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Serbia Today, 97-02-21

Serbia Today Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Yugoslavia <http://www.yugoslavia.com>

Serbia Today


CONTENTS

  • [01] CROATIAN REACTIONS TO GRANIC'S VISIT TO BELGRADE
  • [02] CROATS THREATENED IN SARAJEVO, MOSLEMS IN ZEPCE
  • [03] 12-YEAR-OLD PRISONER
  • [04] ONLY 27.000 SERBS REMAIN IN SARAJEVO
  • [05] EVIDENT HYPOCRISY
  • [06] GREAT STRIDES TOWARDS ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEMOCRACY
  • [07] NEW SADAKO OGATA MISSION

  • [01] CROATIAN REACTIONS TO GRANIC'S VISIT TO BELGRADE

    Croatian newspapers offered ample reports on the Belgrade visit of Foreign Minister Mate Granic and his encounters with Serbian President Milosevic and Yugoslav Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic. The articles underscore the evaluation agreed upon by both sides - that progress has been made concerning a number of issues on future relations between the two countries. All dailies, radio and TV stations quoted Mr. Milutinovic's statement that the Belgrade talks have enhanced the overall Yugoslav- Croatian relations - representing the backbone of Balkan relations. Mr. Granic's remark that the Belgrade meeting will result in the signing of a significant number of bilateral agreements, has also been quoted by the Croatian press.
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Politika, 1997-02-21

    [02] CROATS THREATENED IN SARAJEVO, MOSLEMS IN ZEPCE

    Croats in Sarajevo are now frequently molested by anonymous telephone calls threatening revenge for Mostar - reports the Sarajevan daily "Oslobodjenje", quoting the Catholic news agency in Sarajevo. According to "Oslobodjenje" the same news agency reported that on Tuesday the St. Anthony Church in the Sarajevan quarter of Bistrik was stoned, with the remark that this was not the first attack on this convent. Convent guardian - Perica Vidic said that such attacks happen quite frequently and that they are not only due to the war, but also to the current conflicts within the Moslem-Croatian Federation.

    Croatian authorities in the Bosnian town of Zepce passed a unilateral decision to change the names of all the streets, dubbing them after famous Croatian personalities - Moslem Radio Sarajevo reported yesterday. "This is the best proof that the Croatian authorities in Zepce discard any possibility of Moslems returning to their homes and apartments in this town" observed the Radio Sarajevo commentator. In 1993, Croatian Defense Council troops exiled practically all Moslems from Zepce, though they represented half of the town population before the war.

    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Politika, 1997-02-21

    [03] 12-YEAR-OLD PRISONER

    Yesterday, the Banjaluka Court continued the hearings in the trial against Alija Izetbegovic - accused of war crimes against civilians, war prisoners, wounded and sick persons. The presentation of evidence started on January 21, and 41 witnesses have been heard. One of the most shocking testimonies was given by Dusko Sakan, arrested as a 12 year old boy by Moslem fundamentalists from the village of Vecic (Kotor Varos County), and kept in prison for 6 months. Strahinja Zivak - a retired person from Konjic, was arrested even though he was a bedridden patient. He was first taken to the Kosevo Hospital in Sarajevo and then transferred to a solitary cell in the notorious jail set up in the former Yugoslav Peoples Army barracks "Viktor Bubanj" . He was then kept in a 6 sq. meter cell together with four other Serbs - and without any personal hygiene facilities. Members of the Moslem para-military formations were quite "inventive" in torturing the Serbs, said Mr. Zivak and confirmed that Alija Izetbegovic was fully aware of these monstrosities and authorized them because he visited on several occasions the prisons and camps in Sarajevo, Tarcin and Konjic.
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Ekspres, 1997-02-21

