OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 65, 31 Mar 95

From: "Demetrios E. Paneras" <dep@bu.edu>


CONTENTS

  • [01] POLAND OPENS SECRET POLICE ARCHIVES.

  • [02] UNCRO FOR CROATIA?

  • [03] SARAJEVO AIRLIFT SCALED DOWN.

  • [04] BILL ON BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA MUSTERS SUPPORT IN TURKISH PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE.

  • [05] SERBIAN OFFICIAL HINTS AT CHANGE IN KOSOVO POLICY.

  • [06] BULGARIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES 1995 BUDGET.

  • [07] GREECE DENIES ALBANIAN BORDER SHOOTING.


  • OMRI DAILY DIGEST

    No. 65, Part II, 31 March 1995

    EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE

    [01] POLAND OPENS SECRET POLICE ARCHIVES.

    Internal Affairs Minister Andrzej Milczanowski signed an order on 30 March opening Stalinist secret police (UB) archives dating from 1944-1956 to prosecutors, courts, historians, and journalists. No information on informants will be released, however. Milczanowski said his ministry would not vouch for the authenticity of archival documents. He added that secret police archives dating up to 1965 would also be opened shortly, in keeping with the 30-year principle observed in international practice. Gazeta Wyborcza reported on 31 March that the archives are a mess and that only 25% of the materials have been reviewed or classified. -- Louisa Vinton, OMRI, Inc. SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [02] UNCRO FOR CROATIA?

    One day before UNPROFOR's peacekeeping mandateexpired in the former Yugoslavia, the UN Security Council endorsed three draft resolutions calling for the continued presence of UN peacekeeping forces there, Nasa Borba reported on 31 March. One resolution permits a scaled-down force to remain in Croatia. According to Vjesnik, that force has been dubbed UNCRO (UN Confidence Restoration Operation). The name was apparently intended to meet Croatian President Franjo Tudjman's demand that "Croatia" be reflected in the title. But Reuters on 30 March reported that Croatian Foreign Minister Mate Granic had ruled out simply calling the force UNCRO since it did not include the full name of his country. The resolution was amended to state that the name of the force is "UNCRO in Croatia which shall be known as UNCRO," according to Reuters. An estimated 1,000 peacekeepers may be stationed along Croatia's international borders, apparently in response to Zagreb's demands that the force be charged with monitoring Croatia's frontiers with Serbia and Bosnia rather than its borders with Croatia's rebel Krajina Serbs. Details of how the proposal is to be implemented remain sketchy. UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali has been asked to resume talks with involved parties on the proposal's implementation and to report back to the Security Council on 21 April. Meanwhile, Krajina leaders have renewed their opposition to altering the UNPROFOR mandate, Nasa Borba reported. The UN Security Council is expected to meet again on 31 March to discuss the mandate. Resolutions on peacekeepers in Macedonia and Bosnia leave those missions basically unchanged. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.

    [03] SARAJEVO AIRLIFT SCALED DOWN.

    AFP on 30 March reported that the humanitarian airlift to Sarajevo has been "scaled down to 40% of normal capacity" due to Bosnian Serbs' unwillingness to permit deliveries to be made from the airport to the besieged city. Meanwhile, international agencies reported the same day that Bosnian government offensives appear to be bogging down because of continued heavy snowfall. In other news, the Indonesian news agency Antara on 31 March reported that Jakarta expects to send to Bosnia a battalion of soldiers specializing in clearing away mines. -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.

    [04] BILL ON BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA MUSTERS SUPPORT IN TURKISH PARLIAMENTARY C

    OMMITTEE. The Turkish Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee has approved a bill authorizing the Council of Ministers to lift the arms embargo against Bosnia-Herzegovina, state-run TRT television reported on 30 March. The bill is aimed at enabling the Bosnian government to exercise its right of self-defense. -- Lowell Bezanis, OMRI, Inc.

    [05] SERBIAN OFFICIAL HINTS AT CHANGE IN KOSOVO POLICY.

    Mihajlo Markovic, one of the leading ideologists of the Serbian Socialist Party, has called for a dialogue with Kosovo's ethnic Albanians, international news agencies reported on 30 March. Markovic, in an interview with the Albanian independent weekly Koha, proposed a "debate on the re- establishment of Kosovo's territorial autonomy," which was revoked by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic in 1989. Markovic said that it was time for Serbs and Albanians (the latter account for some 90% of Kosovo's population) to try to live together and give up violence. "We are all suffering, and nothing can be solved by force," he said. Markovic's remarks indicate a possible shift in Serbian policy toward Kosovo. But in the meantime, Serbian nationalists are planning a rally in Pec on 8 April to demand an even tougher stand toward the Kosovo Albanians. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.

    [06] BULGARIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES 1995 BUDGET.

    The Socialist-led government on 30 March approved the state budget for 1995, Bulgarian newspapers reported the following day. The final draft of the budget provides for a deficit of 47 billion leva ($700 million), or 5.6% of GDP. Expenditures are estimated at 387 billion leva ($5.8 billion), and revenues at 340 billion leva ($5.1 billion). GDP is expected to amount to 800-850 billion leva ($12.0-12.8 billion), while inflation is expected to drop to 40-50% from 121.9% in 1994. The estimated budget deficit has risen from the 42 billion leva projected on 24 March, because the government wants to grant the army and police more money. It also needs funds to finance its social projects, Kontinent reported. According to Otechestven Front, 20% of the budget deficit will be financed directly by the Bulgarian National Bank. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.

    [07] GREECE DENIES ALBANIAN BORDER SHOOTING.

    Greece on 30 March denied that border guards shot at a group of four illegal Albanian immigrants, killing one and wounding another, Reuters reported the same day. The Defense Ministry and the army general staff categorically denied a report by the Albanian daily Koha Jone stating that the incident took place on 27 March about 15 kilometers inside Greece. The newspaper quoted one of the four Albanians as saying he was detained but later released and ordered to tell the Albanian authorities about the incident. He said that a 37-year-old Albanian was killed, while the wounded man was taken to a hospital in the Greek town of Kastoria. Koha Jone did not report on the fate of the third Albanian. The Albanian Interior Ministry has no knowledge of the incident, a ministry spokesman said. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc. [As of 12:00 CET] Compiled by Jan Cleave

    This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a Prague-based nonprofit organization.


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