Compact version |
|
Thursday, 26 December 2024 | ||
|
RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 80, 00-04-21Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 4, No. 80, 21 April 2000CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] TRIAL OF FUGITIVE ARMENIAN MINISTER ADJOURNEDA Yerevandistrict court on 20 April suspended the ongoing trial of former Interior Minister Vano Siradeghian, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. Siradeghian, who is accused of ordering several contract killings in the mid-1990s, is believed to have fled the country early this month after a court ruled that he be taken into custody for the remaining duration of the trial (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 and 7 April 2000). At the same time, the court separated Siradeghian's case from that of 11 co-defendants charged with plotting or committing murder at his behest. LF [02] AZERBAIJAN'S FOREIGN MINISTRY CONDEMNS PLANNED KARABAKH POLLIn a statement issued in Baku on 20 April, Azerbaijan'sForeign Ministry charged that the planned 18 June parliamentary elections in the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic constitute "a crude violation of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity," and "another attempt on the part of the Armenian separatists to legitimize the occupation of...an inseparable part of Azerbaijan," Interfax reported. The statement said that fair elections in Karabakh can be held only on the basis of proposals put forward by the OSCE Minsk Group, and only after a solution of the conflict and the repatriation to Karabakh of ethnic-Azerbaijani displaced persons. Also on 20 April, NKR parliament chairman Oleg Yesaian rejected as "completely groundless" an 18 April statement by Azerbaijan's Central Electoral Commission arguing that the planned poll violates Azerbaijan's territorial integrity and creates new obstacles to a peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict. LF [03] EU CRITICIZES CONDUCT OF GEORGIAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONTheEU on 20 April expressed "regret" that the 9 April Georgian presidential poll, in which incumbent President Eduard Shevardnadze was re-elected for a second five-year term, "did not take place in accordance with the commitments given by Georgia as a participating state of the OSCE and the Council of Europe," Reuters reported. It specifically deplored "serious irregularities," including ballot stuffing, media bias, and lack of transparency in the vote count. The OSCE observer mission noted similar procedural violations (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 April 2000). The EU nonetheless extended congratulations to Shevardnadze on his re-election and expressed the hope that his tenure in office will contribute to the stability and the furthering of political, economic, and judicial reforms, with a view to establishing a democratic and market-oriented society in Georgia," the statement said. LF [04] GEORGIAN PRESIDENT ANNOUNCES AMNESTY FOR POLITICAL OPPONENTSIn his first address to parliament since his re-election,President Shevardnadze announced on 20 April an amnesty for 279 prisoners, including 69 supporters of former President Zviad Gamsakhurdia and members of the Mkhedrioni paramilitary found guilty of the car bomb attack on Shevardnadze in August 1995. It had been widely rumored during the runup to the presidential poll that he would do so. Shevardnadze also called, as he had done in the summer of 1992, for "national reconciliation," Reuters reported. In a unanimous vote, deputies also adopted a resolution designating Gamsakhurdia's ouster in January 1992 as "the illegal overthrow of [the country's] legitimately elected authorities." LF [05] AMNESTIED PARAMILITARY LEADER TO CLAIM DAMAGESMkhedrionileader Djaba Ioseliani, who played a key role in Gamsakhurdia's ouster, said on 20 April that he will demand $2 million in compensation from the Georgian authorities for his trial and imprisonment, Caucasus Press reported. Ioseliani, who is 72, was arrested in November 1995 while he still theoretically had immunity as a parliament deputy. He was sentenced in 1998 to 11 years' imprisonment for his alleged role in masterminding the 1995 attempt to assassinate Shevardnadze (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 November 1998). His request last year for clemency on the grounds of ill health was rejected (see "RFE./RL Caucasus Report," Vol. 2, No. 24, 17 June 1999). LF [06] GEORGIA, RUSSIA FAIL TO REACH AGREEMENT ON VISASGeorgianand Russian working groups held consultations in Tbilisi on 18-19 April, but failed to reach any concrete agreement on the introduction of visas for citizens of the two countries, Caucasus Press reported. The talks focused on whether Moscow's insistence on visas for Georgian citizens violates the CIS agreement on visa-free travel; on the visa regime for Russian military servicemen stationed in Georgia; and the regime of visas for residents of conflict zones and the legal status of refugees from