Tanjug Daily News Review, 96-05-13
From: Tanjug, Yugoslavia, via Serbian Unity Congress <http://www.suc.org/>
May 13, 1996
NEWS AGENCY - TANJUG
DAILY NEWS REVIEW
CONTENTS
[01] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT VISITS BELGRADE
[02] COMMENTS BY YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT ON U.N. HUMAN RIGHTS RESOLUTION
[03] CROATIA MANIPULATES MISSING PERSONS LIST, SAYS BELGRADE DAILY
[04] UNHCR WILL MOST LIKELY REVISE PLAN FOR REPATRIATION TO BOSNIA
[05] FOUR YEARS LATER WORLD REMAINS SILENT ABOUT BRUTAL ATTACKS ON FORMER
YUGOSLAV ARMY
[06] CHINESE DAILY: BOSNIA WAS A LABORATORY FOR NEW U.S. WEAPONS
[07] SADAKO OGATA: YUGOSLAVIA HAS CARRIED THE BIGGEST HUMANITARIAN LOAD
[08] BOSNIA'S PARTIES SIGN DECLARATION ON REFUGEES' VISITS TO COUNTRY
[09] EMBARGO COVER FOR SECRET ARMING OF OPPONENTS OF SERBS
[10] GERMANY EXTADITES BOSNIA SERB TO HAGUE TRIBUNAL
[11] YUGOSLAVIA URGES EQUAL TREATMENT OF ALL REFUGEES
[12] KONTIC, KLEIN ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF EAST SLAVONIA
[13] JOURNALIST FEDERATION CONDEMNS CROATIA'S ACTION AGAINST WEEKLY
[14] MILOSEVIC, KLEIN DISCUSS IMPLEMENTATION OF ERDUT AGREEMENT
[15] AGREEMENT ON NEED TO RESOLVE REFUGEE PROBLEM
[16] ELECTIONS TO BE HELD IN MOSTAR AS SCHEDULED
[17] U.N. HIGH COMMISSIONER, YUGOSLAV DELEGATION DISCUSS REPATRIATION
[18] ADMINISTRATOR KLEIN: REAL PROGRESS MADE IN NORMALIZING SITUATION
[19] WORKERS' POSITION IS NOT RESOLVED ON THE STREET
[20] WHITE HOUSE ADMITS ARMS FOR MUSLIMS CAME FROM SEVERAL COUNTRIES
[21] PROGRESS IN GRADUAL NORMALIZATION OF YUGOSLAV-CROATIAN RELATIONS
[22] SOLANA, BILDT URGE FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT IN BOSNIA
[23] YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT REITERATES IT IS INTERESTED IN TALKS WITH IMF, WB
[24] KARADZIC: NO CRISIS IN IMPLEMENTATION OF DAYTON ACCORDS ON BOSNIA
[25] REAFFIRMATION OF BASIC PRINCIPLES FOR RETURN OF REFUGEES TO BOSNIA
[26] EUROPEAN UNION MINISTERS DISCUSS IMPROVING RELATIONS WITH YUGOSLAVIA
[27] YUGOSLAVIA'S FOUR-MONTH FOREIGN DEFICIT 477 MILLION DOLLARS
[28] BOOK PUBLISHED WITH TEXTS ON ESSAY JUSTICE FOR SERBIA
[29] MILTARY MISSIONS IN BOSNIA EXCHANGE INFORMATION
[30] TADIC TRIAL IN THE HAGUE TO POLARIZE LAWYERS AND POLITICIANS
[31] BOSNIA PEACE FORCE NOT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF ARRESTED MUSLIMS
[32] BELGRADE STRIKERS, SERBIAN GOVERNMENT REACH AGREEMENT
[33] ORTHODOX COUNTRIES' BOOK FAIR OPENS IN PEC, SOUTHERN SERBIA
[34] CROATIA'S ADMISSON INTO COUNCIL OF EUROPE UNCERTAIN
[01] ROMANIAN PRESIDENT VISITS BELGRADE
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - romanian president ion iliescu will
be paying an official visit to yugoslavia from may 16-18 at the
invitation of yugoslav president zoran lilic, a statement released by
the president's office said on monday.
the return visit of iliescu will enhance the traditionlly
friendly relations between yugoslavia and romania and boost
neighborly cooperation, said the statement and added that the visit
would contribute to overall cooperation in the balkans.
the statement said the visit would continue dialogue at the top
and strengthen the atmosphere of understanding, not only between
yugoslavia and romania, but in the region.
lilic and iliescu will sign an accord on friendship,
good-neighborly relations and bilateral cooperation.
[02] COMMENTS BY YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT ON U.N. HUMAN RIGHTS RESOLUTION
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the following is the first part of
the comments of the government of the federal republic of yugoslavia
on the draft resolution on the 'situation of human rights in bosnia
and herzegovina, the republic of croatia and the federal republic of
yugoslavia', adopted by the u.n. human rights commission at the
commission's 52nd session.
the comments were circulated as an official document at le
palais des nations in geneva on april 22, 1996.
'the government of the federal republic of yugoslavia is
addressing the 52nd session of the commission on human rights,
desirous to emphasize its sustained efforts to honour the commission
as the most prestigious united nations body directly involved in the
promotion and protection of human rights.
'the federal republic of yugoslavia has manifested its readiness
to proceed with a most active and open cooperation with all those
sincerely wishing to promote and ensure respect for human rights, as
pointed out in the report of ms. elisabeth rehn. however, we must
again reiterate our stand concerning the inappropriate and biased
draft resolution, primarily in view of the spirit prevailing in it,
discerned in the positions it reflects.
'the government of the federal republic of yugoslavia is
profoundly concerned with the letter and spirit of the proposed draft
resolution on the situation of human rights in bosnia and
herzegovina, croatia and the federal republic of yugoslavia, which is
far from reflecting and/or even taking into account the actual human
rights situation in these territories.
'there is no mention of the positive developments and concrete
results accomplished in inplementing the peace agreement. instead of
being future-oriented, and making a contribution of its own to the
peace efforts (in particular concerning respect and promotion of
human rights), the resolution renders support to the forces which
oppose reconciliation and building of confidence in these
territories, by its resorting to biased, partial and politically
motivated conclusions and allegations, in contravention of the
'spirit of dayton'.
'the government of the fry considers it inadmissible that the
appraisals made by ms. elisabeth rehn in her reports
(a/50/727-s/1995/933 and e/cn.4/1996/63), and heard in the
discussions held in the commission on this issue virtually are not
taken into account. we deem it necessary that the authors of the
resolution give specific explanations, along with the reasoning
behind such attitude. since, indirectly, the above-mentioned approach
calls into question the need for pursuing activities of special
rapporteurs, missions etc., whose task is to provide the commission
with particular information.
