OMRI Daily Digest I,II, No. 149, 2 August 1995
From: "Steve Iatrou" <siatrou@cdsp.neu.edu>
CONTENTS
[01] MOSCOW WARNS CROATIA TO HALT OFFENSIVE.
[02] SERBS HIT CROATS WITH JETS, ROCKETS.
[03] KARADZIC, MARTIC APPEAL TO MILOSEVIC FOR HELP.
[04] U.S. HOUSE VOTES TO LIFT ARMS EMBARGO.
[05] AKASHI CALLS ANOTHER MEETING.
[06] MILOSEVIC REITERATES COMMITMENT TO PEACE.
[07] NIMITZ IN MACEDONIA.
[08] AMNESTY FOR TWO ETHNIC ALBANIANS IN MACEDONIA.
[09] BULGARIAN LOCAL ELECTIONS UPDATE.
[10] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT SAYS HIS ELECTION WAS "A DEAL" BETWEEN PARTIES.
[11] ALBANIAN PEASANTS CUT OFF WATER TO TIRANA.
[12] NEW ALBANIAN TV, RADIO DIRECTOR APPOINTED.
[13] INTERNATIONAL PROTESTS AGAINST ALBANIAN CENSORSHIP.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 149, Part I, 2 August 1995
RUSSIA
[01] MOSCOW WARNS CROATIA TO HALT OFFENSIVE.
The Russian government has
officially protested the recent attacks by Croatian forces in western
Bosnia, Russian agencies reported on 1 August. The protest sent to
Zagreb warned Croatian President Franjo Tudjman that the Croatian
offensive could lead to an escalation of hostilities. Izvestiya
commented on 2 August that Moscow's concern with the Croatian offensive
is not shared by its Western partners in the international contact
group, who hope that the Croatian attacks around Bihac will relieve them
of the responsibility of carrying out their threats to use NATO air
power to protect the UN "safe zone" there. The paper added that
divisions between Moscow and the West will undermine recent Russian
initiatives aimed at ending the Bosnian conflict. Yeltsin's proposed
Bosnia peace plan evoked only skepticism from the Western powers, while
his offer to send Russian troops to reinforce UN peacekeepers in Gorazde
is unlikely to find acceptance because it would greatly complicate the
use of NATO air power to defend the Muslim enclave. -- Scott Parrish,
OMRI, Inc.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 149, Part II, 2 August 1995
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[02] SERBS HIT CROATS WITH JETS, ROCKETS.
The 2 August Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung reported that Krajina Serbs attacked Gospic with rockets the
previous day. They also hit Croatian forces near Strmica with three
Galeb jet aircraft. The International Herald Tribune quoted Bosnian
government sources as saying that Belgrade has made great efforts in
recent months to beef up the armed forces of the Krajina and Bosnian
Serbs. Rump Yugoslavia has sent tanks, aircraft, missiles, and up to
40,000 troops, who could easily have been hidden among local Serb
forces. Foreign military observers nonetheless saw troops around Zepa
wearing rump Yugoslav army patches. Bosnian General Mustafa
Hairulahlovic said that "the Yugoslav army is operating in the middle of
our country." -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[03] KARADZIC, MARTIC APPEAL TO MILOSEVIC FOR HELP.
Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic and his Krajina counterpart, Milan Martic, held a
crisis meeting on 1 August and urged Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic to come to their aid, the BBC reported. The move is probably
designed as a political ploy to force Milosevic to take a public stand
on behalf of the Serbs of Bosnia and Krajina. The Serbian president has
fallen out with his two former proteges over tactics and power
relationships, but their strategic goals remain the same. Milosevic has
made sure that in Croatia and Bosnia as well as in rump Yugoslavia, the
Serbian military machine is both well integrated and funded. This was
shown by Serbian payroll and other documents captured by the Croats in
Western Slavonia in May. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[04] U.S. HOUSE VOTES TO LIFT ARMS EMBARGO.
The House of Representatives
voted 298-128 on 1 August to end the embargo against the Bosnian
government. Like the measure passed in the Senate, it will only come
into effect after considerable delay and does not provide for any arms
sales or training. The VOA said that President Bill Clinton feels he can
get enough votes to enforce his expected veto, but the bills passed both
houses with strong bipartisan support. Elsewhere, NATO officials agreed
on a plan to protect the remaining UN-declared Bosnian "safe areas" even
if the Serbs only mass troops there and even if the Krajina Serbs attack
from Croatian territory. But it remains to be seen whether NATO will
want to face Serbian air defense systems and have pilots shot down. A
European diplomat told the International Herald Tribune on 2 August that
the problem is further complicated by the British, French, and Russian
willingness to accept a Serbian project to redraw the map of Bosnia,
which Washington and Bonn oppose. -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[05] AKASHI CALLS ANOTHER MEETING.
UN special envoy Yasushi Akashi will hold
talks in Geneva on 3 August with Croatian and Krajina Serb
representatives. The VOA said the previous day that there is little
chance of a breakthrough and that Croatia agreed only because of Western
pressure. Slobodna Dalmacija quoted UN officials as saying that Croatian
troops are preparing to attack Knin. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
reported that the German Foreign Ministry has warned all German tourists
to leave the Croatian coast south of Rijeka and the islands south of
Split. This could further hamstring Croatia's efforts to revive its
vital tourist industry. Finally, the International Herald Tribune said
that the UN has accused the Bosnian army of using snipers in Sarajevo
against the civilian population. The government denounced the charges,
saying that "instead of doing its duty, the United Nations wishes to
blame both sides equally. By doing so, [it] can justify remaining
impassive." -- Patrick Moore, OMRI, Inc.
