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Yugoslav Daily Survey, 97-08-05Yugoslav Daily Survey Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Yugoslavia <http://www.yugoslavia.com>Yugoslav Daily SurveyCONTENTS
[01] SERBIAN VICE*PREMIER RECEIVES AUSTRIAN AMBASSADOR IN BELGRADETanjug, 1997-08-04Serbian Vice*Premier Ratko Markovic received on a farewell visit on Monday Austrian ambassador in Belgrade Michael Weninger. Markovic thanked Weninger for his efforts in promoting relations between Yugoslavia and Austria, wishing him success in his new post. Weninger welcomed the promotion of Yugoslav*Austrian relations, saying he was confident that they would continue to develop and diversify speedily. [02] UN SPOKESMAN ON BOSNIA SITUATIONTanjug, 1997-08-04UN spokesman Liam McDowell said on Monday at a press conference in Lukavica referring to a recent incident in Vogosca, when about 700 Muslims attacked Serb refugees, that the muslim*Croat Federation police had acted rapidly and appropriately. The Muslims attacked the town hall where a few Serb families were discussing with international community representatives and Muslim authorities the prospects of inspecting and reoccupying their homes. Several policemen were injured in the incident, McDowell said. Referring to the trial of the Prijedor hospital director Milan Kovacevic in The Hague, the spokesman said that Kovacevic pleaded not guilty at the War Crimes Tribunal hearing, but that there had been no mention of his health condition. Kovacevic has been released form hospital and the Tribunal has not yet received any complaint regarding his health, the spokesman said. Asked to clarify the status of Milan Marceta who has been in prison in Bihac form months, the spokesman said the UN regretted the fact that the case was taking so long, and added that the War Crimes Tribunal had examined some evidence provided by the Muslim*Croat Federation and requested clarifications on some legal points. Reminded that the Tribunal had already rejected once the evidence provided by the Federation as unfounded and requested Marceta's release, McDowell said that the evidence had from the outset been considered insufficient and that the Tribunal had consequently requested additional data after which it would announce its decision. Additional information has been provided, but the Tribunal has not yet made its decision public, he said without disclosing the legal points in question. SFOR spokemsna John Blakely said that the Force had monitored 57 military movements, seven by Republika Srpska Army, 31 by the Muslim Army and 12 by the Croat Defence council forces. It also inspected last week*end nine arms depots of the Republika Srpska Army, 13 of the Muslim Army and 14 of the Croat forces. [03] KOSOVO OFFICIAL RECEIVES GERMAN AMBASSADOR TO YUGOSLAVIATanjug, 1997-08-04Kosovo District Deputy head Veljko Odalovic on Monday received German Ambassador Wilfried Gruber. Gruber was interested in the 3+3 Group's progress regarding an education agreement and possible return of ethnic Albanian students to schools, the Information Secretariat of Serbia's southern province of Kosovo and Metohija said in a statement. Odalovic said that as far as authorities were concerned, this year as well as in the past, Albanian students could use schools, but that it was very important that those who had persuaded them to boycott schools should accept Serbia's legal curriculums. Much attention was dedicated to an agreement on the return form Germany of alleged asylum*seekers and it was clearly said that all Yugoslav citizens could return freely despite the fact that many of them had posed as political asylum*seekers although they had actually left the country mostly for economic reasons during the crisis and war in the neighbourhood. The question about the joining of social life of those who have already returned to the county was answered to the effect that the sanctions against Yugoslavia, the recent war in the neighbourhood and the economic crisis presented serious problems in the employment of these citizens and that Yugoslavia's speedier return in international financial institutions would largely help revive the economy and crate possibilities for opening new jobs. Both sides agreed that it would be very good for ethnic Albanians if they exercised their civil rights and participated in the coming elections, because in this way they would be able to enjoy their rights through the legal institutions of the parliamentary system, the statement said. [04] GERMAN AMBASSADOR VISITS PRISTINA UNIVERSITYTanjug, 1997-08-04German Ambassador to Yugoslavia Wilfried Gruber on Monday visited the Pristina University in Serbia's southern Province of Kosovo and Methoija and met with University Rector Radivoje Papovic. Gruber and Papovic reviewed the implementation of the 3+3 education