'the fact that the resolution practically ignores massive, the
most severe human rights violations committed against the serbs is an
evidence of the extent to which the above approach is totally
inappropriate.
'the most severe violations of human rights against serb civilans
are being committed ever since croatia's aggression on western
slavonia and krajina (in may and august 1995). this fact is not at
all mentioned in the draft, despite the united nations official
reports (secretary general, security council), as well as special
repporteur ms. elisabeth rehn, the unhcr, the icrc and many other
nongovernmental organizations. this time again, croatia is protected
from the justified international public condemnation by shifting the
public attention towards the allegedly 'grave situation' of human
rights in the federal republic of yugoslavia.
'referring to alleged efforts aimed at fovouring the rights of
minorities, democratic freedoms etc. in the federal republic of
yugoslavia, while ignoring mass killings of serb civilians, setting
ablaze of serb houses, expelling 400,000 serbs from croatia, evicting
them from their dwellings throughout croatia, and bestowing with
decorations the croats for the crimes committed on serbs, etc., is
sheer cynicism.
'the resolution's double standards and partiality are also
visible, on the one hand, by its reference to the unestablished
evidence of mass graves in the places where, allegedly, croats and
moslems have been buried (srebrenica, zepa, prijedor, sanski most and
vukovar), and by its deliberate overlooking the mass graves of serb
civilians, discovered in mrkonjic grad (bosnia and herzegovina),
krajina, western slavonia (croatia) and elsewhere, on the other.
(more to follow on tuesday) st/ms
[03] CROATIA MANIPULATES MISSING PERSONS LIST, SAYS BELGRADE DAILY
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - croatia has reduced its list of
persons who went missing in 1993 from 14,700 to 2,800, the belgrade
daily vecernje novosti said on monday.
the list includes those who 'were killed, who had been returned
dead or alive through exchanges, and croatian citizens who fled to
yugoslavia from terrors in croatia. these manipulations are
calculated to hide monstrous crimes against serbs, and the truth
about the suffering of croatians,' said the daily.
after disclosing the list of 14,700 missing persons, croatia
launched a strong propaganda campaign against yugoslavia, accusing it
of keeping croatians as slaves in mines.
the croatian claims were officially repudiated by humanitarian
organizations who visited the sites, which held not a single
prisoner.
the daily said the new, reduced, list comprised croatians killed
in the war, those whose deaths the authorities were concealing from
their families, serbs delivered without trial to the croatian army
and police and persons who went missing in croatian-held territories.
these people went missing after the croatian onslaughts on the
republic of serb krajina in may and august last year, when more than
250,000 serbs were put to flight.
the daily said 324 croatians, inhabitants of vukovar, disappeared
while croatian troops lay seige to the town, until nov. 18. when the
town was taken over by troops of the former yugoslav people's army
(jna), 279 persons went missing, according to information released by
croatia.
vukovar is the biggest town in predominantly serb-populated
eastern slavonia, barania and west srem, the only part of krajina not
occupied by croatia.
croatia persists in demanding from krajina and yugoslavia 80 of
its citizens who went missing - 16 in zagreb, 14 in osijek, 13 in
sisak, others in split, karlovac and other towns that were never part
of krajina or never controlled by the jna.
number 798 refers to one bogdan grujic who was killed in a car
accident and buried in western slavonia, which was never part of the
repubic of serb krajina.
number 2,221 refers to one djura slavojevic who was killed by
croatian troops and his body handed over to the serb authorities in
an earlier exchange.
croatia is also seeking branko and soka blagojevic, who fled
ahead of croatian terror to yugoslavia and who do not want to return
to croatia, and several persons who disappeared after talks with
police in croatian-held towns.
[04] UNHCR WILL MOST LIKELY REVISE PLAN FOR REPATRIATION TO BOSNIA
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - the u.n. high commissioner for refugees
sadako ogata said here on monday that in view of many difficulties,
the unhcr would probably have to revise its plan on the mass
repatriation of refugees and displaced persons to bosnia.
welcoming the partipants of a one-day meeting of the humanitarian
working group for former yugoslavia, ogata said the key obstacle was
that the reconstruction of bosnia had not yet begun.
she said the minimum conditions had not been created for the mass
return of refugees, and added that the problem was the lack of
freedom of movement in the fields, with grave threat from mines,
which the unhcr estimates at four million.
the meeting, held at the seat of the united nations, is attended
by officials from 55 countries and about 20 international
organizations, including a yugoslav delegation headed by minister
without portfolion tomica raicevic.
[05] FOUR YEARS LATER WORLD REMAINS SILENT ABOUT BRUTAL ATTACKS ON FORMER
YUGOSLAV ARMY
by milos jevtovic
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - although four years have passed since
an attack on and massacre of former yugoslav people's army (jna)
soldiers who were peacefully pulling out of tuzla, the world has
neither established the number of victims nor has shown any interest
in that or another attack on jna in sarajevo that had preceded it.
the two attacks on jna, unprecedented in the history of the army
that was a symbol of the former yugoslavia's unity, largely
determined the course of civil war in bosnia-herzegovina that ended
after the reaching of peace accords in dayton, ohio, in november
1995.
figures to date by the (bosnian serb state) republika srpska
army, show that 172 jna soldiers were killed or burned to death in
tuzla, a town in northeastern bosnia, while more than 100 were
wounded and about 140 captured.
six jna soldiers were murdered in dobrovoljacka street in
sarajevo on may 3, 1992, including an army physician and a woman
civilian employed in the army, while about 40 were wounded and about
160 captured.
there is strong documentation on the brutal attack on jna
soldiers leaving their barracks in tuzla that shows that the attack
had been carefully planned. the withdrawal had been agreed on with
selim baslagic, town mayor, and sead avdic, local moslem official.
under a decision by the then belgrade leadership, jna troops were
withdrawing from bosnia-herzegovina that had been internationally
recognised as a single state some four weeks earlier although, as
such, it did not exist a single day.
a large number of states and their heads have admitted later on
that the recognition of bosnia-herzegovina was premature and rash.
the deadline by which jna troops were to leave bosnia, which was
torn apart by civil war among local moslems, croats and serbs that
broke out in early april, was may 19, 1992.
the scenarios for the two attacks were almost identical -- jna
troops had first been guaranteed safe conduct and then, when they
were in no position to defend themselves, were attacked from all
sides.