Georgia in Russia and from Russia in Georgia, according to ITAR-TASS. Georgia considers the introduction of visas "inexpedient," while Moscow is reportedly insisting upon it, according to Interfax. Then Russian Premier Vladimir Putin proposed introducing a visa regime for Georgia and Azerbaijan in November 1999 in order to prevent Chechen fighters entering the Russian Federation from those countries (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 4 November 1999). LF [07] KAZAKHSTAN'S PRESIDENT SAYS MEDIA LACK OBJECTIVITYAddressing a conference on crime held in Astana on 19 April,Nursultan Nazarbaev accused the media in Kazakhstan of depicting the situation in the country as far worse than in really is, and of exacerbating interethnic tensions, Reuters and Interfax reported the following day. Nazarbaev said that freedom of the press is sacrosanct, but warned that the right to freedom of speech "must not be turned into an instrument for settling personal scores, misinforming society, and discrediting the state." He called for an investigation into the ownership and financing of individual media outlets, which, he suggested, could reveal "interesting" connections with unspecified hostile organizations abroad. LF [08] KAZAKHSTAN'S PREMIER REJECTS CORRUPTION ALLEGATIONSAspokesman for Qasymzhomart Toqaev on 20 April rejected allegations of corruption leveled against the premier by parliament deputies, Reuters reported. He denied that Toqaev, who served for five years as foreign minister before being appointed premier last October, has any connections with business circles either in Kazakhstan or abroad. Toqaev's dismissal had been rumored two months ago (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 9 February 2000). LF [09] KYRGYZ OPPOSITION HOLDS UNSANCTIONED DEMONSTRATIONSome 700supporters of opposition Ar-Namys party chairman Feliks Kulov staged a demonstration in Bishkek on 20 April to demand his release, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported. They also called for the annulment of the 12 March parliamentary runoffs in Kara-Buura, where Kulov was defeated, and in Issyk-Kul. Meanwhile opposition representatives have agreed to convene a roundtable discussion under the aegis of the OSCE to discuss internationally accepted norms for the conduct of the presidential elections to be held later this year. The roundtable will take place before 5 May, but the opposition has not yet decided whether to invite President Askar Akaev to attend. Akaev, for his part, told participants in a media conference on 20 April that his administration will hold a round table with the opposition in the next two weeks. The opposition had earlier refused to participate in such a gathering unless it was held under OSCE aegis. LF [10] TAJIK EX-PREMIER CALLS FOR DIALOGUE WITH LEADERSHIPOpposition "One Tajikistan" party leader AbdumalikAbdulladjonov, who is believed to be in exile in Uzbekistan, has addressed an appeal to the heads of the Central Asian Union states on the eve of their Tashkent summit to facilitate a dialogue between the Tajik leadership and exiled opposition figures, "Nezavisimaya gazeta" reported on 20 April. Abdulladjonov said such a dialogue should focus on ways to enable opposition members to return to Tajikistan and participate in building a civil society there. LF [11] UZBEK, KAZAKH PRESIDENTS MEETIslam Karimov and NursultanNazarbaev met in Tashkent on 20 April on the sidelines of the Central Asian summit to discuss bilateral relations and regional security issues, Interfax reported. Government delegations from the two countries met simultaneously to discuss economic cooperation. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[12] BAJUK FALLS SHORT IN SLOVENIAN VOTEAndrej Bajuk, who is thecenter-right candidate to become prime minister, received 44 out of 90 possible votes in the Slovenian parliament on 20 April (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 19 April 2000). Since he fell short of the necessary 46-vote minimum, his supporters said they will select a different candidate for a second round. Should no one gain a majority in that vote, a third round will take place in which only a simple majority of legislators is necessary to select a prime minister. Center- right leaders are confident that they can win in the third round, Reuters reported. A spokesman for the Liberal Party of outgoing Prime Minister Janez Drnovsek said, however, that those legislators who did not vote for Bajuk favor early elections, AP reported. President Milan Kucan also wants an early ballot in order to provide a government with a clear mandate. PM [13] CROATIAN INTELLIGENCE CHIEF QUITSOzren Zunec, who heads oneof Croatia's key intelligence services (HIS), resigned on 20 April after complaining that appointees of President Stipe Mesic are interfering with his work (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 12 April 2000). He stressed that Mesic's people are blocking his attempts to institute necessary reforms in the HIS, "Globus" reported on 14 