( Editorial: --> 0303 )
ZAGREB, 17 March (Hina) - On Tuesday the Croatian House of
Representatives' Judicial Committee turned down a lustration bill
calling for elimination of the remnants of the totalitarian
Communist regime and opposed a draft of a declaration denouncing
that regime.
The Croatian Party of Rights (HSP) drafted bill states that high
public functions should not be held by former secret service
officials, senior judges, prosecutors, people who attended
Communist party courses, etc.
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) whip Vladimir Seks opposed the
inclusion of the bill into parliament's agenda for Tuesday.
Describing the bill as constitutionally dubious, Seks said that the
decision on whether a former Communist official should hold a state
office should be made by political parties, the public and the
officials themselves.
Regulating that matter by a law would amount to a blow to the concept
of national reconciliation, Seks believes.
Seks noted that already in the preamble to the Constitution of 1990
the Croatian Parliament clearly defined its stand regarding the
Communist regime. In 1991 the Parliament adopted two declarations
explicitly denouncing rigged trials of Cardinal Alojzije Stepinac
and Andrija Hebrang.
The proposed lustration law and the declaration have been
unanimously turned down by the Committee for the Constitution,
Procedural Rules and the Political System as well.
(Hina) jn mr /mb
172213 MET mar 98
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