OMRI Daily Digest I,II, No. 77, 19 April 1995
From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>
CONTENTS
[01] TURKISH SUPPORT FOR PETRO-CHEMICAL PLANT.
[02] FRANCE WANTS UN SECURITY COUNCIL SESSION ON BOSNIA.
[03] OTHER BOSNIAN DEVELOPMENTS.
[04] SERBIAN PRESIDENT MEETS WITH MEDIATORS.
[05] OPPOSITION PARTY CLAIMS HARASSMENT.
[06] ISTRIANS CALL FOR AUTONOMY.
[07] KOSOVO UPDATE.
[08] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT AND PREMIER CLASH OVER NATO MEMBERSHIP.
[09] GREECE, ALBANIA NEGOTIATE OVER MINORITIES.
[10] COMMUNIST ALBANIA TRAINED FOREIGN TERRORISTS.
[11] HOXHA'S SON UNDER HOUSE ARREST.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 77, Part I, 19 April 1995
[01] TURKISH SUPPORT FOR PETRO-CHEMICAL PLANT.
Moscow and Ankara are
discussing a $120 million loan to Russia in exchange for natural gas
deliveries to Turkey, Interfax reported on 18 April. The money would be
used to complete construction of the first unit of a polypropylene
facility in Budyonnovsk, Stavropol region, by the Turkish contractor
Tekfen. The plant, estimated to cost $280 million, is to yield 100,000
metric tons of polypropylene annually. Last year, Russia provided Turkey
with 5.1 billion cubic meters of natural gas. -- Lowell Bezanis, OMRI,
Inc.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 77, Part II, 19 April 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[02] FRANCE WANTS UN SECURITY COUNCIL SESSION ON BOSNIA.
International media
reported on 18 April that Paris has demanded a special meeting of the
leading UN body in order to grant peacekeepers permission to use force
more easily in response to attacks. France has also threatened to pull
out its 4,500-member UNPROFOR contingent unless the cease-fire is
extended beyond 1 May and unless peace talks resume. The demands come in
the wake of the killing of two French soldiers in Bosnia and of
increased Serbian shelling of Sarajevo. But the key factor behind the
calls seems to be the hotly contested presidential election on 23 April
in a country where the Bosnian war and the safety of peacekeepers
attract voters' attention. AFP notes that Prime Minister Edouard
Balladur has stressed the possibility of withdrawal, while his rival
Jacques Chirac wants ultimatums to be issued and air strikes to follow.
-- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] OTHER BOSNIAN DEVELOPMENTS.
The 19 April edition of the Los Angeles
Times reported that Bosnian Serb forces the previous day refused to
guarantee the safety of an aircraft taking U.S. Ambassador Victor
Jackovich from Sarajevo to his new posting in Slovenia. He was forced to
use the hazardous land route instead. Secretary of State Warren
Christopher noted that Bosnia "is a very dangerous place for Americans
to serve" and called the Serbian move "unjustified and outrageous." But
a BBC commentary on the latest French demands and on Christopher's
remarks suggested that the international community's weakness in the
face of aggression to date makes it unlikely that the Serbs will take
the latest threats seriously. Meanwhile in Serb-controlled Bosnian
territory, Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic visited Banja Luka and
the front lines in central Bosnia where he promised a shakeup in the
civilian and military leaderships. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] SERBIAN PRESIDENT MEETS WITH MEDIATORS.
Nasa Borba on 19 April reported
that Slobodan Milosevic met the previous day with UN envoy Thorvald
Stoltenberg and EU mediator Lord Owen. According to Reuters, the
international mediators expected to discuss Belgrade's alleged
violations of the rump Yugoslavia's blockade of the Bosnian Serbs. But
Tanjug reported only that the talks centered on "further activities
aimed at the intensification of the peace process." Meanwhile, Politika
reported that Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Pavle gave an interview to the
Slovenian daily Dnevnik in which he said that before the war started, he
"knew nothing" about Zeljko Raznatovic, alias Arkan, who is the leader
of the Serbian paramilitary "Tigers" and currently wanted by Interpol
for genocide. Pavle also noted that he first learned from the Swedish
embassy in Belgrade that Arkan "listens only to the orders of the
Serbian patriarch." -- Stan Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[05] OPPOSITION PARTY CLAIMS HARASSMENT.
Novi list on 14 April
quoted the Croatian Independent Democrats as charging that the Interior
Ministry has formed a special unit to spy on the party and bug its
telephones. Other opposition parties have voiced similar complaints, and
some have experienced mysterious bombings of their offices or have found
their leaders evicted from their apartments. Nasa Borba on 18 April
reported on other evictions, namely of Serbs, and on other violations of
human rights encountered by Serbs living in areas under Croatian
government control. The article was based on materials compiled by the
Croatian Helsinki Committee. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[06] ISTRIANS CALL FOR AUTONOMY.