April. The dispute reflects a deeper conflict between Mesic and Prime Minister Ivica Racan over the powers of the president and the control of the intelligence agencies. Racan believes that the government must control the services. Mesic holds that the president must ensure that the agencies remain independent of the government. Under late President Franjo Tudjman, some elements in the governing Croatian Democratic Community used the intelligence services against their political rivals. PM [14] TUDJMAN AIDE DENIES CHARGES IN 'VECERNJI LIST' AFFAIRIvicPasalic, who was chief domestic affairs adviser to President Tudjman, told "Slobodna Dalmacija" of 21 April that Mesic is trying to subject him to a "public lynching" (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 19 and 20 April 2000). Pasalic denied having ever discussed with Tudjman the sale of "Vecernji list," which is the daily with the largest circulation in Croatia. He stressed that any charges to the contrary are a "fabrication." Referring to an alleged recording of Tudjman and Pasalic discussing the sale of the newspaper--which Mesic said he found in Tudjman's offices--Pasalic said that Tudjman's recordings are private property and that their publication or use by others is illegal. PM [15] HAGUE PREPARING BIGGER THINGS FOR CROATIA?"SlobodnaDalmacija" of 21 April quoted Paul Risley, who is a spokesman for the Hague-based war crimes tribunal, as saying that the ongoing exhumations at Gospic are "only the beginning" of the court's investigations of war crimes committed in Croatia against ethnic Serbs and others (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 18 April 2000). The tribunal will give priority to finding evidence about atrocities that were systematically planned with the involvement of the central authorities, the paper added. Elsewhere, Mesic said that recent protests by war veterans against the Gospic exhumations were much smaller than the organizers had hoped for. He argued that the poor turnout showed that the opponents of war crimes investigations are a spent force and that most Croats want to discover the truth. PM [16] FINAL RESULTS IN BOSNIAN VOTE CONFIRMS NATIONALIST STRENGTHA spokeswoman for the OSCE's election commission said inSarajevo that the outcome of the 8 April local and municipal elections "reflected an increased plurality throughout Bosnia-Herzegovina," Reuters reported. She apparently sought to draw attention to the fact that the multiethnic Social Democrats won in 15 municipalities, up from only one in the previous vote. The Social Democrats did particularly well in Sarajevo, Tuzla, and Gorazde. But elsewhere, the nationalist parties remain firmly in control. Radovan Karadzic's Serbian Democratic Party won in 49 municipalities, while the Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ) took 25. The Muslim Party of Democratic Action won in 23 by itself and in 11 more in coalition with the more moderate Party for Bosnia- Herzegovina. PM [17] HDZ PURGE IN BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINAIn Mostar on 20 April, HDZparty chairman Marko Tokic announced the sackings of several local HDZ officials in areas such as Siroki Brijeg and Mostar, where many voters stayed away from the polls on 8 April. Tokic suggested that several thousand people who had voted for the HDZ in previous elections did not vote this time in order to show displeasure with officials "who misused their positions," Hina reported. He said that many unnamed officials at higher levels will also lose their posts soon. Since the routing of the HDZ in the Croatian elections earlier this year and the party's subsequent split, the Herzegovinian HDZ has begun to prepare for a future without the active support from Zagreb that it enjoyed in the past. PM [18] SERBIAN REGIME CONTINUES TO HARASS OPPONENTSA Belgradecourt on 20 April conducted a hearing in the libel suit brought by Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Milovan Bojic against Alliance for Change leader Milan Protic, "Danas" reported. Elsewhere, officials of the mass-circulation private daily "Blic" said that they will help the private Beta news agency pay its fine in a gesture of solidarity (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 19 April 2000). Finally, former General Momcilo Perisic, who heads the small Movement for Democratic Serbia, called for mass meetings in towns and cities across Serbia that would constitute a "referendum" on behalf of early elections and against the regime. PM [19] DEMONSTRATIONS FOR KOSOVA ACTIVIST BROVINAProtests tookplace in Prishtina and Belgrade on 20 April to demand freedom for imprisoned Kosovar poet and rights activist Flora Brovina, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 9 November 1999). PM [20] SERBIAN PRESIDENT LEAVES HOSPITALMilan Milutinovic left aBelgrade hospital on 21 April, Tanjug reported. Independent media recently noted that he had a triple-bypass operation on 10 April and was originally scheduled to leave the hospital some time ago. The Hague-based war