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CROATIAN DEPUTY PM ENDS VISIT TO SLOVENIA

LJUBLJANA, Jan 15 (Hina) - Croatia's Deputy Prime Minister Slavko Linic wrapped his one-day visit to Slovenia late on Wednesday. He met several government ministers, businessmen in the Slovene Chamber of Commerce, and directors of Croatian companies operating in Slovenia.
LJUBLJANA, Jan 15 (Hina) - Croatia's Deputy Prime Minister Slavko Linic wrapped his one-day visit to Slovenia late on Wednesday. He met several government ministers, businessmen in the Slovene Chamber of Commerce, and directors of Croatian companies operating in Slovenia. #L# Talking to Croatian media at the end of the trip, Linic assessed Croatian-Slovene economic cooperation as excellent, sometimes undermined by open issues dating back to the break-up of the former Yugoslavia. These issues will be solved bilaterally and by experts, each issue separately and not in a package, he said. Linic confirmed the two neighbours' prime ministers would meet in Zagreb on Friday. He said that today in Ljubljana he initiated a meeting between the two states' finance ministers in either Zagreb or Ljubljana in the near future. It should be another step in resolving the issue of deposits made by Croatian citizens in Slovenia's Ljubljanska Bank before the 1990s war, he said. Linic added that today's talks with the ministers in the Antun Rop cabinet did not touch upon recent statements by Slovenia's representative for succession to the ex-Yugoslavia to the effect that the Ljubljanska Bank issue belonged to the sphere of succession and must be resolved by Croatia. Linic said that not one Slovene minister had officially mentioned the allegedly new evidence in the matter -- that Croatia had recognised a so-called territorial principle in the payoff of those deposits. "Our reaction was very clear -- Ljubljanska Bank has a debt to its clients," said Linic. "It is nice to know that in both Slovenia and Croatia there are... people who wish to create conditions for cooperation... dialogue. We need an approach involving experts... political statements should not touch upon such delicate issues," he said. As for speculation in Slovenia that it might buy out Croatia's share in the jointly owned nuclear power plant at Krsko, Linic said: "It's not a topic. What we are interested in is Slovenia's ratification of the agreement (on Krsko). "What we said is that the government will support (Croatia's power utility) HEP in protecting its investment. HEP has to do it... professionally. If this protection involves arbitration or the various models (Slovenia) will offer, we are behind (HEP) but don't want to discuss it. It is a problem for the people in HEP, experts, lawyers. We would rather have the ratification than a third party for arbitration," said Linic. He also held talks with Transport Minister Jakob Presecnik. During a meeting with some 30 representatives of Croatian companies operating in Slovenia, Linic said economic cooperation between the two countries was excellent and announced bigger capital investments by Croatia in Slovenia. (hina) ha

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