USIA - FYROM Playing Positive Role in Balkans, Official Says, 97-06-16
From: The United States Information Agency (USIA) Home Page at <http://www.usia.gov>
FYROM PLAYING POSITIVE ROLE IN BALKANS, OFFICIAL SAYS
(6/16 background briefing on FYROM president's visit) (700)
By Louise Fenner USIA Staff Writer
Washington -- The United States recognizes the positive role the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) is playing in the troubled Balkan
region, including its improved relations with Greece and its ongoing
dialogue with the Albanian minority, according to a senior State Department
official who briefed reporters June 16 on the upcoming visit of FYROM's
President Kiro Gligorov.
He noted that Gligorov will meet with President Clinton, Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright, Acting Secretary of Defense John White, and congressional
leaders during his working visit to Washington June 17-18.
The United States supports Gligorov's "constructive approach" to the issues
his country faces, the official said during the background briefing. He
added, "We'd like to see continued dialogue with the Albanians -- we don't
tell them how to solve their problems with the Albanians, but we want them
to keep talking -- and we want them to continue to introduce a market
economy and other aspects of democratization."
He called Gligorov a "survivor" both in the political sense and very
literally, noting that the 80-year-old president lost his right eye in a
September 1995 explosion involving a car bomb in which his driver was
killed.
That same month, the official noted, the government of FYROM signed an
interim accord normalizing relations with Greece that was brokered by
former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. "Greek Foreign Minister Pangalos
visited Skopje, and FYROM Minister of Foreign Affairs Handziski visited
Greece last week. There is a high-level dialogue going on." The main issue
still under negotiation, he said, is the fact that Greece does not accept
the use of the name "Macedonia."
He added that Greece "is now the main economic investor in Skopje and is
emerging as the top trading partner." The interim accord, he said, "has
been a very good platform for launching a positive relationship."
Discussing the issue of ethnic tensions, the official said "the government,
and especially President Gligorov, in our view, have taken a very
constructive attitude to the Albanian minority, and they continue to
maintain dialogue, which is very important and which is in contrast with
the situation in Kosovo -- but it's still a very difficult situation."
The official said the United States is "positive" on FYROM's economic
reforms. "We feel they have gone in the right direction. They have a lot of
support from the IMF and World Bank. The IMF has continued to assess their
progress as very favorable."
However, the economy is in a deep recession, "the private sector has grown,
but not very fast, foreign investors have somewhat stayed away because they
see it as being contiguous to a war zone, so it has been a very slow
haul."
FYROM exports to Serbia were hurt by the U.N. embargo on Serbia and "by the
failure of the Serbs to modernize their economy," including the road
network, which makes it difficult for Skopje to get its exports to Croatia
and Slovenia, the official said.
There is an OPIC (Overseas Private Investment Corporation) agreement
"wherein there is an available facility for guarantees of investments. We
don't yet have Ex-Im Bank credit lines.... I don't anticipate progress on
that particular issue (when President Gligorov is here) because it is tied
up with some other technical issues that cannot be solved during this
visit."
Asked about the future of the United Nations Preventive Deployment force
(UNPREDEP), which has been stationed in FYROM since 1993 and
includes some 500 U.S. troops, the official said, "It is very difficult to
predict when the U.N. force will be able to leave.... It depends on the
situation at the time, which is when we make our call." On May 31 the U.N.
Security Council extended the mandate for six months.
He said the United States has "very much favored the continuation of the
U.N. mandate. We have wanted our troops to be there under a U.N. umbrella
rather than on a bilateral basis." If the situation remains the same, he
said, "I would imagine we would support that continuation."
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