crimes tribunal indicted him in May 1999 along with Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and three other top Belgrade leaders in conjunction with atrocities committed in Kosova. Persistent but unconfirmed reports have suggested that he has meanwhile had a falling-out with Milosevic and has spent at least some time under house arrest. The regime media have denied such reports. PM [21] AN OLIVE BRANCH FROM DJUKANOVIC TO BELGRADE?MontenegrinPresident Milo Djukanovic said in Podgorica on 20 April that he has not been to Belgrade since early 1999 because the authorities there showed no serious interest in discussing the future of the federation. He stressed, however, that he would be willing to go to Belgrade if there were a political reason to do so. He is fully aware of "all the dangers that such a move would involve," RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. PM [22] MONTENEGRIN LEGISLATURE APPROVES PRIVATIZATION PLANSTheparliament in Podgorica voted on 20 April to proceed with the voucher privatization of some 242 firms in the course of 2000. Among those companies affected are Telekom, Elektroprivreda, Montenegrin Railways, and the Port of Bar. The legislature is still debating a separate proposal to set up a committee to oversee the privatization process (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 20 April 2000). PM [23] ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES MILITARY STRATEGYThe cabineton 20 April decided to raise military spending from $710 million in 2000 to $1.19 billion by 2006 as part of Romania's NATO accession quest, Reuters reported. The decision is part of the military strategy endorsed at the meeting. The strategy provides for reductions of armed forces personnel from 180,000 at present to 112,000 troops and 28,000 civilian employees by 2000. It still has to be approved by the parliament before becoming law. MS [24] ROMANIAN INTELLIGENCE SERVICE DENIES PACEPA 'RE-ACTIVATED'Horia Vasioiu, chief of Romanian Foreign Intelligence Service(SIE) told the parliamentary commission overseeing the activities of the service on 20 April that a general recently re-integrated in the service by presidential decree is not Ion Mihai Pacepa (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 20 April 2000). Vasioiu told the commission that general Pacepa, now 72, cannot be re-integrated, since the law mandates a maximum age of 64 for those in service. He also said opposition leader Adrian Nastase had "unfortunately done a great disservice to SIE" by spreading "press speculations." The commission, however, decided to summon SIE chief Catalin Harnagea for further clarifications. Opposition members on the commission said Vasioiu had been unable to confirm that Pacepa is not working for SIE "as a civilian," Mediafax reported. MS [25] ROMANIAN INDUSTRIAL MAMMOTH TO BE PRIVATIZEDPrime MinisterMugur Isarescu on 20 April told a meeting of the cabinet that the huge communist-era steel maker SIDEX is in a "very difficult financial situation" due to both its debt and "management errors" and that the government must "make a political decision" that would make possible the privatization of the giant as early as possible, RFE/RL's Bucharest bureau reported. State Property Fund chief Radu Sarbu told the cabinet that SIDEX, which now employs some 28,000 workers, owed some $1 billion at the end of 1999. He said that two foreign companies have expressed an interest in SIDEX's privatization and that the "optimist" outlook is for the company to be privatized by September 2000, while the "pessimist" one is to conclude the deal by spring 2001. MS [26] UN REPORT SAYS ROMANIAN POLLUTION DUE TO FAULTY DESIGN,WEATHER CONDITIONSA UN Environment Program report says the January spill of cyanide from the Aurul gold mine in Romania that polluted the Tisa and Danube rivers was due to "a combination of inherent design deficiencies in the industrial process involved, inadequate operating conditions, and bad weather," Reuters reported on 20 April. The report also warned of possible "chronic health impacts" from the spill, in view of the fact that it occurred in an area "already contaminated with heavy metals due to a long history of mining and metal processing." It said that the region's "large number of poorly maintained and operated plants and flotation ponds containing dangerous substances--many of which continue to leak--are the source of a chronic pollution problem." MS [27] MOLDOVAN STUDENTS 'SUSPEND' STRIKE, DEMONSTRATIONSStudentsin Chisinau on 20 April decided to "suspend" their protest demonstrations and strike while delegating a few representatives to continue negotiations with the authorities. They said the demonstrations will resume on 24 April if their demands are not met by then, RFE/RL's Chisinau bureau reported. Among those demands are the nullification of fines imposed on students detained during the demonstrations, the abrogation of an April 1999 government decision to reduce the number of scholarships, and a 50 percent cut in fees paid by students