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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 137, 00-07-19

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>

RFE/RL NEWSLINE

Vol. 4, No. 137, 19 July 2000


CONTENTS

[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

  • [01] RELEASE OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SHOOTING SUSPECTS QUESTIONED
  • [02] OSCE CHAIRWOMAN DISCUSSES KARABAKH SETTLEMENT IN
  • [03] ...AS ARMENIA, KARABAKH RELEASE FURTHER POWS
  • [04] AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT APPROVES FIRST CENTRAL ELECTORAL
  • [05] SLAIN GEORGIAN INSURGENT NOT YET BURIED
  • [06] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT DISCUSSES OIL PIPELINE OPTIONS IN LONDON
  • [07] KAZAKHSTAN SEEKS TO ALLEVIATE WATER SHORTAGE
  • [08] KYRGYZ PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE PASSES LANGUAGE EXAM
  • [09] TURKMENISTAN, RUSSIA AT ODDS OVER CASPIAN

  • [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

  • [10] NATO SECRETARY-GENERAL WARNS ALBANIANS, SERBS
  • [11] MITROVICA SERBS PLEDGE MORE PROTESTS
  • [12] RISTIC TO HEAD MODERATE SERBIAN BODY
  • [13] MACEDONIAN ALBANIANS STAGE PROTEST FOR TETOVO UNIVERSITY
  • [14] MACEDONIAN PARLIAMENT DEBATES CUTTING MINISTRIES
  • [15] YUGOSLAV ARMY SAYS IT WILL 'NEVER' ATTACK MONTENEGRO
  • [16] FAMILIES OF DEAD SERBIAN JOURNALISTS SUE STATE TV BOSSES
  • [17] PROSECUTORS CHARGE 10 PEOPLE IN ARKAN SLAYING
  • [18] VERHEUGEN: EU MEMBERSHIP FOR SLOVENIA BY 2003?
  • [19] MESIC BUOYED BY EU TIES
  • [20] BOSNIAN SERB INFORMATION CHIEF QUITS
  • [21] NEW RIGHTIST COALITION IN ROMANIA TO BACK ISARESCU FOR
  • [22] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT CRITICIZES USE OF EU FUNDS
  • [23] OSCE TO TAKE STRICTER STANCE ON TRANSDNIESTER SEPARATISTS?
  • [24] BULGARIAN JUSTICE MINISTER APOLOGIZES TO LIBYA OVER RACIAL

  • [C] END NOTE

  • [25] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT SLAMS DOOR SHUT

  • [A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA

    [01] RELEASE OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SHOOTING SUSPECTS QUESTIONED

    Relatives of some of the eight men killed in the 27 October

    Armenian parliament shootings have addressed a statement to

    Military Prosecutor Gagik Jahangirian questioning his

    decision to shelve the investigation into the possible

    compliance in that crime of four persons, including

    presidential aide Aleksan Harutiunian, RFE/RL's Yerevan

    bureau reported on 18 July. The statement, which was

    published in the independent daily "Aravot," argued that

    rather than take that decision on the basis of testimony

    given by Nairi Hunanian, the leader of the five gunmen who

    committed the killings, Jahangirian should have collated the

    evidence given by all the defendants. Jahangirian told RFE/RL

    that the victims' families may appeal to the prosecutor-

    general to review the findings of the preliminary

    investigation. But the wife of slain parliamentary deputy

    speaker Yurii Bakhshian said that the families do not want to

    prolong the investigation and would prefer that the case go

    to trial. LF

    [02] OSCE CHAIRWOMAN DISCUSSES KARABAKH SETTLEMENT IN

    AZERBAIJAN...

    Meeting in Baku on 18 July with Azerbaijan

    President Heidar Aliev, Foreign Minister Vilayet Guliev, and

    parliamentary speaker Murtuz Alesqerov, Benita Ferrero-

    Waldner called on the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan

    "to take the courageous steps necessary" to resolve the

    conflict now on the basis of mutual compromise. She also

    stressed the importance of taking "small but significant

    confidence-building measures" proposed by the OSCE in the

    economic and military spheres. Aliev, however, said he thinks

    the OSCE should be more active and responsive in promoting a

    settlement of the conflict, Reuters reported. Guliev, for his

    part, said that Ferrero-Waldner had brought no new proposals

    on how the conflict could be resolved, although "there are

    some elements that need to be carefully looked at." LF

    [03] ...AS ARMENIA, KARABAKH RELEASE FURTHER POWS

    Responding to

    an appeal by Ferrero-Waldner, Nagorno-Karabakh President

    Arkadii Ghukasian released four Azerbaijani prisoners of war

    who had been detained in Stepanakert for up to two years,

    Russian agencies reported. Two more Azerbaijani POWs who had

    been held in Yerevan were also freed. The six men were flown

    to Baku on 18 July. LF

    [04] AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT APPROVES FIRST CENTRAL ELECTORAL

