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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 3, No. 244, 99-12-17Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 3, No. 244, 17 December 1999CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIA, WORLD BANK CLOSE TO AGREEMENT ON FINAL 1999 TRANCHESenior World Bank official Judy O'Connor told journalists inYerevan on 16 December after talks with government ministers the previous day that the final $25 million tranche of a $65 million World Bank credit could be released within a couple of weeks provided that problems with the fulfillment of the 1999 budget are resolved, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. That tranche is needed to cover the 1999 budget deficit. The delay in releasing it is believed to be due to the failure to meet the fourth-quarter target for revenue collection. LF [02] KARABAKH ARMY COMMANDER FIREDArkadii Ghukasian, presidentof the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, fired Samvel Babayan, commander of the Karabakh Defense Army, on 17 December, RFE/RL's Stepanakert correspondent reported. Two days earlier, a group of senior generals of the Defense Army of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic issued a statement accusing Ghukasian of exacerbating political tensions, and calling on both the president and Babayan to resign, Noyan Tapan and RFE/RL's Stepanakert correspondent reported. Armenian Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian, who traveled to Karabakh on 15 December, pledged support for Ghukasian the following day (see "RFE/RL Caucasus Report," Vol. 2, No. 50, 17 December 1999). An unknown number ofKarabakh parliamentary deputies and the heads of the enclave's administrative districts issued similar statements on 17 December, according to Noyan Tapan. LF [03] MORE CRITICISM EXPRESSED OF AZERBAIJAN'S MUNICIPAL ELECTIONSThe Sumgait branch of the opposition Musavat Party on 16December called for the results of the 12 December municipal elections in the city's constituencies to be annulled because of irregularities in the vote count, Turan reported. The same day, the party's newspaper, "Yeni Musavat," reported that more than 5,000 voters in one constituency in Yasamal Raion have asked President Heidar Aliev and Azerbaijan's Constitutional Court to investigate irregularities during the voting. "Hurriyet" on 16 December reported that a group of residents of Belakan Raion staged a demonstration to protest the abduction by members of the executive branch of the chairman of the local electoral commission. And in Washington, the National Democratic Institute characterized the poll as "quite poor," adding that turnout was lower than the 25 percent minimum required by the election law for the poll to be valid, Turan reported. LF [04] GEORGIA COMPLAINS TO UN OVER RUSSIAN DISINFORMATION...In aletter to the UN Security Council, Georgian Foreign Minister Irakli Menagharishvili expressed the Georgian government's concern over continuing claims in the Russian media that Georgia is abetting the Chechen resistance, Caucasus Press reported on 17 December. Menagharishvili said those allegations are directed at drawing Georgia into the conflict. He again affirmed that as a sovereign country, Georgia will not allow anyone to use its territory to launch aggression against a neighboring state. He added that monitoring by OSCE observers of the Georgian-Chechen border should preclude any further escalation of the situation. LF [05] ...OFFERS TO HOST OSCE CHECHEN TALKSSpeaking at a newsconference in Tbilisi on 16 December, Georgian presidential spokesman Vakhtang Abashidze said Tbilisi is ready to host a meeting between Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov, Russian Minister for Emergency Situations Sergei Shoigu, and OSCE Chairman In Office Knut Vollebaek, Caucasus Press reported. Abashidze explained Georgia's interest in resolving the Chechen conflict in terms of expediting the repatriation of several thousand Chechen refugees. LF [06] KAZAKHSTAN FEARS EXCLUSION FROM BAKU-CEYHAN PROJECTKazakhstan's ambassador to Azerbaijan, Rashid Ibraev, toldjournalists in Baku on 16 December that Azerbaijan's state oil company SOCAR has ignored Kazakhstan's request to be acquainted with the content of framework agreements signed on the sidelines of the OSCE Istanbul summit that deal with the use of the planned Baku-Ceyhan export pipeline for Caspian oil. Kazakhstan signed another document in Istanbul confirming its interest in exporting some crude via that pipeline. The Georgian government has already called for at least one of the framework documents to be amended (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 8 December 1999). LF [07] TWO FORMER KYRGYZ PREMIERS IMPLICATED IN CORRUPTION CASEFollowing a two-day debate, the upper house of the Kyrgyzparliament voted on 16 December to ask the government to begin an investigation into the possible involvement of former Prime Ministers Apas Jumagulov and Kubanychbek Jumaliev in a major embezzlement case, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. The case in question is that of Shalkar Jaisanbaev, former head of the state company Kyrgyzgasmunaizat, who fled Kyrgyzstan in December 1998 after embezzling some 4.8 billion soms (then worth approximately $200 million). Jumagulov served as premier from December 1993 until March 1998 and is currently Kyrgyz ambassador to Germany, while Jumaliev, who was premier from March to December 1998, is governor of Jalal-Abad Oblast. Former Finance Ministers Marat Sultanov and Taalai Koichumanov are also suspected of involvement in the case. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[08] SERBIAN COMMANDER REBUKES MONTENEGROGeneral DragoljubOjdanic, who heads the Yugoslav army general staff and is an indicted war criminal, said in an open letter to Montenegrin Prime Minister Filip Vujanovic on 16 December that the military will do whatever is necessary to defend the country and its territory (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 16 December 1999). He urged Vujanovic to order the Montenegrin police "to return to their normal activities" ahead of a possible joint inspection by the federal and Montenegrin authorities of "the situation in the field" at Podgorica airport, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. In Belgrade, Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Vojislav Seselj accused Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic of trying to provoke a "civil war" through what Seselj called "separatist activities." PM [09] THACI SAYS SERBS HAVE PLACE IN POWER-SHARINGHashim Thaci,who headed the former Kosova Liberation Army and is now a member of the UN's new power-sharing council, said in Sarajevo that Serbs and other minorities have their place in Kosova's new political structure (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 15 December 1999). He urged Serbian leaders to end their boycott of the body. In Belgrade, a spokesman for Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's Socialist Party said that UN's Bernard Kouchner should be replaced because his council constitutes "collaboration with Albanian terrorists." PM [10] KOSOVAR LAWYER RELEASED AFTER RANSOM PAIDUnidentifiedkidnappers freed Kosovar human rights lawyer Teki Bokshi on 16 December after his family paid a ransom (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 6 December 1999). It is unknown how much money changed hands, but the kidnappers had sought $60,000, AP reported. Leading Serbian human rights activist Natasa Kandic said the kidnappers could have been former policemen who are no longer in service. She said the official police had nothing to do with Bokshi's disappearance. Jiri Dienstbier, who is the UN's special rapporteur for human rights in the former Yugoslavia, wants an explanation from the authorities about Bokshi's disappearance. PM [11] KFOR STEPS UP PATROLSBritish peacekeepers in Prishtina"stepped up" patrols in that city on 16 December with the aim of protecting teenagers of either sex from being abducted by prostitution rings. The criminals then take the young people to Germany or Italy. A KFOR spokesman told Reuters that the abductions are currently "the biggest problem we have." The "Frankfurter Rundschau" wrote that "gangsters and mobsters run the province under the UN's nose." PM [12] EU OIL REACHES SERBIAN CITIESFour trucks carrying heatingoil supplied by the EU reached the opposition-run towns of Nis and Pirot on 16 December (See "RFE/RL Newsline," 15 December 1999). An EU spokesman told Reuters that "everything went smoothly." PM [13] HAGUE INVESTIGATORS INTERVIEW SREBRENICA SUSPECTSAn unnamedBosnian Serb government spokesman confirmed in Banja Luka on 16 December that a team of experts from the Hague-based war crimes tribunal is in the Bosnian Serb capital (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 16 December 1999). The spokesman told Reuters that "the tribunal's investigators held talks in Banja Luka with two Bosnian Serb army officers suspected of having been involved in Srebrenica." Serbian forces are believed to have killed at least 6,000 mainly Muslim males from Srebrenica after taking that Bosnian town in 1995. It is believed to be the largest single massacre in Europe since World War II. PM [14] WINTER WEATHER CAUSES HAVOC IN BOSNIAHeavy snowfallscontinue to cover large areas of Bosnia, forcing school and airport closings, blocking roads, and knocking down power lines. The authorities in the mainly Muslim and Croat federation may call a state of emergency later in the day, AP reported from Sarajevo on 17 December. In Herzegovina, heavy rains caused the Neretva River to flood its banks, and several pedestrian foot-bridges near the former Ottoman stone bridge were washed away. Some 400 persons were evacuated to nearby Medjugorje. PM [15] HATS IN THE RING IN CROATIAPrime Minister Zlatko Matesasaid in Rijeka on 16 December that he wants presidential elections to take place on 23 January, "Jutarnji list" reported. Foreign Minister Mate Granic of the governing Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) told "Vecernji list" that