    [04] ONLY 27.000 SERBS REMAIN IN SARAJEVO

    Currently only 27.000 Serbs live in Sarajevo - said Mr. Beris Belkic - Cantonal Minister of Occupation, Displaced Persons and Refugees. Previous data - based on the 1991 census, indicate that then there were 157.526 Serbs in Sarajevo. Simple arithmetic reveals the shocking fact that 130.000 Serbs left Sarajevo during the war. The Croats were a bit more lucky then the Serbs. In 1991 they were 34.867, and now they are about 20.000 according to figures provided by Mr. Belkic. Bearing in mind that the same official revealed that there are about 310.000 Moslems in the Bosnian capital, then the idea of a multi-ethnic Sarajevo - advocated by Moslem political leaders really seems both tragic and comic. The pre-war demographic structure has radically changed during the war and even serious analyses forecast that Sarajevo will progressively become a mono-ethnic city. Experts have already warned that the exodus from Sarajevo will continue in peace time, once new laws on tenancy are passed which will allow to purchase, sell or swap apartments. This will practically prevent people from returning to their homes and initiate the second phase of the exodus to "national territories".
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Vecernje Novosti, 1997-02-21

    [05] EVIDENT HYPOCRISY

    As far as Brcko is concerned, some of international military and civilian officials, have revealed their true colors, unveiling that their real intention is to wipe out the Republic of Srpska and create a Moslem state in this part of Europe - said major-general Pero Colic, - Chief of Staff of the Republic of Srpska Army (VRS), stressing that he is speaking as an ordinary person and veteran, and not as a VRS top official, that is ready to carry out every order given by state leadership. "The fact that the fate of this town has been turned into an arbitration issue is a disgrace for the international community. We have won Brcko in battle and all peace documents indicate that it is to belong to the Republic of Srpska only", remarked gen. Colic and asked: "What freedom of movement are international representatives talking about? Why are Moslems settling ruins? Certainly not to live there, but rather to cut Republic of Srpska in half and destroy it with foreign support." General Colic invited international representatives to take into consideration the freedom of movement of the Serbs in Drvar, Petrovac, Kljuc and Sanski Most, where they were once the majority. According to the Republic of Srpska Chief of Staff, this clearly indicate the presence of double standards and the hypocrisy part of the international community is displaying regarding the Serbs in the case of Brcko. "We have fulfilled most of our Dayton Agreement obligations before the others, nut the Republic of Srpska still has not been given 49% of Bosnian territory it is entitled to. The Brcko corridor must not be questioned" - general Colic stressed.
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Vecernje Novosti, 1997-02-21

    [06] GREAT STRIDES TOWARDS ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEMOCRACY

    At the press conference for reporters accredited at the UN Building, the Minister of Information of the Republic of Serbia - Dr. Radmila Milentijevic, stressed that the political crisis, generated by the November elections, has been terminated and that Serbia will make great strides towards the realization of two basic objectives: development of political and economic democracy. The privatization process initiated before the war that destroyed former Yugoslavia, and which was subsequently truncated by the sanctions, is now being successfully revitalized - said Minister Milentijevic. As far as democracy is concerned, freedoms are warranted by the Constitution and they are embodied in various forms: a multi-party system exists, several democratic elections have been held on various levels, and there is major freedom of the press. In Serbia there are numerous opposition dailies, weeklies, monthlies and periodicals - Ms. Milentijevic stressed, adding that accusations about lack of freedom of the press are completely unfounded. "We hope that our imminent efforts to be promptly re-admitted to the United Nations will be fruitful - since our country was one of the UN founding members, and because all that Serbia is doing today is aimed at its integration into the western world, into the European and global community", remarked the Serbian Minister of Information. She rejected, however, the possibility of certain obsolete state unions being newly formed, and underscored that the trend is - probably - to "create an economic community in the Balkans, so that integrated Balkan states might join Western Europe and consequently the world as well."
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Tanjug, 1997-02-21

    [07] NEW SADAKO OGATA MISSION

    UN High Commissioner for Refugees - Ms. Sadako Ogata will soon initiate a new mission in former Yugoslavia, most probably in mid-April. It is expected that she will visit Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and FR Yugoslavia to personally verify the realization of UNHCR humanitarian projects and to see whether the necessary conditions for the repatriation of refugees have been created. According to the revised UNHCR plan, half a million refugees should return this year to Bosnia alone, mostly from western Europe, FR Yugoslavia and Croatia. UNHCR has not yet made a precise plan for the return of Serbian refugees to Krayina this year, but it is quite certain that during the tour Ms. Ogata will insist with the Croatian authorities that the barriers for their return be finally lifted.
    Serbia Today, 1997-02-21 ; Borba, 1997-02-21

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