jna troops withdrawing from sarajevo had been guaranteed safe
conduct by ranking moslem authorities as well as by u.n. protection
force (unprofor) officials whose troops were to protect the front and
the rear of lines of troops.
the attack on soldiers withdrawing from tuzla was still more
brutal. the belgrade daily politika ekspres has recently reported
that moslems separated the wounded from other soldiers and killed
them on the spot, brutally abusing those they had captured.
those who have survived the attack say that moslems killed 17
wounded soldiers with hard objects while pretending to be
transporting them by ambulance to hospital. the following day, they
handed over their mutilated bodies to jna representatives in
pozarevica near tuzla.
the victims, whose bodies were even burned, were buried at the
tuzla cemetery or the town dump.
witnesses say that there were between 400 and 500 troops in about
200 vehicles. they were attacked by about 3,000 moslem 'green berets'
as soon as they left the barracks.
the 'green berets' were the troops that the sarajevo government
set up some six months before bosnia-herzegovina's violent secession
from the former yugoslav federation.
the 'green berets' allowed one third of troops to pass, attacking
the remaining troops in skojevska street. snipers opened fire on
drivers, while the troops that could not defend themselves were the
target of barrage fire.
moreover, jna vehicles were showered by molotov cocktails thrown
from nearby buildings and blocks of flats, while the troops suffered
great losses as fire was opened on them with shoulder grenade
launchers.
the local tv station in tuzla provided live coverage of the
attack, which was mounted about 6 p.m. local time and which ended
about 11 p.m.
according to zoran bogdanovic, who was a traffic warden in tuzla
from january to march 18, 1992, an order for the attack was issued by
muhamed bajric, the then head of the public security department in
the town.
the attack was planned by croat zeljko knez, 48, a former jna
lieutenant-colonel.
moslem faruk prezic, director of the tuzla mining institute,
organised obstruction of routes along which the troops were to pull
out that included laying of wire entanglements and anti-tank mines.
moreover, trenches deep enough to stand in were dug along
skojevska street.
evidence related to the two attacks has been systemitised but no
legal proceedings have been instituted yet.
ejup ganic, vice-president of the moslem-croat federation who was
then as is now bosnian moslem leader alija izetbegovic's deputy, was
involved in the dobrovoljacka street attack.
[06] CHINESE DAILY: BOSNIA WAS A LABORATORY FOR NEW U.S. WEAPONS
peking, may 13 (tanjug) - a chinese paper has accused the u.s. on
monday for testing weapons for mass destruction in last year's
bombardment of bosnian serbs in an attempt to rule the world.
the official daily of the people's liberation army in harsh tones
accused the u.s., which calls for the prevention of weapons for mass
destruction, of having used such weapons profusely in bosnia against
serb civilian targets.
analyzing in detail the u.s. bombardments within nato's military
actions, the daily said the u.s. used the most sophisticated
aircraft, high-precision laser-guided rockets, tomahawk cruise
missiles, radioactive weapons and poison gases in implementing the
carpet bombing of serb regions in bosnia.
in addition to political reasons for achieving peace by employing
force, the u.s. was testing the efficacy of the new weapons in the
actual conditions of the bosnian war.
the u.s. also practiced this in the gulf war and with the air
strikes on libya, said the daily.
'america is the only country that has carried out nuclear and
chemical tests on living people after world war ii,' said the daily.
it said that by using the weapons that had been tested on the
bosnian serbs, the u.s. was striving toward supremacy and domination
over the world.
[07] SADAKO OGATA: YUGOSLAVIA HAS CARRIED THE BIGGEST HUMANITARIAN LOAD
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - the u.n. high commissioner for refugees
sadako ogata said here on monday, on opening a humanitarian working
group meeting for the former yugoslavia, that yugoslavia had carried
the biggest humanitarian load in the previous period.
ogata said she was encouraged with yugoslavia's refugees register
and added it would be of help to both the yugoslav authorities and
the unhcr in estimating and planning relief operations.
there were about 700,000 refugees in yugoslavia, before the
commencement of a new refugee register in cooperation with the unhcr
in mid-april.
[08] BOSNIA'S PARTIES SIGN DECLARATION ON REFUGEES' VISITS TO COUNTRY
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - ministers of the (bosnian serb)
republika srpska, the sarajevo moslem government and the moslem-croat
federation signed here monday a joint declaration, adopting 10 u.n.
high commissioner for refugees (unhcr) principles on visits by
refugees and displaced persons to places where they used to live.
in the presence of u.n. high commissioner for refugees sadako
ogata, the declaration was signed by unhcr special envoy soren
jesen-petersen, by republika srpska minister ljubisa vladusic,
sarajevo moslem government minister nugdin recica and federation
minister ante alic.
after the signing of the declaration, vladusic told tanjug that
the unhcr principles would enable organised and fully controlled
visits.
vladusic said, 'in any case, we expect them (the principles) to
prevent attempts at political manipulation and to create conditions
for full freedom of movement throughout bosnia-herzegovina.'
he said he expected the declaration to enable exercising the
right to immovable property as well as compensation or exchange of
the property.
ogata welcomed the signing of the declaration upon which unhcr
has been insisting for more than ten months.
serbian refugee commissioner bratislava morina, who is attending
a meeting of the working group for humanitarian issues in the former
yugoslavia, also welcomed the signing of the declaration.
morina said it was vital that visits by refugees and displaced
persons be carried out in a more organised manner, that bosnia's
three parties tightly cooperate and that refugees and displaced
persons be not politically manipulated.
[09] EMBARGO COVER FOR SECRET ARMING OF OPPONENTS OF SERBS
sophia, may 13 (tanjug) - the u.n. embargo on the federal
republic of yugoslavia has served as a cover for the secret arming of
the opponents of the serbs in bosnia-herzegovina, sophia daily
kontinent said on monday.
'the u.n. security council's embargo on yugoslavia could decieve
only the innocent,' the bulgarian paper said reacting to the latest
reports from the united states on the secret arming of the muslims.