    COMMISSION MEMBERS

    Parliamentary deputies on 18 July

    endorsed nine nominees to the new Central Electoral

    Commission by 85 votes to nine, Turan reported. Three of the

    nominees represent the majority Yeni Azerbaycan party, three

    are independent deputies, two are from the opposition

    Azerbaijan National Independence Party (AMIP), and one

    represents the opposition Musavat Party. But AMIP chairman

    Etibar Mamedov warned the parliament the same day that the

    opposition representatives to the election commission from

    his party and from the opposition Azerbaijan Popular Front

    will refuse to cooperate with the commission until the

    parliament amends the election law to comply with the demands

    of the opposition and the OSCE's Office for Democratic

    Institutions and Human Rights (see "RFE/RL Caucasus Report,"

    Vol. 3, No. 26, 30 June 2000). That refusal, Mamedov said,

    will paralyze the functioning of the commission, whose

    decisions must be adopted by two-thirds of its 18 members.

    Meeting with Azerbaijani officials on 18 July, OSCE

    Chairwoman in Office Ferrero-Waldner likewise noted "serious

    shortcomings" in the election law and expressed the hope they

    will be corrected, Turan reported. LF

    [05] SLAIN GEORGIAN INSURGENT NOT YET BURIED

    The family of

    Colonel Akaki Eliava, killed in unclear circumstances by

    Georgian security officials on 9 July (see "RFE/RL Newsline,"

    10 July 2000), held funeral rites for him in his home town of

    Senaki on 18 July but are refusing to bury him until the

    Georgian authorities release three of his comrades in arms,

    Caucasus Press reported. The three men were detained with

    Eliava on 9 July and have been charged with illegal

    possession of arms, although two of them were unarmed at the

    time of their arrest. Bondo Djikia, governor of the west

    Georgian regions of Mingrelia and Upper Svaneti, on 18 July

    joined Georgian ombudsman Nana Devdariani in calling for the

    three men's release. LF

    [06] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT DISCUSSES OIL PIPELINE OPTIONS IN LONDON

    Eduard Shevardnadze, who arrived in the U.K. on 17 July on a

    state visit, met with oil sector officials in London on 18

    July to discuss the feasibility of a second Baku-Supsa oil

    export pipeline and of a pipeline from the Russian Black Sea

    port of Novorossiissk via Supsa to the Turkish terminal at

    Ceyhan, Caucasus Press reported. LF

    [07] KAZAKHSTAN SEEKS TO ALLEVIATE WATER SHORTAGE

    Kazakh

    government officials have held urgent talks with neighboring

    Uzbekistan and Tajikistan on increasing water supplies to

    southern Kazakhstan, Deputy Prime Minister Danial Akhmetov

    told journalists on 18 July. He did not say whether those

    talks were successful, RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reported.

    Natural Resources and Environment Minister Serikbek Daukeev

    told a recent cabinet meeting that Uzbekistan is violating a

    schedule drawn up by the inter-governmental commission on

    water resources, according to Interfax on 18 July. Kyrgyzstan

    has reduced the flow of irrigation water to southern

    Kazakhstan, where the cotton crop in Maqta-Aral is threatened

    by drought, in retaliation for Kazakhstan's failure to comply

    with an agreement concluded last year on exchanging coal for

    irrigation water. LF

    [08] KYRGYZ PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE PASSES LANGUAGE EXAM

    Lawyer

    Tursunbek Akunov on 18 July became the first candidate for

    the 29 October presidential poll to sit the mandatory tests

    in fluency in the Kyrgyz language ordered last month by the

    Central Electoral Commission, Interfax reported (see "RFE/RL

    Newsline," 29 June 2000). The tests comprise writing an essay

    on an assigned topic, making a five-minute oral presentation

    in Kyrgyz, and reading extracts from fictional works. A

    second presidential candidate, film-maker and parliament

    deputy Dooronbek Sadyrbaev, has condemned the language test

    as humiliating and designed to exclude non-Kyrgyz candidates.

