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RFE/RL Newsline, Vol. 4, No. 84, 00-04-28Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty: Newsline Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty <http://www.rferl.org>RFE/RL NEWSLINEVol. 4, No. 84, 28 April 2000CONTENTS[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA
[B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
[C] END NOTE
[A] TRANSCAUCASUS AND CENTRAL ASIA[01] ARMENIAN PRESIDENT MEETS WITH PARLIAMENT FACTIONSRobertKocharian met on 27 April with members of the Kayunutiun parliament faction to discuss the deteriorating political situation, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau. Kayunutiun is closely aligned with the majority Miasnutiun bloc that on 25 April had considered demanding Kocharian's impeachment. Kocharian expressed his concern at the parliament's 25 April vote to halt the tender for privatization of four energy-distribution networks. Also on 27 April, Hrant Voskanian, who heads the Communist Party of Armenia (CPA) parliamentary faction, told Noyan Tapan that Kocharian had met the previous day with CPA members to discuss their proposed amendments to the constitution, which he rejects, and the possibility of holding a nationwide referendum on Armenia's accession to the Union of Belarus and Russia (see "RFE/RL Caucasus Report," Vol. 3, No. 16, 21 April 2000). LF[02] ARMENIAN OPPOSITION LEADER PROPOSES NEW GOVERNMENTSpeakingat a press conference in Yerevan on 27 April, National Democratic Union chairman Vazgen Manukian warned that a definitive victory by either side in the ongoing power struggle between the president and the parliament majority aligned with Prime Minister Aram Sargsian would only compound the difficulties Armenia currently faces, Noyan Tapan reported. Manukian advocated creating a new government with broader powers that would enjoy the trust of both those players. Then, Manukian said, a new constitution should be adopted as a prelude to the holding of pre-term parliamentary and presidential elections, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. He further warned that uncertainty whether Armenia's primary foreign policy orientation should be pro-Western or focused on eventual accession to the Union of Belarus and Russia aggravates internal political tensions. LF [03] RUSSIAN TROOPS TO RELOCATE FROM GEORGIA TO ARMENIA?ArmenianDefense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian, who traveled to Moscow on 27 April with Prime Minister Sargsian, will discuss with his Russian counterpart, Igor Sergeev, the logistics of relocating to Armenia the Russian forces to be withdrawn from Russia's four military bases in Georgia, Caucasus Press reported on 27 April quoting an unnamed Russian Defense Ministry official. On 26 April, "Kommersant-Daily" published what it claims is the full text of a secret protocol signed after the Russian-Georgian talks in Moscow on 20-21 April at which agreement was reached on the Russian withdrawal from Georgia (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 April 2000). LF [04] IMPRISONED KARABAKH JOURNALIST RELEASEDVahram Aghajanian, ajournalist with the opposition newspaper "Tasnerord nahang," was released on 27 April and his sentence suspended for two years, RFE/RL's Stepanakert correspondent reported. Aghajanian was sentenced on 12 April to one year of jail on charges of slandering the prime minister of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Anushavan Danielian, in an article he published last November (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 14 April 2000). LF [05] BAKU MAYOR BANS AZERBAIJANI OPPOSITION DEMOA spokesman forthe Baku Municipal Council told Turan on 27 April that the rally which opposition parties plan to hold on 29 April on the city's Fizuli Square is "inexpedient." The 10 opposition parties aligned in the Democratic Congress decided on 26 April to hold the demonstration at that location after refusing an offer by the Baku city authorities to convene at a motorcycle racetrack on the city's outskirts. The protesters will demand amendments to the election law to ensure that the parliamentary poll scheduled for November 2000 is truly free and democratic. LF [06] NATO OFFICIAL SAYS GEORGIA MAY EVENTUALLY JOIN ALLIANCEItalian Admiral Guido Venturoni, who is chairman of NATO'sMilitary Committee, said after talks in Tbilisi on 27 April with President Eduard Shevardnadze that Georgia has good prospects of eventually joining the alliance, according to AP. But he implicitly called into question Shevardnadze's prognosis that Georgia "will knock on NATO's door" in 2005, noting that Georgia's accession