ZAGREB, June 19 (Hina) - A European Parliament delegation led by Doris
Pack met members of the Croatian Parliament's Subcommittee for
Cooperation with the European Parliament in Zagreb on Thursday for talks
on recent presidential elections, return of displaced persons,
termination of the UNTAES mandate, freedom of the media and trial of war
criminals.
The agenda also included the political and economic situation in
Croatia, the situation in the UN-administered Eastern Slavonia region,
minority rights, and Croatia's relations with the international
community and the European Union.
Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Zarko Domljan
informed the European parliamentarians about the situation in the
country and the recent elections, stressing that Wednesday's agreement
in the Zagreb City Council ended the local government crisis in the
capital.
Domljan described the economic situation in Croatia as stable and
optimistic.
Asked about the termination of the UNTAES mandate, Drago Krpina of
the ruling Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) party said that UNTAES should
leave because "there is still a group of people in the Croatian Danube
region who do not want to stay in Croatia and who are obstructing the
reintegration process. The sooner UNTAES leaves the area the sooner the
normal constitutional and legal order will be established."
European parliamentarians asked Croatian colleagues to comment on
an assessment by OSCE monitors that Sunday's presidential elections were
free but not fair.
Bozo Kovacevic of the Social Liberal Party (HSLS) said that "media
coverage was not correct because electronic media gave preference to one
candidate." Agreeing with Kovacevic, Social Democrat Zeljka Antunovic
said that "Croatian Radio and Television is really in the service of one
party" and "in that regard monitors' remarks are correct."
Krpina disagreed with the OSCE assessment, saying that every
political party could equally buy air time in a sponsored programme on
state-run television as the HDZ had.
Asked how many Serbs could return to Croatia, Domljan said that all
Serb refugees were allowed to return and that 15,000 had returned so
far. According to data from the Croatian Office in Belgrade, 35,000
people would like to return. In Eastern Slavonia, 5,000 have expressed a
desire to return while a further 5,000 would like financial compensation
for their property and after which they would leave. That process is
open, Domljan said.
Stjepan Radic of the Peasant Party (HSS) stressed the complexity of
the return process, saying that Croats had been expelled from their
homes first and that they had been living in exile for six years. "The
degree of their frustration is certainly the highest and now demands are
being made that Serbs should return first."
Ante Djapic of the Party of Rights (HSP) said that occupied houses
should be vacated so that all people could return to their homes,
Moslems and Bosnian Croats to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbs to Croatia and
Croats to Eastern Slavonia.
Zeljka Antunovic of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) said that it
was unjustifiable to expect from Croatia, for the sake of political
peace, to first resolve the problems of Serbs and then of Croats. The
international community could contribute to the speedier resolution of
the problem with financial assistance, in view of the fact that Croatia
is devastated by war and accommodation presents a great problem.
Speaking of lists of war criminals, Domljan said that the issue
should be dealt with by the judiciary and not politicians.
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