'while the west european alliance sent observers to spy on
bulgarian barges on the danube like hyenas, rivers of weapons flowed
via the southern turkish corridor,' the paper said.
the daily said that ankara took part in shipping iranian arms to
the bosnian muslims, that guns came from all parts of the muslim
world, but that no-one wanted to see this.
the 'secret door' for sending iranian weapons to the bosnian
muslims was opened in washington, kontinent said and recalled that
several parliamentary committees have recently interrogated president
bill clinton for tacit agreement on the violation of the embargo.
the bulgarian daily said that as part of the election campaign,
the republicans are blaming clinton for allowing iran's presence in
the balkans, but his critics would have done the same.
underscoring the double standards of the international community
and especially the united states, kontinent recalled that the embargo
had caused the bulgarian economy to suffer direct losses exceeding
two million dollars.
bulgaria, which had respected the embargo but had also advocated
its lifting, has not received a single cent of compensation for
losses sustained.
end ms/jpe/mb
[10] GERMANY EXTADITES BOSNIA SERB TO HAGUE TRIBUNAL
bonn, may 13 (tanjug) - germany on monday extradited to the
international war crimes tribunal in the hague bosnian serb goran
lajic, 28, charged with executing the inmates of the keraterum prison
camp in prijedor in northwest bosnia.
the german news agency dpa said that lajic was handed over to the
hague tribunal after being arrested on march 18 near nuremberg.
lajic allegedly agreed to go to hague, although his family and
friends said after his arrest that the german police had made a
mistake and that he had never been on duty in keraterum.
following the extradition of dusan tadic, a serb, whose trail has
moved into its fifth day in the hague, germany has also sent there
muslim zejnel delalic, to be now followed by another serb.
under the german law, only foreigners arrested in german
territory can be handed over to the hague tribunal, while this does
not apply to german citizens.
thus, the recent trial to two german mercenaries, who fought in
bosnia for the croats, were tried for killing their german co-fighter
for material gains.
end mi/mb/mb
[11] YUGOSLAVIA URGES EQUAL TREATMENT OF ALL REFUGEES
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - yugoslavia urges that all refugees be
treated equally, yugoslav minister tomica raicevic, who heads a
delegation at a meeting of the working group for humanitarian issues
in the former yugoslavia, said in geneva on monday.
he said that one of the important segments of the dayton
agreement was the securing of full freedom of movement in
bosnia-herzegovina.
'it is necessary that all former warring sides in
bosnia-herzegovina (serbs, croats and muslims) show maximum tolerance
and good will and avoid any form of provocation, so that the civilian
part of the bosnian agreement could be fully implemented,' raicevic
said.
in that context, yugoslavia sees as important a joint declaration
signed by representatives of the muslim-croat federation and the
(bosnian serb entity) republika srpska before the opening of the
meeting in geneva, he said.
the declaration -- in which the signatories accepted ten
principles of the united nations high commissioner for refugees
(unhcr) concerning refugees' visits to their hometowns in bosnia --
was signed in geneva on monday by ministers of the republika sprska,
the muslim government in sarajevo and the muslim-croat federation.
raicevic said that the unhcr had played a highly important role
during the civil war in the former yugoslavia but that,
unfortunately, the humanitarian crisis was still not over.
stressing yugoslavia's great contribution in reaching and
implementing the bosnian peace agreement, the head of the yugoslav
delegation said that the initiated process of reconstruction was a
necessary precondition for the return of refugees and a decent life
of all citizens of bosnia-herzegovina.
yugoslavia fully agrees with the estimates of the international
community about the importance of holding elections in bosnia by the
end of next september, as planned, he said.
as there are difficulties in organizing the return of of
refugees, conditions should be provided that they may vote wherever
they happen to live at present, raicevic said.
he said that the humanitarian situation and the position of
nearly 700,000 refugees currently living in the federal republic of
yugoslavia was very grave.
the yugoslav economy is unable to provide conditions for their
adequate integration and care in general because of the disastrous
effects of international sanctions, raicevic said.
he said that international humanitarian activities should by no
means be halted and that international development institutions
should actively participate in programmes for the integration of
refugees who wished to stay in yugoslavia.
[12] KONTIC, KLEIN ON ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF EAST SLAVONIA
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - yugoslav prime minister radoje kontic
and u.n. administrator of east slavonia, baranja and west srem
jacques paul klein agreed in belgrade on monday that the region's
economic recovery and development was the key issue.
the serb region of east slavonia, baranja and west srem is
situated between the federal republic of yugoslavia and croatia. a
november 1995 agreement placed the region under one-year u.n.
administration, with the possibility of one-year extension.
the yugoslav information secretariat said klein had told kontic
that international community was ready to invest some funds in the
region and that the transitional administration had proposed five
projects.
klein told kontic that a number of international organizations
were interested in opening offices in the region, which is another
factor in securing the implementation of the basic agreement.
kontic stressed the importance of efficient functioning of
international factors in restoring confidence, security and
cooperation of the region's entire population.
klein informed kontic about activities in the implementation of
the basic agreement in the region and thanked yugoslav authorities
for their cooperation and assistance.
both sides agreed that regional autonomy was specially important.
kontic and klein agreed that the reopening of the belgrade-zagreb
highway and oil pipeline was an important step in the normalization
of the serb-croatian relations.
[13] JOURNALIST FEDERATION CONDEMNS CROATIA'S ACTION AGAINST WEEKLY
zagreb, may 13 (tanjug) - interational federation of journalists
secretary general aidan white has said that the entire european
journalist organization would condemn croatia's action against the
independent daily feral tribune.
white told feral tribune, which is printed in the croatian
adriatic city of split, that croatian authorities' attitude towards
media would be discussed at the ifj annual conference in cyprus this
weekend.
white said that charges against feral tribune editor-in-chief
viktor ivancic and journalist marinko culic for 'slander and insult'
of croatian president franjo tudjman were shocking.
ivancic and culic were charged last week for an item which was
said to have tarnished tudjman's name and reputation. the item
criticized tudjman's idea to have the remains of victims and their
murderers (croatian wwii fascists -- ustashas) burried together on
the site of the notorious wwii jasenovac concentration camp.
white said he did not know of any case in which a president or
prime minister of a western country had interpreted satire as insult
and taken an action against media.
unless croatia stops its actions against media, it can easily
become the first state whose acceptance in the council of europe, at
a time when it appeared it was over, would be reviewed, said the
secretary general of the federation that rallies more than 40,000
journalists from more than one hundred countries.
feral tribune and its editor-in-chief have recently received a
council of europe reward for texts against racism. now that he has
risen against tudjman's idea, the same journalist will be tried,
white said.
the council of europe recognized good-quality journalism in
croatia and conferred its award on feral tribune, white said.
the tudjman regime claims it respects european standards and
probably the fact that the council of europe has awarded feral
tribune, but still continues its campaign of harassing the weekly.
this is unbelievable, he said.
the vienna-based international press institute on thursday called
on tudjman to stop the campaign against independent media.
[14] MILOSEVIC, KLEIN DISCUSS IMPLEMENTATION OF ERDUT AGREEMENT
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug).- serbian president slobodan milosevic
and u.n. administrator for eastern slavonia jacques klein discussed
monday in belgrade the implementation of the erdut agreement.
according to the agreement signed last november by
representatives of croatia and of the serb region of eastern
slavonia, baranja and western srem, this region between federal
republic of yugoslavia and croatia was placed under one-year
international administration which can be extended by another year.
milosevic and klein pointed to the need for creating the
necessary conditions for ensuring safety and freedom of the region's
citizens, and normal living and working conditions and freedom of
movement.
to this effect, it is necessary to achieve successful and
continuous cooperation between the administrator and his team and the
region's leadership and local authorities, as well as mutual trust,
dialogue and efficient realization of all commitments taken by both
sides, it was underlined during the meeting.
positive results were achieved so far in stabilizing the
situation in the region, it was also noted.
the meeting was attended also by yugoslav foreign minister milan
milutinovic and klein's aides.
[15] AGREEMENT ON NEED TO RESOLVE REFUGEE PROBLEM
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - the working group for humanitarian
issues in the territory of the former yugoslavia agreed here on
monday there can be no stability and longterm peace without the mass
repatriation of displaced persons and refugees to bosnia and the
entire territory of the former yugoslavia.
the participants of the meeting agreed that the early return of
displaced persons and refugees to bosnia, without first creating the
necessary conditions, would threaten peace there.
the meeting, which is expected to end late this evening, assesed
that the mass return of displaced persons and refugees will be
neither easy nor quick.
u.n. high commissioner for refugees (unhcr) sadako ogata told the
meeting that the transition process from war to peace will clearly be
very difficult.
the minister for refugees and displaced persons of the bosnian
serb state republika srpska, ljubisa vladusic, informed the meeting
that, according to unofficial reports from the census of refugees and
displaced persons, of the 130,000 families scaterred throughout
republika srpska, only one third said they have the minimum normal
living conditions.
vladusic said that republika srpska currently has 67 centres for
displaced persons and refugees and that many of these facilities are
improvised and provide very bad living conditions.
u.n. high commissioner for human rights jose ayala laso informed
the meeting about his recent visits to croatia, bosnia and yugoslavia
and specially urged the strict respect of the dayton agreement, the
freedom of thought, press, basic human rights, including those of
minorities.
end zn/mb/mb
[16] ELECTIONS TO BE HELD IN MOSTAR AS SCHEDULED
brussels, may 13 (tanjug) - elections in the southern bosnian
town of mostar will be held on may 31, as scheduled by the dayton
peace accords, european union foreign ministers decided in brussels
on monday.
they said that any delay of the date would only harm the peace
process.
the ministers made the decision after hearing reports on the
situation in the town subumitted by international high representative
for bosnia carl bildt and the new mostar adminsitrator ricardo peres
casado.
the two officials gave an unfavourable assessment of events in
mostar where necessary conditions have still not been met for full
reconciliation of the muslim and croat sides.
it was nevertheless concluded that there would be more danger at
the moment in postponing the elections than in holding them in a
tense situation.
the ministers appealed for passions to cool down and urged mostar
muslims to submit their election lists.
eu sources consider the settlement of the mostar problem as a
decisive test for the survival of the muslim-croat federation in
bosnia on which is based the entire policy of the international
community of a unified bosnia comrpising two entities - the
federation and republika srpska (the serb entity).
the muslim-croat federation was formed in march 1994 in
washington at the initiative of the united states, following one-year
fierce armed conflicts between the federal partners, but has never
worked in paractice.
even after the setting up of the federation mostar remained a
city divided to its western, croat and eastern muslim parts.
[17] U.N. HIGH COMMISSIONER, YUGOSLAV DELEGATION DISCUSS REPATRIATION
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - u.n. high commissioner for refugees
sadako ogata and a yugoslav delegation discussed the repatriation of
refugees in geneva on monday.
obstacles to a mass return of refugees and displaced persons and
yugoslavia's plans in the process were discussed at the talks with
the yugoslav delegation to a meeting of the working group for
humanitarian issues in the former yugoslavia, which is headed by
yugoslav minister tomica raicevic.
the two sides also discussed the yugoslav-unhcr cooperation in
the repatriation of refugees and displaced persons.
montenegrin commissioner for refugees djordjije scepanovic
proposed and ogata agreed that ministers of all states that emerged
in the territory of the former yugoslavia and unhcr representatives
hold a meeting in yugoslavia by the end of june.
ogata was interested in possibilities for a mass return of
refugees who fled to yugoslavia and raicevic said he believed that
democratic elections in bosnia-herzegovina might be followed by a
mass return.
under the dayton agreement, the first post-war democratic
elections in bosnia-herzegovina should be held by the end of
september.
[18] ADMINISTRATOR KLEIN: REAL PROGRESS MADE IN NORMALIZING SITUATION
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - head of the united nations
transitional administration in eastern slavonia (untaes) jacques
klein said here on monday that real progress had been made in
implementing the plan for normalizing the situation in the region of
eastern slavonia, baranja and western srem.
after talks with serbian president slobodan milosevic,
administrator klein said that so long as all the interested parties
supported the initiated process, and that was the case at present,
the plan for the region would be implemented.
he mentioned the reopening of the belgrade-zagreb highway, which
passes through the region, as well as the reopening of the oil
pipeline and telephone lines with croatia.
he said the most important thing right now was to carry out
demilitarization.
klein said he expected the demilitarization to start in a few
weeks and that troops from various countries would be deployed in the
region to safeguard the local population.
he said he had proposed to the council of europe to open its
office in the region, which, in his view, should show the locals that
there was an international support behind all activities in the
region.
speaking about the reconstruction of the region, klein said that
the european union had already offered 40 million ecus and the u.s.
government 9.7 million dollars for reconstruction projects.
in keeping with the dayton agreement, representatives of the
local serbs and the croatian government agreed at the end of last
year that the region be placed under u.n. administration for one
year, with the possibility of extending the transitional period for
another year.