agreement. Papovic said that all solutions had to be sought within the law and that this agreement should only be understood as ethnic Albanians' readiness to respect the state education system with a single curriculum and not as a possibility for parallel education on all levels, because this would strengthen separatism in education. Answering Gruber's question about the political status of the region's autonomy, Papovic said that ethnic Albanians already had their autonomy with clearly defined rights and obligations. Practice has shown that any further bringing of minority rights above international norms would inevitably lead to further speratist demands. Yugoslavia, as a civil state, in which the rights of all its citizens are guaranteed, has no reason to create political autonomies, Papovic was quoted as saying. The task of every state, including this one, is to ingrate all citizens, provide them with social and economic possibilities throughout their territory, which is best achieved through a single education system. Otherwise, we would be the only country in the world whose laws would disintegrate both the citizens and the state, the statement quoted Papovic as saying. [05] US, ITALY, AUSTRIA SUSPEND CONTACTS WITH BOSNIAN EMBASSIESTanjug, 1997-08-04The United States, Italy and Austria on Monday suspended contact with Bosnian ambassadors in an effort to pressure the joint leadership of Bosnia*Herzegovina to divide ambassadorial posts in line with provisions of the Dayton Peace Accords. The three countries joined France, Germany, Great Britain and Sweden, which have been the first to accept international community's High Representative for Bosnia*Herzegovina Carlos Westendorps's call to all countries for severing contacts with bosnian Ambassadors until the three*member Presidency of Bosnia*Herzegovina reached and agreement on appointing new diplomatic representatives. Reuters quoted US State Department spokesman James foly as saying in Washington that the suspension of contacts with Bosnian ambassadors would not affect economic aid to Bosnia*Herzegovina. The inerantional community has set a deadline, expiring at midnight on Monday, for the Presidency of Bosnia*Herzegovina to reach an agreement on dividing 33 ambassadorial posts. Diplomatic sources in Sarajevo say that the current ambassadors have been appointed by the former Muslim government of President Alija Izetbegovic. Their appointments have not been confirmed by the three*member Presidency of Bosnia*Herzegovina, set up after the signing of the Dayton Peace Accords. [06] WESTENDORP FAVOURS SUSPENSION OF CONTACTS WITH BOSNIAN EMBASSIESTanjug, 1997-08-04International community's High Representative for Bosnia*Herzegovina Carlos Westendorp on Monday proposed a suspension of contacts with embassies of Bosnia*Herzegovina until an agreement was reached on appointing ambassadors. Spokesman for Westendorp's Office Samuel Haselock told a press conference in Sarajevo that this was part of measures the High Representative had proposed to the Steering Board for the implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords. Haselock said the suspension should be in effect until the three*member Presidency of Bosnia*Herzegovina reached an agreement on dividing ambassadorial posts. The Presidency of Bosnia*Herzegovina, which is in charge of appointing ambassadors, has been trying for several months to establish a diplomatic network abroad, failing to reach a final agreement. All three sides have agreed that Bosnia*Herzegovina should initially have 33 ambassadors' posts, but disagreed over their national structure. Unofficially, the reaching of an agreement of the issue is hampered by Croats urging parity, although Westendorp himself had proposed earlier that a diplomatic network should comprise 13 Muslims, 11 Serbs and 9 Croats. Westendorp also proposed other measures to the Steering Board, because, except for an agreement on embassies, the Presidency and the Council of Ministers of Bosnia*Herzegovina had failed to reach an agreement on draft laws on citizenship, passports and opening of Mostar, Tuzla and Banjaluka airports to civilian flights by August 1, as previously agreed. Haselock said a proposal for punitive measures had been communicated to the Steering Board and that these measures were to be taken if the council of Ministers failed on Monday to coordinate stands on the laws on citizenship and passports. The deadline set by Westendorp expires at midnight. However, judging by statements made during a break of the council of Ministers' session, it is highly unlikely that the deadline will be met. Chances are obviously poor that the stands will be coordinated on Monday, as High Representative's Deputy Gerd Wagner left the session saying in a rief statement that the Council had failed to reach an agreement and that it probably would