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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 18, 00-01-26Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 4, No. 18, 26 January 2000CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIAN TERRORIST GROUP MARKS ANNIVERSARYIn a statementissued in Yerevan on 20 January to mark the 25th anniversary of its inception, the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) vowed to continue its fight "to liberate western Armenian territories in Turkey," AFP and Noyan Tapan reported on 22 and 25 January, respectively. The organization, founded by young diaspora Armenians in the Middle East, mounted a terrorist and bombing campaign in the late 1970s and early 1980s with the objective of coercing the Turkish government to officially acknowledge as genocide the deaths of an estimated 1.3 million Armenians in Turkey in the early years of the century, and to cede territory in Eastern Anatolia claimed as Armenian. The 20 January statement conceded that it is "naive" to continue to hope for an acknowledgement by the the present Turkish leadership that the killings constituted genocide. LF [02] AZERBAIJAN PRISON MUTINY TRIAL BEGINSThe trial began on 25January of 23 prisoners and one guard charged with high treason, theft of weapons, and attempted murder in connection with the January 1999 mutiny at the high security Gobustan prison near Baku, Turan reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 8 and 11 January 1999). A group of prisoners overpowered their guards and seized hostages, demanding transportation to leave the country, but were subsequently disarmed when Interior Ministry troops stormed the jail. LF [03] AZERBAIJAN TO RATION ELECTRICITYMuslim Imanov, chairman ofAzerbaijan's state power generating company Azenergo, announced on 25 January that effective immediately, electricity supplies will be cut daily between the hours of 7-9 a.m. and from 7 p.m. to midnight, Turan reported. The cuts will apply nationwide except for Baku, where they will be timed from noon-5 p.m. and from 1-6 a.m. Hospitals, schools, kindergartens, and TV and radio companies will not be affected. The rationing has been made necessary by the failure of up to 70 percent of all customers to pay their electricity bills. The resulting shortage of funds, in turn, had precluded badly needed repairs to transmission lines and transformer stations. Many rural areas of Azerbaijan have already received only sporadic power supplies for months, leading to repeated popular protests. LF [04] AZERBAIJAN, GEORGIA FAIL TO AGREE ON OIL TRANSPORT TARIFFSDuring talks in Ankara on 21-24 January, Azerbaijani andGeorgian representatives failed to resolve their dispute over transit tariffs that Georgia will receive from the export of oil via the planned Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, Caucasus Press reported. Nor did the Azerbaijani side agree to the Georgian demand that it be allowed to keep 2-3 percent of the crude transitting its territory for domestic use. Also on 25 January, Georgian Minister of State Vazha Lortkipanidze told Ukrainian Premier Viktor Yushchenko in Moscow that Georgia will support the proposed export of some Caspian oil via the Odesa-Brody pipeline, ITAR-TASS reported. LF [05] MORE SHOOTINGS IN WESTERN GEORGIATwo Abkhaz police officerswere shot dead on 25 January in the village of Saberio in Abkhazia's Gali Raion, Caucasus Press reported citing Abkhaz Interior Minister Amazbei Kchach. The same day, representatives of the ethnic Georgian Abkhaz government-in- exile told Caucasus Press that three Abkhaz guerrillas had been killed and one wounded in a shootout in the village of Rukhi in Zugdidi Raion, close to the border between Abkhazia and the rest of Georgia. LF [06] TWO MORE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES NOMINATED IN GEORGIATheProgressive Party of Georgia on 26 January nominated as its candidate for the 9 April presidential poll Vazha Zhghenti, who is 62 and unemployed, Caucasus Press reported. Two days earlier, the political union Mdzleveli nominated 42-year old architect Avtandil Djoglidze as its candidate. Mdzleveli polled less than 1 percent of the vote in the 31 October parliamentary election. Both candidates must collect 50,000 signatures in their support by 29 February. LF [07] KAZAKH OPPOSITION POLITICIAN FINEDAn Almaty district courton 25 January found Bigeldy Gabdullin guilty of obstructing a police officer and fined him 5,075 tenges ($36), RFE/RL's Almaty bureau reported. Gabdullin had attempted last month to prevent a police officer from making an unsanctioned video recording of the proceedings of a meeting last month of a session of the Republican People's Party of Kazakhstan Executive Committee, of