    LF

    [09] TURKMENISTAN, RUSSIA AT ODDS OVER CASPIAN

    Russian Deputy

    Foreign Minister and presidential envoy for the Caspian

    Viktor Kalyuzhnyi held three hours of behind-closed-doors

    talks in Ashgabat on 18 July with Turkmenistan's President

    Saparmurat Niyazov, Russian agencies reported. Kalyuzhnyi

    told journalists later that those discussions were "much more

    difficult" than his talks earlier this month in Astana and

    Baku (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 and 17 July 2000). Kalyuzhnyi

    proposed a phased approach to resolving the question of the

    legal status of the Caspian, beginning with an agreement on

    the environment and the sea's biological resources. But

    Niyazov argued that environmental and other issues should be

    addressed only after the median line has been defined and all

    five littoral states have signed a convention on the status

    of the sea, according to Interfax. LF


    [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    [10] NATO SECRETARY-GENERAL WARNS ALBANIANS, SERBS

    Lord Robertson

    said in Prishtina on 18 July that the Atlantic alliance

    demands a stop to ethnically-motivated violence in Kosova. He

    stressed that "we are going to protect a multi-ethnic society

    here and we'll do it if necessary by making sure the

    individual groups are protected in their homes and

    communities," AP reported. He told ethnic Albanians not to

    "allow the Serb community to be run out of Kosovo and into

    the arms of [Yugoslav President Slobodan] Milosevic."

    Robertson called on Serbs to admit that "some horrifying

    violence went on here over the last two years, and [that] the

    memory of that is not going to fade very quickly" among local

    Albanians. Addressing the Albanians, Robertson said: "Go and

    visit the [Serbian] churches and show that you, too, care

    about sacred sites that are being despoiled. Go to those who

    have had relations or friends murdered and tell them that

    you, the Kosovo Albanians, know more about harassment than

    practically any other people on Earth." PM

    [11] MITROVICA SERBS PLEDGE MORE PROTESTS

    Mitrovica Serb leader

    Oliver Ivanovic told AP on 19 July that local Serbs have

    lifted their blockades of roads leading into northern

    Mitrovica. He added, however, that there will be daily

    protests until Dalibor Vukovic is freed from jail for having

    set fire to Albanian-owned cars (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 18

    July 2000). Ivanovic also warned that there could be violence

    if Vukovic remains in prison, adding: "Over the past 10

    months, during clashes around bridges [in Mitrovica], we had

    more than 100 people injured and not a single Albanian was

    jailed. Some 53 Serbs were killed or abducted and not a

    single Albanian is in jail." Ivanovic told AP that he will

    meet with UN officials in the course of the day to try to

    persuade them to free Vukovic. PM

    [12] RISTIC TO HEAD MODERATE SERBIAN BODY

    Meeting in Gracanica on

    18 July, members of the moderate Serbian National Council

    (SNV) elected Dusan Ristic president. He replaces Momcilo

    Trajkovic, who recently resigned to protest the SNV's

    decision to resume cooperation with the UN civilian

    administration's advisory council, RFE/RL's South Slavic

    Service reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 26 June 2000). PM

    [13] MACEDONIAN ALBANIANS STAGE PROTEST FOR TETOVO UNIVERSITY

    Some 1,000 ethnic Albanians held a rally in central Skopje on

    18 July to demand that the parliament make the underground

    Tetovo Albanian-language university a full-fledged state

    institution (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 17 July 2000). Dean Fadil