he is willing to run for the presidency, (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 15 December 1999). He added that he believes that the intelligence services should be accountable to the parliament and not to the president. Public opinion polls suggest that Granic is the only possible HDZ candidate who could easily defeat any challenger from the opposition. Elsewhere, Jadranko Crnic, who is a former president of the Constitutional Court, said he is willing to stand for the presidency if all six opposition parties agree to back him, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. PM [16] CROATIAN NEWS DISTRIBUTION WORKERS STAGE WARNING STRIKESome2,800 employees of the state-run Tisak company staged a two- hour warning strike on 16 December to demand that the government bail out the debt-ridden firm. Tisak is the country's major distributor of newspapers and magazines. PM [17] ISARESCU OFFICIALLY DESIGNATED ROMANIA'S PREMIER...In atelevised speech on 16 December, President Emil Constantinescu announced he has officially designated National Bank governor Mugur Isarescu as Romania's next premier. Constantinescu said he is doing so "in response to the wish of many citizens" and because Romania needs "a good negotiator" and an economic expert to achieve EU accession. That task, he said, would be best undertaken by a premier who has no party affiliation, particularly in electoral year 2000. He said Isarescu will present his team to parliamentary commissions beginning on 20 December and expressed the hope that parliament will vote confidence in it later next week. MS [18] ... AND NEW CABINET TO BE RESTRUCTUREDConstantinescu saidthe government will have an Economic Council to coordinate the activities all economic ministries and a new Ministry of Public Administration will be set up to coordinate legislation in this sphere and "overcome bureaucracy." Constantinescu also announced the Department for European Integration will be abolished and its functions transferred to the Foreign Ministry to ensure that Romania "speaks in one voice." MS [19] CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS OVER IN ROMANIA?The parliamentarygroups of the National Peasant Party Christian Democratic (PNTCD) on 16 December decided to "partly lift" the punishment handed down two days earlier on outgoing Premier Radu Vasile. While it was not explained what is meant by "partly," National Peasant Party Christian Democratic Chairman Ion Diaconescu said Vasile could resume his party functions "if he so wishes." According to as yet unconfirmed reports, Senate Chairman Petre Roman has mediated an agreement whereby Vasile would return to his position as PNTCD secretary-general in return for resigning as premier, thereby resolving the country's constitutional crisis, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. Vasile opponent and PNTCD Deputy Chairman Nicolae Ionescu-Galbeni indirectly confirmed that deal when he said he has resigned to protest "the triumph of hooligans." MS [20] MOLDOVAN PREMIER-DESIGNATE ON GOVERNMENT LINE-UPDumitruBraghis told journalists on 16 December that in order to prevent the legislature interfering in the process of forming the government and later in the cabinet's activities, he will not appoint parliamentary deputies as ministers. He said the cabinet will consist of "competent people, selected on the basis of professionalism," Infotag reported. He also said he will not change the program of Ion Sturza's outgoing cabinet, in whose drafting he has participated. Bragis said his cabinet will continue to implement reform and pursue integration into European structures. MS [21] BULGARIAN SCHOOLS TO OFFER CLASSES ON ISLAMThe EducationMinistry on 16 December announced that Bulgarian schools will begin offering classes on Islam next year in areas where there is a strong Muslim minority, AFP reported. Since 1997, classes on the Bible have been available to pupils whose parents wish them to have such instruction. MS [C] END NOTE[22] RUSSIA GOES TO THE POLLSBy Donald JensenWhen Russians vote for a new State Duma on 19 December, the fate of various parties and movements will be less important than whether the process can begin to change the rules by which Russian politics is played. During the campaign, there has been little discussion of the serious issues facing the country. Instead, the central drama has been the competition between two elite coalitions of politicians, oligarchs, and regional leaders. One of those coalitions, Unity (Edinstvo), has the backing of the Kremlin. The other, Fatherland-All Russia (OVR), is led by former Prime Minister Yevgenii Primakov and Moscow Mayor Yurii Luzhkov. At stake are vast financial resources, political power, and, ultimately, the Russian presidency when Boris Yeltsin's term expires next year. That elections in Russia are now routine is a healthy sign. Unfortunately, the campaign has witnessed the same unsavory characteristics that marred earlier electoral contests and, indeed, Russian politics as a whole for much of the Yeltsin era. Among those characteristics is