which Gabdullin is vice chairman (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 January 2000). Gabdullin said he will appeal the verdict in the Supreme Court as it sets a precedent for allowing police to attend meetings of any political party without obtaining prior permission to do so. LF [08] LOCAL NEWSPAPER IN KAZAKHSTAN LINKED TO SEPARATISTSThe citycourt in Ust-Kamennogorsk, the capital of East Kazakhstan Oblast, on 25 January suspended for three months publication of the local independent commercial newspaper "HBC-Press," for having published materials undermining the independence and sovereignty of Kazakhstan, RFE/RL's Almaty bureau reported. On 25 November the paper had published an appeal by Viktor Kazimirchuk, the leader of a group of 22 ethnic Russians arrested several days earlier for having allegedly planned to attack and occupy administrative buildings in Ust- Kamennogorsk and proclaim an independent Russian Altai Republic (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 23 and 24 November 1999). LF [09] AILING KYRGYZ OPPOSITION POLITICIAN BROUGHT TO TRIALParliament deputy and opposition El (Bei Bechara) partychairman Daniyar Usenov was taken from a Bishkek hospital to a district court in the city on 25 January to face charges of assault in a case closed last year and recently reopened, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 21 and 25 January 2000). The court proceedings were interrupted when Usenov's condition deteriorated, and he was taken back to the hospital and is now in intensive care. Under Kyrgyz law, as a parliament deputy and registered candidate for the 20 February parliamentary elections, Usenov theoretically has immunity from arrest and legal proceedings. LF [10] TAJIK INSURRECTION PARTICIPANTS ON TRIALThe trial opened inDushanbe on 25 January of 66 people accused of participating in an abortive armed insurrection led by former Tajik army Colonel Mahmud Khudoiberdiev in Tajikistan's northern Leninabad Oblast in November 1998, ITAR-TASS reported. Over 150 people were arrested for their role in that insurrection, of whom some 50 have already been tried and sentenced on charges of treason, murder, terrorism, and banditry. Two of those accused have been sentenced to death. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[11] SFOR ARRESTS SERBIAN WAR CRIMES SUSPECT...The InternationalCriminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia said in a statement in The Hague on 25 January that French peacekeepers arrested Mitar Vasiljevic and sent him to the Dutch city. NATO troops captured him in the eastern Bosnian town of Visegrad, where he allegedly "participated in the mass murder, torture, and other cruel treatment of the Bosnian Muslim population, including women, children and the elderly" between May 1992 and October 1994. Charges against him include "extermination...of a significant number of Bosnian Muslim civilians...[as well as] inhumane acts and violence to life and person," AP reported. At the time, Vasiljevic belonged to a notorious paramilitary group called the White Eagles. PM [12] ...AND COURT CUTS TADIC'S SENTENCEOn 26 January, the Hague-based tribunal cut the sentence of Bosnian Serb war criminal Dusan Tadic from 25 to 20 years. The presiding judge ruled that "although the criminal conduct underlying the charges of which the appellant now stands convicted was incontestably heinous, his level in the command structure, when compared to that of his superiors, or the very architects of the strategy of ethnic cleansing, was low," AP reported. This is the last step in the long-running court case of the former police chief convicted of the murder of Muslim civilians in 1992. Tadic's trial began in May 1996 and was the first and longest one of an individual for war crimes since the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials at the end of World War II. PM [13] BOSNIAN MUSLIM LEADER CALLS FOR REVISING DAYTONHarisSilajdzic, who is the Muslim co-chair of the joint Bosnian government, unveiled his Memorandum on Changes at a press conference in Sarajevo on 25 January. He called for a revision of the Dayton peace agreement on the grounds that it preserves the results of ethnic cleansing rather than reversing them. Silajdzic wants Bosnia's administration to be based on a system of cantons rather than on the current two entities, "Oslobodjenje" reported (see "RFE/RL South Slavic Report," 13 and 20 January 2000). Bosnian Serbs have demanded that Silajdzic be sacked for opposing Dayton (see "RFE/RL Balkan Report," 25 January 2000). PM [14] KOSOVA'S SERBS TO ENTER UN-BACKED COUNCILS?Kosova Serbleader Momcilo Trajkovic said at Gracanica monastery that his Serbian National Council is getting closer to an agreement with the UN's