[19] WORKERS' POSITION IS NOT RESOLVED ON THE STREET
belgrade, may 13 (tannug) - the president of the serbian
autonomous trade union federation tomislav banovic said monday that
the workers' discontent over their material position cannot be
expressed or resolved on the street.
at a press conference banovic appealed for workers and citizens
'to join ranks and invest maximum efforts to launch production,
increase employment and in this way improve the workers' material
position'.
regarding the workers' strike in nis, in southern serbia, which
has been going on for several days and the strike of the workers of
the engine and tractor industry (imt), which started on monday
banovic said 'lately, whenever the autonomous union reaches an
agreement on launching production in a firm, the independent union
organises a strike, and there are also cases of sabotaging
production.'
he said the independent union's present activities have been
supported by certain international trade union associations which
have demonised serbia before and urged the introduction of sanctions
against it.
banovic said the speakers' platform in front of the imt strikers
was not a place for the governor of the national bank of yugoslavia
dragoslav avramovic to be and that all those who give promises should
show they can keep them.
recalling that workers' discontent with their material and
social position was growing banovic said his organisation had chosen
to fight through the union and create a working setting for
negotiations with state and economic bodies.
[20] WHITE HOUSE ADMITS ARMS FOR MUSLIMS CAME FROM SEVERAL COUNTRIES
washington, may 13 (tanjug).- the white house admitted monday
that washington post was right in stating sunday that arms for
muslims in bosnia-herzegovina were not provided only by iran, but
also by seven other countries, and that this was done with the
knowledge and tacit approval by washington.
washington post wrote that besides iran, arms were shipped to
muslims via croatia also by afghanistan, brunei, pakistan, saudi
arabia, malaysia, hungary and argentina.
turkey should also be added to the list as it had provided
aircraft to carry the weapons.
in investigations so far into the secret armes deliveries to
bosnian muslims, the only finding disclosed in washington was that at
croatian president franjo tudjman's request, president bill clinton
had given his tacit approval in the spring of 1994 to the secret
delivery of arms from iran through turkey and croatia to bosnian
muslims.
in congressional investigation into the affair, the adminisration
last week said this had been done to prevent a military collapse of
the muslim-croat federation.
the white house now admits that arms were shipped to muslims as
far back as in the autumn of 1992, at the time of the bush
administration.
it has also been revealed that both the bush and clinton
administrations had abandoned neutrality regarding the civil war in
bosnia and sided more than openly with the muslims and croats.
it has also become evident that washington had done this and
tolerated arms smuggling while at the same time claiming it was fully
abiding by the international embargo on arms deliveries to the
warring sides in bosnia in line with the u.s. vote to this effect at
the u.n.
[21] PROGRESS IN GRADUAL NORMALIZATION OF YUGOSLAV-CROATIAN RELATIONS
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - important progress has been achieved
in the process of the gradual noralization of relations between the
federal republic of yugoslavia and croatia, deputy foreign ministers
zivorad jovanovic of yugoslavia and ivan simanovic of croatia said in
belgrade on monday.
this is evident in the recent opening of an oil pipeline and the
belgrade-zagreb highway, jovanovic and simanovic said. the deputy
ministers were heading expert teams which in belgrade considered the
realization of the agremeents signed in zagreb on march 11 during a
visit by yugoslav foreign minister milan milutinovic, a yugoslav
foreign ministry statement said.
the sides expressed mutual interest and readiness to promote, by
continuing political dialogue and respective efforts, the resolving
of other outstanding issues which will set the pace of the
realization of the full normalization of relations, the statement
said.
special attention was devoted to the manner of resolving the
controversial issue of the adriatic premontory of prevlaka on the
yugoslav-croatian border. the sides favored talks and the spirit of
establishing good-neighbor relations.
this strategically important premonotory, which is the gateway to
yugoslavia's biggest bay of boka kotorska, is currently a
demilitarized zone where u.n. representatives are deployed.
the yugoslav side on this occasion reiterated it was necessary
and imperative to create conditions for the free and unhindered
return of all refugee and expelled serbs from croatia.
more than 500,000 serbs fled or were expelled from croatia from
1991 until the end of last summer.
it was agreed at the meeting to continue expert talks on the
operative implementation of the reached agreement in the areas of
traffic and communications, the articles of the protocol on
cooperation between commissions for humanitarian issues and missing
persons, and in the area of consulary affairs.
in connection with the recent opening of the belgrade-zagreb
highway, experts of the two countries separately considered questions
of simplifying the regime of border crossings for citizens of the two
countries, in order to secure equal treatment and free passage of
people and goods.
yugoslav foreign minister milan milutinovic received simonovic,
the ministry statement said in closing.
[22] SOLANA, BILDT URGE FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT IN BOSNIA
brussels, may 13 (tanjug) - nato secretary-general javier solana
and carl bildt, the international community's high representative for
the implementation of the civilian aspect of the bosnian peace
accord, asked monday that all border crossings and roads in
bosnia-herzegovina be opened to secure better conditions for free
elections.
solana and bildt discussed in brussels cooperation between the
military and the civilian sectors on the implementation of the dayton
accords for bosnia.
bildt told reporters after the talks that he was happy with the
cooperation with the multinational peace implementation force (ifor)
in bosnia and with the assistance they were providing in the
implementation of the civilan part of the dayton accords.
he said that ifor was providing especially important assistance
in building bridges and roads, as well as in securing more freedom of
movement.
the talks did not touch on the issue of the extradition of war
criminals to the international war crimes tribunal in the hague,
though bildt pointed at the obligations of the signatories deriving
from the dayton accords.
he informed the e.u. council of ministers about the latest
developments in the (bosnian serb) republika srpska, emphasizing that
the new bosnian serb leadership was creating an evidently positive
atmosphere.
[23] YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT REITERATES IT IS INTERESTED IN TALKS WITH IMF, WB
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the yugoslav government on monday
accused yugoslav national bank governor dragoslav avramovic and his
associates of imputing that it allegedly wanted to postpone talks on
the normalization of yugoslavia's relations with international
financial institutions.
in answer to claims by avramovic presented in a report in the
belgrade daily nasa borba last weekend, the yugoslav government said
it had adopted a decision on may 11 that talks with the international
monetary fund (imf) and the world bank (wb) should continue
immediately, the yugoslav secretariat of information said.
the yugoslav government claims there were no conflicts between
itself and the governor or disagreements over the issue of regulating
relations between yugoslavia and the imf and the world bank. this is
evident also in the yugoslav government platform on this issue which
was adopted on march 22, with the participation of the yugoslav
national bank, the statement said.
avramovic, the statement said, had stands identical with those of
the yugoslav government, so that 'it is not clear why the governor
has obviously changed his mind and why he has in the meantime come
into collision with himself.'
rejecting all seven objections to its policy voiced by avramovic,
the yugoslav government assessed that these objections were not an
expression of essential and principled differences between the
government and the governor, 'but a result of certain
misunderstandings and (mis)constructions.'
the yugoslav government underscored it was evident that the only
essential difference between itself and the governor was in the issue
of continuity and succession.
pointing out that this was why it had proposed that political and
legal aspects be separated from economic ones, and that this would be
a good basis for continuing talks with the imf and world bank, the
yugoslav government underscored that continuity and succession were a
constitutional category and the most important issue in the speedier
reintegration of yugoslavia in the international community.
in closing, the yugoslav government pointed out to avramovic that
'a governor with such a reputation as an expert should have known
that, even in so-called highly democratic countries, the government
is in charge of internal and foreign policies, of course, in the
interest of its citizens, and its people.'
