Serbs to return to Croatia. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [10] . . . WHILE SERB RADICAL LEADER SAYS KRAJINA BELONGS TO THE SERBS.

    Accused war criminal and leader of the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), Vojislav Seselj, said on the occasion of the first anniversary of Croatia's reclaiming of its Krajina territory from rebel Serbs, that Krajina is "simply occupied and forcibly taken from our people." Seselj vowed he would use all "peaceful and democratic" means to work towards the goal of retaking Krajina for the Serbs. Beta on 5 August quoted the SRS leader observing that "if the French had to wait nearly fifty years to reclaim Alsace-Lorraine from Germany ... and so we Serbs will have to wait for a better reconfiguration of forces in the international community ... to forge the unity of all Serb lands." -- Stan Markotich

    [11] SERBIAN LEADERS REACT TO NEWS OF KRAJINA LIBERATION ARMY.

    Several prominent Serbs have reacted negatively to news of the formation of the self-proclaimed terrorist group known as the Krajina Liberation Army (KAO), which has vowed to wage terrorist campaigns against "Serbian traitors" and Croatia for its having reclaimed Krajina (see ). Beta on 2

    August reported that Mihajlo Vucinovic, president of the association representing Krajina refugees, said that Zagreb "could hardly wait for the KOA to be formed so it could justify continued discrimination against Serbs staying in Croatia and keep those who wished from returning." Even paramilitary leader and accused war criminal Zeljko "Arkan" Raznatovic offered a condemnation, saying the KOA can accomplish "nothing through terrorism." -- Stan Markotich

    [12] SUPREME COURT JUDGE: ILIESCU'S CANDIDACY UNCONSTITUTIONAL.

    In an interview with the daily Romania libera, Judge Paul Florea of the Romanian Supreme Court said incumbent president Ion Iliescu's candidacy for a new term is unconstitutional, Reuters reported on 5 August. The constitution stipulates that a president's mandate is limited to a maximum of two consecutive terms. Romania libera had earlier reported that Iliescu's campaign team had consulted the constitutional court and had been unofficially advised that the provision concerning a second term does not apply retroactively to the adoption of the basic law. Iliescu had served as president of the transitional legislative-executive body set up in December 1989, and was elected president in May 1990. He was again elected in 1992, after the passing of the country's new constitution, and his supporters claim his renewed candidacy is for a constitutional second term. -- Michael Shafir

    [13] ILIESCU STILL LEADING POLLS.

    According to a recent opinion poll, the main opposition alliance, the Democratic Convention of Romania (CDR), is the most popular "party" in parliamentary elections scheduled for early November (33.5%), but President Ion Iliescu is ahead (37.1%) in the presidential race that will be held at the same time, the daily Libertatea reported on 6 August. The survey was conducted by the Institute for Market and Social Analysis. CDR candidate Emil Constantinescu trails Iliescu (31.6%), followed by the candidate of the Democratic Party, Petre Roman (18.7%). In the parliamentary race, the major ruling party, the Party of Social Democracy in Romania, is backed by 27.5% of those polled. More than a quarter of those questioned (26%) said either that they will not vote or that they are undecided. -- Michael Shafir

    [14] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT ON POLITICAL SITUATION.

    President Zhelyu Zhelev, in an interview with Trud on 5 August, repeated his position that a presidential republic could help pull Bulgaria out of its present crisis. Zhelev said the present parliamentary system has shown that "it either works badly, or not at all." Zhelev called accusations that he wants more power "not serious." He repeated that he will not run in the upcoming elections but stay in politics after leaving the presidency in January 1997. Also on 5 August, Zhelev met with the united opposition's presidential candidate, Petar Stoyanov. Stoyanov told RFE/RL that he and Zhelev agreed that the main problem in Bulgaria is the government's mismanagement. Stoyanov said the opposition supports Zhelev's foreign policy orientation. -- Stefan Krause

    [15] GREEK-LANGUAGE SCHOOLS TO OPEN IN SOUTHERN ALBANIA.

    Greek-language schools will open this year in Gjirokastra, Saranda, and Delvina, international agencies reported on 6 August. The Greek government had demanded the opening of elementary schools instructing in Greek as an important step towards improving mutual relations. The ethnic-Greek minority in southern Albania has previously been able to attend classes in Greek in regular Albanian schools. In other news, Police have arrested a man suspected of killing Bujar Kaloshi, the general director of the Albanian prisons, Koha Jone reported on 6 August. -- Fabian Schmidt

    Compiled by Victor Gomez and Pete Baumgartner
    News and information 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 info@omri.cz.


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