    Sulejmani said a compromise put forward by the OSCE to make

    the university an accredited but private institution is

    "unacceptable." Reuters reported. The opposition Party of

    Democratic Prosperity organized the rally. The question of

    Tetovo University is one of the most acrimonious in

    Macedonian politics. PM

    [14] MACEDONIAN PARLIAMENT DEBATES CUTTING MINISTRIES

    The

    parliament on 18 July began debates on the status of Tetovo

    University and on the reorganization of the state

    administration. The government wants to cut the number of

    ministries from 21 to 14, the private MIC news agency

    reported. If the legislature gives the proposal the necessary

    two-thirds majority, some of the ministries that have been

    eliminated will be reorganized as "agencies" of other

    ministries. A new cabinet will also be formed. PM

    [15] YUGOSLAV ARMY SAYS IT WILL 'NEVER' ATTACK MONTENEGRO

    Colonel

    Svetozar Radisic told journalists in Belgrade on 18 July that

    "there is no price for which the Yugoslav army would attack

    Montenegro," Reuters reported. He said that reports to the

    contrary in the Montenegrin and foreign media are "notorious

    lies." The colonel stressed that "the Yugoslav army has no

    intention of attacking either [federal] republic because its

    purpose is to defend them. It does not even cross its mind to

    enter into conflicts with its people. The Yugoslav army has

    always been with the people, never against them, and will

    therefore prevent a civil war at any price," he argued.

    Radisic stressed that the army recognizes that the former

    Yugoslav military made a "mistake" when it attacked Slovenia,

    Croatia, and Bosnia, "Glas javnosti" reported. He added,

    however, that while the army is free of partisan politics, it

    recognizes that it has a political role to play in keeping

    the peace, "Danas" reported. PM

    [16] FAMILIES OF DEAD SERBIAN JOURNALISTS SUE STATE TV BOSSES

    Belgrade lawyer Slobodan Sisic has filed lawsuits on behalf

    of 12 families against Serbian Television's Director

    Dragoljub Milanovic, Editor-in-Chief Milorad Komrakov,

    Chairman of the Administrative Board Vukasin Jokanovic, and

    several other people, "Danas" reported on 19 July. The

    families say that the officials knew that NATO was planning

    to attack the state television building in April 1999 but did

    nothing to warn the staff. The air strike left 16 dead and 18

    injured. State television has been one of the main pillars of

    Milosevic's rule. In response to the families' lawsuit,

    Justice Minister Dragoljub Jankovic said that NATO, not the

    Belgrade authorities, are responsible for the deaths. PM

    [17] PROSECUTORS CHARGE 10 PEOPLE IN ARKAN SLAYING

    The Belgrade

    public prosecutor's office said in a statement on 18 July

    that it has charged four people for the murder of warlord and

    indicted war criminal Zeljko "Arkan" Raznatovic in January

    (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report," 18 January 2000). The statement

    added that another six individuals have been charged as

    accomplices. One of the alleged murderers is at large and

    will be tried in absentia, AP reported. The statement did not

    indicate when the trial will begin. PM

    [18] VERHEUGEN: EU MEMBERSHIP FOR SLOVENIA BY 2003?

    Guenter

    Verheugen, who is the EU's commissioner for enlargement, said

    in Ljubljana on 18 July that Slovenia must keep up the

    momentum for reform, "Delo" reported. He urged his hosts to

    make special efforts to introduce the EU's common body of

    legislation, known as the "acquis communautaire." Verheugen

    added that EU membership for Slovenia could be a realistic

    possibility by 2003 or 2005. Slovenian Foreign Minister Lojze

    Peterle recently said membership is a realistic possibility

    only between 2005 and 2008. PM

    [19] MESIC BUOYED BY EU TIES

    Croatian President Stipe Mesic said

    in Brussels on 18 July that the leaders of all 15 EU member

    states will attend the EU's Balkan summit slated for the fall

    in Zagreb, "Jutarnji list" reported. He added that he has

    received backing in Brussels for a number of key economic

    projects. These include building an Adriatic-Ionian highway,

    reopening the Croatian segment of the Danube to navigation,

    constructing an oil pipeline from the Caspian to the

    Adriatic, and launching work on a gas pipeline linking Norway

    to the Adriatic. PM

    [20] BOSNIAN SERB INFORMATION CHIEF QUITS

    Republika Srpska

    Information Minister Rajko Vasic resigned on 18 July

    following criticism by several representatives of the

    international community of his alleged interference in the

    appointment of officials of Bosnian Serb television, RFE/RL's

    South Slavic Service reported. Prime Minister Milorad Dodik

    accepted the resignation. "Dnevni avaz" wrote that the

    Information Ministry will in any case soon be abolished.

    Unnamed representatives of the international community have

    repeatedly called for the ministry's abolition on the grounds

    that democratic countries do not have such ministries. PM

    [21] NEW RIGHTIST COALITION IN ROMANIA TO BACK ISARESCU FOR

    PRESIDENT?