[24] KARADZIC: NO CRISIS IN IMPLEMENTATION OF DAYTON ACCORDS ON BOSNIA
pale, may 13 (tanjug) - (bosnian serb) republika srpska president
radova karadzic said late monday there would be no crisis in the
implementation of the dayton peace accords if that agreement was
respected.
the military part of the dayton peace accords has been
implemented in full with the approval of the republika srpska state
and military leadership and that is a basis for peace, karadzic said
in an interview to republika srpska television.
we shall implement the dayton accords, nothing less, karadzic
said, adding that there was a crisis in the interpretation of the
dayton accords.
[25] REAFFIRMATION OF BASIC PRINCIPLES FOR RETURN OF REFUGEES TO BOSNIA
geneva, may 13 (tanjug) - a meeting of the working group for
humanitarian issues in former yugoslavia, held within the council for
the implementation of peace, ended work late monday after reaffirming
the basic principles for the massive return of refugees.
the conclusions of this newly-founded institution, which on feb.
1 this year replaced the international conference on former
yugoslavia, underscored that the due implementation of the dayton
peace accords on bosnia-herzegovina, primarily the annex on the
return of refugees, was the first and most important principle.
the meeting also adopted principles on the voluntariness of
return, freedom of movement, bosnia's reconstruction, free democratic
elections, and on the extension of stay of refugees in third
countries until there are conditions for their return.
the federal republic of yugoslavia, whose delegation to the
meeting was headed by minister tomica raicevic, was praised highly
for taking care of over 650,000 refugees under very difficult
circumstances resulting from the disastrous effects of the u.n.
sanctions.
the participants in the meeting assessed that there were not even
minimal conditions for a more massive return of displaced persons or
refugees to bosnia-herzegovina. they warned that their premature
return under such circumstances might pose a threat to peace.
[26] EUROPEAN UNION MINISTERS DISCUSS IMPROVING RELATIONS WITH YUGOSLAVIA
brussels, may 14 (tanjug) - the european union ministers said on
monday that the eu was ready to continue normalizing relations with
yugoslavia, in keeping with an apr. 9 decision adopted in rome.
the one-day sssion focused mainly on developments in the former
yugoslavia, said a eu statement.
the statement said the eu would examine with international high
representative on bosnia carl bildt improving relations with
yugoslavia.
the conclusions said the eu desired to improve contact with the
leaders of republika srpska who have shown a readiness to implement
the dayton peace process, to which the opening of bildt's office in
banjaluka will provide fresh impetus.
the ministers agreed that the consolidation of the muslim-croat
federation was a key element of the bosnian peace process and
appealed to both sides to overcome difficulties.
the problem-plagued federation was formed in march 1994 at
washington's initiative.
elections in bosnia, scheduled tentatively for late september,
under the terms of the dayton peace agreement, and the return of
refugees, are the biggest trials for the peace process in yugoslavia,
said the ministers.
they said a planned visit of senior eu officials to states
created in the former yugoslavia had been postponed for technical
reasons, due to the coming government changes in italy, which
presides over the eu until july 1.
the visit is, however, expected to take place in the nearest
future, possibly by the end of may or early june.
hastening the visit is a eu conference due in florence on june
13-14 to discuss semi-annual efforts to establish peace in the former
yugoslavia.
[27] YUGOSLAVIA'S FOUR-MONTH FOREIGN DEFICIT 477 MILLION DOLLARS
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - yugoslavia's exports in the first
four months of 1996 amounted to 460 million dollars and imports to
937 million dollars, creating a foreign deficit of 477 million
dollars.
the yugoslav statistics bureau on monday said that italy and
germany stood at the top of the list of yugoslavia's trade partners
with 153 and 136 million dollars' worth of exchanged commodities
respectively.
yugoslavia's imports from the two countries reached 216 million
dollars in the first four months.
exports to russia, worth 51 million dollars, were the biggest.
trade with macedonia was the largest of all with the former
yugoslav republics, followed by that with slovenia and a very small
exchange of commodities with croatia.
trade deficit was 78 million dollars in april, slightly smaller
than in march, when it reached 95 million dollars.
the decrease is mostly due to a reduction in imports, from 225
million dollars in march to 209 million dollars in april.
[28] BOOK PUBLISHED WITH TEXTS ON ESSAY JUSTICE FOR SERBIA
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the yugoslav news agency tanjug in
cooperation with the grigorije bozovic publishing house of pristina
has published a book entitled handke and his critics.
in addition to the essay 'justice for serbia -- a winter trip to
the rivers danube, sava, morava and drina' by renowned austrian
author peter handke, which has prompted extensive media reaction, the
book also contains selected reviews, commentaries and criticisms by
leading european and world papers.
handke's latest interviews in which he openly defends the truth
and justice from media manipulation are printed at the end of the
book and represent some kind of an answer to his fervent critics.
handke is not pro-serb oriented, serbian academician ljubomir
tadic said in the preface and added that this was imputed to him by
'hatred-inspired critics.'
handke's essay appeals to the consience of intellectuals and
journalists, a vast majority of whom became propagators of hatred of
serbs, tadic said.
handke only wanted to make people think in order to reach the
truth and justice and stop media pillory of an entire people, the
preface said.
the texts were selected by zivota ivanovic, editor of tanjug's
publishing department.
[29] MILTARY MISSIONS IN BOSNIA EXCHANGE INFORMATION
banja luka, may 13 (tanjug).- military liason missions of the two
bosnian entities - republika srpska and muslim-croat federation - on
may 11 echanged information on the structure and strengh of their
amred forces, it was disclosed monday.
the meeting was organized in sarajevo by the organization for
security and cooperation in europe, the regional osce mission in
banja luka, largest town in r.s., said in a statement.
the meeting, held in line with the vienna agreement and
confidence-building and cooperation measures, was attended by
delegations of r.s. army, bosnia-herzegovina army and croat defense
council (hvo).
the meeting was convened on the basis of an agreement reached by
the former warring sides following the demobilization of theit forces
on april 18, 1996.
