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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 3, No. 198, 99-10-11Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 3, No. 198, 11 October 1999CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AGAIN PLEDGES NO INTERFERENCE IN ELECTIONOF CATHOLICOSMeeting on 8 October with members of the board of the Republican Party of Armenia, one of the partners in the majority Miasnutyun coalition, Robert Kocharian again ruled out any interference by the Armenian leadership in the election later this month of a new head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Noyan Tapan reported. Several senior clerics have recently claimed that the Armenian leadership has made clear that it wants the present archbishop of the Ararat diocese elected to that post (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 29 September and 8 October 1999). Kocharian also called for "every effort" to be made to preclude fraud, violence, or falsification during local elections scheduled for 24 October. Candidates from Miasnutyun heavily outnumber opposition candidates in the elections for heads of 936 towns and villages, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. LF [02] ARMENIA PROPOSES PAN-ARMENIAN TV STATIONArmenian statetelevision has submitted to the government plans to create a diaspora-funded "pan-Armenian television channel," RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported on 8 October. The proposal was endorsed by all participants at the Armenia-diaspora conference held in Yerevan last month. Armenian state television director Tigran Naghdalian estimated the cost of launching the channel at $7 million. He added that at present Armenian state television can be accessed with satellite dishes in Europe and the Middle East but that his top priority is to extend its range to North America. LF [03] AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION CONVENES DEMONSTRATIONSome 5,000people attended a 9 October rally on the outskirts of Baku to protest the Azerbaijani leadership's Karabakh policy, ITAR- TASS and Turan reported. Participants adopted a 16-point resolution calling, among other things, for Armenian compliance with UN Security Council resolutions on Karabakh; the repatriation to Armenia of Azerbaijani refugees and the creation of an autonomous formation for them; stripping Russia, which is seen as pro-Armenian, of its the co- chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group; and barring the leadership of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic from participating in the peace process. The demonstrators also condemned the Baku police's intervention on 9 October to halt broadcasting by the private Sara TV station, Turan reported. On 8 October, Sara TV had broadcast an appeal by two opposition party leaders to take part in the rally. LF [04] AZERBAIJANI COURT RULES NEWSPAPER SLANDERED OPPOSITIONLEADERA Baku district court has ordered "Yeni Azerbaycan," the newspaper of the eponymous ruling party, to apologize to opposition Musavat Party chairman Isa Gambar. It also order the newspaper to publish a refutation of two articles it printed in July and August 1999 alleging that Gambar and his brother Rovshan have connections with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), Turan reported on 8 October. LF [05] GEORGIA BEGINS REGISTERING REFUGEES FROM CHECHNYA...TheGeorgian authorities will begin formally registering refugees from Chechnya on 11 October, Caucasus Press reported. Since 26 September, an estimated 1,500 people have fled south from Chechnya into Georgia; some 500 of those people are Georgian citizens who had earlier sought employment in Chechnya. An unspecified number of the refugees have traveled from Georgia to Azerbaijan or Turkey. Also on 11 October, Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze said in his weekly radio broadcast, that "there are no misunderstandings" between Moscow and Tbilisi over Chechnya thanks to talks between Georgian Minister of State Vazha Lortkipanidze and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. Interfax on 9 October similarly quoted Shevardnadze's adviser Levan Aleksidze as affirming that "Georgia wants to maintain friendly relations with Russia while refraining from a quarrel with the Chechen people and their President Aslan Maskhadov." LF [06] ...AS CHECHEN OFFICIAL CLAIMS GEORGIAN MILITARY SUPPLIED ARMSTO CHECHNYANewly appointed Chechen State Council Chairman Malik Saidullaev told journalists in Moscow on 8 October that he has information that arms were airlifted from Georgia to Chechnya by helicopters with Georgian Defense Ministry markings, ITAR-TASS reported. But Colonel General Leonid Ivashev, who heads the Russian Defense Ministry's Department for International Military Cooperation, told Interfax the same day that "one cannot speak of a mass flow of mercenaries" from Georgia and Azerbaijan to Chechnya. Ivashev said both those countries' leaderships appreciate the danger posed by terrorism and extremism and are taking all possible measures to tighten control over their borders and preclude the transit of terrorists to Russia. LF [07] KAZAKHSTAN HOLDS PARLIAMENTARY, LOCAL ELECTIONSSome 61.5percent of Kazakhstan's 8 million voters participated in