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OMRI Daily Digest II, No. 81, 24 April 1996
From: OMRI-L <omri-l@ubvm.cc.buffalo.edu>
CONTENTS
[1] BELGRADE AUTHORITIES ARREST BOMB SUSPECTS.
[2] MONTENEGRIN OFFICIALS IN WASHINGTON.
[3] VIOLENCE ESCALATES IN KOSOVO.
[4] SERBIAN OPPOSITION PARTY CALLS FOR DIALOGUE WITH KOSOVO ALBANIANS.
[5] TUDJMAN CALLS FOR NATIONAL RECONCILIATION . . .
[6] . . . AND SPARKS CONTROVERSY.
[7] ROMANIAN DAILY SUES SWISS FOREIGN MINISTRY OVER SPY CHARGE.
[8] ROMANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN MOLDOVA.
[9] BULGARIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN BONN.
[10] UPDATE ON BULGARIAN-MACEDONIAN "DIPLOMATIC SCANDAL."
[11] GREENPEACE WANTS BULGARIA TO CLOSE DOWN KOZLODUY.
[12] ALBANIAN SUPREME COURT REJECTS APPEAL BY DEPUTIES BANNED FROM ELECTIONS.
OMRI DAILY DIGEST
No. 81, Part II, 24 April 1996
SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[1] BELGRADE AUTHORITIES ARREST BOMB SUSPECTS.
Belgrade police on 23 April
arrested Alexander Gajic and Milan Dobrilovic on charges related to the
1992 bombing of Belgrade's central mosque, Reuters reported. The two are
also suspects in the May 1993 bombing of St. Ann's Catholic Church in
the capital city. Some media have speculated that they may have also
been involved in the 30 March 1996 attack against the Bajrakli Mosque in
Belgrade, which caused serious damage to the building but no casualties.
The suspects were apprehended carrying 1.9 kilograms of explosives,
three hand guns, and three grenades. -- Stan Markotich
[2] MONTENEGRIN OFFICIALS IN WASHINGTON.
Premier Milo Djukanovic and Finance
Minister Predrag Goranovic have decided to extend their visit to the
U.S. "by a few days," Nasa Borba reported on 24 April. The two men left
Montenegro on 21 April for a working visit aimed at restoring political
relations with Washington as well as with international financial and
political institutions. Nasa Borba also reports that the rump Yugoslav
embassy in Washington claims to have no knowledge of the Montenegrins'
visit. Embassy officials told a VOA correspondent they have nothing to
do with the visit and that Djukanovic has not contacted the embassy. --
Stan Markotich
[3] VIOLENCE ESCALATES IN KOSOVO.
At least five Serbs have been killed and
four injured since a Serbian civilian killed an Albanian student on the
weekend, AFP reported on 24 April. The Serbs who died are three men who
were in a cafe in Decani when a gunman entered and sprayed the bar with
automatic gunfire; a policeman who was shot outside a police station in
Stimlje, near Urosevac; and a woman who was gunned down while sitting
inside a police car in Sipolj. Some 10,000 women on 23 April gathered at
the site where the Albanian student was killed, QIK reported the same
day. The Democratic League of Kosovo strongly condemned the killings,
adding they had added a "dangerous dimension" to the Kosovo conflict. It
also stressed its policy of non-violence. -- Fabian Schmidt
[4] SERBIAN OPPOSITION PARTY CALLS FOR DIALOGUE WITH KOSOVO ALBANIANS.
The
spokesman for the opposition Serbian Renewal Movement has said that "if
negotiations do not take place soon with representatives of the Kosovar
Albanians, there will be no solution for Kosovo," Nasa Borba reported on
24 April. The ruling Socialist Party of Serbia, however, accused the
"separatist Albanian movement of choosing terrorism as the means for its
struggle." It warned that this could "exclude a peaceful settlement" in
Kosovo, AFP reported. -- Fabian Schmidt
[5] TUDJMAN CALLS FOR NATIONAL RECONCILIATION . . .
Croatian President
Franjo Tudjman, in an important interview with leading pro-government
media, said his principal aim is to urge a balanced historical view of
all major personalities and movements in modern Croatian history,
Vecernji list reported on 23 April. He accordingly condemned the World
War II ustasha leader Ante Pavelic but noted that Pavelic did meet a
popular demand for an independent Croatia. Tudjman at the same time
praised former Yugoslav communist leader Josip Broz Tito as the most
successful modern Croatian politician and traced the roots of the
current Republic of Croatia back to Tito rather than to Pavelic. Tudjman
stressed that it is wrong to continue demonizing one or another of the
major political movements, saying it is time to bring back to Croatia
from abroad the remains of Tito, Pavelic, and Dr. Vladko Macek, who led
the powerful Croatian Peasant Party in the 1930s. -- Patrick Moore
[6] . . . AND SPARKS CONTROVERSY.