Bernard Kouchner on Serbian participation in the UN's provisional administrative system. Trajkovic stressed that he is negotiating Serbian participation on the local, regional, and provincial levels as a package, "Danas" reported on 26 January. Observers note that the key provision of any deal between the Serbs and the UN is a wide degree of self-rule for largely or purely Serbian communities. "Danas" reported that the Serbs will police their own "enclaves" and that the Kosova Protection Corps, which is composed largely of ethnic Albanian veterans of the former Kosova Liberation Army, will not be allowed to enter them. The UN still retains its formal opposition to the Serb demand for a "cantonization" of the province on ethnic lines. PM [15] SERBIAN WRITERS' GROUP ELECTS KOSOVA ACTIVIST MEMBERMembersof the independent Serbian Writers' Forum voted on 25 January to elect imprisoned Kosovar poet and rights activist Flora Brovina an honorary member (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 9 November 1999). The group condemned "political trials," of which hers is one, AP reported. Writers and writers' organizations traditionally enjoy immense prestige in the Balkans. PM [16] DJUKANOVIC SAYS NO REFERENDUM YETSpeaking in London on 25January, Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic said that it is too early to hold a referendum on independence from the federal Yugoslav state headed by President Slobodan Milosevic. Djukanovic warned, however, that Montenegrins' "patience is not without limits," the "Financial Times" reported. British Prime Minister Tony Blair stressed the importance of Montenegrin reforms for the democratization of Serbia, "Danas" noted. British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook praised Montenegrin reforms and pledged support for them. But he "pointedly declined" to offer any defense guarantees to the mountainous republic when journalists pressed him to do so, the "Daily Telegraph" added (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 January 2000). PM [17] SERBIAN OPPOSITION SAYS WEST MISSED OPPORTUNITYDemocraticParty leader Zoran Djindjic said in Belgrade on 25 January that he regrets the EU foreign ministers did not agree the previous day to end at least the international flight ban against Serbia. A spokesman for the nationalistic Serbian Renewal Movement of Vuk Draskovic charged that Western governments in practice support the Milosevic regime because they do not lift sanctions that affect primarily ordinary Serbs, "Danas" reported. Opposition leader Vojislav Kostunica added that the EU's failure to override British and Dutch opposition to lifting sanctions showed the Serbs that they "can rely only" on themselves, Reuters reported. PM [18] BALKAN WINTER WRECKS HAVOC IN SERBIA...Winter is rarely apleasant time in the western Balkans, where cold winds and often poor heating facilities can make for chilly times. This year, heavy snowfalls and a flu epidemic have added serious additional problems. In Belgrade, Serbian power company officials called on citizens on 25 January to save electricity and specifically to turn off electric heaters, AP noted. The company introduced two-hour power cuts in the capital and other major towns. Furthermore, ice and snow on Belgrade streets brought traffic to a virtual halt. Milosevic's Socialist Party said in a statement that the opposition-run city government is to blame. The Socialists suggested that, while the opposition leaders are on their "frequent trips abroad, they have completely forgotten that something has to be done in Belgrade." PM [19] ...AND ALBANIA"Half of Albania was plunged into darkness"on 25 January because of heavy snows and failures of the power grid, which is often unreliable even in good weather, dpa reported. Most of Tirana has power cuts of two to three hours per day. Heavy snows have cut off road communications in much of northern Albania. The southern port of Vlora had its first snow in 20 years. PM [20] CROATIAN DEFENSE MINISTER'S AIDE ASKED TO QUITActingpresident Vlatko Pavletic called on General Ljubo Cesic-Rojs to resign his post in the Defense Ministry following his public criticism of opposition presidential candidate Stipe Mesic. The general had suggested that he and some other hardline military officers would not accept Mesic's election as commander in chief. Mesic has been critical of some of the military and of hardliners among the Herzegovinian Croats. Pavletic made his appeal to Cesic-Rojs after discussing the matter with Mesic, "Jutarnji list" reported on 26 January. PM [21] ROMANIAN RAILWAY WORKERS SUSPEND STRIKERomania's railwayworkers suspended their strike on the evening of 25 January, just a few hours after launching it, Rompres reported. The railway