    At a meeting organized by the Civic Alliance

    Movement (MAC), the leaders of the National Peasant Party

    Christian Democratic (PNTCD), the Union of Rightist Forces,

    the National Christian Democratic Alliance, and the

    Ecologist Federation agreed to set up a center-right

    alliance and run on joint lists in the fall parliamentary

    elections, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. A final

    agreement is to be concluded by 1 August. The MAC will not

    field candidates but will support the alliance. PNTCD

    chairman Ion Diaconescu said the alliance will support

    either Premier Mugur Isarescu as its presidential candidate

    "or another person." He noted that Isarescu has agreed to

    replace President Emil Constantinescu as the alliance's

    candidate for head of state (see "End Note" below). But

    Isarescu said he learned about the initiative only "from

    the media." The daily "Ziua" reported on 19 July that the

    alliance's "other" possible candidate for president might

    be Education Minister Andrei Marga. MS

    [22] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT CRITICIZES USE OF EU FUNDS

    Speaking on

    national television after chairing a cabinet meeting,

    Constantinescu said he has urged Isarescu to take urgent

    measures to ensure the "transparent and efficient" use of

    funds granted by the EU. He said that otherwise Romania

    runs the risk of being unable to use funding from the EU

    and other foreign creditors. Isarescu said the government

    was "on course" to meet budget targets but noted that

    budget figures might have to be revised. He also announced

    that pensions will be increased as of 1 September. On 19

    July, Constantinescu was scheduled to depart for visits to

    Mexico and Brazil. MS

    [23] OSCE TO TAKE STRICTER STANCE ON TRANSDNIESTER SEPARATISTS?

    Iurii Vition, head of the Moldovan delegation that attended

    the OSCE Standing Bureau's meeting in Vienna on 18 July,

    said the organization is contemplating adopting punitive

    measures against the Transdniester separatists for their

    obstruction of a solution to the conflict, RFE/RL's

    Chisinau bureau reported. Vition said the OSCE Standing

    Bureau harshly criticized the Tiraspol leaders, saying that

    it is "inadmissible" that they continue attempting to

    thwart the decisions of the OSCE's summit in Istanbul last

    year. The Transdniester delegation walked out of the

    meeting after the bureau refused to accept the delegation's

    claim that it represents the separatist region and is not

    part of the Moldovan delegation. At the meeting, Russia

    submitted a four-stage plan for withdrawing its troops and

    arsenal from the Transdniester but neither submitted a

    time-table for the withdrawal nor specified when it would

    begin. MS

    [24] BULGARIAN JUSTICE MINISTER APOLOGIZES TO LIBYA OVER RACIAL

    REMARK

    Justice Minister Teodosii Simeonov on 18 July

    apologized to Libya over a remark he had made in connection

    with the pending trial of six Bulgarian nationals who are

    accused by Tripoli of having willfully infected children in a

    Benghazi hospital with the HIV virus, dpa reported, citing

    BTA. The six face the death penalty if found guilty. Simeonov

    had told Bulgarian journalists that he could predict the

    outcome of a trial "in a white country, but this is not

    Libya's case." In a fax to the Libyan authorities, Simeonov

    said his words "must not be wrongly interpreted as an

    insult." Last week, Prime Minister Mubarak Abdallah al-

    Shamikh and parliamentary chairman Zenati Mohammed Zenati

    told a Bulgarian parliamentary delegation to Libya that

    Tripoli is "extremely unhappy" about the Bulgarian media's

    coverage of the pending trial, Reuters reported. MS


    [C] END NOTE

    [25] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT SLAMS DOOR SHUT

    by Michael Shafir

    President Emil Constantinescu's decision not to seek

    re-election was surprising, but not unexpected.

    Constantinescu made the announcement on national television

    on 17 July, less than three weeks after declaring he would

    seek a second mandate. However, for months Constantinescu has

    been trailing his predecessor and likely successor in office,

    Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR) chairman Ion

    Iliescu, and some recent polls even showed him behind Teodor

    Melescanu, the leader of Alliance for Romania (APR). The gap

    between Iliescu and Constantinescu seemed too large to close,

    unless the incumbent could have counted on the support of all

    those who voted for "anyone but Iliescu."

    But it became clear between his two announcements that

    Constantinescu could not count on the backing of that part of

    the electorate. His candidacy was endorsed by the National

    Peasant Party Christian Democratic (PNTCD) and the Union of

    Rightist Forces, which will run in an alliance in the fall

    parliamentary and presidential elections. The two formations

    even picked a "running mate" for Constantinescu--namely,

    Prime Minister Mugur Isarescu, who, though politically

    independent, was to be their choice for premier. This,

    however, was an electoral gimmick: the constitution does not

    grant the president the right to appoint the premier--that

    appointment being rather the prerogative of the parliament.

    Moreover, those behind the creation of the

    Constantinescu-Isarescu "team" failed to take into account

    two factors: Theodor Stolojan, also a former premier (1991-

    1992) and, like Isarescu, a popular figure; and the National

    Liberal Party (PNL), although it is uncertain how much longer

    the party will continue to use that name.

    For some time, a group calling itself the Social Liberal

    Initiative had been pushing Stolojan's candidacy for either

    the premiership or the presidency, as an alternative to the

    PDSR-Iliescu tandem or that of Constantinescu and the

    Democratic Convention of Romania (CDR). Based on the A Future

    for Romania debating club, which formerly had ties with the

    PDSR, this reformist group had developed over the last years

    closer ties to Melescanu's party. These ties were "natural,"

    so to speak, as the APR had split from the PDSR in 1997. The

    APR embraced the idea of the "return of Stolojan" but made

    its support for that idea conditional on the "ticket" of

    "Melescanu for president, Stolojan for premier."

    And then there is the PNL factor. In the June local

    elections, that party, which was the PNTCD's main partner in

    the CDR in the 1996 parliamentary elections, chose to run on

    separate lists. It did not do well, but it did better than

    the so-called "CDR"--which was virtually the PNTCD. The

    dilemma faced by the PNL leadership after the June ballot was

    how to avoid, in the electorate's eyes, sharing

    responsibility for the country's dismal economic performance

    and the failure of its three post-1996 cabinets to implement

    reform while remaining credible in its opposition to the

    left-wing PDSR.

    The party had two choices: run on separate lists in the

    fall elections (infringing on a PNTCD-PNL agreement to revive

    the CDR for that ballot) or seek a new partner. The final

    decision has not yet been taken, but all the indications are

    that PNL First Deputy Chairman Valeriu Stoica will have his

    way and the PNL will run in the elections on joint lists with

    the APR. This ideologically unlikely alliance has already

    deeply divided the PNL, and some prominent members have

    resigned. And to complicate matters, the APR is insisting

    that Melescanu be presidential candidate and Stolojan the

    candidate for the premiership. The PNL, however, would rather

    back Stolojan for the first position.

    One thing is clear: the PNL will not back

    Constantinescu. This explains why Constantinescu, in

    addressing the nation on 17 July, spoke bitterly of

    competition among Romania's political parties having turned

    into "a blind struggle for power-seeking personal or group

    interests." "This is a time, he said, when "people buy and

    sell principles, ideologies, seats in the parliament and the

    cabinet, making use to that end of lies, blackmail,

    vulgarity, and manipulation."

    Constantinescu may also feel betrayed by the electorate

    or, rather, by what its preferences are likely to be in the

    presidential and parliamentary elections, based on the

    outcome of the local ballot. He had been waging, he said, a

    struggle against the "Mafia-like" structures that had

    penetrated Romanian's economic and political structures. But

    instead of receiving support for those efforts, his political

    adversaries (read: Iliescu) had accused him of manipulating

    the judicial process for electoral purposes.

    The electorate, for its part, has clearly shown that it

    cares little at this point about Constantinescu's anti-

    corruption drive, or perhaps it simply does not believe that

    one side is better than the other. This is why Constantinescu

    urged Romania's citizens to choose between "the world of

    theft and lies or a country of honesty and truth." Aware of

    the fact that he himself has also been accused of condoning,

    and even of being personally involved in, corruption,

    Constantinescu announced that he will not seek election to

    the parliament and hence will not enjoy immunity. Unlike his

    predecessor, as his audience was clearly meant to understand.

    Regardless of whether one chooses to view

    Constantinescu's slamming of the political door as a gesture

    of a frustrated politician or of a desperate honest man, it

    should not be forgotten that no other politician in Romania

    has voluntarily quit. Those who stay in the race will find it

    hard to explain why they, rather than Emil Constantinescu,

    should continue to pursue their electoral ambitions.

    19-07-00


    Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
    URL: http://www.rferl.org


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