will be a "long, drawn out" and "step-by-step" process. On 26 April, Venturoni discussed with Georgian Defense Minister David Tevzadze Georgia's ongoing participation in NATO's Partnership for Peace program. U.S., Georgian, Azerbaijani, and possibly also Armenian forces will participate in maneuvers to be held in Georgia later this year within the framework of that program, ITAR-TASS quoted Tevzadze as saying. LF [07] GEORGIA, RUSSIA AGREE TO RESCHEDULE GAS DEBTSDuring talksin Moscow on 27 April, Georgian Deputy Minister of State Vano Chkhartishvili and Fuel and Energy Minister David Mirtskhulava agreed that by 5 May Tbilisi will pay the Gazprom subsidiary ITERA part of its outstanding $70 million debt for gas supplies, Interfax and Caucasus Press reported. Tbilisi will also draw up a schedule for meeting remaining repayments. ITERA cut deliveries to Georgia by half on 15 April. ITERA agreed to resume gas supplies to Tbilisi in May, but supplies to other areas of Georgia will be resumed only after consumers repay their debts. The two sides also agreed to establish a joint working group to discuss ITERA's participation in the privatization of Georgia's gas distribution network. LF [08] KAZAKHSTAN SUMMIT PARTICIPANTS DISCUSS TRANSPORTATIONPROJECTSGeorgian President Eduard Shevardnadze told the Eurasia-2000 summit in Almaty on 27 April that the TRACECA transportation network should be expanded to include a north- south transportation link running through Russian territory, Caucasus Press reported. A Russian scholar had recently called for making the route though the Caucasus the hub of any new Eurasian transport system (see "RFE/RL Caucasus Report," Vol. 3, No. 10, 10 March 2000). Russian Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko, for his part, said that a single Eurasian transport system should include an east-west route from China across the Russian Federation, Belarus, and Poland to Germany, according to Interfax. Khristenko also pushed for a single investment system within the CIS in order to strengthen stability and economic development. LF [09] IRAN WARNS AGAINST CONFRONTATION IN CASPIAN...Addressing theEurasia-2000 forum in Almaty on 27 April, Iranian Vice President Hasan Habibi warned that competition for influence in the Caspian region, in particular by the U.S., could compound instability in the area, Reuters and AFP reported. Habibi said conflicts in the Caucasus and the war in Afghanistan pose a threat to regional security. He also called for a speedy decision on defining the legal status of the Caspian Sea, but stressed that that decision must be taken by the five Caspian littoral states. He said Iran does not support the agreement reached in 1998 between Russia and Kazakhstan delimiting their respective sectors of the northern Caspian. But Russian Deputy Prime Minister Khristenko told journalists after talks with Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev on the sidelines of the summit that Moscow welcomes Kazakhstan's offer to revise that delimitation agreement, according to Interfax. LF [10] ...BIDS FOR OIL EXPORT ROLEIranian Deputy Foreign MinisterMohammed Hossein Adeli told the Eurasia-2000 forum on 28 April that the choice of export routes for Caspian hydrocarbons should not be constrained by political factors, Reuters reported. He argued that a pipeline running south from Kazakhstan through Iran to the Persian Gulf "is the cheapest, shortest, most economically viable way to take 1.8 million barrels per day of oil over 1,500 km." He estimated the cost of construction of such a pipeline at $1.2 billion, less than half the estimated cost of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline which the U.S. and Turkey support. Some analysts say a firm commitment by Kazakhstan to export some oil via the Baku- Ceyhan pipeline is needed for that project to be economically viable, but a Kazakh oil sector official said earlier this month that Kazakhstan is unlikely to produce enough oil to require access to that pipeline before 2008 (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 11 April 2000). LF [11] IS KAZAKHSTAN'S NEW CAPITAL A POTEMKIN VILLAGE?DeputyPremier Danial Akhmetov told a cabinet session on 27 April that the majority of the buildings in the new capital, Astana, including some constructed by international companies, are of such low quality that they do not meet international standards, RFE/RL's Almaty bureau reported. He ordered the State Construction Committee and State Standards Commission to review the situation and identify international companies that do not have the requisite licenses. Western visitors to Astana have termed it a "Potemkin