worker representatives said they decided to suspend the strike in the face of threats from Transport Minister Traian Basescu that they would face sanctions. Earlier, a Bucharest district court on 25 January declared the current railway strike illegal and requested workers to resume work immediately, Romanian Radio reported. VG [22] ROMANIAN PREMIER URGES PEOPLE TO REFRAIN FROM PROTESTMugurIsarescu said on 25 January in a live television broadcast that Romanians must endure the hardships of the reforms necessary for the country's accession to the EU, Reuters reported. He urged the people to refrain from protests rather than calling on "the government to spend money irresponsibly." He added: "we don't have the right to miss the chance Romania has got by being invited to start accession talks." In other news, the IMF negotiator for Romania, Emanuel Zervoudakis, on 25 January announced he will extend his stay in Bucharest by at least one day, Rompres reported. The current round of talks between the IMF and Romania on a $547 million standby agreement were due to end on 25 January. VG [23] ROMANIAN FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS ALBRIGHTPetre Roman was inWashington, D.C. on 25 January for talks with U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Romanian Radio reported. The two agreed that Romania should speed up its military and economic reforms. In other news, the National Office of the Trade Register on 25 January announced that Romania received $256.2 million in foreign direct investment in 1999, up by almost $28 million over 1998 but still far below investment in the early to mid-1990s, Mediafax reported. Also, Romanian Transport Minister Basescu on 25 January told the parliamentary Economic Committee that $1.2 billion worth of foreign credits which Romania has received have gone unused because of the country's inability to drawup projects required by the loans or live up to the terms imposed by foreign banks, Mediafax reported. VG [24] MOLDOVAN, RUSSIAN LEADERS MEET IN MOSCOW...MoldovanPresident Petru Lucinschi told his acting Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, on 24 January during a meeting on the sidelines of the CIS summit in Moscow, that he is confident the recent changes in the Moldovan government will allow for "a more efficient solution" of the two countries' bilateral problems, particularly in the areas of trade and the economy, Infotag reported. The two also reportedly discussed the withdrawal of Russian troops from the breakaway Transdniester and additional bilateral measures for settling the dispute in the region. They also discussed questions related to Moldova's debt for Russian natural gas. VG [25] ...AS CIS EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT SUBMITS RECOMMENDATIONS ONTRANSDNIESTERthe CIS Executive Secretariat submitted on 25 January its recommendations for settling the Transdniester conflict to the visiting heads of state and government in Moscow. For the first time ever, the Moldovan delegation at the CIS summit included a representative from Tiraspol, the deputy prime minister of the breakaway region, Victor Sinev. Also, a Spanish military delegation arrived in Transdniester to inspect Russian army depots as part of the CFE onventional Forces Treaty in Europe signed last November, BASA-Press reported. VG [26] BULGARIA DECLARES FLU EPIDEMICThe Bulgarian Health Ministryon 25 January declared a nationwide flu epidemic and closed schools across the country, BTA reported. Health officials have reported 329 cases of influenza for every 10,000 people in the country. In other news, the Foreign and Security parliamentary committees on 25 January approved a Bulgarian contingent for the KFOR operation in Kosova, BTA reported. The Bulgarian contingent will consist of 40 troops, and will be part of the Dutch KFOR contingent. VG [C] END NOTE[27] SUBDUING THE PARLIAMENT WITH A REFERENDUMBy Jan MaksymiukRussia resolved its parliamentary crisis in 1993 with tanks. Ukraine, in a similar situation, opted for a referendum. Nonetheless, the parliament fiercely opposes this choice. That's how the pro-presidential Kyiv-based "Segodnya" commented on President Leonid Kuchma's decree to hold a constitutional referendum on 16 April, which may result in the ouster of the current uncooperative legislature. The implication of the comment is obvious: Ukraine is far more moderate than Russia regarding its choice of methods for developing democracy, so there is no ground for apprehensions. However, one almost automatically starts having such apprehensions as soon as one recalls the 1996 constitutional referendum held by Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka. Will Kuchma follow in Lukashenka's footsteps? Taken at face