the 10 October elections to the lower chamber of the parliament and to city and local councils, ITAR-TASS reported, quoting an unnamed Central Electoral Commission official. A total of 65 candidates representing nine political parties contested the 10 seats that are to be allocated under the proportional system, while 484 candidates competed for 67 seats in single- mandate constituencies. "Nezavisimaya gazeta" on 6 October cited a recent opinion poll suggesting that the pro- presidential OTAN party enjoys 23.6 percent support, followed by the Civic Party (8.6 percent), the Communist Party (8.1 percent), and the Agrarians (3.4 percent). LF [08] KAZAKHSTAN'S PRESIDENT WRAPS UP IRAN VISITDuring his visitto Iran from 5-7 October, Nursultan Nazarbaev held talks with his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Hatami, on bilateral and regional cooperation and bilateral economic ties, Interfax reported. The two presidents expressed concern that bilateral trade fell from $160 million in 1997 to $120 million the following year, and they discussed increasing sales to Iran of Kazakhstan's oil, metals, coke and grain. Kazakh officials expressed preliminary approval of plans to expand oil exchanges whereby Kazakhstan delivers crude to northern Iran and takes delivery of refined oil at the Persian Gulf, but they noted that the price Iran is demanding for transporting that oil is "too high," according to Interfax. Plans were also approved on the supply of electricity from Kazakhstan via Iran to Turkey. Nazarbaev is reported to have visited the mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini. LF [09] U.S. SEEKS TO WIN KAZAKH COMMITMENT TO BAKU-CEYHANPIPELINE...U.S. State Department special envoy for Caspian energy issues John Wolf told journalists in Astana on 8 October that the U.S. wants Kazakhstan to play "a major role" in the development of the planned Baku-Ceyhan export pipeline for Caspian oil, Interfax reported. Wolf said he told President Nazarbaev that that pipeline would enable Kazakhstan to begin developing new oilfields and expand production at those currently operating. But in order to export oil via that pipeline, Kazakhstan would have to transport crude to Baku by tanker or a Trans-Caspian oil pipeline would have to be built in tandem with the planned Tras-Caspian gas pipeline. LF [10] ...WHILE ASTANA FAVORS DIVERSIFICATIONAlso on 8 October,Kazakhstan's acting Deputy Foreign Minister Medina Djarbusynova told a meeting of Caspian oil and gas sector executives in Astana that Kazakhstan takes a "pragmatic and non-political approach" to the export of hydrocarbons by multiple pipelines. Acting Energy, Industry and Trade Minister Mukhtar Ablyazov told the same gathering that by 2010, the member state of the Economic Cooperation Organization will become a major producer of oil. LF [11] KYRGYZSTAN'S PRESIDENT VISITS SOUTH...Askar Akaev traveledon 9 October to the Batken and Leilek Raions of southern Kyrgyzstan, the scene of hostilities over the past two months between government troops and ethnic Uzbek guerrillas who continue to hold 13 hostages, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. Akaev told local officials that raising the status of those two raions and another district to that of an oblast will strengthen security in the region. He called for the swiftest possible expulsion of the guerrillas from Kyrgyz territory, warning that intelligence reports indicate that up to 5,000 guerrillas could enter Kyrgyzstan next spring, according to Interfax. But the previous day, General Abdygul Khotbaev, who commands the Kyrgyz troops deployed in the south, said that he cannot begin military operations against the guerrillas without endangering the hostages, AP and ITAR- TASS reported. Khotbaev accused Tajikistan of failing to take any measures to prevent gunmen and arms entering Kyrgyzstan from Tajik territory. LF [12] ...AS NEGOTIATIONS ON HOSTAGES' RELEASE CONTINUEKyrgyzparliamentary deputy Tursunbai Bakir Uulu met with representatives of the United Tajik Opposition in Tajikistan on 9 October to enlist their help in securing the release of the hostages, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. UTO leader Said Abdullo Nuri had assured Japan's ambassador to Dushanbe the previous day that he is willing to try to assist in negotiating the release of the four Japanese geologists among the 13 hostages. A second mediator, human rights activist Tursunbek Akunov, returned to Bishkek on 9 October following an abortive trip to Pakistan, where he failed to establish contact with members of the exiled Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan which masterminded the hostage-takings. LF [13] RUSSIAN BORDER GUARDS CONDEMN AFGHAN SHELLING OF TAJIKTERRITORYA spokesman for the Russian Border Guards contingent deployed along Tajikistan's frontier with Afghanistan expressed concern on 8 October over the recent explosion in Tajikistan of a mine and eight tank shells fired from Afghan territory amid the ongoing fighting between Taliban and Northern Alliance forces, ITAR-TASS reported. Two shells exploded on the Tajik side of the border late on 8 October. No one was injured in any of the explosions. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[14] FATE OF ALBANIAN GOVERNMENT UNCERTAINBy a vote of 295 to261, Socialist Party leader Fatos Nano won re-election in a challenge by Prime Minister Pandeli Majko in Tirana on 10 October. Majko had previously said he would resign from the government if he failed to defeat Nano. But party officials told Reuters that Majko may reconsider in view of the narrow margin of his defeat. Observers suggested that Nano managed to hold on to power because of his control over extensive patronage networks. Similar ties recently enabled Democratic Party leader Sali Berisha to win re-election as well. Many Albanians and foreigners blame the rivalry between and authoritarian leadership styles of Berisha and Nano for the polarization of political life. FS/PM [15] ALBANIAN POLICE PLEDGE TO FIGHT ORGANIZED CRIMEInteriorMinister Spartak Poci said on 8 October that the police will spare no efforts in their fight against powerful and often elusive criminal gangs. He noted, however, that "there has been a lot of pressure from some state officials to release some gangsters after the police have arrested them," dpa reported. Poci did not elaborate. He noted that a team of U.S. experts will soon arrive in Albania to instruct police, and that some Albanian police will receive training in the U.S. Meanwhile, a bomb damaged a central Tirana bar popular with Socialist leaders. No one was injured. PM [16] LEADING SERBIAN OPPOSITION PARTIES TO BOYCOTT EU MEETINGSpokesmen for the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO) and theDemocratic Party said in Belgrade on 11 October that their respective parties will not attend a meeting with EU foreign ministers later that day in Luxembourg, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. The spokesmen said they object to EU demands that they promise to extradite to The Hague Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and other indicted war criminals once the opposition comes to power. An SPO spokesman told the BBC that if the opposition parties agree to the EU's demands, they will open themselves to charges by Milosevic and his supporters that they have betrayed fellow Serbs to Western countries. The previous day, the pro-Milosevic "Politika" accused prospective participants in the Luxembourg meeting of being "puppets" of the Western countries that bombed Serbian targets in the spring. Observers note the opposition needs financial, political, and technical support from abroad to wage a successful election campaign. PM [17] HOW MANY SERBS WILL ATTEND?Spokesmen for the SerbianOrthodox Church said in Belgrade on 11 October that the Church will not send representatives to Luxembourg. They said the reason is that the Church leadership has yet to discuss the EU's invitation to attend the gathering, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. In Podgorica, Prime Minister Filip Vujanovic said that he and Foreign Minister Branko Perovic will represent Montenegro at the gathering. The EU had invited President Milo Djukanovic, who is an outspoken critic of Milosevic, to head the Montenegrin delegation. In Belgrade, an unnamed Serbian opposition politician told AP on 11 October that Washington pressured the EU into demanding that the Serbian opposition pledge to extradite war criminals. But representatives of several smaller opposition groups stressed that they will go to Luxembourg in any event. PM [18] EU TELLS SERBIA: NO MAJOR AID WITH MILOSEVICBritish ForeignSecretary Robin Cook told the private Serbian news agency Beta that the U.K. "remains firmly resolved not to make Milosevic's position easier.... Serbia should not expect any significant help in reconstruction so long as Milosevic is in power," AP reported on 11 October. In Bari, Bodo Hombach, who is the coordinator for the EU's Balkan Stabilization Pact, said two days earlier that the EU does not want to isolate Serbia but that it is increasingly impatient for change there. Italian Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema said that the international community should have acted to isolate Milosevic earlier than it did. The Italian leader stressed that Serbia is welcome to become a major actor in Balkan affairs again but only once it is no longer led by indicted war criminals. PM [19] DRASKOVIC DEMANDS 'RESULTS' ON ACCIDENTSPO leader VukDraskovic said in Belgrade on 9 October that he may "take matters into my own hands" if the authorities do not quickly identify and punish those responsible for the recent traffic accident that he says was an attempt to kill him (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 8 October 1999). He said the police report on the accident is a cover-up. Police officials claim that Draskovic and his colleagues were driving at 150 kilometers per hour and were thereby at least partially responsible for the deaths of four of his party. The police have yet to identify the driver or owner of the truck that swerved in front of the SPO leader. PM [20] SOCCER FANS PELT OPPOSITION LEADERS WITH BEER CANSSome20,000 people crowded central Belgrade on 9 October to celebrate the Yugoslav national team's 2-2 draw against Croatia in Zagreb in the qualifying match for the European cup championships. The draw enables Yugoslavia to advance to the next stage in the play-offs. Leaders of the opposition Alliance for Change led 5,000 people through the streets