for interurban public transportation. Meanwhile, the authorities announced that 149 persons were detained during the violent three days of demonstrations. All of those arrested were released except for two who have previous criminal records. MS [28] WORLD BANK FOLLOWS IMF ON MOLDOVAThe World Bank on 20 April"suspended" delivery of a second $20 million tranche from a structural adjustment loan, Infotag reported. The bank's Chisinau representative, Carlos Elbirt, said Moldova has failed to meet some of the conditions linked to the loan, above all the privatization of its wine and tobacco industries. Also on 20 April, the international rating agency Moody's downgraded Moldova's foreign currency country ceiling for bonds and the rating for a $75 million Eurobond due to mature in 2002, from B2 to B3. MS [29] BULGARIAN PREMIER ADMITS 'MISTAKES' IN STRUGGLE AGAINSTCORRUPTIONPrime Minister Ivan Kostov, speaking on national television on 20 April amid the growing scandal on corruption among his party and government officials (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 20 April 2000), said "I know that I have made mistakes, but I also know that you [i.e. the people] will forgive me." Kostov said he does not intend to "drop my responsibilities as prime minister" and resign, AP reported. He denied that his Union of Democratic Forces is about to split and cause a governmental crisis, but spoke of "evident errors" having been made in local and central administration and of "insolence in our ranks." A poll recently conducted by Gallup International shows that 52 percent of Bulgarians do not trust the government--more than double the 25 percent figure of May 1997. MS [C] END NOTE[30] Former Slovak Premier Arrested, ReleasedBy Jolyon NaegeleFormer Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar had resisted efforts by Slovak authorities to question him for months, repeatedly refusing to accept a subpoena. On 20 April, members of a masked special police unit used explosives to gain entry to Meciar's villa in the western Slovak spa town of Trencianske Teplice. Meciar, who was expecting the arrest, had invited Slovak TV reporters to record the event from inside the villa. "The police, to violate my freedom, have to find some way of getting in here. It is for them to decide what means to use. As for me, I don't expect I'll attack the police, but if they try to take me away, I'll resist." In the end, Meciar surrendered without a struggle and was taken in a convoy of 10 vehicles to Bratislava for questioning. The chief investigator, Interior Ministry General Jaroslav Ivor, says Meciar has been charged with abuse of power and fraud for having made illegal payments to members of his cabinet despite repeated warnings by Slovakia's Supreme auditing office. Meciar had not left his villa, a former trade union hotel, since March 26, when police tried but failed to serve him a summons after a television debate with Prime Minister Mikulas Dzurinda in Bratislava. That summons was to answer questions in connection with the 1995 abduction to Austria of the son of then-President Michal Kovac. Ivor says Meciar is also suspected of having committed "sabotage" in connection with a secret annual report in 1995 of the Slovak Intelligence Service, or SIS. For his part, Dzurinda says police did not consult with him before picking up Meciar. He says the law must be applied equally to all regardless of position or party affiliation. Meciar's populist party, the Movement for a Democratic Slovakia, or HZDS, has issued a statement saying Meciar's detention is an unprecedented, illegal act that "confirms [that] the Slovak Republic has become a police state with elements of state terror." The deputy chairman of the Party of the Democratic Left, Peter Weiss, rejects the HZDS reaction as "inappropriate." In recent days, Meciar has said that if he were detained he would not answer investigators' questions. He has insisted the investigation into the Kovac abduction is illegal and unconstitutional. Meciar, while serving as interim head of state, amnestied those who were allegedly involved in the abduction. Dzurinda subsequently repealed those amnesties, a move that Meciar rejected. The Slovak Constitutional Court has also ruled that repealing amnesties is unconstitutional. Nevertheless, Slovak authorities have continued to investigate Meciar and his former secret police chief. Meciar remains simultaneously the most popular and the most unpopular politician in Slovakia. Slovaks either love him or hate him. His populist opposition party HZDS continues to lead in the opinion polls. Since losing parliamentary elections in September 1998 and presidential elections last year, Meciar has largely remained out of the public eye. However, in recent weeks, he has launched a petition campaign to force early elections, a move that does not guarantee him a fourth return to office but does put him back in the public eye. So does getting detained in one's own home. 21-04-00 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
|