value, the constitutional referendum-- decreed by the president following the collection of some 4 million signatures by citizens--is aimed at creating a legislature with a workable majority. The government needs such a majority very urgently. First, the parliament must pass an austerity budget, which is a necessary condition for the IMF and other Western lenders to resume providing credits to Kyiv. Ukraine is obliged to repay more than $3 billion this year and another $3 billion next year, and faces an immediate default without Western money. Second, Kuchma wants to capitalize on his recent election success by introducing as soon as possible the market-oriented reforms he had long pledged to the West. Again, this can be done only with prompt and reliable legislative support. Ukrainians on 16 April will be asked as many as six questions. Each of those questions, if answered in the affirmative, will entail essential changes in the constitution. The first question will be a vote of no confidence in the current parliament. Ukrainians will also be asked to give the president the right to disband the parliament if it fails to form a majority within a month or adopt a budget in three months; to abolish lawmakers' immunity from criminal prosecution; to reduce the 450-seat parliament to 300 seats; to create a second chamber; and to provide for the possibility to adopt a constitution via a referendum. All Ukrainian commentators tend to agree that Kuchma will win the referendum on all points, including the question about a bicameral parliament, which is an almost completely mystifying idea for the overwhelming majority of Ukrainians. The government-controlled media, those commentators argue, have already ingrained the conviction in the broad masses that the current Supreme Council is a hotbed of unpunished "thieves and bandits." There will be no difficulties for those media--as last year's presidential elections amply testified--to air more messages favorable to Kuchma and detrimental to his parliamentary foes, notably to speaker Oleksandr Tkachenko and the Communist Party parliamentary caucus led by Kuchma's presidential rival, Petro Symonenko. Anticipating the president's move, more than 300 parliamentary deputies voted to introduce a temporary ban on referendums in Ukraine, but Kuchma paid no attention to it. Then 241 deputies from center and right-wing caucuses and groups formed a majority, claiming that they will support the government. This move sparked a full-scale parliamentary crisis and a split of the legislature into two irreconcilable factions. Some 180 leftist deputies remain loyal to Tkachenko, while the 261-strong majority is temporarily coordinated by former President Leonid Kravchuk. Both factions already held parallel sessions, claiming to be legitimate parliaments, and no immediate resolution of the impasse is in sight. Such a situation benefits primarily the president. Kuchma told the 15 January "Zerkalo nedeli" that he is not interested in dissolving the parliament if it proves to be "able to function" [deesposobnyi]. However, some Ukrainian political analysts argue that following the referendum, which is expected to overwhelmingly endorse the vote of no confidence in the Supreme Council, the parliament will be doomed. The president will be carried away by the course of events and will have to dissolve the legislature that is not trusted by the people. What is more, some analysts even say that Ukraine's current constitution may be called into question if the decreed referendum provides a yes answer to the question about approving the country's basic law via a referendum. Thus, Ukraine may likely face early parliamentary elections and a referendum on approving a new constitution following the 16 April plebiscite. Socialist Party leader Oleksandr Moroz called Kuchma's referendum decree a "constitutional coup d'etat." It should be noted that a similar view is shared not only by Kuchma's leftist foes, but also by many politicians far from the left. When the opposition is deprived of free access to the media (as was the situation in Belarus's notorious referendum of 1996), the parliament may be easily made the only scapegoat for the failures of socioeconomic policies in Ukraine under Kuchma and, as a consequence, popularly voted out. Consequently, the balance of power in Ukraine may be irreparably damaged or even eliminated, confirming many pessimists' much-publicized belief that democracy is good for the West, while the East prefers autocracy. Ukraine--after what seemed to be a nine-year period of trudging toward Western democratic values--now appears to be taking a step backward. 26-01-00 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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