in an anti-Milosevic protest that merged with the crowds celebrating the soccer victory. Soccer fans then threw beer cans at several opposition politicians who tried to speak to the gathering. In Zagreb, police arrested 69 persons in conjunction with post-match violence, which resulted in damage to 11 trams and one bus. PM [21] SERBIAN AGENTS INTO KOSOVA?A spokesman for the Kosovarprovisional government, which is sponsored by the former Kosova Liberation Army (UCK), said in Prishtina on 10 October that Serbian secret services are attempting to destabilize Kosova. He charged that the agents provocateurs have recently arrived in the province in ever increasing numbers. He added that the Yugoslav army has failed to respect the demilitarization of the border region between Serbia and Kosova, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. PM [22] KOSOVARS REBURY MASSACRE VICTIMSSome 500 ethnic Albaniansattended the reburial of 27 people in Plocica on 9 October. Uniformed, armed leaders of the newly formed Kosova Protection Force, who are former UCK officers, addressed the gathering. Serbian forces shot 13 of the victims at short range after they fled the shelling of their village in 1998. PM [23] BOSNIAN SERB GOVERNMENT SLAMS MILOSEVIC MEETINGThe officeof caretaker Prime Minister Milorad Dodik issued a statement on 10 October saying that the government does not approve of the recent meeting of three Bosnian Serb leaders with Milosevic. The three are parliamentary speaker Petar Djokic, ousted Republika Srpska President Nikola Poplasen, and Zivko Radisic, who is the Serbian representative on the Bosnian joint presidency. PM [24] TUDJMAN'S PARTY BLOCKS AGREEMENT ON ELECTORAL LAWOfficialsof the governing Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) on 8 October rejected an opposition request that top officials of state-run television resign their membership in the HDZ. The opposition has demanded the depoliticization of the only nationwide television broadcaster as a key component of electoral law reform. Opposition parties and foreign observers agree that state-run television broadcasts are heavily biased in favor of President Franjo Tudjman and the HDZ. PM [25] FORMER ROMANIAN PRESIDENT NOMINATED AS 2000 CANDIDATETheopposition Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR) voted at the party's national conference on 9 October to nominate former President Ion Iliescu as its candidate in next year's presidential elections, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. Iliescu promised that when the PDSR returns to power, it will "not replace today's profiteers with its own." He harshly attacked the ruling coalition's economic policy and warned PDSR members against the "dangers of euphoria" over polls predicting the party's return to power in 2000. Adrian Nastase, who was re-elected PDSR first deputy chairman, said the party intends to "stop the process of de- industrialization and revise the role of the state in the economy." MS [26] MOLDOVAN PARLIAMENTARY LEADERS ASK LUCINSCHI TO FOREGOCONSTITUTIONAL CHANGEThe leaders of the four parliamentary groups have called on President Petru Lucinschi to give up his plan to revise the constitution and introduce a presidential system, RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau reported on 8 October. The appeal was signed by For a Democratic and Prosperous Moldova Bloc leader Dumitru Diacov, Democratic Convention of Moldova leader Mircea Snegur, Party of Democratic Forces Chairman Valeriu Matei, and Communist leader Vladimir Voronin. The four warned that "society is being dragged into hot debates that only amplify political confrontation, inflicting considerable damage on the country and its international prestige." MS [27] BULGARIAN FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS NATIONALISM 'USELESS'Foreign Minister Nadezhda Mihailova, addressing students inBlagoevgrad on 8 October, said the Kosova conflict has demonstrated that it is not enough for Bulgaria to be "an enclave of stability in the region," BTA reported. She noted that the country must be "surrounded by stable, democratic countries" to avoid being held "hostage" to its neighbors' problems. In the new context of European integration, she continued, "nationalism is useless" because it "gives the false impression of protecting national interests" but in fact jeopardizes them. She pointed to the example of neighboring Serbia: "The more Serbian public opinion was pushed to uphold the slogan 'One country for all Serbs,' the more disunited the Serbs became. The more the idea of Great Serbia was raised, the less plausible it grew." MS [C] END NOTE[28] SHADOWS OF STATUESby Michael ShafirDuring a visit to Bucharest in late July, Hungarian Foreign Minister Janos Martonyi agreed with his Romanian counterpart, Andrei Plesu, on a symbolic gesture: a "historical reconciliation park" would be set up in the Transylvanian town of Arad, and its foundation stone would be jointly laid by the two countries' premiers. Moreover, the park would include both a monument commemorating 13 Hungarian generals executed in Arad by the Austrians in 1849 and statues of Romanian historical figures in Transylvania. Martonyi had raised the issue of the monument with Plesu, emphasizing its considerable historical