[30] TADIC TRIAL IN THE HAGUE TO POLARIZE LAWYERS AND POLITICIANS
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the trial of bosnian serb dusan
tadic, which started in the hague last week before the international
war crimes tribunal for the former yugoslavia, has taken on a
political dimension over which positions of lawyers and politicans
will polarize in the coming months, predrag simic wrote monday in the
belgrde daily politika ekspres.
the trial, which is the first of its kind after world war two,
has attracted the media causing an upheaval and a division among the
international public and will in many ways set a precedent in the
future development of international law and international relations,
the yugoslav international law expert wrote.
'the beginning of the trial indicates that its main theme will be
determining the responsiblity for the break-up and war in the former
yugoslavia,' simic said.
the indictment, which does not primarily deal with determining
tadic's guilt, suggests that the crisis and the war were the result
of 'fear of greater serbian hegemony'.
the memorandum of the serbian academy of sciences (sanu), which
is used as the main proof of greater serbian pretensions and as an
alibi for breaking up the yugoslav federation, was in the center of
attention already in the first days of the trial.
the defense on its part opened a debate on the former yugoslav
constitution, the right to self-determination and the position of the
serb people in croatia and bosnia-herzegovina before the war,
obviously trying to prove that serbs in these republics had a
legitimate reason to fear for their own safety after the republics
seceded from the former yugoslav federation.
the debate can now be expeted to focus on opposite definitions of
the conflict: the prosecution will prbably try to prove the thesis of
aggression and the defence that it is civil war, simic said.
the international tribunal in the hague will therefore have a
difficult task before it to clearly separate the legal from the
political aspect of the trial and avoid the danger of allowing it to
become a political trial which would lastingly compromise the entire
idea of sanctioning those responsible for war crimes, simic said.
the tribunal judges seem to be aware of this and are trying to
justify the imbalance in the number of indictments of serbs in
relation to other protagonists of the armed conflict (out of 57
indictments 47 are against serbs) by the failure of the serb side to
cooperate with the tribunal.
the capacity of the hague lawyers to resist political pressure
and keep strictly within the framework of legal norms will be a test
not only of their future relations with the serb side but also of the
capacity of international law to regain authority which was seriously
put in question in different stages of the armed conflict in the
former yugoslavia, simic said in conclusion.
[31] BOSNIA PEACE FORCE NOT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF ARRESTED MUSLIMS
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the bosnia peace implementation force
(ifor) on monday declined a bosnian muslim demand to request the
release of seven muslims accused of terrorism by (bosnian serb)
republika srpska authorities.
the agence france presse news agency quoted an ifor officer who
wished to remain anonymous as saying that they had rejected the
demand.
the bosnian serb news agency srna said on monday that vice
president of the bosnian muslim-croat federation ejup ganic had
requested the release of the group in talks with ifor deputy
commander gen. jean heinrich.
gen. heinrich informed ganic that an investigation was launched
to determine the circumstances of their arrest.
according to srna, ifor explained that during the arrest, the
muslim terrorist group was in the bosnian serb territory in violation
of the dayton agreement and that it was under the serb police
jurisdiction.
srna said that the group, which was arrested in the village of
planinci near the eastern bosnian serb town of zvornik on may 10, was
armed with explosive devices, firearms and cold steel.
the group told the zvornik public security centre that they had
killed four serb civilians from the village of milici on may 2,
dragged their bodies into the woods and burried them there.
[32] BELGRADE STRIKERS, SERBIAN GOVERNMENT REACH AGREEMENT
belgrade, may 13 (tanjug) - the serbian government and the
strikers from the imt engine and tractor industry of belgrade agreed
monday that the january salaries would be paid in the next two days.
the strikers left the streets of belgrade after the agreement had
been reached.
imt workers went on strike on monday and rallied in downtown
belgrade, demanding salaries outstanding for the past four months and
operation of the factory, one of the biggest in belgrade.
assistant serbian information minister ljiljana jovanovic said
that the government and the strikers had agreed that the imt would
pay salaries in the next three-four months from capital it earns from
production.
she said that the government would meet again with imt workers on
friday.
jovanovic said that both the government and workers were against
fresh money issue and were urging a thorough investigation of
activities regarding the implementation of an accord on resuming
production in the metal processing industry. the accord was reached
by the government, the chamber of commerce, and the autonomous trade
union in march.
meanwhile, workers of the biggest factories in the metal
processing and electrical industries in serbia's southeastern city of
nis continue a several-day strike, stating similar reasons as their
belgrade fellow-workers.
strikers were out in the streets of nis on monday, though their
representatives had agreed to call off the strike after the city
government had pledged to fulfil most of their demands on sunday.
workers of the biggest trade company in nis -- angropromet --
also went on strike monday.
commenting these strikes, serbian trade and tourism minister
srdjan nikolic told a local radio in nis that workers should not seek
a solution to their problems in the streets, but in the better
competitiveness of their companies.
nikolic said that a market-oriented economy demanded behaviour
different from that which had been valid in earlier forms of economy.
[33] ORTHODOX COUNTRIES' BOOK FAIR OPENS IN PEC, SOUTHERN SERBIA
pec, yugoslavia, may 13 (tanjug) - the 5th international book
fair of publishers from orthodox countries opened monday in pec, in
serbia's southern province of kosovo and metohija.
publishers from five orthodox countries -- russia, ukraine,
romania, the (bosnian serb) republika srpska and yugoslavia -- will
be presenting books at about 30 stands until may 18.
this year's fair is dedicated to the 800th anniversary of the
serb hilandar monastery on mt. athos in greece, the 160th anniversary
since the first library was established in pec, and the 50th
anniversary of the local njegos library.
the best fiction and publicists' works will receive st. sava
awards and the patriarch pajsije award will be given to the best
publisher.
[34] CROATIA'S ADMISSON INTO COUNCIL OF EUROPE UNCERTAIN
belgrade, may 14 (tanjug) - the council of europe is expected on
tuesday or wednesday to reexamine a decision on admitting croatia
into the organization due to some recent undemocratic decisions made
by president franjo tudjman.
the decision on croatia's admisson must be unanimous, news
agencies have quoted sources close to the council's secretary-general
as saying.
concern in strasbourg was caused by tudjman's decision to
dissolve the zagreb municipal assembly which comprised chiefly
opposition representatives and to raise charges against several
independent papers in croatia.
the council's parliamentary assembly approved croatia's admission
into the council on apr. 24.
Copyright © Tanjug, Yugoslavia, 1996
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