OMRI Daily digest II, No. 85, 2 May 1995
From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>
CONTENTS
[01] CROATIA LAUNCHES NEW OFFENSIVE.
[02] WHAT LIES BEHIND THE CROATIAN ATTACK?
[03] WHAT WILL THE SERBS DO?
[04] BOSNIAN CEASE-FIRE ENDS.
[05] BULGARIAN PREMIER, FORMER U.S. PRESIDENT IN ROMANIA.
[06] BULGARIAN SOCIALISTS HOLD MAY DAY RALLY.
[07] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION HOLDS NATIONAL CONFERENCE, REELECTS LEADER.
[08] ALBANIAN POLICE BAN MAY DAY DEMONSTRATIONS.
[09] ALBANIA CLOSES BORDERS TO KURDISH IMMIGRANTS.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 85, Part II, 2 May 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[01] CROATIA LAUNCHES NEW OFFENSIVE.
At dawn on 1 May, several thousand
Croatian troops began an attack from the north, west, and east into
Sector West of Krajina. It was the Croatian army's biggest offensive
since Operation Maslenica in January 1993, which also had the stated
goal of a limited strategic objective. The current thrust officially
aims at securing the section of the Zagreb-Belgrade highway between
Novska and Nova Gradiska following a series of incidents there on 28-29
April. But Croatian forces also took several villages and UN observation
posts not only in Sector West but in Sector South as well. Troops in
Sector West captured the site of the World War II concentration camp at
Jasenovac and seem to be trying to take Okocani to the north of the
highway. On 1-2 May, the Croats also sought unsuccessfully to bomb the
bridge connecting Krajina with Bosanska Gradiska and Bosnian Serb supply
routes beyond. International media added that the UN Security Council on
1 May called on the Croats to end their attack, while UN mediators tried
to hammer out some sort of cease-fire agreement between Croats and
Serbs. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[02] WHAT LIES BEHIND THE CROATIAN ATTACK?
The size, speed, and scope of theattack suggest that it was well planned in advance and that the
incidents on the highway, including the fatal stabbing of a Serb at a
gasoline station, may not have been entirely spontaneous. Vecernji list
on 2 May referred to the operation going according to plan, while Nasa
Borba on 29 April noted that President Franjo Tudjman was holding a
series of mass meetings aimed at mobilizing support for him and his
government. The state-run media in Croatia have joined in the enthusiasm
for the current offensive. Vjesnik ran a headline on 2 April calling it
"a legitimate act of self-defense." The timing of the move is also
suspect, coming just as the Bosnian cease-fire expires and UNCRO's
mandate is about to be more clearly defined. Zagreb may well have
calculated that a thrust aimed at securing the free flow of traffic on
the highway would bring it little criticism from abroad. -- Patrick
Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] WHAT WILL THE SERBS DO?
The first important response by Krajina forcesin Sector West was to retrieve their big guns stored under UN
supervision. But Sector West is their weak link and was reassigned to
Croatia under the Z-4 peace plan earlier this year. International media
on 2 May quoted Krajina leader Milan Martic as threatening to shell
Croatian cities. Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic promised help; and
on 1 May, his men shelled Dubrovnik. It appears, however, that the
Croats and Bosnian government forces may be launching a concerted
campaign to force the Serbs to fight on several fronts at once and
thereby prevent them from concentrating their overextended forces. The
obvious question now is not only what can Knin and Pale do to regain
their footing but what will Belgrade do to back them. -- Patrick Moore,
OMRI, Inc.
[04] BOSNIAN CEASE-FIRE ENDS.
As the cease-fire in Bosnia-Herzegovina came to
an end on 1 May, Yasushi Akashi, UN envoy to the former Yugoslavia,
expressed hope that hostilities would not escalate, AFP reported on 1
May. Akashi, who was in Sarajevo attempting to hammer out a new cease-
fire agreement to no avail, said "each of the parties has separately
assured me that it will demonstrate maximum restraint." Prior to the
expiry of the cease-fire, the BBC on 29 April reported that two Galeb
fighters entered Bosnian's northwestern Bihac pocket from the Serb-
occupied Croatian region of Krajina. In a separate development, Bosnian
Serb forces shelled the central Bosnian town of Maglaj on 29 April,
using phosphorus bombs. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[05] BULGARIAN PREMIER, FORMER U.S. PRESIDENT IN ROMANIA.
Zhan Videnov,
during a one-day visit to Romania on 28 April, met with President Ion
Iliescu and his Romanian counterpart, Nicolae Vacaroiu. The two premiers
said at a joint press conference that it was necessary to strengthen
economic cooperation in the areas of transportation networks (including
the construction of a new bridge over the Danube) and tourism, Radio
Bucharest reported the same day. They also agreed to increase
collaboration on joint foreign policy aims, such as integration into
European structures and compensation for losses suffered as a result of
the embargo on rump Yugoslavia. Meanwhile, former U.S. President George
Bush paid a two-day private visit to Romania at the invitation of Invest
Group, an organization uniting private entrepreneurs. Bush, in a speech
broadcast live by Radio Bucharest on 29 April, said that Bucharest must
accelerate economic reforms if the 1989 revolution is not to become a
meaningless event. -- Michael Shafir, OMRI, Inc.
[06] BULGARIAN SOCIALISTS HOLD MAY DAY RALLY.
The ruling Bulgarian Socialist
Party, for the first time since the demise of communism, celebrated May
Day with a rally, AFP reported. Prime Minister and BSP Chairman Zhan
Videnov said that "the situation that we have inherited is especially
serious" and that people are "living poorly and with difficulty." He
noted that the government is committed to its pre-election promises and
will continue to fight inflation and unemployment. Some 30,000 people
took part in the rally, but the Confederation of Independent Trade
Unions refused to participate. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[07] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION HOLDS NATIONAL CONFERENCE, REELECTS LEADER.
The
Union of Democratic Forces, at its seventh National Conference on 29-30
April, re-elected Ivan Kostov as chairman of the National Coordinating
Council, Demokratsiya reported on 2 May. It also established a National
Executive Council, which will take decisions between sessions of the
Coordinating Council. The latter's membership was enlarged from 15 to
140 to include representatives of parliament factions and regional
organizations. The conference abolished a ban on former communist party
members becoming members of the UDF. Kostov said that the UDF must be
open to all non-socialist voters and must broaden its program beyond
anti-communist rhetoric. The conference proposed the cooperation of all
non-socialist forces in the October local elections. -- Stefan Krause,
OMRI, Inc.
[08] ALBANIAN POLICE BAN MAY DAY DEMONSTRATIONS.
May Day demonstrations
planned by the Confederation of Albanian Trade Unions in Tirana were
banned by the police, Koha Jone reported on 29 April. Only private
meetings outside the city were reportedly allowed. Police argued that
demonstrations in downtown Tirana would endanger public order and cause
traffic chaos in the capital. Meanwhile, more than 3,000 people on 29
April protested the killing of an Albanian by Montenegrin border guards
two weeks earlier, international agencies reported the same day. --
Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[09] ALBANIA CLOSES BORDERS TO KURDISH IMMIGRANTS.
Following reports about
the illegal smuggling by boat of mainly Kurdish, Chinese, and Pakistani
immigrants from Albania to Italy, Albania has closed its borders to
Kurdish immigrants, Koha Jone reported on 30 April. The Interior
Ministry allegedly ordered border checkpoints to refuse entrance to all
those people "who have no justified reason" to enter the country,
international agencies reported. Albania does not require visas for
Turkish and many other citizens, but media reports failed to say whether
visa requirements are now in force. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a Prague-based nonprofit organization.
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