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Yugoslav Daily Survey 96-06-11Yugoslav Daily Survey Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Yugoslavia <http://www.yugoslavia.com>CONTENTS
[01] YUGOSLAVIA ADOPTS PLATFORM FOR FLORENCE CONFERENCEBelgrade, June 10 (Tanjug) - The Yugoslav Government adopted Monday a platform for the participation of the Yugoslav delegation in the Ministerial Conference on the implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords, to be held in Florence on June 13-14. The basic goal of the Conference is a review of the six-month implementation of the Dayton Agreement, Accord on a further comprehensive implementation of the Dayton provisions and respect for the set deadlines, a Federal Government statement said.The Conference participants will focus attention, among other things, on elections in Bosnia-Herzegovina, the return of refugees and regional arms control. Special attention will be devoted to the full freedom of movement, as a condition for the elections in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Yugoslav delegation will insist, in keeping with the country's peace policy, on a comprehensive implementation of the Dayton Accords and an equal treatment of all sides in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Yugoslav delegation to the Florence Conference will be headed by Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic. [02] YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT ADOPTS PLATFORM FOR TALKS WITH IMFBelgrade, June 10 (Tanjug) - The Yugoslav Government adopted on Monday at a session chaired by Prime Minister Radoje Kontic a platform for expert talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Geneva on June 13-14.The Yugoslav delegation will be headed by Oskar Kovac, who teaches at Belgrade's Faculty of Economics. The delegation will act in line with the Government's stands, which clearly affirm Yugoslavia's principled policy. The expert talks will also deal with legal and economic issues in regulating Yugoslavia's IMF membership. The Yugoslav Government has stated its readiness to find optimal ways to normalize relations with the IMF and pointed out that it would strive to resolve the issue in a pragmatic and realistic way. The Government said that the platform for the Geneva talks was based on previous Government documents and bases for Yugoslavia's stabilization and development. [03] YUGOSLAV FOREIGN MINISTER IN OSLO, TRADE MINISTER IN POZNAN, LONDONBelgrade, June 10 (Tanjug) - The Yugoslav Government decided Monday that Foreign Minister Milan Milutinovic travel to Oslo for the signing of the agreement on sub-regional arms control. The agreement on sub-regional arms control is in line with the stands advocated by Yugoslavia during several weeks of talks in Dayton, Ohio, in November 1995 and the obligations defined in the Dayton Peace Accords.The Government endorsed a platform for Trade Minister Djordje Siradovic's talks with Polish Minister of Foreign Economic Cooperation Jacek Buchacz in Poznan, June 15-16. The Poznan talks will cover possibilities for economic cooperation and the drawing up of relevant documents. Special attention will be devoted to the promotion of relations in finance and banking, as a basis for all-round economic cooperation between Yugoslavia and Poland. The Yugoslav Government adopted also a platform for Minister Siradovic's visit to Great Britain, June 17-20, where he will participate in a seminar on Yugoslavia to be attended by more than 100 Yugoslav and British business people. YUGOSLAVIA - REFUGEES[04] ABOUT 19,000 REFUGEES REGISTERED IN SERBIA'S KOSOVO-METOHIJA PROVINCEPristina, Yugoslavia, June 10 (Tanjug) - Serbia's southern Kosovo-Metohija Province has given shelter to about 19,000 displaced persons from war-zones in former Yugoslavia, according to a recent census. Kosovo-Metohija has completed the census which encompassed 98 percent of the displaced persons, Provincial Secretary for Refugee Affairs Zvezdan Milenkovic said on Monday, and added that final returns would be known in another ten days or so.The Province, where ethnic Albanians account for about 90 percent of the population, has given shelter mostly to Serb refugees from the Republic of Serb Krajina, who fled before Croatia's aggression on August 1995 which displaced more than 250,000 Serbs. The largest number of them have found refuge in the Provincial centre of Pristina - about 5,500 of them, and in Pec and Kosovo Polje - about 1,200 each, and have mostly been accommodated in 130 collection centres. Initial analyses of the census returns show that a large number of refugees would like to remain in Kosovo-Metohija, where