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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 34, 16 February 1996

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

Open Media Research Institute Directory

CONTENTS

  • [01] IFOR SEIZES 'FOREIGN FIGHTERS.'

  • [02] PLAN FOR TRANSFER OF SERB-HELD SARAJEVO SUBURBS.

  • [03] SARAJEVO BUS TARGETED FROM "KNOWN LOCATIONS."

  • [04] HOLBROOKE SAYS BOSNIAN SERB GENERAL MUST GO.

  • [05] CROATIAN POLICE ARRIVE IN MOSTAR.

  • [06] SERBIAN AUTHORITIES CLAMP DOWN ON INDEPENDENT TV.

  • [07] ROMANIAN SENATE PASSES LAW ON POLITICAL PARTIES.

  • [08] GROWING LABOR UNREST IN ROMANIA.

  • [09] MOLDOVAN FOREIGN MINISTER AT EU HEADQUARTERS.

  • [10] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION ON PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS.

  • [11] ALBANIAN MINE PRIVATIZATION TO GET UNDER WAY.

  • [12] EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT BACKS GREECE IN DISPUTE WITH TURKEY . . .

  • [13] . . . WHILE TURKEY REJECTS LEGALITY OF RESOLUTION.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 34, Part II, 16 February 1996

    SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [01] IFOR SEIZES 'FOREIGN FIGHTERS'.

    IFOR on 15 February detained 11 heavily armed individuals near Sarajevo who were carrying a significant number of weapons and munitions, international media reported. IFOR did not reveal the identity of the individuals, saying only they were not natives of Bosnia and that their presence appeared to violate provisions of the Dayton peace accords prohibiting the presence of "foreign forces." Some sources say that a few of the men were Iranians. Both IFOR and the Bosnian government have officially maintained that there are no "foreign fighters" in the country, but the U.S. has repeatedly complained to the Bosnian government that their continued presence threatens military aid. -- Michael Mihalka

    [02] PLAN FOR TRANSFER OF SERB-HELD SARAJEVO SUBURBS.

    Michael Steiner, deputy to the international community's Carl Bildt, on 15 February presented a plan for the phased transfer of Serb-held Sarajevo suburbs to Bosnian government control, Hina and international media reported. A federal police force is to take over on 20 March and will reflect the composition of the national population based on the 1990 census. Serbian police officers who are not indicted for war crimes may serve in the force. Steiner added there was no longer any need to discuss the matter with Bosnian Serb authorities, who have boycotted meetings with international organizations. -- Michael Mihalka

    [03] SARAJEVO BUS TARGETED FROM "KNOWN LOCATIONS".

    An IFOR spokesman has said that sniper shots aimed at a Sarajevo bus on 14 February can be traced to "the same location from which IFOR soldiers were fired at," Onasa reported the next day. Two people were injured in the 14 February shooting. Meanwhile, Onasa also reported that a spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees has said that the corridor linking downtown Sarajevo to Serb-populated Ilidza will be restored when authorities determine it to be safe. -- Stan Markotich

    [04] HOLBROOKE SAYS BOSNIAN SERB GENERAL MUST GO.

    Reuters on 15 February quoted U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke as saying NATO will "demand compliance" with regard to the status of Bosnian Serb General and accused war criminal Ratko Mladic. Holbrooke said that by continuing to hold onto his post, Mladic is "defying the Dayton agreement." He also said that Mladic is likely to be a major topic of discussion at the Rome summit this weekend. -- Stan Markotich

    [05] CROATIAN POLICE ARRIVE IN MOSTAR.

    Hina on 15 February reported that 101 police officers from Croatia have arrived in the Bosnian city of Mostar with the mandate to preserve peace and law and order. Josko Moric, Zagreb's deputy interior minister, said the officers will wear Croatian uniforms. He added that they will not police Muslim-held parts of the city and will not come under the command of EU police authorities. Croatia had promised at Dayton to send more than 100 police officers to Mostar. Meanwhile, Slobodna Dalmacija on 16 February reported that Mostar's Croatian and Muslim mayors are slated to meet in Sarajevo on 16-17 February for discussions aimed at restoring contacts and resolving outstanding differences. -- Stan Markotich

    [06] SERBIAN AUTHORITIES CLAMP DOWN ON INDEPENDENT TV.

    Belgrade's only politically independent television station, Studio B, is the latest target in the government's campaign against independent media in the rump Yugoslavia, Nasa Borba reported on 16 February. A Belgrade court the previous day revoked the station's status as a private company. Reuters quoted Milorad Roganovic, general manager of Studio B TV, as saying "I don't know how you can have a private company for six years and then all of a sudden it doesn't exist. This is stupidity." The BBC on 16 February reported that the attempt to take over Studio B appears to be part of Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic's plan to control and manipulate information as rump Yugoslav general elections approach. -- Stan Markotich

    [07] ROMANIAN SENATE PASSES LAW ON POLITICAL PARTIES.

    The Romanian Senate on 15 February approved the draft law on political parties, Radio Bucharest reported. Since the draft differs from one passed by the Chamber of Deputies, a mediation commission will now attempt to bridge differences between the two texts. The bill raises the minimum membership of political party from 2,500 to 10,000 members. The Hungarian Democratic Federation of Romania (UDMR) faction walked out in protest and did not participate in the ballot. UDMR senator Gyorgy Frunda told the parliament before the vote that the draft infringes on both the right to free association and the international convention on the rights of national minorities, which Romania has signed. The UDMR has said it will appeal the bill at the Constitutional Court. -- Michael Shafir

    [08] GROWING LABOR UNREST IN ROMANIA.

    Most of the 4,000 employees at a Romanian car plant co-owned by South Korea's industrial giant Daewoo have been on strike for more than a week, despite a court ruling that the protest action is illegal, Romanian and international media reported on 15 February. The strikers are demanding that their wages be indexed to the dollar. President Ion Iliescu, meeting with union leaders and management at the car plant, said the strike was endangering Korean investment in Romania. South Korea is Romania's largest foreign investor. Meanwhile, more than 5,000 steel workers in the town of Hunedoara protested for the third consecutive day against lay-offs caused by cuts of energy supplies at their plant. At a rally outside the city hall on 15 February, they threatened to launch an indefinite strike if energy supplies are not resumed. -- Matyas Szabo

    [09] MOLDOVAN FOREIGN MINISTER AT EU HEADQUARTERS.

    Mihai Popov on 15 February held talks in Brussels with Hans van den Broek, the EU Commissioner for relations with Eastern Europe and the CIS, to review progress on the withdrawal of Russian troops from Moldova. Reuters quoted Popov as saying there were good chances that Russia's commitment to withdraw its troops from eastern Moldova will be carried out soon. He added, however, that the unstable political situation in Russia may complicate the withdrawal. Russia has pledged to remove troops from the breakaway Dniester region within six months to comply with one of the conditions for its recent successful application to join the CE. -- Matyas Szabo

    [10] BULGARIAN OPPOSITION ON PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS.

    Leaders of the Union of Democratic Forces (SDS), the People's Union (NS), and the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedom on 15 February held talks on selecting a joint candidate for upcoming presidential elections. Standart reported that SDS Chairman Ivan Kostov failed to persuade other party leaders to preliminary elections among the parties' members. Kostov said that incumbent President Zhelyu Zhelev can "on no account" be the SDS's candidate but he can be the candidate of the united opposition. But he added that the president will have to participate in the preliminaries. Kostov also said that the "necessary circumstances" for former Tsar Simeon's candidacy do not exist. Kontinent reported that the NS will set up a political council of all parties supporting Zhelev's candidacy. -- Stefan Krause

    [11] ALBANIAN MINE PRIVATIZATION TO GET UNDER WAY.

    Albanian authorities on 15 February announced they will start the privatization of the country's mines in the coming weeks, international agencies reported the same day. Director of the National Privatization Center Niko Glozheni said smaller mines will be put up for auction in the first wave of privatization. Glozheni said that in 1995, 2,924 small and medium-sized state enterprises and 50 large ones were privatized. Albania is the world's third biggest chrome producing country. In other news, Albania and Germany signed an agreement whereby Germany will provide aid worth $13 million to help improve the water supply system in three Albanian towns. The agreement is the second stage of a project on which Germany has already spent about $5.8 million. Negotiations on a similar program in two other towns are currently under way. -- Stefan Krause

    [12] EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT BACKS GREECE IN DISPUTE WITH TURKEY . . .

    The European Parliament on 15 February passed a declaration backing Greece in its dispute with Turkey over the islet of Imia/Kardak, AFP reported the same day. The vote was 342 to 21 with 11 abstentions. The resolution condemned "Turkey's dangerous violation of Greek sovereignty" and voiced concern about "increased military tension in the Aegean." Meanwhile, a Greek Aegean Ministry official said Athens will continue with a resettlement program involving 10 islets, which was unveiled last July. Also on 15 February, the Greek government named Gen. Athanasios Tzoganis as new armed forces chief of staff. Tzoganis, until now chief of the air force, replaces Admiral Christos Limberis, who was fired on 8 February for his handling of the crisis. -- Stefan Krause

    [13] . . . WHILE TURKEY REJECTS LEGALITY OF RESOLUTION.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, termed the European Parliament's resolution "devoid of any legal basis" and noted that the parliament is maintaining its "biased and far from constructive stance," Reuters reported on 15 February. The ministry the same day summoned a Greek envoy to demand that Greece withdraw a speedboat reportedly anchored off the Kardak/Imia islet in the Aegean. -- 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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