significance to Hungarians. Plesu, one of the more enlightened members of the government, readily obliged. The agreement was reconfirmed at a meeting in Timisoara of the two countries' justice ministers, Valeriu Stoica and Ibolya David, who announced that the foundation stone would be laid on 6 October, the 150th anniversary of the generals' execution. Bucharest and Budapest apparently overlooked two "small details": the part of the continent in which the neighboring states are located and the timing. As Timothy Garton Ash recently remarked in an interview on German television, when Americans say "that is history," they mean that things have lost their relevance. When it comes to Eastern Europe, Ash remarked, "that is history" means that trouble is around the corner. Indeed, the manipulation of history has a long tradition in Eastern Europe. When an election is looming, as is the case in Romania, such manipulation is bound to be an almost irresistible temptation. The monument to the generals is also history. Known as "Hungarian Liberty," it is composed of a group of statues of the 13 generals, whom Hungarians consider to be the "martyrs" of their nation. The monument is the work of sculptor Gyorgy Zala and was unveiled in Arad in 1890. The trouble is that one nation's "martyrs" are the other's "villains." The Transylvanian Romanians fought on the side of the Austrians for most of the 1848-1849 Hungarian "liberation war." After World War 1, when the region became part of Romania, the National Liberal Party government of Ionel I. C. Bratianu decided in 1924 to dismantle the monument, on the grounds that the generals had massacred some 40,000 ethnic Romanians, which the Hungarians vehemently deny. Since then, the monument has been stored in a military fort and has deteriorated considerably. Its restoration may take as long as three years. For some time, both the ruling coalition parties--with the inevitable exception of the Hungarian Democratic Federation of Romania--and the nationalist opposition have been courting the ethnic Romanian electorate in Transylvania ahead of the 2000 elections. The opposition could not possibly miss an opportunity to outbid the coalition. Ever ready to contribute to the minimization of the Holocaust, Greater Romania Party (PRM) leader Corneliu Vadim Tudor said that the intention to open the park and reinstate the monument is comparable to "demanding that the Jews erect a statue of Hitler at the Auschwitz concentration camp." The Party of Romanian National Unity "firmly condemned" the agreement, saying it is "humiliating...for the Romanians' national dignity.'" The Alliance for Romania commented that it was "surprised by the tactless decision," which "undermines the [Romanian-Hungarian] reconciliation spirit, since it may create inter-ethnic tensions." And the Romanian National Party announced that it opposes reinstating "the Greater Hungary monument" in Arad "or anywhere else in Romania." The main opposition Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR), as usual jumping on the nationalist band wagon when it serves its purposes, said the monument has a "profound anti-national and anti-Romanian character." PDSR First Deputy Chairman Adrian Nastase accused the ruling coalition of being "an accomplice in serving the interests of Hungarian revisionism." PDSR leader and former President Ion Iliescu, for his part, warned Vasile to stay away from the ceremony, claiming that the Hungarians are "setting a trap" to make claims on Transylvania. The main blow, however, came from the Democratic Party, a member of the ruling coalition. The Democrats said that reinstating the monument would "bring back the tragic memory of a Transylvania where the national rights of Romanians were not recognized." More important, Democrats on the Arad town council joined the opposition in passing a resolution expressing opposition to making available the land earmarked for the park. In face of this opposition, Vasile backed down. Citing health reasons, he designated Stoica to represent him at the stone-laying ceremony. Orban, who on 5 October arrived in Arad and attended an evening function organized by the UDMR, left the same night, delegating David as a "fittingly appropriate" representation. Stoica responded the next morning by announcing that he would not be taking part in the ceremony and by designating the local prefect to represent the government. In the end, the ceremony of laying the foundation stone did not take place. What did take place, however, was a demonstration by PRM sympathizers, who heckled David and members of the Hungarian delegation as they left a church where they had attended Mass and as they laid wreaths at an obelisk dedicated to the generals' memory. Chanting nationalist slogans, the demonstrators were unlikely to have been impressed by the reaction of Plesu's ministry. Deeming "the manipulation of national sentiment for the purpose of building political capital" to be "irresponsible," spokeswoman Simona Miculescu said the two countries' relations must not be influenced by "fears of historical shadows or the shadows [cast by] statues." Perhaps they shouldn't, but they nonetheless are. 11-10-99 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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