they hope to solve their vital problems - find work and make their homes. There is a number of those, too, who have expressed a desire to return to their places of birth, but only if the Croatian authorities fully guaranteed their safety and security. BOSNIA - HERZEGOVINA[05] BOSNIAN MUSLIM-CROAT FEDERATION, REPUBLIKA SRPSKA HOLD TLAKSPale, June 10 (Tanjug) - Ranking officials of the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Republika Srpska in Bosnia-Herzegovina met in Pale on Monday to discuss mutual relations, delimitation and prisoners. The Republika Srpska was represented by Vice President Nikola Koljevic and Parliament Speaker Momcilo Krajisnik, and the Federation, by its President Kresimir Zubak. The talks are said to have encompassed also upcoming elections in Bosnia-Herzegovina, slated for mid-September.After the meeting, Krajisnik said that important information had been exchanged and that the central topic had been delimitation between the two entities, especially in areas populated by Serbs and Croats. He said that the proposals had come from the field and had had to be discussed, and added that an answer would be known next week, but did not specify what proposals had been made and for what territories. Zubak, for his part, confirmed the subjects of discussion and stressed that the two sides had examined relations between the Republika Srpska and the Federation, and the problem of prisoners. THE RED CROSS AND FORMER YUGOSLAVIA[06] TENSIONS RUN HIGH ALONG ETHNIC LINES IN BOSNIA AND CROATIABelgrade, June 10 (Tanjug) - Violence and total disrespect for international humanitarian law during the war in the former Yugoslavia may pose a threat to the peace process for a long time, the ICRC said in its latest report released in Geneva. The peace process may be particularly endangered by tensions along ethnic lines of separation in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, the report said.Developments in February 1996, when the Serbs fled all the Sarajevo suburbs which were taken over the Muslims, have shown that a transfer of power, even when agreed, can lead to a new displacement of population. The report warned that the future of the Serb people in the area of Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Srem, which will be under Croatian rule after the U.N. transitional administration, was a particular source of concern. The ICRC will strive to obtain assurances that security and dignity of the endangered local Serbs and return of Croats will be respected, the reported added. In the period to come, the ICRC will focus its activities on the creation of a climate which will guarantee security and freedom of movement for all in Bosnia-Herzegovina, collection of data on all unaccounted persons and visits to the still detained persons in Bosnia and Croatia, the report said. The Red Cross warned that food and medical assistance was most needed in the Republika Srpska and Eastern Slavonia. The Red Cross will continue to work on projects of reconstruction of social institutions (health centres, centres for the old and handicapped, orphanages) and rehabilitation of buildings and warm water and heating systems, the report said. FROM FOREIGN PRESS[07] HUNGARIAN DAILY: BOSNIA'S ALL THREE PEOPLES ORGANISED ON ETHNIC BASISBudapest, June 10 (Tanjug) - All three peoples in Bosnia have been organised on ethnic basis since 1990, the Hungarian daily Nepszabadsag reported on Monday. Consequently, it is wrong to believe that supporters of a single Bosnia would get the upper hand if Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and General Ratko Mladic were removed from power, the paper's leading international politics commentator Endre Aczel said.Separatism prevailed in Bosnia-Herzegovina even before the world new about Karadzic or before Gen. Mladic arrived in its territory, the paper said. After the disintegration of Titoist Yugoslavia, a multiethnic parliament was set up in Bosnia-Herzegovina that did not take a single decision after 18 months of activity, because one of the parties would always block decisions, the daily said. Moreoever, the war deepened antagonism among Moslems, Croats and Serbs to the extreme, the paper said. Nepszabadsag said September's elections in Bosnia-Herzegovina would doubtless be free and democratic, but said Moslems would vote for Moslem candidates, Croats for the Croat and Serbs for the Serb. The paper said those who thought that liberal tendencies would prevail in Bosnia-Herzegovina if Karadzic and Mladic were removed from its political scene lived in a fool's paradise. Yugoslav Daily Survey Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |