ZAGREB, Feb 3 (Hina) - President Tudjman's special legal advisor,
Professor Smiljko Sokol, today said the "Zagreb-four plan, namely
its structure, basic provisions, title and preamble" were
"unacceptable for Croatia".
"To accept this plan would be contrary to the basic provisions
of the Croatian Constitution, namely Articles 1 and 2, which define
Croatia as a unitary and indivisible state," Sokol told a news
conference at the Zagreb University Press Centre.
"The establishment of a Serbian federal unit, which would
effectively have a 'quasi-federal structure' would turn Croatia
into a two-nation federation, changing the status of the Serbian
minority into that of constituent nation," Sokol said.
Such a status would implicitly recognise their right to self-
determination, leading to a step-by-step realisation of greater-
Serbian aspirations.
Certain provisions of the Z-4 plan were even defined as
prevalent over the Croatian Constitution, because they call for
changes in the Constitution and the Constitutional Law.
Moreover, the plan stipulated that no changes would be
possible in future without the agreement of the Krajina authorities
and Serb MPs in the Croatian Parliament.
"The plan absolutely limits Croatia's sovereignty - according
to the theory of constitutional law, it is a confederal compact,"
Sokol said.
He explained that typical federal states were characterised by
the two-fold division of powers and the federal units' right to
self-organisation.
"There won't be any federalisation of Croatia or a 'state
within the state'," Sokol asserted.
"The form of reintegration of the temporarily occupied areas
will be decided by the Croatian people," he said.
Croatia had its own plan for a peaceful reintegration, based
on the Croatian Constitution, the Constitutional Law on the rights
of ethnic minorities and communities, and President Tudjman's
November 1993 Peace Initiative.
Croatia's plan would be further elaborated by the Croatian
Government, Sokol said, adding that "nothing else was acceptable"
and that this plan "was the bottom line".
Emphasising that he was presenting his personal opinion, Sokol
said the plan "should neither be taken lightly or overestimated".
"It is just a test case to see how far Croatia is prepared to
go," Sokol concluded.
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