bosnet-digest V5 #73 / Wednesday, 21 February 1996
From: Dzevat Omeragic <dzevat@EE.MCGILL.CA>
Subject: bosnet-digest V5 #73 / Wednesday, 21 February 1996
From: Dzevat Omeragic <dzevat@EE.MCGILL.CA>
CONTENTS
[01] 20 February 1996 - Press TWRA & FPB Zagreb
[02] Tribunal Watch: Poster Boys
[03] Support Program For the University of Tuzla
[04] This Week in Bosnia: Feb. 21, 1996
[01] 20 February 1996 - Press TWRA & FPB Zagreb
SUMMIT OF GENERALS AT THE SHIP "GEORGE WASHINGTON"
Naples, Feb 19, 1996 (Press TWRA) - Commander of IFOR and Afsouth
(NATO south wing), the US Adm. L. Smith called the meeting of the
joint military commission for the Dayton agreement implementation
to be held at the US plane carrier "Washington" in the Adriatic.
Participants at the meeting are: head of the HVO HQ, gen.
Zivko Budimir, commander of the B-H army HQ general Rasim Delic
and Serb general Zdravko Tolimir. /end/ A.S.
VLADO GOTOVAC - NEW CHAIRMAN OF HSLS
Zagreb, Feb 19, 1996 (Press TWRA) - At the 6th HSLS (Croatian
Social-Liberal Party) conference, Vlado Gotovac was elected the
Party's chairman, led from 1989-199O by Slavko Goldstein and from
199O-1996 by Drazen Budisa. Vice-chairmen are Jozo Rados, Goran
Granic, Ivo Skrabalo and Zlatko Kramaric. Party's secretary gen.
Bozo Kovacevic is replaced by retired Croatian army gen. Karl
Gorinsek whom Franjo Tudjman removed three years ago due to a
military operation in Baranja. He is ethnic Slovenian, Croatian
citizen. He led defence of Croatian eastern part with Osijek as
the biggest town, whose mayor is Kramaric. Goran Granic (brother
of Croatian foreign minister Mate Granic) was a candidate for the
Zagreb mayor declined by president Tudjman. New candidate is Jozo
Rados about whom Tudjman has not made any statement yet.
After some leading HSLS members left the Party to join the
leading HDZ (Ivan Bozicevic, Mate Mestrovic, Damir Zoric),
"outstanding liberals" (Mladen Vilfan, Goranko Fizulic, Bozo
Kovacevic) criticized the chairman Budisa as yielding to those
still HSLS members but close to deserters in HDZ. Election of
Gotovac, Rados, Granic, Skrabalo, Kramaric and Gorinsek should
preserve the unity in the partition-undermined HSLS.
In the speech to the Conference, Drazen Budisa, at the end
of his chairman's mandate announced that in spring 1994, HDZ and
Tudjman offered him privileges, access to the state's secrets and
two-party system in Croatia if he left the oppositional coalition
which nearly won majority in the Parliament after dissidents of
HDZ, led by Mesic & Manolic, founded the opposition party HND.
The Conference resolution states: Though it was written
in the Constitution more than five years ago, Croatia is not a
democratic & social state. (...) President of the Republic and of
HDZ concentrates all the power in his hands, extending
Constitutional authorities of semi-presidential system,
maintaining the power like an absolutist. (...) Government has
control over electronic media, trying to prevent independence of
the papers." Gotovac, who due to criticism of the communist
repression, spent twelve years in Yugoslav prisons, announces
severe criticism of the authorities and effort of HSLS to bring
democratic change to Croatia as soon as possible. The claim that
the opposition coalition is unnatural is not right, as the
coalition is joined in devotion to freedom, says Gotovac, calling
Church to defend all-human values. /end/ A.S.