the criminalization of the political process. A large number of candidates who allegedly have committed illegal acts or have ties to organized crime are seeking election. Victory will ensure their immunity from prosecution. In addition, the federal law governing election finances requires candidates for the Duma to report their annual income, its sources, and the total value of their possessions. In fact, many wealthy candidates vastly understated their income, without fear of punishment. Even when the government has tried to enforce election laws, it has done so inconsistently, disqualifying some candidates on technicalities while allowing other apparent violators to remain on the ballot. Another characteristic is the weakness of political parties. Most parties sponsoring candidates are little more than clubs clustered around leading politicians, with little large-scale organization. Only the Communist Party, which has several hundred thousand members, most of whom are pensioners, has strong grass-roots support. And then there is the heavy politicization of the media. The print and electronic media have largely reflected the political views of the coalitions who control them. Muck-raking by the Kremlin-controlled Russian Public Television (ORT) network and the pro-OVR station NTV has done little to enlighten the voters, although attacks by ORT anchor Sergei Dorenko on the Moscow mayor have almost single-handedly caused a significant drop in support for Primakov and Luzhkov's movement in recent weeks. Despite all this, there are signs that the election may mark a turning point in Russian politics. More than at any time in the past decade, voters and their leaders support a uniquely Russian path of development. Other than a rejection of the extreme right or left and agreement on the need for a strong leader, however, there is little consensus on what that course might be. Although the Communist Party is by far the largest party and likely to have the biggest representation in the new Duma, it has been unable to expand its core constituency significantly since the last national election. In an effort to court voters, the party has finally accepted some aspects of reform, such as privatization and democratization. However, its leader, Gennadii Zyuganov, has limited appeal and little hope of succeeding Yeltsin. Indeed, the Kremlin has targeted Primakov and Luzhkov, not Zyuganov, as the real threat to Russia's future. The shift in public opinion toward the center has also resulted in declining support for parties advocating Western political and economic models. Boris Nemtsov's Union of Right Forces may not receive the 5 percent of the vote its needs to gain entry to the parliament. Grigorii Yavlinskii's Yabloko--the party voicing the most reservations about the war in Chechnya- -will have trouble making gains. More than ever before, regional governors, without whose support no president can govern effectively, are critical to the outcome of the Duma contests. Governors form the backbone of both the OVR and Edinstvo coalitions and are expected to deliver the vote in their jurisdictions. Finally, the fact that Unity floundered in the polls until Prime Minister Vladimir Putin announced that he will vote for it demonstrates Putin's increasingly independent political base. In the past, Yeltsin has been unwilling to cohabit with politicians he cannot control. For now, at least, he must do so, since popular support for Putin and the war in Chechnya is virtually all that unites the country. The 19 December vote will probably result in an anti-Yeltsin majority of the Communists, the OVR and independent deputies. When the Duma focuses on legislative work, it will likely be at least moderately hostile to the West. Moreover, a broad sense among the anti-Kremlin forces of the need to amend the constitution to reduce the powers of the president is likely to result in that issue being put high on the lower house's agenda. At the same time, the Duma sessions will be dominated by the question of who succeeds Yeltsin. The legislature may try to weaken Putin--who remains vulnerable to Yeltsin's jealousy and the negative impact of setbacks in the Chechnya war--by voting no confidence in the government. The Kremlin may be able to take advantage of the tensions between the Primakov and Luzhkov wings of the OVR; on the other hand, a reconciliation between Yeltsin and Primakov is not out of the question, either. And the appearance of an entirely new contender, such as Interior Minister Vladimir Rushailo, is also possible. Alas, a consensus that Yeltsin should leave the scene and Russia should find its own way does not mean there will be an imminent agreement on a viable approach to slowing the country's decline. Overwhelming support for bringing Chechnya to heel is no substitute for the unifying national idea for which many Russians have yearned since the collapse of Soviet rule. The author is associate director of broadcasting at RFE/RL. 17-12-99 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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