The First World Congress of Istrians, which
closed in Pula on 15 April, endorsed a declaration calling for broad
autonomy for Istrians in Croatia, Slovenia, and Italy as well as for
minority rights, Belgrade and Zagreb dailies reported. The congress said
that Istria should become a Euroregion linking the three countries,
according to the full text of the meeting published in Slobodna
Dalmacija on 19 April. A group loyal to the Croatian government tried to
introduce an alternative resolution that did not endorse autonomy, which
the Zagreb authorities regard as subversive. Vjesnik charged that
autonomy would "open a Pandora's box." Politika, however, ran a headline
saying "Istrians want no borders" and called the alternative resolution
"an unsuccessful provocation" by Croatia's governing party. Some
observers predict that Zagreb still intends to have the last word. --
Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[07] KOSOVO UPDATE.
Three unidentified ethnic Albanian politicians have been
sentenced to two-year prison terms by the Pec local court, international
agencies reported on 18 April. The accused have been charged with
planning secession from Serbia. A lawyer is quoted as saying that it was
"a staged political trial." Meanwhile, the number of ethnic Albanian
policemen from Kosovo who have been charged with creating a shadow
Kosovar Interior Ministry has risen to 71. The former policemen, who
deny the charges, are among the 172 ethnic Albanian police officers who
were arrested between November and December 1994. According to official
sources, 11 policemen continue to evade the authorities. -- Fabian
Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[08] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT AND PREMIER CLASH OVER NATO MEMBERSHIP.
Prime
Minister Zhan Videnov on 18 April said Bulgaria is in no hurry to apply
for NATO membership, Bulgarian newspapers reported the following day. He
said Bulgaria's candidacy for full membership will be appropriate when
NATO evolves into a "system of collective and regional security." He
also noted that the government is not ready to meet the terms of full
membership if these include deployment of nuclear weapons and foreign
troops in Bulgaria. President Zhelyu Zhelev, in his annual speech on
foreign policy, said on 17 April that his country deserves to become a
member of NATO because it is an oasis of calm in the turbulent Balkan
region, Reuters reported the same day. He said it is "very important
that Bulgaria declares clearly and categorically its urgent request for
NATO membership." Zhelev argued that Bulgaria's inclusion in the Western
military alliance would create "a NATO triangle on the Balkans pitched
between Ankara, Sofia, and Athens," since Bulgaria has good relations
with both neighbors. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[09] GREECE, ALBANIA NEGOTIATE OVER MINORITIES.
Greece and Albania on 18
April resumed talks on the status of the ethnic Greek minority in
Albania and of Albanian workers in Greece, AFP reported the same day.
The talks, which were broken off 11 months ago, are taking place in
Athens at the level of state secretary. Greece is expected to press for
further rights of the Greek minority in the education system, while
Albania's main concern is the possible legalization of Albanians who
work and live illegally in Greece. Negotiations between Athens and
Tirana had been suspended after an attack on an Albanian army barrack in
April 1994 and the subsequent arrest and trial of five ethnic Greeks in
Albania led to serious tensions between the two countries. -- Stefan
Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[10] COMMUNIST ALBANIA TRAINED FOREIGN TERRORISTS.
Blerim Cela, head of the
Albanian anti-corruption agency, has said that Albania trained and
financed foreign terrorist groups from 1964 to 1970, international
agencies reported on 18 April. He said that an $11.6 million "solidarity
fund" was created and that small Marxist-Leninist groups--mainly from
Sudan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Indonesia, and Ecuador--attended training
courses at Albanian military schools and in the Albanian army. About $4
million from the fund were used to support left-wing groups in Italy,
Germany, and France and to promote Enver Hoxha's publications in foreign
languages. Another $400,000 were reportedly appropriated by deputy party
leader Namik Dokle to buy a printing machine for the party newspaper
Zeri I Popullit in Denmark or Canada. The machine never materialized. --
Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[11] HOXHA'S SON UNDER HOUSE ARREST.
The son of the late Albanian dictator
Enver Hoxha has been placed under house arrest on charges of calling for
an uprising in an interview about his father, international agencies
reported on 18 April. Hoxha reportedly said that "it was not the people
who toppled the monument of my father, but the mob. The people were the
ones who went out to protect him." He added that "ordinary people in
Albania are afraid. They no longer have an Enver Hoxha to protect them."
He is also quoted as threatening that "one day, those people who scoffed
at my father and my family will have to pay for it." -- Fabian Schmidt,
OMRI, Inc.
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