Sender: croatian-news@stribor.srce.hr
From: Foreign Press Bureau-Zagreb <fpbzg@zagreb.matis.hr>
FOREIGN PRESS BUREAU DAILY BULLETIN
FEBRUARY 20 1996
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PEACE ACCORDS CONTINUES REGARDLESS
OF SERBIAN COOPERATION
IFOR Commander Admiral Leighton Smith said that the
implementation of the peace accords would continue
regardless of Sebian cooperation. The Bosnian Serb
General Zdravko Tolmir, who was to represent Serbs at a
joint military commission, failed to show up yesterday at
a meeting with NATO on board a U.S. carrier in the
Adriatic. The HVO and Bosnian army representatives,
generals Zivko Budimir and Rasim Delic, flew to the U.S.
carrier "George Washington" and met with Admiral Smith.
French press reported that IFOR ground forces Commander,
General Michael Walker, was set to meet with General
Tolmir this morning in Pale. NATO hopes that General
Walker will persuade the Bosnian Serb military to renew
their contact with IFOR.
RESTRICTIONS ON MOVEMENT LIFTED IN MOSTAR
As of noon today all restrictions on movement are to be
lifted in the city of Mostar, said Deputy EU
Administrator Claus Mecher. Croat and Moslem police are
set to begin joint patrols together with the EU police.
The Croat and Moslem patrols will have executive
authority. Mr. Mecher added that he hoped both sides
would cooperate so that all risks can be avoided.
WAR CRIMINALS INDICTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNAL IN
THE HAGUE
International forces in Bosnia have begun distributing a
pamphlet with 17 photographs of indicted war criminals to
help them recognize and apprehend them.
The pamphlet is called "War criminals indicted by the
International Tribunal in the Hague". It has 17 photos
including shots of the two best known indictees, Bosnian
Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and military Commander
General Ratko Mladic.
ALL INDICTED WAR CRIMINALS IN BOSNIA SHOULD BE
APPREHENDED BY IFOR
NATO Secretary General Javier Solana says that all
indicted war criminals in Bosnia should be apprehended by
IFOR before the end of NATO's one year mandate in Bosnia.
Speaking in Ottawa, Canada, Mr. Solana said apprehending
suspected war criminals was part of IFOR's job and that
NATO was not going to hunt down suspects, but if they
found General Mladic they would hand him over to the
Hague Tribunal.
IFOR SEIZES WEAPONRY AND AMMUNITION IN ILIJAS
French IFOR troops have seized a considerable amount of
weaponry and ammunition at a Bosnian Serb depot in
Ilijas, a Sarajevo suburb. Under the Dayton Agreement,
the weapons were supposed to be withdrawn by Feb. 3.
About 100 French troops took part in the operation
supported by U.S. F-18 jets.
SERBIAN TERRORIST RING UNCOVERED IN ITALY
According to the Italian newspaper "Messagero", a Serbian
terrorists ring, which has been preparing terrorist
actions in Italy, has been uncovered.
The terrorists planned to blow up objects including the
oil refinery in Falconari near Ancona, where UN planes
used to take off for Sarajevo.
"Messagero" wrote that the Serb terrorist had built up a
storage of arms and explosives including anti tanks
mines, gas bombs, grenades and automatic weapons for a
series of attacks in Italy.
FOREIGN MINISTER MATE GRANIC MEETS WITH THE COUNCIL OF
EUROPE'S DIRECTOR FOR POLITICAL ISSUES
Croatia's Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Mate
Granic met today in Zagreb with the Council of Europe's
Director for Political Issues, Hans Peter Fuerrer.
The delegation of the Council of Europe expressed its
interest in the process of the peaceful reintegration of
the occupied parts of eastern Croatia into the Croatian
state system, and the role of UNTAES in the process.
Minister Granic stressed that the full realisation of the
basic agreement for eastern Croatia should start
immediately and that an important prerequisite for the
agreement was the normalisation of relations between
Croatia and the so called Yugoslavia.
Opinions expressed/published on BosNews/BosNet-B do NOT necessarily
always reflect the views of (all of the members of) Editorial Board,
and/or moderators, nor any of their host institutions.
Murat Erkocevic <ErkocevicM@aol.com>
Dzevat Omeragic <Dzevat@ee.mcgill.ca>
Davor Wagner <DWagner@mailbox.syr.edu>
Nermin Zukic <N6Zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
[02] Tribunal Watch: Poster Boys
Sender: Tribunal Watch List <TWATCH-L@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU>
From: Tom Warrick <tom.warrick@HIS.COM>
Berserkistan's Jim Bartlett is online with the first picture of the
wanted poster being distributed to IFOR soldiers. It has "grainy" pictures
of 17 unarrested indicted war criminals, along with the names and other
information on the remaining 34 indictees. Bartlett's picture shows
Admiral Smith holding up the poster for journalists to see, with several
other officers looking at Admiral Smith, and Carl Bildt looking in another
direction.