not do so by the end of the day. [07] THREE PEOPLE INJURED IN TERRORIST ATTACKS IN KOSOVOTanjug, 1997-08-04The Serbian Interior Ministry said in a statement on Monday that three people were injured in two terrorist attacks in Serbia's southern Province of Kosovo and Metohija on August 3 and 4. In the first attack, which took place on the local road Podujevo*Krpimej near the village of Bradas at about 7 p.m. (1700 GMT) on august 3, terrorists ambushed and damaged a Ministry vehicle. At about 9.50 a.m. (0750 GMT) on August 4, terrorists ambushed and opened fire from automatic weapons at Ministry members who were going towards Kosovska Mitrovica in an official vehicle. The attack took place on eh Pec*Kosovska Mitrovica regional road, on the territory of the Srbica municipality. Offices Milomir Todic and Zoran Boskovac of the Srbica Police Station wee seriously injured in the attack and Paljus Sulja of the village of Turicevac, who was also in the vehicle, received light injuries. The Serbian interior Ministry has taken intensive measures aimed at finding the perpetrators of the attacks, the statement said. [08] GERMANY FIRST TO FREEZE CONTACTS WITH BOSNIAN AMBASSADORSTanjug, 1997-08-03German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel announced officially Sunday that diplomatic representatives of Bosnia-Herzegovina in Germany were boycotted as of yesterday, Saturday. Germany is the first country to take such a step. A statement issued by Kinkel's cabinet says that all contacts were officially frozen as of Saturday, in compliance with the request of the High Representative of the international community for Bosnia Carlos Westendorp, who said such measures would be taken if Bosnian authorities did not reach agreement by August 1 on dividing up Bosnia-Herzegovina ambassadorships. Kinkel's statement explains that the freezing of contacts was due to Sarajevo's destructive policy, but avoids stating that Muslim and Croat politicians are to blame for the non compliance with the commitments made last May 30 in Sintra, as Westendorp said Saturday. Kinkel said that 1.2 billion dollars had been earmarked recently in Brussels for Bosnia's recovery, and added that the West's patience was running out as the Sarajevo politicians have not yet reached agreement on the tasks set by the international community. Bonn's strong criticism of the avoidance of responsibility, albeit without directly naming the guilty side, seems to have hit the target, as all current Bosnian ambassadors come from the Muslim-Croat Federation and the entire funds for recovery have been earmaked for the Federation only. [09] KRAJISNIK: SRPSKA WILL COOPERATE WITH WAR CRIMES TRIBUNALTanjug, 1997-08-01The Republika Srpska member of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Presidency Momcilo Krajisnik told Tanjug that the arrests of people according to secret lists and SFOR activities beyond its precisely pre-determined mandate were strongly condemned by the Republika Srpska people and practically hindered the implementation of the Dayton Peace Agreement. Underlining that Srpska leadership and people would not tolerate or endorse war crimes, Krajisnik said that any person guilty of such crimes must be punished accordingly, but that their guilt must be precisely and objectively established. Radovan Karadzic, for instance, is not considered a war criminal by the people, but Republika Srpska will not object to an arrival of War Crimes Tribunal judges to carry out an investigation in Republika Srpska, whose Government and institutions will provide them with the necessary evidence, Krajisnik said. Krajisnik proposed that preliminary investigation be carried out in Republika Srpska, to be followed, if necessary, by a trial under the full supervision of the War Crimes Tribunal and any relevant international community institutions. The Republika Srpska people and authorities could never amnesty anyone who had committed a crime, but strongly oppose the strong doze of politics in the Tribunal's decisions. Srpska's offer provides an opportunity to disprove the widely held view that the Tribunal is not working independently but is acting in line with a specific policy, Krajisnik said. Referring to the situation in Republika Srpska, Krajisnik said the crisis was serious and had been provoked mainly by President Biljana Plavsic. The constitutional crisis is a result of President Plavsic's attempts to appoint a man to her liking as minister of internal affairs. When she did not succeed, she turned not only against the police that she accused of criminal activities, but also against the members of Srpska leadership who did not agree with her moves, Krajisnik said. Krajisnik said he did not wish to deny President Plavsic's merits, but noted that her recent decisions were detrimental to the state and its interests. He added that