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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 26, 6 February 1996

From: OMRI-L <omri-l@ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu>

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [1] BIG MONEY NEEDED FOR BOSNIAN RECONSTRUCTION.

  • [2] IFOR DEPLOYS MORE TROOPS IN SARAJEVO.

  • [3] U.S.-EU DIFFERENCES CONTINUE OVER BOSNIAN RECONSTRUCTION

  • [4] RUMP YUGOSLAV PREMIER ON SANCTIONS, WAR CRIMES.

  • [5] KOSCHNIK ON SOLUTION TO MOSTAR REORGANIZATION.

  • [6] SUIT TO BE FILED AGAINST TUDJMAN?

  • [7] MACEDONIAN TV DIRECTOR FIRED, MINISTER RESIGNS IN PROTEST.

  • [8] MONTENEGRIN ALBANIANS PROTEST DISCRIMINATION OVER INFRASTRUCTURE EXPENDITURES.

  • [9] ROMANIAN PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION SUBMITS REPORT ON 1989 REVOLT.

  • [10] STRIKES IN ROMANIA.

  • [11] MOLDOVAN PRESIDENT THREATENS TO DISMISS CABINET.

  • [12] BULGARIAN COURT INVALIDATES KARDZHALI ELECTIONS.

  • [13] HOLBROOKE CANCELS VISIT TO GREECE, TURKEY, CYPRUS.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 6, Part II, 26 February 1996

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [1] BIG MONEY NEEDED FOR BOSNIAN RECONSTRUCTION.

    Nasa Borba quotes Bosnian Prime Minster Hasan Muratovic as stressing that Bosnia needs a lot of money and soon. Muratovic estimates the bill at $3 billion per year for the next five years, and he quoted a World Bank projection of $5.1 billion in emergency aid for the infrastructure alone. Onasa on 30 January had cited the transportation minister as saying that if he gets the money, his first priority will be to rebuild the Ploce-Mostar- Zenica-Doboj-Tuzla road connection and then the railroad that links Ploce via Doboj to Hungary, Banja Luka, and Tuzla. He dismissed ideas about building a new railroad system independent of the Republika Srpska and called for the reconstruction of the prewar route. -- Patrick Moore

    [2] IFOR DEPLOYS MORE TROOPS IN SARAJEVO.

    IFOR has deployed additional troops in the former Serb-held areas of Sarajevo to reassure the local population, international and local media reported. Those areas are due to be handed over to the Bosnian government by March 20. The decision, taken by the international community's Carl Bildt, has angered the Bosnian government. But US Dayton peace accord negotiator Richard Holbrooke dismissed Bosnian government concerns. Speaking in Davos, Switzerland, on 5 February, Holbrooke said the issue was not "critical." Meanwhile, only 215 UN policemen out of the expected 2,000 have been deployed. -- Michael Mihalka

    [3] U.S.-EU DIFFERENCES CONTINUE OVER BOSNIAN RECONSTRUCTION.

    The EU and the U.S. still have considerable differences over the allocation of funds for Bosnian reconstruction, international media reported. Holbrooke denied on 5 February that there was a "crisis" in EU-U.S. relations but admitted that a "funding problem" exists. The World Bank wants donor countries to confirm pledges for the estimated $5.1 billion needed for Bosnian reconstruction before a scheduled conference in April. Pledges for only $520 million were made at a December meeting. Holbrooke also stressed Bosnia was the "testing ground for what we used to call the West's post-Cold War foreign policy." -- Michael Mihalka

    [4] RUMP YUGOSLAV PREMIER ON SANCTIONS, WAR CRIMES.

    Premier Radoje Kontic has said that Belgrade will cooperate with the International UN War Crimes Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, Nasa Borba reported on 6 February. But he has also stressed that Belgrade cannot be held responsible for the actions of Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic, since the rump Yugoslavia has "no jurisdiction" over them. Kontic added that the issue of lifting sanctions against rump Yugoslavia must not be linked to the issues of war crimes and extradition. -- Stan Markotich

    [5] KOSCHNIK ON SOLUTION TO MOSTAR REORGANIZATION.

    Hans Koschnik, the EU administrator of Mostar, on 4 February met with the president and vice president of the Bosnian Federation as well as an aide to the international community's Carl Bildt to inform them of his proposal to reorganize Mostar into "six municipalities and one central district," Hina reported. Koschnik has also met with the mayors of the western and eastern parts of Mostar--Mijo Brajkovic and Safet Orucevic--to discuss the issue. The full details of Koschnik's proposal are to be announced on 6 February. Brajkovic said that the Croatian side cannot accept the term "district" but would agree to the idea of joint authorities in the same building. Orucevic told Oslobodjenje that the Muslim side agrees in principal with the proposal. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [6] SUIT TO BE FILED AGAINST TUDJMAN?

    Editor of the magazine Erasmus SlavkoGoldstajn has warned Croatian President Franjo Tudjman that he will file a suit against him if he goes ahead with his plan to turn the Jasenovac Memorial Center into a memorial center for Croatian war victims, Nasa Borba and Politika reported, citing the Croatian weekly. In an open letter to Tudjman, Goldstajn said that Tudjman's plans are strongly opposed by the Jewish community in Croatia. He noted that some 17,000 Jews were killed in Jasenovac and that the total number of victims of fascist terror there amounted to 80,000. -- Daria Sito Sucic

    [7] MACEDONIAN TV DIRECTOR FIRED, MINISTER RESIGNS IN PROTEST.