village." LF [12] KYRGYZSTAN REGISTERS MINIMAL FIRST QUARTER GDP GROWTHDeputyFinance Minister Kubat Kanimetov told a cabinet session in Bishkek on 27 April that GDP grew by only 1 percent during the first three months of 2000 compared with the same period in 1999, RFE/RL's bureau in the Kyrgyz capital reported. Agricultural production rose by 3.6 percent and the volume of construction by 10.8 percent, according to Interfax, but industrial output during the first quarter declined by 4.5 percent, and foreign trade turnover at $221 million was down 7 percent on the 1999 figure. GDP growth for 1999 as a whole was 3 percent (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 31 January 2000). LF [13] TAJIK PRESIDENT DECLARES WAR ON CRIMEIn an "emotional"address to the first joint session of both chambers of the newly-elected Tajik parliament on 27 April, Imomali Rakhmonov vowed to "declare war" on crime and drug smuggling, Asia Plus-Blitz reported. Referring to the anti-crime campaign launched earlier this month, he said a new decree will be issued banning the wearing of camouflage uniforms and carrying weapons except by military personnel on duty. He also announced that the government will soon draft a national military doctrine. Rakhmonov specifically lauded the contribution of the National Reconciliation Commission and its chairman, Said Abdullo Nuri, to the peace process. Rakhmonov singled out industrial development and market reform as crucial for the country's economic development, noting the need to appoint qualified specialists to implement those reforms. LF [B] SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE[14] CONTROVERSY OVER BOSNIAN PRIME MINISTERThe governing Sloga(Concord) coalition in Banja Luka said in a statement on 27 April that it will demand the resignation of Zivko Radisic as the Bosnian Serb representative on the joint presidency. Sloga said that Radisic nominated former Bosnian Serb Deputy Prime Minister Tihomir Gligoric to head the new, expanded joint cabinet without consulting Sloga, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 27 April 2000). Radovan Karadzic's Serbian Democratic Party said it will support Gligoric only if it has a representative or representatives in the cabinet. Alija Izetbegovic's Party of Democratic Action, for its part, approved Gligoric. Finally, the Social Democrats announced that they will decide whether to back the new prime minister once they see his program. PM [15] BOSNIAN PARLIAMENT APPROVES REFORM PACKAGEOn 27 April, theHouse of Nations passed a package of recommendations from the EU on promoting political and economic reform. Passing the measures is one of the EU's preconditions for holding another donors conference. Several representatives of the international community have repeatedly warned that foreign money for Bosnia will dry up unless key reforms are implemented. PM [16] MUSLIMS EXHUME MASS GRAVESForensics experts working for theMuslim Commission for Missing Persons have exhumed 83 bodies from several mass graves in eastern Bosnia, AP reported on 28 April. The bodies found in the Bratunac area are believed to be those of some of the 6,000 Muslim males killed by Serbian forces after the fall of Srebrenica in July 1995. Jasmin Odobasic, who is the deputy head of the commission, said that investigations will continue at Bratunac and other sites throughout Bosnia in the coming week. PM [17] BOSNIAN SERB PLEADS 'NOT GUILTY' TO 80 CHARGESDraganNikolic, the Bosnian Serb prison commander recently arrested by SFOR troops, entered a blanket plea on 28 April of not guilty to all 80 counts against him of crimes against humanity, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, and violations of the laws or customs of war (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 April 2000). It was the first time in the history of the tribunal that anyone has entered a blanket plea rather than respond to each charge individually, Reuters reported. The 80 counts against Nikolic are the highest number in any public indictment that the tribunal has announced to date. PM [18] CROATIAN PARLIAMENT PASSES LAWS ON MINORITY EDUCATIONThelower house of the parliament on 27 April approved two bills regulating the education of ethnic minorities and their right to use their respective native languages and alphabets. Legislators from the Croatian Democratic Community and the far-right Croatian Party of [Historic] Rights opposed the bill, "Slobodna Dalmacija" reported. Meanwhile, the government approved a measure to amend the constitution to list all legally recognized minorities and to drop references to two autonomous districts, RFE/RL's South Slavic Service