he was regretfully not sure that a compromise could be reached but that he was nevertheless ready to pursue talks with the President. According to Krajisnik, the crisis and the confrontation over prerogatives cannot be resolved by the Constitutional Court. The only solution would be that President Plavsic return to the policy she had had followed, to the party whose candidate she had been and to the state she represented. Dualism of power will bring nothing good as it would be intolerable to have the President of the Republic advocate one option and the government another, although they belong to the same political party, Krajisnik said. If she continues acting this way, President Plavsic will isolate herself, Krajisnik said and reiterated he was ready to continue the dialogue with her. The policy being followed now by President Plavsic is not her own, she is an unconscious advocate of a policy contrary to the interests of Republika Srpska, created by powers who want to jeopardize or nullify everything that the Serb people had obtained in Dayton, above all a high degree of independence, Krajisnik said. Referring to relations with SFOR, Krajisnik said that they were correct in general and that attempts were being made to overcome the animosity between the Srpska people and SFOR in order to restore the good cooperation with the force that had brought peace to the region. Referring to the joint Bosnia-Herzegovina institutions, Krajisnik said a parity of the entities and a consensus in decision-taking had been established within the institutions, which means that nothing can be done without the approval of Republika Srpska. The Muslim idea of a single Bosnia is gradually failing as expected, as the Muslims are in fact the greatest opponents of a single Bosnia but do not dare to say so, Krajisnik said. The Serbs will not act against Bosnia-Herzegovina, although the people would still prefer a unification with Serbia and Montenegro. However, as this is not a realistic possibility, Republika Srpska will comply with the Dayton Agreement and maintain parallel relations with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Krajisnik said. Commenting the forthcoming visit of the principal architect of the Dayton Agreement, Richard Holbrooke, to the Balkans, Krajisnik said his mission would help accelerate the implementation of the Agreement. [10] SERBIAN CONSTRUCTION MINISTER VISITS KENYATanjug, 1997-08-02Serbian Minister of Construction Branislav Ivkovic, who heads a Yugoslav state and business delegation on a visit to Kenya, met in Nairobi the Assistant UN Secretary-General and Habitat Executive Director Vai Ndau. Ivkovic informed Ndau of Yugoslavia's program for the settlement of refugees and expelled persons, underlining that Yugoslavia had made an inestimable contribution to the establishment of peace in the region of the former Yugoslavia, thus preventing another exodus of refugees, and had accommodated over 650,000 refuges in most difficult conditions, Serbian Radio-Television (RTS) reports. This is why assistance of Habitat experts would be precious in obtaining international community approval and funding for Yugoslavia's refugee settlement program, which would provide a lasting solution for many refugees who wish to remain in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Ivkovic said. Expressing his appreciation of Yugoslavia's endeavors in this regard, Ndau said Habitat would fully support the realization of the program and other similar projects with humane goals. Providing funds for Yugoslavia's program of settling refugees and expelled persons is essential and necessary, and the UN member-states and system must provide aid to Yugoslavia in this great endeavor, Ndau said, and added that Habitat would do its utmost to back Yugoslavia's interests in dealings with the international community. Minister Ivkovic and his delegation met later in the day the Kenyan Foreign Minister Kalonzo Musioka and the Kenyan Finance Minister. Kenyan officials expressed their wish to raise bilateral diplomatic relations to the level of ambassadors and to promote bilateral cooperation in all fields. Both sides noted that all cooperation protocols and documents signed in the past by the two countries should be updated and that new agreements should be signed on trade, transport, preferences, avoidance of double taxation and investment protection. [11] WESTENDORP-BOSNIAN MUSLIM AMBASSADORS FACE LOSING THEIR JOBSTanjug, 1997-08-03The ambassadors of Bosnian Muslims in nearly 30 countries who claim to represent Bosnia-Herzegovina may be out of a job tomorrow. The High Representative of the international community for civilian issues in Bosnia Carlos Westendorp has confirmed that the deadline for appointing Bosnia- Herzegovina ambassadors had been extended until Monday, August 4, after which Bosnian diplomatic representatives will apparently no longer be recognized, Associated Press reports from Sarajevo. Westendorp blamed Bosnian Muslims and Croats for hindering an agreement on the appointment of ambassadors, AP says, noting that Bosnian Serbs have no ambassadors anywhere in the world. At a press conference held at the UN last week following Security Council consultations, Westendorp had threatened Bosnia-Herzegovina authorities with sanctions if they did not comply with the August 1 deadline for dividing up ambassadorships, set by the Contact Group at the recent meeting in Sintra, Portugal. The same deadline was given also for reaching an agreement on citizenship and travel documents. If Muslims and Croats do not cease hindering such agreements, about 30 countries and the UN will break all contacts with the current ambassadors as they do not officially represent Bosnia-Herzegovina, Westendorp said. [12] YUGOSLAV, LONDON CLUB REPRESENTATIVES MEETTanjug, 1997-08-01Yugoslav representatives and a delegation of the international coordination committee of commercial banks, including the Societe General and West Deutsche Landes Bank co-presidents and Chase Bank economic experts, met in Belgrade on July 30-August 1. A Yugoslav Government statement said that progress had been made in economic preconditions determining the capacity of debt payment, which would be used in the coming talks in late August. During the talks, the London Club representatives received additional information about the Yugoslav balance of payments, inflow and outflow of funds and other important financial projections, which completed the economic package which the Yugoslav delegation had presented at the previous meeting in London. In the meantime, experts will continue with further consultations, the statement said. [13] YUGOSLAV VICE PREMIER ON IMPLEMENTATION OF ECONOMIC PROGRAMMETanjug, 1997-08-01Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Nikola Sainovic said on Friday that the Government's economic programme for this year was being implemented with success. "Industrial production is growing, exports in the first seven months of this year went 29 percent up on the same period last year, the living standards improved, prices are stable and the seven-month inflation amounts to 3.3 percent," Sainovic told a news conference. This confirms that this year's economic policy is correct, he said and added that the Yugoslav and republican Governments would continue with intensive activities aimed at preserving the stability of prices and the national currency, the dinar, intensifying foreign trade, ensuring regular and sufficient supply of the market and consistent implementation of economic and political reforms. Sainovic said that economic processes had been slower than expected in the first quarter but that they had significantly improved in the second quarter and that a more marked increase of exports was expected in the third quarter, both because of a normalisation of relations with the international community and of the effects expected from exports to the European Union under the trade preferences regime. Speaking about public consumption, Sainovic said that there was a problem with the dynamics of inflow of funds in the federal budget and that measures would be taken on the federal and republican levels aimed at ensuring a more regular inflow of funds in the federal budget. Speaking about Yugoslavia's international position, Sainovic said that the country had signed about 170 bilateral and multilateral agreements, which showed that the normalisation of Yugoslavia's relations with the world and former Yugoslav republic was improving. Asked about an alleged blockade of the transport of goods on the boundary between Serbia and Montenegro, Sainovic categorically denied the term "blockade" and said that there was just a stricter control of the legality of the tranport of goods throughout the country, aimed at putting an end to the so-called grey economy. "This is just the control of illegal transfer of goods and under no circumstances can it be described as a 'blockade'. Not a single legal transport is jeopardised through this control, which lasts ten minutes at the most," he stressed. [14] MILOSEVIC RECEIVES MORE MESSAGES OF FELICITATIONSTanjug, 1997-07-31Belarus President Alexandar Lukashenko sent on Thursday a message of felicitations to Slobodan Milosevic on his election as President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Similar messages were sent to President Milosevic on Thursday also by Presidents Jorge Sampaio of Portugal and Nuhak Phumsavan of Laos. Over the past few days, Milosevic has received messages of felicitations from a number of world statesmen and eminent politicians. [15] SERBIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES LAWS, PROJECTSTanjug, 1997-07-31Serbian Government held a session on Thursday chaired by Prime Minister Mirko Marjanovic and approved the bills on public information and on courts and judges and referred them to the Serbian Parliament for discussion and adoption. The Government approved a program of realization of the project of construction of the E-80 highway Nis-Pristina-Pec-Montenegro providing an easy route linking the Adriatic coast and the Danube river and the Black Sea. It also approved a program of construction and maintenance of roads in Serbia this year. [16] LONDON CLUB CO-PRESIDENTS VISIT BELGRADETanjug, 1997-07-31London Club co-presidents Marie-Christine Crosnier of the Paris-based Societe Generale Bank and Heidi Lefeber of the Duesseldorf West LB on Thursday visited the Belgrade Banking Group and met with President Borka Vucic and her associates. The talks focused on the resumption of talks with the London Club and promotion of cooperation with French and German banks. The London Club co-presidents voiced optimism regarding the resumption of talks and stressed the Belgrade Banking Group's contribution so far, saying it was efficient and successful. Beogradska Banka was also visited by German Ambassador in Belgrade Wilfried Walter Gruber. Gruber and Vucic discussed the talks with the London Club, the rescheduling of Yugoslav debts and promotion of economic and financial relations with Germany. Gruber was interested in the organisation and functioning of the Belgrade Banking Group, its role in credit transactions with foreign countries and privatisation projects as well as other activities in which the bank participates. [17] YUGOSLAV PRESIDENT FELICITATES ALBANIA'S NEW PRESIDENTTanjug, 1997-07-31Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic sent a message of felicitations on Thursday to Albanian President Rexhep Majdani on his election to the post. Milosevic expressed hope that relations between Yugoslavia and Albania would normalize to the interest of regional development. [18] YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT DEBATES ECONOMIC POLICYTanjug, 1997-07-31The Yugoslav Government held a session on Thursday to review progress in the implementation of the economic policy for 1997. The session was chaired by Prime Minister Radoje Kontic, a Government statement said. The Government noted that the set economic policy objectives are being attained on the whole, especially as regards stabilisation of prices and of the national currency, the dinar, which is at the core of the 1997 economic policy. Other main objectives are also being attained, such as increasing production and export, it was said. Ownership and structural changes in the economy have begun, and the living standards are up, which are also some of the priorities of the Yugoslav Federal Government's economic policy for 1997, it was said. The body noted that there are positive trends in export, which is considerably greater than last year's average, although still below plan. Special difficulties are being encountered in the sphere of public spending, where there is a wide discrepancy between earnings and the necessary budgetary outlays. This is a serious problem which needs to be tackled without delay, it was noted. The Government decided that additional measures and steps should be taken especially in order to accelerate the rise in production and export, as well as to combat "the gray market." The body approved reports on the results of negotiations on bilateral agreements on social security with Croatia, Macedonia, the Czech Republic, Romania and Russia. These agreements should regulate important questions of interest to a large number of people, the body said, specifying that these concern old-age and disability pension benefits and health insurance. The Yugoslav side to the talks urged that the agreements be based on experience to date and on the latest European standards in these fields. The Government further reviewed the results of negotiations with Croatia on agreements that should regulate across-border railway traffic, international road passenger and goods traffic, the setting up of border posts and border-zone traffic. The body also reviewed the outcome of talks with Croatia on the implementation of Article 7 of the Normalisation Accord between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Croatia. Article 7 sets down conditions for the repatriation of refugees and fair compensation for property destroyed in the war, the statement said. [19] SFOR WILL NOT GUARANTEE SAFETY TO REPATRIATES - SPOKESMANTanjug, 1997-07-31Bosnia Stabilisation Force Nordic-Polish Brigade Spokesman Maj. Artur Bilski of Poland said here on Thursday that SFOR would not guarantee safety to Bosnian Muslims who wish to move in the Republika Srpska part of the demarcation zone with the Muslim-Croat Federation. This is the task of local authorities and police, Bilski said in confirmation of a statement by Nordic-Polish Brigade Commander Jakob Karsten Muler. Reporters posed the question of Bosnian Muslims' safety after a Muslim attempt to forcibly enter the Serb villages of Svjetlica and Poljice on Tuesday and Wednesday, when they provoked a fight with Bosnian Serb refugees in the villages. [20] RUSSIAN WEEKLY SAYS MILOSEVIC HAS NO ALTERNATIVE IN YUGOSLAVIATanjug, 1997-07-30The Russian weekly Literaturnaya Gazeta on Wednesday published a lengthy article stressing that the entire world, including the western patrons of the Yugoslav opposition, had seen that as a politician, Slobodan Milosevic had no alternative in Yugoslavia. The parliamentary decision to elect him Yugoslav President confirmed this, the weekly said and added that the credit for this went to Milosevic alone, "his personal qualities of a politician, which is recognised not only by his supporters, but also his unreconcilable opponents." The weekly quoted as an example the rallies organised by the opposition last winter. "However, Milosevic did not waver, though he made significant concessions - he even ceded Belgrade to his opponents - but he was able to keep Serbia's support," Literaturnaya Gazeta said. The weekly said that Milosevic's forecast that the opposition would quarrel had been correct, "They quarreled and reduced to nothing their western patrons' hopes." [21] RUSSIA WILL NOT TAKE PART IN ARRESTS OF SUSPECTS IN BOSNIATanjug, 1997-07-31By arresting war crimes suspects in the former Yugoslavia SFOR has overstepped its mandate, and the Russian brigade of peacekeepers will never take part in such operations, Russian Foreign Ministry said Thursday. High NATO officials have issued a series of statements which are tantamount to a public announcement of planned urgent arrests of suspects with the help of the international peace force, Foreign Minstry Spokesman Gennady Tarassov said. Russia believes that war criminals must be punished as they deserve, but all issues in this regard must be resolved through direct cooperation between Bosnian parties and the International War Crimes Tribunal in line with international agreements, Tarassov said. The recent action of British SFOR troops has increased tension in Republika Srpska and made the task of international representatives more difficult, as Russia had warned would happen, Tarassov said. Any future operations of this kind or threats of such operations would only lead to a deterioration of the situation and bring into question the holding of local elections in Bosnia scheduled for next September, he said. Russia expects all participants in international endeavors aimed at resolving the situation to act in a balanced manner and with caution, without taking any steps that would have negative effects on the peace process in Bosnia, Tarassov underlined. [22] MONTENEGRO MIGHT HOLD PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS IN EARLY 1998Tanjug, 1997-07-31The Government of Montenegro chaired by Premier Milo Djukanovic said on Thursday that Montenegro would hold early parliamentary elections in the first half of 1998. A government statement said that, at a meeting convened by Djukanovic on Thursday, all parliamentary parties in this Yugoslav republic had agreed that parliamentary elections should be held early and that this should be in the first half of 1998. The meeting was attended by Parliament Speaker Svetozar Marovic. [23] MONTENEGRIN PREMIER ON YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT, MONTENEGRIN CADRESTanjug, 1997-07-31Montenegro's Premier said here on Thursday that individual officials and bodies of the Yugoslav federal state and its constituent republics were pursuing a policy of self-isolation of Yugoslavia. Premier Milo Djukanovic was speaking in a meeting with supporters of the faction of that Yugoslav republic's ruling Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) that he is heading. State electronic media, however, quoted Djukanovic as repeating his earlier negative assessments of the work of individual cadres from Montenegro in the Federal Government and the functioning of some federal bodies of power. Djukanovic said that "the chief political job of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia today is to achieve a complete and qualitative reintegration in the international community". He added that his Government was actively pursuing this policy and "reminding the competent authorities in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia daily about it, whether they like it or not." "We shall do so in the future, too, urging and demanding the replacement of all those in responsible jobs in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia who hamper or slow down this process," he said. 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