The Croatian president went on to deny
that he--a former member of the communist party and a general under
Tito--was still "an old communist" at heart and that he had made the
current state apparatus a safe haven for officials of the old regime. He
noted that only 2% of the Foreign Ministry's staff are holdovers from
the former Yugoslavia, while some 22% are former emigres. But the most
controversy was generated by his attempt to present a balanced view of
Croatian history and his call for reconciliation, Croatian dailies and
Nasa Borba the next day. As was the case with calls for reconciliation
in post-dictatorship Spain and Greece, many people across the political
spectrum see his remarks as an attempt to whitewash evil deeds. His
earlier call for turning the Jasenovac concentration camp in to a
memorial for all war dead has been slammed as a move to equate murderers
with victims. -- Patrick Moore
[7] ROMANIAN DAILY SUES SWISS FOREIGN MINISTRY OVER SPY CHARGE.
Evenimentul
zilei, Romania's top-selling tabloid, has said it is suing the Swiss
Foreign Ministry for alleging one of its reporters is a spy, Reuters
reported on 23 April. The move came after Switzerland recalled its
ambassador to Bucharest because of his relationship with a 21-year-old
political reporter accused of working for the Romanian Intelligence
Service (see OMRI Daily Digest, 22 April 1996). Ion Cristoiu, chief
editor of the daily, said "the Swiss statement has damaged the newspaper
by creating the impression that we have journalists who are undercover
agents for various secret services." He has asked for the Swiss Ministry
to provide "hard evidence." The newspaper is seeking token damages of 1
leu (less than 1 cent). -- Dan Ionescu
[8] ROMANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN MOLDOVA.
Teodor Melescanu, at the start of
an official visit to the Republic of Moldova, discussed bilateral
relations with Moldovan President Mircea Snegur, Prime Minister Andrei
Sangheli, Parliamentary Chairman Petru Lucinschi, and Foreign Minister
Mihai Popov, Radio Bucharest reported on 23 April. Melescanu told Radio
Bucharest that the long-delayed bilateral basic treaty was included on
their agenda. He is scheduled today to attend a meeting of a Romanian-
Moldovan interdepartmental commission that is expected to focus on
boosting bilateral economic and cultural cooperation. -- Dan Ionescu
[9] BULGARIAN FOREIGN MINISTER IN BONN.
Georgi Pirinski and his German
counterpart, Klaus Kinkel, on 23 April launched a German-Bulgarian Forum
aimed at boosting bilateral economic and political ties, international
agencies reported. Pirinski noted that Germany is Bulgaria's most
important partner in achieving the "national goal" of EU membership. --
Stefan Krause
[10] UPDATE ON BULGARIAN-MACEDONIAN "DIPLOMATIC SCANDAL."
Meanwhile, ForeignMinister Pirinski's decision to cancel a visit to Skopje has received
wide media coverage in both countries. Macedonian Ambassador to Bulgaria
Gorgi Spasov said the decision was related to Sofia's ongoing refusal to
meet Skopje's condition that bilateral agreements be drawn up in both
the Bulgarian and Macedonian languages, Kontinent reported. Macedonian
Foreign Minister Ljubomir Frckovski stressed his country's good will to
solve "this comical dispute," Nova Makedonija reported. Georgi Parvanov,
deputy chairman of the ruling Bulgarian Socialist Party, said his party
did not know why the visit has been canceled. He added that the language
issue has been raised by people who do not want relations between Sofia
and Skopje to improve, according to Demokratsiya. -- Stefan Krause
[11] GREENPEACE WANTS BULGARIA TO CLOSE DOWN KOZLODUY.
Greenpeace on 23 April
called on the Bulgarian government to close down the Kozloduy nuclear
power plant, Reuters reported. The spokesman for the organization's
Greek branch said Kozloduy is one of the world's three most dangerous
nuclear plants and that "the question is not if an accident at Kozloduy
will happen; the question is when." He added that a study commissioned
by Greenpeace showed Bulgaria could close down the plant if it learned
to conserve and economize on energy. The Bulgarian government claims it
wants to phase out the reactors but that they are still necessary
because they supply 40% of the country's electricity. Greenpeace says 15
accidents at Kozloduy were made public between 1990 and 1993, including
three radiation leaks. -- Stefan Krause
[12] ALBANIAN SUPREME COURT REJECTS APPEAL BY DEPUTIES BANNED FROM ELECTIONS.
The Albanian Supreme Court on 23 April rejected an appeal by 13 deputies
who have been banned from running in the upcoming general elections,
Albanian media reported. A commission screening candidates for the
elections ruled that they have a communist past. The Supreme Court
rejected the deputies' request that they be given access to the
documents on which the commission based its decision. It argued that
there was enough evidence against them, since their names were included
in a file listing those who collaborated with the Sigurimi, the
communist-era secret service. Another 26 deputies have also appealed to
the court. -- Fabian Schmidt
This material was reprinted with permission of the Open Media Research Institute, a nonprofit organization with research offices in Prague, Czech Republic.
For more information on OMRI publications please write to info@omri.cz
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