[06] MILOSEVIC REITERATES COMMITMENT TO PEACE.
Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic on 1 August sent letters to Bosnian Serb military leader Ratko
Mladic and Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic appealing for peace,
international media reported. According to Reuters, Milosevic noted that
continued fighting would result in "enormous human and material losses."
The letters were sent one day before the international Contact Group's
scheduled meeting in Washington. The BBC on 2 August reported that
Milosevic contacted Mladic and Izetbegovic just hours before Karadzic
and Martic issued appeals for military backing from Belgrade. -- Stan
Markotich, OMRI, Inc.
[07] NIMITZ IN MACEDONIA. U.S.
special envoy Matthew Nimitz, mediating in the
Greek-Macedonian dispute, ended a two-day visit to Macedonia on 1
August, Nova Makedonija reported the following day. Nimitz met with
Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov and Foreign Minister Stevo
Crvenkovski. Talks focused on the prospects for direct Greek-Macedonian
talks and for normalization of relations. The Macedonian side stressed
its willingness to participate in such talks, but only on an equal
footing. -- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[08] AMNESTY FOR TWO ETHNIC ALBANIANS IN MACEDONIA.
Two ethnic Albanians
sentenced two years ago for allegedly preparing an armed uprising have
been amnestied by Macedonian President Kiro Gligorov, Flaka reported on
2 August. Seven more Albanians sentenced on the same charges were
released after completing their terms. Among the released were two
former secretaries of the Party of Democratic Prosperity and a former
deputy defense minister. The Albanians were sentenced for allegedly
building up a network of people who were to take part in an armed
uprising, but Albanian politicians in Macedonia claimed that the trials
were staged and repeatedly demanded that the accused be released. *
Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[09] BULGARIAN LOCAL ELECTIONS UPDATE.
Standart on 2 August reported that the
opposition failed to agree on a common mayoral candidate for Sofia. A
meeting scheduled for the previous day was canceled when representatives
of the Union of Democratic Forces (SDS) did not show up. SDS Deputy
Chairman Petar Stoyanov denied that a meeting was scheduled, but
representatives of other parties contradicted him. Meanwhile, the
Constitutional Court on 1 August announced it will review the local
election law in September. Both the SDS and President Zhelyu Zhelev had
asked the court to review some of the law's provisions that, they claim,
contradict the constitution. Judge Ivan Grigorov was cited by
Demokratsiya as saying that irrespective of its ruling, the court "will
not complicate or hamper . . . the elections." -- Stefan Krause, OMRI,
Inc.
[10] BULGARIAN PRESIDENT SAYS HIS ELECTION WAS "A DEAL" BETWEEN PARTIES.
Zhelyu Zhelev, in an interview with Bulgarian Radio on 1 August, said
his election by the Grand National Assembly in August 1990 resulted from
a deal between the Bulgarian Socialist Party and the Union of Democratic
F
orces. He rejected allegations that the BSP dictated the conditions for
his elections. According to Zhelev, the Socialists agreed on his
election in order to avoid an early ballot. He also denied allegations
that the BSP tacitly supported his re-election by popular vote in 1992,
saying the party did everything to remove him from office. Zhelev said
that during his five years in office, restitution was stopped,
privatization has not taken place, and land restitution is proceeding
very slowly. These are the reasons for the growing crime rate, he added.
-- Stefan Krause, OMRI, Inc.
[11] ALBANIAN PEASANTS CUT OFF WATER TO TIRANA.
Some 70 farmers on 29 July
took control of the Bovilla pumping station, north of Tirana, and cut
off the water supplies to the capital to protest a dam project that
would drive them from their land, Reuters reported on 1 August. Supplies
were restored the same day, and the farmers were taken into custody.
They have accused the government of breaking a promise to give them land
and housing equivalent in value to what they would lose. The dam is
expected to be completed next year. The government reportedly has
declared the pumping station a strategic installation and ordered a
permanent guard stationed there. -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[12] NEW ALBANIAN TV, RADIO DIRECTOR APPOINTED.
Bardhyl Pollo, former
director of Radio Tirana's foreign service, has been appointed director
of Albanian Radio and TV, Gazeta Shqiptare reported on 2 August. BETA on
1 August quoted Pollo as saying that his priorities are
"professionalism, program restructuring, and increased independence for
journalists." -- Fabian Schmidt, OMRI, Inc.
[13] INTERNATIONAL PROTESTS AGAINST ALBANIAN CENSORSHIP.
The Article 19
International Center against Censorship has sent a letter to Albanian
President Sali Berisha protesting the arrest of Filip Cakuli, chief
editor of the satirical magazine Hosteni 2000, and the journalist Naim
Noka, Koha Jone reported on 1 August. Both journalists were detained in
late June by the secret service SHIK until they agreed to change the
covers of their next issues (see OMRI Daily Digest, 3 July). The German
satirical magazine Titanic has also issued a protest saying that items
confiscated during the arrests had been given to the Albanians during a
visit to Germany in February. Elsewhere, the International Federation of
Journalists protested the trial against the chief editor of Populli PO,
Arban Hasani. He faces charges that his newspaper wrongly reported that
a SHIK officer was arrested for ordering a killing. -- Fabian Schmidt,
OMRI, Inc.
This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a Prague-based nonprofit organization.
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