reported. Under late President Franjo Tudjman, references to the Muslim and Slovenian minorities were dropped from the constitution, although some numerically far smaller minorities retained their legal status. The governments in Sarajevo and Ljubljana protested the change. More recently, some critics have called for dropping all references to ethnic groups and stressing instead that Croatia is a state of all its citizens. PM [19] KUCAN, HAVEL STRESS NO DELAYS IN EU ENLARGEMENTAfter theirmeeting in Brdo Pri Kranju in Slovenia on 27 April, President Milan Kucan and his guest Czech President Vaclav Havel said that they hope that political troubles in current member states will not hold up the process of EU enlargement. Kucan added bluntly: "A delay, making up new conditions or allowing special bilateral conditions, may cause candidates to question if they are truly wanted in the EU.... [The same would be true if the applicants come to sense that] they are only interesting to the EU as a market, as consumers, and on condition that they will not increase labor competition towards member states," Reuters reported. Kucan's statement follows recent remarks by German businessmen that they foresee no enlargement before 2004, as well as periodic statements by Austrian Freedom Party leader Joerg Haider and others of his party opposed to enlargement. PM [20] HAVEL CALLS FOR GREATER SLOVENIAN ROLE IN KOSOVAHavel saidin Ljubljana on 27 April that Slovenia is ideally suited to act as a bridge between Central Europe and the Balkans. CTK quoted him as saying: "It seems to me that Slovenia, which is closest to [the crisis region] not only geographically but also owing to its insight and understanding, can play an important role in this field as the international community is a bit helpless on many points.... Why could not the contribution of Slovenia, a stable democracy in the former Yugoslav region, be [a factor] enriching the general conscience and bringing new ideas?" Observers note that following independence in 1991, Slovenia took great pains to identify itself with Central Europe rather than with the other former Yugoslav republics, except to regain its former markets there. EU and especially NATO member states have made it clear to Ljubljana, however, that they expect it to do its part to promote stability and development in the region. PM [21] KFOR COMMANDER SLAMS ATTACKS ON RUSSIANSGeneral Juan Ortunosaid in Prishtina on 27 April that peacekeepers will not tolerate a spate of recent attacks on Russian personnel. These included three incidents on 26 April, one of which led to the death of a Russian soldier, AP reported. Ortuno added: "An attack against one soldier is an attack against us all." he said. "We are one force and such acts will not be tolerated." Many ethnic Albanians regard all Russians as pro- Serbian and believe that Russian volunteers and mercenaries took part in the Serbian crackdown prior to NATO's intervention in 1999. PM [22] ANOTHER SHOOT-OUT IN BELGRADEZoran "Skole" Uskokovic, whomReuters describes as "a Yugoslav businessman," was killed by unidentified gunmen following a car chase in the Belgrade suburb of Vidikovac on 27 April. A second, unidentified individual was also killed. Some Serbian press reports had linked Skole to the slaying of Zeljko "Arkan" Raznatovic at the start of the year. Two days earlier, an explosion rocked the building where Skole has his flat. PM [23] YUGOSLAV AIRLINES CHIEF BURIEDIn Pozarevac on 27 April,hundreds of mourners including top government ministers and Yugoslav Airlines personnel attended the funeral of Zika Petrovic, who was gunned down two days earlier (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 26 April 2000). Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic and his wife did not attend but sent a wreath. In Athens, a Greek government spokesman said that Serbia needs to become more democratic and that street killings are not the way to solve problems, "Vesti" reported. PM [24] SERBIAN SOCCER STAR WARNS AUTHORITIESSinisa Mihajlovic, whoplays for the Italian team Lazio, said in Rome on 27 April that he will no longer play for the Yugoslav national team unless the Belgrade authorities deny a recent report in the regime press that he has joined Milosevic's Socialist Party. He gave the authorities a deadline of three days to meet his conditions. Mihajlovic stressed that he recently signed a document naming him as a "sports ambassador" of his country and not as a member of a political party. PM [25] MOLDOVA, ROMANIA, INITIAL BASIC TREATYVisiting RomanianForeign Minister Petre Roman and his Moldovan counterpart, Nicolae Tabacaru, initialed the basic