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PARLIAMENTARY PARTIES' LEADERS EVALUATE SANADER CABINET'S HONEYMOON PERIOD

ZAGREB, March 30 (Hina) - Assessing the first 100 days of the Croatian Democratic Union-led (HDZ) government, the parliamentary opposition have praised Prime Minister Ivo Sanader's efforts to bring Croatia closer to EU membership but criticised the lack of development projects, notably in the economy. The parties supporting the government have praised its activities on both the home and the external front.
ZAGREB, March 30 (Hina) - Assessing the first 100 days of the Croatian Democratic Union-led (HDZ) government, the parliamentary opposition have praised Prime Minister Ivo Sanader's efforts to bring Croatia closer to EU membership but criticised the lack of development projects, notably in the economy. The parties supporting the government have praised its activities on both the home and the external front.#L# The leader of the opposition Social Democrats, Ivica Racan, said on Monday the biggest success of the Sanader Cabinet had been achieved in foreign affairs but underlined this was not enough to live on since not much could be done with a three percent growth rate. He criticised what he said was the complete lack of development and economic programmes. "I'm afraid the HDZ is doing everything to undermine development projects. Another minus is the widening rift between the image it tries to project of the party as reformed and practice, namely the rift between Sanader's reformed HDZ and the unreformed HDZ," said Racan. The leader of the Croatian Peasant Party, Zlatko Tomcic, said the HDZ deserved a relatively good grade for moves in foreign policy but a very poor one for home affairs. Tomcic in particular criticised the government for what he said was parliament's distancing from a debate on the unacceptable parts of the Hague war crimes tribunal's indictments against generals Ivan Cermak and Mladen Markac, and for what he said was the questionable possibility and lawfulness of giving Serbs who left Croatia their tenancy rights back. Tomcic's main objection to the government's performance, however, is the lack of an economic policy. The leader of the opposition Croatian Party of Rights, Anto Djapic, said the government had focused all of its actions on receiving a positive opinion on its EU membership application, at the expense of economic, social and other issues important to citizens. "The government has turned into a big foreign ministry, while internal affairs are not at all different from those led by Racan's (previous government)," said Djapic. The leader of the opposition Croatian People's Party, Vesna Pusic, praised Sanader's government for what she said had been several good moves on the foreign policy front, notably in relation to minority issues and admission to the EU, but complained about the lack of any vision of how the HDZ intended to lead the country, particularly in the economy. The leader of the opposition Libra, Jozo Rados, shares a similar view. He said the government's activity in international relations had been good and very logical, but added that politics were founded on development projects, in which he said the HDZ had failed completely. "The consequences of these wrong moves may be felt very soon in the form of stagnation and social problems," Rados said. On the other side, the leaders of the Social Liberals (HSLS), the Democratic Centre, the Pensioners Party, the Serb Democratic Independent Party (SDSS), and the Party of Democratic Action (SDA) supported the HDZ government, saying it had done a lot in improving Croatia's image abroad. As for economic effects, it was not possible to feel them in the government's first 100 days, they said. HSLS leader Djurdja Adlesic said the HDZ government's honeymoon period had completely refuted the claim that the HDZ would not take Croatia into the EU and showed that the HDZ was much better and more successful than the previous coalition government. SDSS vice president Milorad Pupovac said the government had started dealing with determination with winning back citizens' trust, the minority policy, "shedding light on the past and distancing itself from the 20th century's defeated ideologies". Pupovac criticised the government's make-up, which he said was incapable of implementing the state policy. "The government has a strong policy but a weak personnel." SDA leader Semso Tankovic applauded the positive atmosphere the Sanader Cabinet was spreading but criticised the lack of will to implement what it had agreed to do with representatives of ethnic minorities, notably Bosniaks. HSU parliamentary deputy Dragutin Pukles said the government's actions and will to achieve something were tangible, but added that it was difficult to expect big results in a short time. "The government is evidently preparing something concrete on the economic front, but it's not easy to kickstart an economy in this state." (Hina) ha sb

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