    Macedonian Radio and TV Director-General Melpomeni Korneti on 4 February dismissed the director of the Macedonian TV station Saso Ordanoski, MIC reported the next day. Korneti argued that Ordanoski was fired for disrupting scheduled programming and for his editorial policy. He also charged Ordanoski with failing to uphold the "principle of truthful and objective information." But the editorial board of Macedonian TV said Ordanoski's dismissal was "contrary to the principles of freedom of the press and to international standards...oriented toward a democratic and free press." Meanwhile, Minister without portfolio and government spokesman Ismail Gjuner on 5 February resigned in protest at Ordanoski's dismissal, Nova Makedonija reported. Gjuner said that Ordanoski had been good not only for Macedonian journalism but also for the country's "young democracy." -- Fabian Schmidt

    [8] MONTENEGRIN ALBANIANS PROTEST DISCRIMINATION OVER INFRASTRUCTURE EXPENDITURES.

    Secretary of the Democratic Alliance of Albanians in Montenegro Muhamet Nikaj has said the current Montenegrin government is severely discriminating against its Albanian community, the BBC reported, citing Albanian TV on 3 February. Nikaj argued that Albanian- inhabited areas near Ulcinj, Plav, and Gusinje have been largely left out of any plans for infrastructure development. He added that the Montenegrin authorities are continuing to "ghettoize" Albanians in various ways. -- Fabian Schmidt

    [9] ROMANIAN PARLIAMENTARY COMMISSION SUBMITS REPORT ON 1989 REVOLT.

    The parliamentary commission investigating the bloody 1989 anti-communist revolt has submitted its report to the Senate, according to Romanian media on 5 February. Senator Valentin Gabrielescu of the National Peasant Party-Christian Democratic, who heads the commission, said the report was incomplete since investigators failed to locate the secret bank accounts of former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. Gabrielescu repeated accusations that Romania's current leaders and other ex-Communists had "hijacked" the December 1989 popular uprising. The government mouthpiece Vocea Romaniei on 6 February responded by decrying "fabrications by some people and publications about the Romanian revolution." -- Dan Ionescu

    [10] STRIKES IN ROMANIA.

    Some 40,000 coal miners on 6 February staged a one- day strike to demand better social conditions and higher wages, Romanian media reported. The strike took place after representatives of miners' trade unions failed to reach an agreement with government officials. The miners have threatened an all-out strike on 12 February if their demands are not satisfied. In a separate development, some 4,500 employees at the Rodae car plant in Craiova on 5 February went on a warning strike and announced plans for an unlimited strike later this week in support of demands for higher pay. The technical staff of Romania's national air company have also threatened a warning strike if negotiations with the Labor Ministry over a collective work contract fail. -- Matyas Szabo

    [11] MOLDOVAN PRESIDENT THREATENS TO DISMISS CABINET.

    Mircea Snegur on 5 February said cabinet ministers will be dismissed if no solution is found by 1 April to pay pension and pay arrears to the population, BASA- press and Infotag reported. Snegur did not rule out the possibility that the entire cabinet would be dismissed. He noted that the huge arrears may provoke mass protests and thus destabilize the country. Snegur's comments were made during a meeting with cabinet ministers in charge of economic and social issues. According to the president's office, pension arrears total 100 million lei ($22 million) while wage arrears amount to 200 million lei. -- Dan Ionescu

    [12] BULGARIAN COURT INVALIDATES KARDZHALI ELECTIONS.

    The Kardzhali Regional Court on 5 February invalidated the election of Mayor Rasim Musa and the city council, Bulgarian media reported. Musa, a member of the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedom (DPS), was elected last November by a margin of 658 votes over the Bulgarian Socialist Party candidate. The BSP, alleging irregularities such as the casting of double votes and voting by non-residents, had demanded that the elections be declared void. The court ruled that there were 1,217 cases of illegal voting in the mayoral run-off and 827 in the city council elections. DPS Chairman Ahmet Dogan said his party will recall its mayors and councillors nationwide and stage protests in Kardzhali. -- Stefan Krause

    [13] HOLBROOKE CANCELS VISIT TO GREECE, TURKEY, CYPRUS.

    The U.S. State Department on 5 February announced that Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke has canceled visits to Athens, Ankara, and Nicosia, AFP reported the same day. Greek Prime Minister Kostas Simitis, who was blamed by the opposition for backing down in the recent crisis with Turkey over an Aegean islet, had made it clear that Holbrooke would not be welcome in Athens. At the same time, Simitis announced that Athens will undertake a major diplomatic initiative to win support from European and NATO partners in its dispute with Turkey. Holbrooke's visits were aimed at reducing tension between Greece and Turkey and to lay the groundwork for a possible new peace initiative on Cyprus. In related news, Greece has protested to Turkey over an incident in which Turkish coast guard boats allegedly fired on two Greek fishing vessels. -- Lowell Bezanis

    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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