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PRESIDENT ON LATEST INDICTMENTS, ALLEGED TAPPING OF JOURNALISTS' PHONES, ECONOMY

ZAGREB, April 3 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic said on Saturday he would be able to comment on the latest indictments from the war crimes tribunal in The Hague once he saw them.
ZAGREB, April 3 (Hina) - Croatian President Stjepan Mesic said on Saturday he would be able to comment on the latest indictments from the war crimes tribunal in The Hague once he saw them.#L# Speaking to reporters at his office after his usual Saturday morning meeting with citizens, he was asked to comment on the contradictory statements the tribunal's chief prosecutor, Carla del Ponte, made with regard to the detention of generals Mladen Markac and Ivan Cermak. Mesic said it had been agreed when the two generals flew to The Hague that their detention pending trial would be very brief since they had surrendered voluntarily, had not been arrested and had said the were willing to answer every question from the tribunal. "It was deemed unnecessary that they should stay even one day longer than necessary, but (...) del Ponte has now evidently evaluated that they must answer some questions before the trial date is set," Mesic said, adding that it would be fair if that was a short period of time. He was also asked to comment on or confirm that former Counterintelligence Agency (POA) chief Franjo Turek had given a presentation at Mesic's Office on the tapping of journalists' phones. Mesic said he had been present at a routine presentation at his office at which it was said that there were intelligence people from various countries in Croatia and that POA followed their work, including their contacts. He stressed that no diplomatic representatives had been mentioned in any one case and that there had been no mention of the tapping of journalists' phones at all. Mesic went on to say that he assumed the same presentation had been made to those in charge of intelligence services, but added he could not comment on the one made to Prime Minister Ivo Sanader or what he said because he was not familiar with that presentation. Asked to comment on his statement after the presentation that video footage of those contacts had been shown at the presentation, Mesic said POA had detected some foreign intelligence people who had been in contact not only with journalists but also with "our people". He reiterated that no mention had been made of taped conversations. Asked if video footage was not in effect a measure of tailing journalists, Mesic said "we can't prohibit the intelligence service to follow people it is convinced have an intelligence job in Croatia. It is normal that they should follow such people or we would have to ban intelligence services". Speaking of the economy, the President said "we have to invest additional efforts in order to reactivate our production and exports through our own capital but also by engaging foreign capital and foreign technology". He added it was necessary to discourage the export of raw materials and pass legislation to help foreign investors profit by producing in Croatia. The President also said it was unacceptable that there was so much uncultivated farmland in Croatia and that instead of exporting Croatia was importing food. He once again advocated the opening of more free zones, which he said would increase employment. (Hina) ha

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