Those of you with high-speed Internet links and Netscape 2.0 should check
out Bartlett's Web site, Berserkistan, run by Pacific Interactive Media.
The URL is:
http://www.linder.com/berserk/berserk.html
Bartlett is a free-lance journalist whose coverage of Bosnia has been
excellent. He follows photojournalist Robert Capa's motto, "If your
pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough." The Web site has
won numerous awards in the short time it has been set up. (The fact that
it has links to the Coalition's Web site is wholly extraneous to this
strong endorsement!)
Tom Warrick
Coalition for International Justice
Opinions expressed/published on BosNews/BosNet-B do NOT necessarily
always reflect the views of (all of the members of) Editorial Board,
and/or moderators, nor any of their host institutions.
Murat Erkocevic <ErkocevicM@aol.com>
Dzevat Omeragic <Dzevat@ee.mcgill.ca>
Davor Wagner <DWagner@mailbox.syr.edu>
Nermin Zukic <N6Zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
[03] Support Program For the University of Tuzla
SUPPORT PROGRAM FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF TUZLA.
Foundation YSY (University of Amsterdam) has been active at Tuzla
University since April 1994. One of our members has just spend a four
month period in Tuzla preparing four projects. We hope some of our
(American) colleagues will be interested to work together with us on the
following projects:
Summer university
This summer we are organising an international summer university in
Tuzla. The summer university will consist of two parts. On the one hand
we will offer a social-science program that focuses on topics as
nationalism, multi-culturalism etc. The other part of the program will
consist of courses in medicine, economy, physics, mathematics, chemistry,
biology, mining and geology, electrical and mechanical engineering.
Professors from the USA, Netherlands, Great Britain, Germany and
Switzerland have already committed themselves to participate. We are
still looking for more (American) professors who would like to teach and
(American) students who would like to participate.
English Courses
At this moment we have two American professors of English employed in
Tuzla. They are giving English courses at the University. Before the war,
English language was part of the normal curriculum of all students, but
due to the war, English classes had stopped.
Our ultimate goal is to establish a department of English language and
Literature at the University of Tuzla, as desired by both students and
staff of the University of Tuzla.
We are still searching for more professors of English language,
literature and financial resources.
Exchange program
We have started an academic exchange program for assistants and
professors of the University of Tuzla. Especially young assistants are
included. We hope to offer them a study abroad for a period of three to
six months. In conjunction with the University of Tuzla we have therefor
compiled a list of 30 academics of the University who have the highest
priority. All of them have a good command of English language. The list
can be obtained from our office. We still need assistance in finding
suitable places for them. So far we were able to find places for five of
them. Especially offers for stays over 3 months are very much
appreciated.
Assessment of needs
We have compiled an assessment of needs of the University of Tuzla. This
110 pages manual includes specific information on all faculties. . Lists
of needed books and material are included. Also information on other
initiatives for the University of Tuzla can be found in the book as well
as a list of contacts at the University of Tuzla. The booklet is now
available from our office.
In order to obtain more information on any of these projects, please send
a fax or e-mail to our office including your postal address and the topic
you are interested in.
Foundation YSY, Fax: ++.31.20.5252495, E-mail: ysy@antenna.nl
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Opinions expressed/published on BosNews/BosNet-B do NOT necessarily
always reflect the views of (all of the members of) Editorial Board,
and/or moderators, nor any of their host institutions.
Murat Erkocevic <ErkocevicM@aol.com>
Dzevat Omeragic <Dzevat@ee.mcgill.ca>
Davor Wagner <DWagner@mailbox.syr.edu>
Nermin Zukic <N6Zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
[04] This Week in Bosnia: Feb. 21, 1996
**************************************************************************
"Look around you. People are walking, people are smiling, people
are buying and selling. It's as if they've just woken up from a
terrible nightmare."
--Vanja Hodzic, 23, on the rebirth of Sarajevo
**************************************************************************
February 21, 1996
THIS WEEK IN BOSNIA-HERCEGOVINA
SARAJEVO `COMING BACK TO LIFE.' "Only a few months ago, this was a
city almost paralyzed by fear, subject to merciless bombardments, haunted
by snipers, and always dreading the hours and days ahead," the N.Y. Times
reports. Now, the courageous and resourceful people of Sarajevo are
bringing their city back to life.
"So many people packed Sarajevo's open-air market on Sunday that it
was almost impossible to move," writes correspondent Stephen Kinzer,
noting that stalls were piled high with goods. "It is little short of
astonishing." Less than three years ago, starving Sarajevans were reduced
to eating grass to survive.
Massive problems continue, of course. Many residents are physically
and/or psychologically scarred by the horrors of siege. And the city
itself has changed; not only landmarks bombed to rubble, but because many
of the city's educated, cosmopolitan residents were killed or fled.
"Things aren't like they were before the war, because too many of
the people who made Sarajevo such a wonderful place are gone," Vildana
Kovacevic told the Times. "But most of us think the worst is over."
While prices have plunged -- 12 German marks for a kilo of veal
instead of 120, 10 marks for a roll of film instead of 50 -- there is
little opportunity to find a job in the city's shattered economy. Most of
those not lucky enough to be employed by foreign agencies must survive on
humanitarian aid or help from relatives abroad. Nevertheless, the Times
reports, "This city's revival has begun sooner than anyone had dared
hope, and taken on an amazing momentum."
"People are full of hope," Nenad Hadzovic, 24, told the Times. "But
everyone wonders what will happen when IFOR leaves. There is still a lot
of hatred in this country. You can't help worrying that these good times
could end suddenly, and the war could start again."
SNIPERS TARGET SARAJEVO BUSES. Sarajevans still face danger, albeit
reduced, from Serb nationalists seeking to kill and terrorize them.
A 76-year-old man, Sergej Markovic, was seriously wounded in the
feet Wednesday when snipers attacked a bus during the first day of
restored service between Serb-occupied Ilidza and Sarajevo center.
"There was a real panic inside and everybody lay down on the floor
and was screaming," Markovic told Reuters from his hospital bed. "Please
don't let NATO talk to me about freedom of movement any more."
The next day, a 61-year-old woman was shot in the neck on a bus
traveling through Ilidza.
NATO troops captured two sniping suspects Friday, but they were
turned over to Serb nationalist authorities. It was Serb officials who
architected and carried out the campaign of shelling, sniping, and terror
against Sarajevo civilians for almost four years, killing more than
10,000 people.
On Saturday, a bus bringing refugees home from Germany was attacked
in Ilidza. Jelena Mulahasanovic, 44, was severely wounded in the kidneys.
A second bus was hit, but there were no injuries.
HEALTH WARNING. A World Health Organization official believes that
Bosnia faces potentially serious outbreaks of disease, as well as massive
psychological trauma after four years of brutal war.
"We are concerned about the possibility of epidemics. The quality
and quantity of water and sanitation are still a big problem," WHO
European Director Dr. Jo Asvall told Reuters.
Overcrowding, along with a lack of water, sanitation, shelter,
heating and food, have already caused a five-fold increase in infectious
diseases. In addition, an estimated 60% of Sarajevans suffer from
traumatic stress syndrome, depression, personality disorders, or drug and
alcohol abuse from four years of siege.
ROME SUMMIT SUPPOSEDLY PUTS DAYTON BACK ON TRACK. The presidents of
Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia met with international officials in Rome last
weekend, at an emergency summit aimed at putting the deteriorating
Bosnian peace process back on track.
Leaders claimed to have reached agreements shoring up the crumbling
Bosnian-Croat federation in Mostar, as well as ending a Serb nationalist
boycott of the process following the detention of two of their officers
by an international war-crimes tribunal. All three presidents reaffirmed
their commitment to fulfilling the Dayton accords.
"Rome has averted a crisis," U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke said
Sunday. Holbrooke, the key architect behind the Dayton agreement, is
leaving his government job this week.
EARLY FAILURE. But the summit quickly "failed its first test," BBC
notes, when Bosnian Serb Gen. Zdravko Tolimir boycotted a Monday meeting
with NATO, Bosnian, and Bosnian Croat officials scheduled aboard a U.S.
aircraft carrier. NATO commander Admiral Leighton Smith called Tolimir's
no-show "unconscienable" and "not very smart."
AP was more blunt, saying the boycott "made a mockery of the weekend
summit in Rome."
"As long as we have two war criminals as the heads of that para-
state we are going to have problems," Bosnian Croat Gen. Zivko Budimir
told Reuters. Radovan Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic, both indicted for
genocide and crimes against humanity, retain power in Serb-held Bosnia,
violating the Dayton accords.
Smith said he is authorized to recommend economic sanctions not be
lifted against Bosnian Serbs -- as agreed in Rome -- if they continue to
boycott military and civilian meetings.
Tolimir later told Lt. Gen. Michael Walker, commander of NATO ground
forces in Bosnia, that he had to wait until a Serb assembly meeting today
(Wednesday) before determining if contacts could be resumed.
MOSTAR BOUNDARIES REDRAWN. Also at the Rome summit, Croat and
Bosnian officials agreed to redraw Mostar district boundaries laid out by
European Union Administrator German Hans Koschnick. The city was then
supposed to finally be reunified yesterday (Tuesday) -- removing all
barriers and checkpoints. "But," according to AP, "the promised freedom
of movement lasted only an hour."
Several hundred Muslims braved torrential rains and the taunts of
hostile Croats to cross into the western part of the city. One Croat wore
a Hitler mask and swastika, and yelled "fascism is good!" Reuters
reports. The Muslims were also required to show identification papers --
in violation of the Rome agreement.
"I'm afraid, I'm very much afraid. But my heart is leading my head,"
said one Muslim, 24-year-old Semir, who dared to cross. "This is our town
also." He was among thousands of Muslims driven from their homes on the
city's west side by Croatian nationalist forces early in the war.
Yesterday, Semir could only gaze at his former apartment while
standing outside the building in the driving rain. "I feel like I'm in a
pastry shop, but I have no money and I'm very hungry," he told AP.
When several Muslim youths attempted drive into the western
district, a crowd of Croats jeered and blocked the car. The vehicle then
crashed into a tree. At least some of the Muslim youths were detained by
Croat police as they tried to flee back across the bridge. One was
reportedly first beaten by the crowd.
Croat police claimed Muslims may only cross on foot -- although such
a restriction was not part of the Rome summit agreement.
A joint Muslim-Croat police force, along with some officers from
Croatia and a small international civilian force, was supposed to begin
patroling the city. However, patrols took place only in one district.
Western diplomats say Croatian criminal gangs with ties to Croat police
hold great power in Mostar's Croatian sector, and the gangs bitterly
oppose reunification -- in part because it would cut black-market
profits. Many other Croats in Herzegovina, including most of their
leaders, vow they will accept nothing less than ethnically pure Croatian
territory.
"We Serbs hate the Muslims, but the Croats ... wow!! ... do they
hate the Muslims!!" one Serb soldier in nearby Serb-held territory told
New Republic journalist Samantha Power.
Muslims, however, largely favor reunification. "The Croats burned
down my flat and drove me away. Still, I could live with them again, with
those who are decent," Emina Pajic, 47, told Reuters.
Croats rioted last week after Koschnick announced his plan to create
3 Croat, 3 Muslim, and one central mixed district. Croat nationalists
said the central district actually had a Muslim majority.
Under the redrawn plan, the central district is smaller, although it
still includes the airport, railway station, and water facilities. A
landmark high school, formerly slated for a "Muslim" zone, has been
included in the joint district, according to Reuters; some apartments
were taken out and returned to the "Muslim" side.
Safet Orucevic, the mayor of the city's Muslim section, resigned
after the Rome summit, BBC reports. However, AP said that Bosnian
President Alija Izetbegovic refused to accept the resignation. "The
situation in Mostar was on the verge of clashes. We almost had war,"
Izetbegovic told a news conference Monday, Reuters reports. Bosnia's UN
ambassador, Muhamed Sacirbey, recently called the situation in Mostar
"the biggest danger to the peace process."
The southern Bosnian city was ethnically mixed before the war, but
Croats swept through the western sector in 1993, driving its Muslims
across the river into a ghetto and bombarding it with artillery fire.
PHASED SARAJEVO-SUBURB HANDOVER SET TO BEGIN FRIDAY. Vogosca is
supposed to become the first of five suburbs to be completely handed over
to Bosnian government control this Friday at 6 a.m., when 85 Bosnian
police officers formally enter the district. The phased handover of the
other districts -- Hadzici, Ilijas, Ilidza and Grbavica -- is scheduled
to finish by March 20. This would end the siege of Sarajevo by giving
Bosnian authorities control of major routes in and out of the capital.
A few Serb nationalist leaders -- including Milosevic ally Rajko
Kasagic -- said Serbs should stay in the districts. But hardline Serb
leaders who oppose a multi-ethnic city are ordering all Serbs to leave
the five districts, despite pledges from the Bosnian government that
civilians will be safe there.
Serb nationalist media were also instructing people to leave.
"We must not allow a single Serb to stay in the regions that will
revert to Muslim-Croat rule," Serb nationalist official Gojko Klickovic
told the Bosnian Serb news agency SRNA. Actually, thousands of Serbs
remained in government-controlled Sarajevo throughout the war, in support
of a multi-ethnic nation.
Serb officials Tuesday were removing piles of documents from
Vogosca's town hall and setting them on fire, AP reports.
Kris Janowski of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees accused Serb
leaders of launching "a campaign of manipulation to get people out, to
create a psychosis." He said there is no reason for the Serbs to flee,
and the UN would not help them leave.
BBC Tuesday reported scenes of "panic" and "total confusion" in
Vogosca, with Serbs desperate to leave before Bosnian police arrive. Serb
nationalist authorities claim a massive evacuation will conclude this
week in three days; but the Serb mayor there said it would be impossible
to do so quickly.
Some of the fleeing Serbs fear retribution for the brutal four-year
siege waged against Sarajevo center. "Others said this weekend they were
under orders to go," AP reports. Still others are refugees living in
homes of Muslims and Croats who were "ethnically cleansed" by Serb
militia; the rightful owners are now expected to return. Some of the men
leaving now vowed to return again one day by force.
Serb officials plan to resettle some of the new refugees in
Srebrenica, which had a Muslim majority until it was overrun by Serb
militia last summer. Thousands of Muslim men were massacred there, and
other residents expelled; not a single Muslim remains in the town now,
Western reporters say
Other Serbs will reportedly be resettled in Bratunac, Srebenica, Zvornik,
Pale, and Brcko. The fate of Brcko is still to be decided by
international arbitration.
By quickly resettling tens of thousands more Serbs in homes of
expelled Muslims, Serb authorities can prevent Muslim refugees from
returning to those homes and cement the country's ethnic partition, BBC
notes.
WAR PROPAGANDA A BITTER SUCCESS. "In Vogosca and other Serb-held
suburbs of Sarajevo, people such as Mile, 22, genuinely believe the
Orwellian doublespeak of their leaders: that Serbs were the victims in
this war," writes Indira A.R. Lakshmanan in the Sunday Boston Globe.
"An elaborate propaganda machine has convinced many rebel Serbs that
Muslims bombed themselves to gain sympathy. ... Similarly, Croat
propagandists have tried to convince their people that the Muslims were
the aggressors."
According to a U.S. Information Agency survey, two out of three
Serbs and Croats cannot envision living peacefully with other ethnic
groups. "As unlikely as it may seem, only the war's biggest victims,
Muslims, seem eager to forgive and hopeful about forging a harmonious
multi-ethnic state....
"Perhaps believing the lies of nationalist leaders is the only way
for some Serbs and Croats to justify their complicity with a brutal war
carried out in the name of separation and irreconciliable differences.
"Some Serbs and Croats need war crimes trials like the Germans
needed Nuremberg -- to expose them to the bald, grotesque reality of what
political and military leaders did in their name."
AMERICAN `SHOW OF FORCE' PUSHES SERBS OUT OF DMZ; GAINS ACCESS TO
`SECRET' WEAPONS DEPOT. U.S. troops twice this week threatened Serb
nationalists with artillery and airpower in order to demand compliance
with the Dayton peace agreement. In both cases, Serbs complied and the
showdowns were resolved peacefully.
At the Serbs' Han Pijesak underground military complex, where NATO
troops had twice been refused access, Col. Andy Batiste finally told a
Serb officer blocking his entry: "I want you to know that I am going in
with or without your permission," the N.Y. Times reports. "I have above
me air support. I have helicopters. I have artillery targeted right here
where we are standing and we can use it if we have to." His Second
Brigade was granted access to the site, and registered weapons there.
On Monday, "American troops, backed by tanks and helicopter
gunships, forced Bosnian Serb tanks and armored vehicles to abandon front-
line positions held in violation of the peace accord," AP reports.
Twenty-six tanks, 16 armored-personnel carriers, and army trucks
were escorted out of what was supposed to be a demilitarized zone near
Modrica, 45 miles north of Tuzla. Some weapons belonging to the Bosnian
government -- which has much less hardware than the Serb nationalist army
- -- were also removed.
`FOREIGN' FIGHTERS ARRESTED IN BOSNIA. NATO troops arrested 11 men,
including 3 Iranians, on Bosnian government territory at a one-time ski
chalet, where weapons and booby-trapped explosives were also found. NATO
called the site "a training center for terrorism" and a "serious breach
of the Dayton agreements." One Bosnian government official said the site
was actually an anti-terrorist training center for its own forces.
Initial reports that the site contained specific plans to attack
NATO targets were later admitted to be inaccurate, ABC-TV noted.
Under the Dayton accords, all foreign fighters -- including Iranians
- -- were to have been expelled from the country. However, it is difficult
for some in the Bosnian government to turn against them, since Iranians
were willing to arm Bosnia, and fight and die for it. During the same
time, the West enforced an arms embargo as the much-more-heavily-armed
Serb army slaughtered thousands of defenseless Bosnian civilians.
Nevertheless, it's believed most of the several hundred Iranian
fighters in Bosnia have already left.
NATO has not acted on Bosnian government complaints that thousands of
armed Serb fighters from Croatia remain in the country, continuing to
terrorize Muslims and Croats in Serb-held territories, also in violation
of Dayton's "foreign-fighters-out" provision.
BANOVICI REFUGEE CAMP SHUT DOWN BY ARSON. Arsonists again struck at
a German-run tent camp for refugees in Banovici, 12 miles southwest of
Tuzla, and it will be closed down. Residents will be moved to another
site, which the German Humanitarian Foundation declined to name for
safety reasons.
Those in the camp are survivors of ethnic cleansing in Srebrenica --
mostly women and children whose husbands and fathers were slaughtered by
Serb forces.
Foundation head Uwe Breininger blames local gangsters, who had
unsuccessfully sought to control aid distribution to the camp, for the
fires.
DIVJAK UNDER PRESSURE TO RESIGN? Gen. Jovan Divjak, an ethnic Serb
who helped lead the Bosnian government army, told the Bosnian weekly
Svijet that he is being pressured to retire. While almost one-fifth of
the army is not Muslim, critics say President Izetbegovic is trying to
politicize it and turn the army into a power base for his political
party.
E-MAIL SUBSCRIPTION REQUESTS to nebosnia-list-approval@world.std.com
or find "This Week in Bosnia-Hercegovina" on the World Wide Web at
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--The Bosnia Action Coalition (Mass./NH)
Opinions expressed/published on BosNews/BosNet-B do NOT necessarily
always reflect the views of (all of the members of) Editorial Board,
and/or moderators, nor any of their host institutions.
Murat Erkocevic <ErkocevicM@aol.com>
Dzevat Omeragic <Dzevat@ee.mcgill.ca>
Davor Wagner <DWagner@mailbox.syr.edu>
Nermin Zukic <N6Zukic@sms.business.uwo.ca>
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