treaty between their countries in Chisinau on 28 April, the RFE/RL bureau in the Moldovan capital reported. The treaty must now be approved by the two countries' parliaments. Roman said the treaty defines relations between the two countries as a "privileged partnership" and "is of historic significance for the two Romanian states," while also contributing to European stability. Tabacaru said that the treaty includes "all the elements that must be included in such a document" while also "codifying the special relationship between the two countries." MS [26] MOLDOVAN GOVERNMENT SAYS PEOPLE 'MUST NOT PANIC'In anappeal to "all forces in society," the government on 27 April said Moldova is undergoing "one of its most difficult periods in modern history" and faced the danger of "relapsing into the second or third layer of states in the world." The government called on citizens "not to panic" but "consolidate [instead] all intellectual, physical, material, and spiritual forces" of the nation. It said the cabinet will "soon" undertake "urgent measures" for overcoming the crisis, relaunch the economy, strengthen "social discipline," liquidate corruption, and fight organized crime. "Now and in the future, the Republic can count on itself alone, and development cannot be achieved only on the basis of foreign credits. At the same time, we cannot imagine an autarchic economy," the appeal said, in reference to the recent IMF and World Bank decisions to stop lending to Moldova. MS [27] BLACK SEA ECONOMIC COOPERATION ORGANIZATION MEETS INCHISINAUThe foreign ministers of members in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization, gathering in Chisinau on 27 April, decided to establish a permanent seat for the organization's secretariat in Istanbul, Romanian radio reported. Addressing the gathering, Prime Minister Dumitru Braghis expressed the hope that the forum will help his country's quest to become a member of the Stability Pact for Southeastern Europe. Roman, who will be the next rotating chairman of the organization, told the gathering that the organization must improve efficiency and turn itself into one "ready for the 21st century." He said attention must concentrate on regional projects financed by the Black Sea Bank and international organizations, above all the EU. MS [28] MOLDOVAN CENTRIST PARTIES FORM ELECTORAL BLOCLeaders of theDemocratic Party of Moldova, the Party of Revival and Conciliation, and the Party of Democratic Forces signed an agreement in Chisinau on 27 April on setting up an electoral bloc, Infotag reported. They said this is "a strategic partnership for all forthcoming electoral campaigns." Democratic Party leader Dumitru Diacov said the three parties will support a joint candidate in the next presidential elections. MS [29] BULGARIANS DETAINED IN AIDS SCANDAL MAY LEAVE LIBYASix ofthe 17 Bulgarians detained last year in Libya in connection with the accusation that they deliberately infected children with the HIV virus have been released and can leave the country, the BBC reported on 26 April, citing BTA. MS [30] BULGARIAN EMIGRES GATHER IN SOFIAMore than 500 Bulgarianemigres from the West held a meeting with representatives of the government on 26 April to discuss ways of generating international support for Bulgaria's efforts to join the EU, AP reported. Prime Minister Ivan Kostov, who initiated the meeting, told the forum that before Bulgaria can join the EU it must solve the problem of "economic backwardness and low incomes." MS [C] END NOTE[31] SERBIA AFTER THE PROTESTBy Patrick MooreThe opposition has been congratulating itself on a successful mass demonstration. The question now is: where will Serbian politics go from here? The feuding leaders of Serbian's opposition--most notably the Serbian Renewal Movement's Vuk Draskovic and the Democratic Party's Zoran Djindjic--managed to bury their hatchets for at least a few hours on 14 April to stage one of the largest demonstrations Belgrade has seen. Estimates in the independent and private media ranged up to 200,000 participants. Shortly thereafter, the opposition began congratulating itself on a job well done, despite the fact that Draskovic was soon criticizing Djindjic in public, much to the delight of the regime media. For its part, the Belgrade independent daily "Danas" wrote of the "therapeutic effect" of the harmony that the opposition displayed at the rally. Germany's "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" went perhaps a step further and spoke of a "pre-revolutionary situation." The paper pointed to the results of recent polls to conclude that a large segment of the population supports the opposition. Some 46 percent of the respondents would back a joint opposition slate, while only 19 percent would choose the regime. At the rally, the paper added, the majority of the citizens showed that they were tired not only of the regime but also of the divisions within the opposition. The protesters' message to their leaders was clear: unite and provide the leadership to channel the growing frustration across the country. Whether the opposition will be willing and able to do so is anybody's guess. Your editor has the gut feeling that the long-term future (at any rate) belongs to the educated professionals of the G-17 group and the Alliance for Change. Djindjic, by contrast, may prove to be a spent force. There remains, moreover, often precious little substantive difference between Draskovic's people and those of the regime, especially where nationalism and anti-Westernism are concerned. One German diplomat commented to "RFE/RL Balkan Report" that the common link between Draskovic and the regime is anti-modernism, which vents itself as anti-Americanism. In any event, Draskovic knows well how to play upon the confusion and ignorance of many voters. Like Djindjic, he has every intention of becoming Serbia's next leader. The regime of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, for its part, still has teeth, although some observers feel that its behavior is increasingly that of a cornered animal. The wheels of repression continue to turn, and rarely do a day or two pass without news of one or another independent or private media outlet being hit with a stiff fine for violating the Kafkaesque 1998 media law. Similarly, Milan Protic and other opposition leaders face libel suits filed by Milosevic's followers. Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Vojislav Seselj, the United Yugoslav Left's Mira Markovic, and their respective minions regularly slam the opposition as traitors and NATO's bootlickers. One would be inclined to laugh these hard- liners off as pathetic political dinosaurs--except for the fact that Serbia remains a country where political violence is not unknown. Just three days before the latest protest, independent journalists and human rights activists held several commemorative meetings in Belgrade to mark the first anniversary of the killing of publisher Slavko Curuvija. At the site of the murder, friends and colleagues of Curuvija unveiled a memorial plaque, which reads that he was "killed for his tough and critical words" against the regime of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, whom he had once supported. A friend of Curuvija's said at the meeting that the late journalist "was not killed; he was executed," "Vesti" reported. Seselj, true to form, called Curuvija a "criminal," "Danas" noted. The authorities have remained silent on the killing. Another unresolved mystery is the fire that swept some offices in Novi Sad on 6 April. These rooms were located on the upper floors of a modern office building. They just happened to house the editorial boards or bureaus of key independent media outlets: TV Duga, TV Melos, TV Montenegro, Radio 021, Radio Signal, and "Danas." The weekly "Vreme" recently concluded that unless the authorities produce a convincing explanation for the fire and do so soon, one may most likely assume that the MUP, or the Ministry of the Interior, knows more about the fire and its origins than it cares to admit. The question remains as to where things are headed in Serbia. Even if the opposition manages to maintain a healthy degree of unity and parlay popular discontent into a real citizens' movement, it is difficult to see where such a movement can go. But former General Momcilo Perisic has called for further demonstrations across Serbia to serve as a "referendum" on the opposition's demand for early elections. Under the present circumstances, one may not realistically expect that any elections could be free and fair. This is true both for the local vote that the regime wants in order to oust the opposition from their provincial strongholds, and for the general elections that the opposition seeks in order to "turn the rascals out." In the fall of 1998, several independent Serbian journalists participated in a roundtable at RFE/RL headquarters in Prague. Someone asked one of the Serbs what he thought the political landscape would look like in six months. The journalist replied that nobody in Serbia knows what the situation will be in six days, let alone in six months. Those words seem to ring as true now as they did then. 28-04-00 Reprinted with permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
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