ZAGREB, Sept 5 (Hina) - Croatian President Stipe Mesic met on Wednesday with the government delegation for the project on succession of the former Yugoslavia, which informed him of the implications of the application of the Agreement,
signed by the successor states in Vienna on June 29. Head of the governmental Office for succession, Bozo Marendic, said the project will be implemented in two phases: the signing of the Agreement, which took almost ten years because of the Milosevic regime's claims his country was the only successor, and the application of the Agreement, which regulates the division of former Yugoslavia's assets. Under the Agreement, Croatia's share amounted to 140 million US dollars in gold, 250 million in foreign exchange holdings, and approximately 50 million from the debt owed by the former Soviet Union and Iraq. All of Yugoslavia's assets on Croatia's territory at the moment of the proclamation of
ZAGREB, Sept 5 (Hina) - Croatian President Stipe Mesic met on
Wednesday with the government delegation for the project on
succession of the former Yugoslavia, which informed him of the
implications of the application of the Agreement, signed by the
successor states in Vienna on June 29.
Head of the governmental Office for succession, Bozo Marendic, said
the project will be implemented in two phases: the signing of the
Agreement, which took almost ten years because of the Milosevic
regime's claims his country was the only successor, and the
application of the Agreement, which regulates the division of
former Yugoslavia's assets.
Under the Agreement, Croatia's share amounted to 140 million US
dollars in gold, 250 million in foreign exchange holdings, and
approximately 50 million from the debt owed by the former Soviet
Union and Iraq.
All of Yugoslavia's assets on Croatia's territory at the moment of
the proclamation of independence also belong to Croatia.
(hina) js